- Lepontic language
Infobox Language
name=Lepontic
familycolor=Indo-European
region=Cisalpine Gaul
fam1=Indo-European
fam2=Celtic
fam3=Continental Celtic
extinct=ca. 400 BC?
iso2=cel
lc1=xlp|ld1=Lepontic
lc2=xcg|ld2=Cisalpine GaulishLepontic is an extinct Celtic language that was spoken in parts of
Rhaetia andCisalpine Gaul (today'sNorthern Italy ) between700 BC and400 BC . Sometimes called Cisalpine Celtic, it is considered a dialect of theGaulish language and thus aContinental Celtic language (Eska 1998).The language is only known from a few inscriptions discovered that were written in the alphabet of
Lugano , one of five main varieties of Northern Italic alphabets, derived from theEtruscan alphabet . These inscriptions were found in an area centered onLugano , including Lago di Como and Lago Maggiore. Similar scripts were used for writing the Rhaetic andVenetic languages, and the Germanicrunic alphabet s probably derive from a script belonging to this group.Lepontic was assimilated first by Gaulish, with the settlement of Gaulish tribes north of the
River Po , and then by Latin, after theRoman Republic gained control over Gallia Cisalpina during the late second and first century BC.The grouping of all of these inscriptions into a single Celtic language is disputed, and some (including specifically all of the older ones) are said to be in a non-Celtic language related to Ligurian (Whatmough 1933, Pisani 1964). Under this view, which was the prevailing view until about 1970, Lepontic is the correct name for the non-Celtic language, while the Celtic language is to be called Cisalpine Gaulish. Following Lejeune (1971), the consensus view became that Lepontic should be classified as a Celtic language, albeit possibly as divergent as Celtiberian, and in any case quite distinct from Cisalpine Gaulish. Only in recent years, there has been a tendency to identify Lepontic and Cisalpine Gaulish as one and the same language.
While the language is named after the tribe of the
Lepontii , which occupied portions of ancientRhaetia , specifically an Alpine area straddling modernSwitzerland andItaly and bordering Cisalpine Gaul, the term is currently used by many Celticists to apply to all Celtic dialects of ancient Italy. This usage is disputed by those who continue to view the "Lepontii" as one of several indigenous pre-Roman tribes of the Alps, quite distinct from theGaul s who invaded the plains of Northern Italy in historical times.The older Lepontic inscriptions date back to before the
5th century BC , the item fromCastelletto Ticino being dated at the6th century BC and that fromSesto Calende possibly being from the7th century BC (Prosdocimi, 1991). The people who made these inscriptions are nowadays identified with theGolasecca culture , which has been ascribed a Celtic identity (De Marinis, 1991). The extinction date for Lepontic is only inferred by the absence of later inscriptions.ources
*Eska, J. F. (1998). The linguistic position of Lepontic. In "Proceedings of the twenty-fourth annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society" vol. 2, Special session on Indo-European subgrouping and internal relations (February 14, 1998), ed. B. K. Bergin, M. C. Plauché, and A. C. Bailey, 2–11. Berkeley: Berkeley Linguistics Society.
*Eska, J. F., and D. E. Evans. (1993). "Continental Celtic". In "The Celtic Languages", ed. M. J. Ball, 26–63.London : Routledge. ISBN 0-415-01035-7.
*cite journal | author=Gambari, F. M., and G. Colonna | title=Il bicchiere con iscrizione arcaica de Castelletto Ticino e l'adozione della scrittura nell'Italia nord-occidentale | journal=Studi Etruschi | year=1988 | volume=54 | pages=119–64
*cite journal | author=Lejeune, M. | title=Documents gaulois et para-gaulois de Cisalpine | journal=Études Celtiques | year=1970–71 | volume=12 | pages=357–500
*cite book | author=Lejeune, M. | title=Lepontica | location=Paris | publisher=Société d'Éditions 'Les Belles Lettres' | year=1971 | id=
*cite journal | author=Lejeune, M. | title=Vues présentes sur le celtique ancien | journal=Académie Royale de Belgique, Bulletin de la Classe des Lettres et des Sciences morales et politiques | year=1978 | volume=64 | pages=108–21
*cite book | author=Lejeune, M. | title=Recueil des inscriptions gauloises: II.1 Textes gallo-étrusques. Textes gallo-latins sur pierre | location=Paris | publisher=CNRS | year=1988 | id=
*cite book | author=Pisani, V. | title=Le lingue dell'Italia antica oltre il latino | edition=2nd ed. | location=Turin | publisher=Rosenberg & Sellier | year=1964 | id=
*Tibiletti Bruno, M. G. (1978). "Ligure, leponzio e gallico". In "Popoli e civiltà dell'Italia antica" vi, "Lingue e dialetti", ed. A. L. Prosdocimi, 129–208.Rome : Biblioteca di Storia Patria.
*Tibiletti Bruno, M. G. (1981). "Le iscrizioni celtiche d'Italia". In "I Celti d'Italia", ed. E. Campanile, 157–207.Pisa : Giardini.
*cite book | author=Whatmough, J. | title=The Prae-Italic Dialects of Italy", vol. 2, "The Raetic, Lepontic, Gallic, East-Italic, Messapic and Sicel Inscriptions | location=Cambridge, Massachusetts | publisher=Harvard University Press | year=1933 | id=
*cite book | author=AA.VV. and Prosdocimi, A.L. | title=I Celti", pag.50-60, "Lingua e scrittura dei primi Celti | publisher=Bompiani| year=1991 | id=
*cite book | author=AA.VV. and De Marinis, R.C. | title=I Celti," capìtol "I Celti Golasecchiani"| publisher=Bompiani| year=1991 | id=
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