Languages from the World of the Bible Languages from the World of the Bible edited by Holger Gzella De Gruyter ISBN 978-1-934078-61-7 e-ISBN 978-1-934078-63-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Languages from the world of the Bible / edited by Holger Gzella. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-934078-61-7 (alk. paper) 1. Middle Eastern philology. 2. Semitic philology. 3. Middle East—Languages— Grammar, Comparative. 4. Middle Eastern literature—Relation to the Old Testament. 5. Middle Eastern literature—Relation to the New Testament. 6. Bible. O.T.—Criticism, interpretation, etc. 7. Bible. N.T. — Criticism, interpretation, etc. I. Gzella, Holger, 1974 – PJ25L36 2011 492—dc23 2011038199 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http:// dnb.d-nb.de. © 2012 Walter de Gruyter, Inc., Boston/Berlin © Original edition „Sprachen aus der Welt des Alten Testaments“ 2009 by WBG (Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft), Darmstadt Cover image: Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY Typesetting: Apex CoVantage, LLC, Madison, Wisconsin, USA Printing: Hubert & Co. GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen Printed on acid-free paper Printed in Germany www.degruyter.com Contents Preface ............................................................................................................ vii On Transcription ........................................................................................... xi Abbreviations ............................................................................................... xv Introduction .................................................................................................... 1 Holger Gzella The Alphabet ................................................................................................. 14 Alan Millard Ugaritic .......................................................................................................... 28 Agustinus Gianto Phoenician ..................................................................................................... 55 Holger Gzella Ancient Hebrew ........................................................................................... 76 Holger Gzella The Languages of Transjordan ................................................................. 111 Klaus Beyer Old and Imperial Aramaic ........................................................................ 128 Margaretha Folmer Old South Arabian ..................................................................................... 160 Rebecca Hasselbach Old Persian .................................................................................................. 194 Michiel de Vaan & Alexander Lubotsky Greek ............................................................................................................ 209 Andreas Willi West Semitic and Greek letterforms ........................................................ 243 Maps ............................................................................................................. 247 Index ............................................................................................................ 251 Preface Scholarship increasingly emphasizes the considerable linguistic and cul- tural diversity of the environment in which the biblical texts originated over time. Both the neighboring civilizations in the immediate vicinity of ancient Israel, and the Near Eastern world empires, have contributed to shaping the biblical world, although in different respects and during successive periods. Whereas literary and administrative traditions in par- ticular have undergone many influences from the more remote cultures of Mesopotamia and Egypt (which are well known even to the point of exhaustion), the Hebrew language took on its shape and evolved first and foremost in a matrix of closely related tongues in Syria-Palestine. This region also maintained early contacts with the Arabian Peninsula, was incorporated into the Persian Empire, and eventually became part of the Greco-Roman Near East. It is, however, the alphabetic script that unites the languages of Syria-Palestine, Arabia, Persia, and Greece. Their investigation belongs to various academic fields but often does not surface, at least not at a regular rate, in university curricula. Among the plethora of current methods and research interests in biblical exegesis and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, philology no longer occupies the principal place. Nonetheless, a thorough knowledge of the primary sources in their original forms remains the most important point of departure for all further concerns. The present volume aims at furnishing concise yet fresh and up- to- date overviews of the most pertinent varieties of the languages in ques- tion without merely repeating what has been said elsewhere. It also addresses their interaction within a clear historical framework while at the same time maintaining a reasonably sharp focus. Hence it takes a more technical approach than Kaltner and McKenzie’s Beyond Babel1 but has a less ambitious scope than Woodard’s Cambridge Encyclopedia of the 1 John Kaltner and Steven McKenzie (eds.), Beyond Babel: A Handbook for Biblical Hebrew and Related Languages (Leiden: Brill, 2002). viii Preface World’s Ancient Languages2 or Kaye’s Phonologies of Asia and Africa and the same editor’s Morphologies of Asia and Africa published ten years later.3 They all provide useful further reading. Since this book is an updated and thoroughly revised translation from the German,4 it shares a number of shortcomings with in the origi- nal version. It would have been impossible to eliminate them without causing a significant delay in publication. The cuneiform languages have been deliberately excluded, because they already feature in a volume of a similar kind.5 For an excellent modern survey of Akkadian in English, which some readers will no doubt miss here, one may refer to Hueh- nergard and Woods, “Akkadian and Eblaite”.6 A brief description spe- cifically geared toward the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian varieties of Akkadian, which are of particular importance for the world of the Hebrew Bible, remains high on the editor’s wish list, though. Likewise, there is, unfortunately, no treatment of Ancient North Arabian either; a contribution was requested for the German edition but not received. The editor’s Introduction, for what it is worth, contains a few general remarks on this topic and further bibliographic references. Egyptian and some later varieties of Hebrew and Aramaic (as in the Dead Sea Scrolls) would make very sensible additions, too, “had we but world enough, and time.” The chapters on the Transjordanian languages and on Greek were translated by Peter T. Daniels; the others by the authors themselves. Peter Daniels and Gene McGarry also served as copyeditors. As the contributors belong to three different generations and work in five dif- ferent countries, their pieces reflect several distinct, though often in- terrelated, academic traditions and styles. This diversity of notational conventions, specialized terminology, and organization of the data has been intentionally preserved, not least because it is so characteristic of the field as such and its shortage of unifying factors: Semitic philol- ogy in its present pluralistic form has been shaped throughout the ages 2 Roger D. Woodard (ed.), The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World’s Ancient Languages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004); reprinted unaltered in a series of re- gionally organized paperbacks (2008). 3 Alan S. Kaye (ed.), Phonologies of Asia and Africa, 2 vols. (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1997); Morphologies of Asia and Africa, 2 vols. (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2007). 4 Sprachen aus der Welt des Alten Testaments (1st ed., Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buch- gesellschaft, 2009; 2nd ed., 2012). 5 Michael P. Streck (ed.), Sprachen des Alten Orients (1st ed., Darmstadt: Wissenschaftli- che Buchgesellschaft, 2005; 3rd ed., 2007). 6 John Huehnergard and Christopher Woods, “Akkadian and Eblaite,” in Woodard (ed.), Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World’s Ancient Languages [n. 2], 218–287. Preface ix by the combined efforts of mainly biblical scholars, Arabists, students of the ancient Near East, and dialectologists; it is thus governed by a blend of native grammatical traditions, the nineteenth-century teaching of Greek and Latin, and insights of modern descriptive and historical linguistics. I dedicate my own work on this book to the memory of my father. Holger Gzella Leiden, September 2011
Description: