Epirote Greek
The Epirote dialect is a dialect of Northwest Doric that was spoken in the Classical Era. It outlived most other Greek dialects that were replaced by the Attic Koine, surviving until the first or second century CE, in part due to the existence of a separate Northwest Doric koine.
Classification
The Greek population of Epirus proper spoke a dialectal variety of Northwest Doric, joining Epirotic with Locrian, Phocian, Delphic, Aenanian, Aetolian, and Acarnian. Doric, including Northwest Doric and its sister branches, may also be called "West Greek" or "North Greek".Nevertheless, Epirote lacked some of the features that are described as salient diagnostics of Northwest Doric, including the athematic dative plural -ois, the third person imperative -nton, and the mediopassive participle forms in -ei-. Likewise, the uncontracted Doric -eo- sequence is barely attested in Epirus, because it was usually sidelined by the contraction of -ou--, though it does appear in anthroponyms in Epirus.
Méndez Dosuna argued for a distinction of four subgroups within Northwest Doric, in which Epirote, Eastern Locrian, Epizephyrian Locrian and Acarnian were "Medial Northwest". Dosuna argues that North-West Greece was an area of dialectal convergence that became increasingly homogenous from the fifth century BCE onwards, coinciding with the rise of different koinai and political integration.
History of study
Epirote is considered to be under-investigated.Speaking in a broad sense of the history of Epirus, as of 2018, a number of advances have been made in the last few decades, largely powered by ongoing progress in archaeological research in both Greece and Southern Albania. However, there is no up-to-date comprehensive work incorporating all the recent archaeological advances, meaning the least outdated summary is Hammond 1967. Likewise, despite newly available epigraphic corpora from Dodona and Bouthroton, Greek linguist Filos notes that there remains no holistic linguistic account of Epirus at all that extends beyond a "non-piecemeal description of the epichoric variety", though Filos himself offers a summarized account.
In 2013, a collection of over 4000 texts from the Dodona lamellae was published.
History
Attestation
Evidence from epigraphy starting in the late Archaic period indicates that people of Epirus proper spoke a dialectal variety of Northwest Doric. On the other hand, southern Greek dialects were spoken by some of the coastal colonies established by southern Greeks, while in the north, there was a language border with Illyrian.There is earlier attestation of texts from the southern Greek colonies on the coast, but these spoke different varieties of Greek. The variety manifested in the early texts of Dodona is also not representative of Epirotic Greek.
Except for the unrepresentative oracular tablets at Dodona, Epirus was among a set of Greek regions that practically lacked documentation until the Classical period, this set also including Macedonia, Pamphylia, and Aetolia. In terms of early written records, Epirus and the rest of north-west Greece also lagged behind other Northwest-Doric speaking areas, with areas such as Delphi and West Locris providing earlier sources.
The Northwest Doric oracular tablets from Dodona are typically short texts written on small lead plates, whose small size caused the text to be written in an elliptic style.
Origins
A number of scholars have asserted a possible partial Hellenization of pre-classical Epirus, wherein Greek elites would have engendered a language shift by elite dominance over an originally non-Greek-speaking population, including Nilsson, Crossland, and Kokoszko & Witczak On the other side, Hammond argued the converse, wherein it was southward and eastward Illyrian expansions that intruded upon an originally Greek Epirus. Filos notes that due to the limitations of our linguistic knowledge of Epirus during the relevant period, which is entirely lacking except for the onomastic evidence of anthronyms, tribe names, and toponyms, any assumptions either way about which element was intrusive is "tantamount to plain guesswork", but one may reasonably assume a degree of bilingualism did exist without positing which languages were specifically substrate, adstrate or superstrate.The distribution of epigraphic evidence would remain unequally distributed geographically; in later periods, sources still tend to come from Ambracia and Dodona, as well as Bouthrotos. The Corinthian and Elean colonies on the coast were gradually integrated into the emerging pan-Epirote political formations, resulting in increasing linguistic homogenization of the region.
Hellenistic and Roman periods
While the origins of Epirotic Greek are disputed, it is more certain that during the attested period, with its better studied corpora, there was a degree of bilingualism that was likely not symmetrical in nature, and that Epirotic Greek expanded northward beyond the boundaries of Epirus proper, into former Illyrian territory. Though the distribution of texts would remain skewed in favor of Dodona and the coast, the peak of Epirote texts would occur in the late Hellenistic period, when the impact of the supraregional Northwest Doric koina began to be felt. Although the distribution remains skewed, texts from outside Dodona and Ambracia become markedly more common between the third century BCE and the Roman conquest in 167 BCE.The Northwest Doric koina
The Northwest Doric koina was a supraregional North-West common variety that that emerged in the third and second centuries BCE, and was used in the official texts of the Aetolian League. It contained a mix of native Northwest Doric dialectal elements and Attic forms. It was apparently based on the most general features of Northwest Doric, eschewing less common local traits. Its rise was driven by both linguistic and non-linguistic factors, with non-linguistic motivating factors including the spread of the rival Attic-Ionic koine after it was recruited by the Macedonian state for administration, and the political unification of a vast territories by the Aetolian League and the state of Epirus. The Northwest Doric koina was thus both a linguistic and a political rival of the Attic-Ionic koina.The Northwest Doric koina was politically linked to the Aetolian league, which had long had a mutually hostile relationship with Epirus. As such, some have argued that Epirotic during the Hellenistic period was marked by a tendency to avoid the use of features that marked an "Aetolian" identity, such as the use of ἐν + accusative.
Replacement by the Attic koine
Despite its success in halting the spread of Attic for a time, the Northwest Doric koina would ultimately be a mere intermediary stage before the final Atticization of Epirus. In the third and second centuries BCE we already begin to encounter texts showing increasing influence of the Attic-Ionic koine. Statistical analyses have corroborated that Attic was slowly supplanting the native dialect during the end of this period, while the record also shows texts of Epirote embedded in Attic during this period.The Attic-Ionic koine eventually decisively established itself in Epirus firmly during the first century CE.
Phonology
Our understanding of Epirote phonology is limited; epigraphic data, glosses, and contemporary sources are often uncorroborated. However the existing evidence from the limited inscriptions is still considered to have certain insights.Epirote shared with Thessalian, Elean and Macedonian an "oddity" of cases where voiced stops appear to be correspond to Proto-Indo-European voiced aspirates, /bʰ dʰ ɡʰ/. In most Greek, the Proto-Indo-European aspirates were devoiced to voiceless aspirates /pʰ tʰ kʰ/, written <ɸ θ χ>. As with Macedonian, this phenomenon is sometimes attributed to non-Greek substrate and adstrate influence, with some linguists attributing such an influence on Epirote to Illyrian. Filos, however, notes, that the attribution of <β>, <ð> and <ɣ> for specifically voiced stops is not secure.
Other proposed phonological characteristics based on inscriptions include:
- regular apocope in prepositions
- no shortening for <ηι>
- early closing of /eː/ > /iː/
- short /i/ > /e/, though Filos notes that the evidence for this is particularly suspect
- early dropping of /j/ when it is the second element in diphthongs.
- Unlike most other NW Doric varieties, a regular shift of <ɛο> > <ου>
Alphabet
Because the earliest scripts from the region of Epirus hail from Ambracia, the letters resemble those of Corinth, because Ambracia was founded by Corinthians. Another early example using the Corinthian alphabet is the inquiry of a citizen of Orikos, but Filos argues that this is of little use because Orikos is rather far from the center of Epirus. We do not know how many alphabets were in use in Epirus in the sixth to fourth centuries BCE.The diversity of alphabets among the Dodona lamellae merely reflects the diverse origins of the inquirers. Although the earliest oracular sources feature the "blue" alphabet elsewhere seen in Corinth and Attica, the later instances primarily manifest what would become the local Epirote alphabet, which was a "red" Euboean system, in which the letter <Ψ> indicated the velar aspirate /kʰ/, which would later become /x/, while /ps/ was simply written <ΦΣ>, and
Because Epirote distinguished between mid-close and mid-open round vowels,
The Attic alphabet made its appearance in Epirote texts in the fourth century BCE. Over time, it drove all other Greek alphabets, in Epirus and elsewhere, out of usage.
Morphology, Morphosyntax, Syntax
Epirote features a rather "Doric" contract future as seen in the third person active plural praksounti and the future mediopassive lachoumai. Whereas the Northwest Doric koina frequently used ἐν + accusative formations, Epirote preferred εἰς + accusative formations instead. The archaic formation of ἀνά + dative, which is elsewhere found mostly in poetry, has been found to occur a few times in Epirus. Scientific inquiry on the syntax and morphosyntax of Epirote is, to date, too weak in general to make strong statements.Language contact
Due to its geographic position and its history, Epirus had an internal linguistic diversity. Epirus' northern regions, such as Chaonia, bordered on southern Illyrian territory, and likely featured bilingualism with many Illyrians tending to adopt Greek as well as a second language. Ultimately this would lead to language replacement with Illyrian as substrate in these regions. The extent of Illyrian participation in life in Epirus proper is uncertain; although only about a dozen names in the Dodona corpus are confirmedly Illyrian, onomastics is not necessarily a safe way to ascertain ethnic or linguistic identity in this case. On the Epirote coast, colonies of southern Greek provenance often spoke different dialects of Greek, but their incorporation into Epirote polities brought linguistic homogenization.Epirote also experienced interaction with other NW Doric varieties, as well as Macedonian, as adstrates.
The war with Rome, ending in the Roman conquest of Epirus in 167 BCE, featured large-scale destruction and depopulation of Epirus, especially to the south of the Thyamis River. Further destruction was inflicted by king Mithridates VI's Thracian mercenaries in 88-87 BCE as well as during cases where Epirus served as a theatre for Roman civil wars. Such depopulation was followed by the settlement by Latin speakers. Although the Greek language was not effaced from the region as a result of these changes and continued to demonstrate vitality, language contact effects are demonstrated, including interference, accommodation, code-switching, hybridization, and Greco-Latin interaction in onomastics and funerary inscriptions. Latinized place names became especially common on the coastline; the impact of Latin became especially strong in Southern Illyria's urban centers of Dyrrhachium and Apollonia, and was far heavier than that of Epirus proper.
Examples
Vocabulary
- ἀγχωρίξαντας anchôrixantas having transferred, postponed Chaonian not to be confused with Doric Attic ana-chôreô go back, withdraw.
- ἀκαθαρτία akathartia impurity
- ἀποτράχω apotrachô run away
- ἄσπαλοι ' fishes Athamanian
- Ἄσπετος Aspetos divine epithet of Achilles in Epirus
- γνώσκω gnôskô know
- δάξα daksa, cited by Hesychius, argued by one Greek scholar to be an Illyrian loan
- διαιτός diaitos Lamelles Oraculaires 16
- ἐσκιχρέμεν ' lend out πὲρ τοῖ argyria
- Ϝεῖδυς Weidus knowing Cabanes, L'Épire 577,50
- κάστον wood Athamanian ; Sanskrit kāṣṭham
- λῃτῆρες lêïtêres Athamanian priests with garlands Hes.text ἱεροὶ στεφανοφόροι. Ἀθαμᾶνες
- Νάϊος Naios or Naos epithet of Dodonaean Zeus
- παγάομαι ' 'wash in the spring'
- παμπασία pampasia
- πέλειοι peleioi "old people", cited by Hesychius
- Πελιγᾶνες Peliganes or Peligones
- πρᾶμι prami do optative Syncope
- τίνε tine to whom
- τριθυτικόν' trithutikon triple sacrifice tri + thuo
Excerpts
The following is an inquiry by the diaotoi, dated to either the late 5th to early 4th century BCE, or the 4th to 3rd century BCE: