History of the Hebrew alphabet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (April 2008) |
The History of the Hebrew alphabet dates back several thousand years.
Contents |
[edit] History
According to contemporary scholars, the original Hebrew script developed alongside others in the region during the course of the late second and first millennia BCE; it is closely related to the Phoenician script, which itself probably gave rise to the use of alphabetic writing in Greece (Greek). It is sometimes claimed that around the 10th century BCE [1][verification needed] a distinct Hebrew variant, the original "Hebrew script", emerged, which was widely used in the ancient kingdoms of Israel and Judah until they fell in the 8th and 6th centuries BCE, respectively. It is not straightforward, however, to distinguish Israelite/Judahite scripts from others which were in use in the immediate area, most notably by the Moabites and Ammonites.
Following the Babylonian exile, Jews gradually stopped using the Hebrew script, and instead adopted the Aramaic script (another offshoot of the same family of scripts). This script, used for writing Hebrew, later evolved into the Jewish, or "square" script, that is still used today. Closely related scripts were in use all over the Middle East for several hundred years, but following the rise of Christianity (and later, the rise of Islam), they gave way to the Roman and Arabic alphabets, respectively.
The Hebrew alphabet was later adapted in order to write down the languages of the Jewish diaspora (Karaim, Judæo-Arabic, Ladino, Yiddish, etc.). The Hebrew alphabet was retained as the alphabet used for writing down the Hebrew language during its rebirth in the 18th to 19th century.
According to one Jewish tradition,[2] however, the block script seen today in Hebrew Torah Scrolls, known as Kthav Ashurith, was the original Hebrew script carved into the Ten Commandments [3]. According to this opinion, the Ktav Ashurith was lost over time, as the masses used Paleo-Hebrew and its cousins, known as Kthav Ivri, for day to day writing, just as Jews today use a non block script for everyday writing.[4]
[edit] Ancestral scripts and script varients
Symbol | Name | Scripts | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hebrew | Ancestral | Related | |||||||||||||||
Cursive | Rashi | Proto-Sinaitic Hieroglyphics |
Proto-Canaanite | Phoenician | Paleo-Hebrew | Aramaic | Greek | Latin | Cyrillic | Arabic | |||||||
א | Alef |
|
Αα | Aa | Аа | ا | |||||||||||
ב | Bet, Vet |
|
Ββ | Bb | Бб Вв |
ﺑ ﺏ | |||||||||||
ג | Gimel |
|
Γγ | Cc Gg |
Гг | ﺟ ﺝ | |||||||||||
ד | Dalet |
|
Δδ | Dd | Дд | دذ | |||||||||||
ה | Hei |
|
Εε | Ee | Ее Єє |
ه هـ ـهـ ـه |
|||||||||||
ו | Vav | unknown | Υυ Ϝϝ |
FfUuVv WwYy |
Ѵѵ Уу |
ﻭ | |||||||||||
ז | Zayin | unknown | Ζζ | Zz | Зз | ﺯ | |||||||||||
ח | Het |
|
Ηη | Hh | ? | ﺣﺡ | |||||||||||
ט | Tet |
|
Θθ | ? | Ѳѳ | ﻁ | |||||||||||
י | Yud |
|
Ιι | Jj Ii |
Јј Іі |
ﻳ ﻱ | |||||||||||
כ | ך | Kaf, Khaf |
|
Κκ | Kk | Кк | ﻛ ﻙ | ||||||||||
ל | Lamed |
|
Λλ | Ll | Лл | ﻟ ﻝ | |||||||||||
מ | ם | Mem |
|
Μμ | Mm | Мм | ﻣ ﻡ | ||||||||||
נ | ן | Nun |
|
Νν | Nn | Нн | ﻧ ﻥ | ||||||||||
ס | Samech |
|
Ξξ Χχ |
Xx | Ѯѯ Хх |
? | |||||||||||
ע | Ayin |
|
Οο | Oo | Оо | ﻋ ع غـ غ |
|||||||||||
פ | ף | Pei, Fei |
|
Ππ | Pp | Пп | ﻓ ﻑ | ||||||||||
צ | ץ | Tsadi |
|
, | Ϻϻ | - | Цц Чч |
ﺻ ص ضـ ض |
|||||||||
ק | Kuf |
|
Ϙϙ | Ҁҁ | ﻗ ﻕ | ||||||||||||
ר | Reish |
|
Ρρ | Rr | Рр | ﺭ | |||||||||||
ש | Shin, Sin | unknown | Σσς | Ss | Сс Шш |
سـ س شـ ش |
|||||||||||
ת | Tav | unknown | Ττ | Tt | Тт | ﺗ ﺕ ﺛ ﺙ |
[edit] See also
- Hebrew alphabet
- Cursive Hebrew
- Rashi script
- Middle Bronze Age alphabets
- Proto-Canaanite alphabet
- Phoenician alphabet
- Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
- Aramaic alphabet
[edit] References
- ^ 10th century BCE script
- ^ The Script of the Torah. Aishdas (2002).
- ^ Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Shabbat 104a, Tractate Megilla 2b. "Rav Chisda says that the (final) mem and samech in the tablets were miraculously hanging in the air." This can only happen in Kthav Ashurith and not in Kthav Ivri.
- ^ Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Megilla 3a.
|