abstract
The impact of the Hellenization in the Ancient Near East resulted in a notable presence of Greek koiné language and culture and in the interaction between Greek and Nabataean that conducted inhabitants to engrave inscriptions in public spaces using one of the two languages or both. In this questionably ‘diglossic’ situation, a significant number of Nabataean-Greek inscriptions emerged, showing that the koin was employed by the Nabataeans as a sign of Hellenistic cultural affinity. This book offers a linguistic and philological analysis of fifty-one Nabataean-Greek epigraphic evidences existing in northern Arabia, Near East and Aegean Sea, dating from the first century BCE to the third-fourth century CE. This collection is an analysis of the linguistic contact between Nabataean and Greek in the light of the modalities of social, religious and linguistic exchanges. In addition, the investigation of onomastics (mainly the Nabataean names transcribed in Greek script) might allow us to know more about the Nabataean phonological system.
Keywords: Nabataean Aramaic. Greek. Epigraphy. Diglossia. Ancient Near East.
Published: April 26, 2021
Language: en
ISBN (print): 978-88-6969-508-7 ISBN (ebook): 978-88-6969-507-0
permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-507-0
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International LicenseTable of contents
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Corpus of Nabataean Aramaic-Greek Inscriptions
Giuseppe Petrantoni
Università degli Studi di Enna “Kore”, Italia
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