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Anatolian hieroglyphs

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Writing system
Anatolian hieroglyphs
An inscription from Hama, in Anatolian hieroglyphs
Script type
Time period
14th–7th centuries BC
DirectionLeft-to-right Edit this on Wikidata
LanguagesHieroglyphic Luwian language
ISO 15924
ISO 15924 Hluw (080), ​Anatolian Hieroglyphs (Luwian Hieroglyphs, Hittite Hieroglyphs)
Unicode
Unicode alias
Anatolian Hieroglyphs
U+14400–U+1467F
[1]
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

Anatolian hieroglyphs are an indigenous logographic script native to central Anatolia, consisting of some 500 signs. They were once commonly known as Hittite hieroglyphs, but the language they encode proved to be Luwian, not Hittite, and the term Luwian hieroglyphs is used in English publications. They are typologically similar to Egyptian hieroglyphs, but do not derive graphically from that script, and they are not known to have played the sacred role of hieroglyphs in Egypt. There is no demonstrable connection to Hittite cuneiform.[2] [3] [4]

History

Geographical distribution of Anatolian hieroglyphs. Thick lines represent the most finds
Anatolian hieroglyphs surround a figure in royal dress. The inscription, repeated in cuneiform around the rim, gives the seal owner's name: the ruler Tarkasnawa of Mira. This famous bilingual inscription provided the first clues for deciphering Anatolian hieroglyphs.

Individual Anatolian hieroglyphs are attested from the second and early first millennia BC across Anatolia and into modern Syria. A biconvex bronze personal seal was found in the Troy VIIb level (later half of the 12th century BC) inscribed with Luwian Hieroglyphs.[5] The earliest examples occur on personal seals, but these consist only of names, titles, and auspicious signs, and it is not certain that they represent language. Most actual texts are found as monumental inscriptions in stone, though a few documents have survived on lead strips.

The first inscriptions confirmed as Luwian date to the Late Bronze Age, ca. 14th to 13th centuries BC. After some two centuries of sparse material, the hieroglyphs resume in the Early Iron Age, ca. 10th to 8th centuries BC. In the early 7th century BC, the Luwian hieroglyphic script, by then aged some 700 years, was marginalized by competing alphabetic scripts and fell into oblivion.

Language

While almost[6] all the preserved texts employing Anatolian hieroglyphs are written in the Luwian language,[7] some features of the script suggest its earliest development within a bilingual Hittite-Luwian environment. For example, the sign which has the form of a "taking" or "grasping" hand has the value /ta/, which is precisely the Hittite word ta-/da- "to take," in contrast with the Luwian cognate of the same meaning which is la-.[8] There was occasionally some use of Anatolian hieroglyphs to write foreign material like Hurrian theonyms, or glosses in Urartian (such as á – ḫá+ra – ku for aqarqi or tu – ru – za for ṭerusi, two units of measurement).

Typology

As in Egyptian, characters may be logographic or phonographic—that is, they may be used to represent words or sounds. The number of phonographic signs is limited. Most represent CV syllables, though there are a few disyllabic signs. A large number of these are ambiguous as to whether the vowel is a or i. Some signs are dedicated to one use or another, but many are flexible.

Words may be written logographically, phonetically, mixed (that is, a logogram with a phonetic complement), and may be preceded by a determinative. Other than the fact that the phonetic glyphs form a syllabary rather than indicating only consonants, this system is analogous to the system of Egyptian hieroglyphs.

A more elaborate monumental style is distinguished from more abstract linear or cursive forms of the script. In general, relief inscriptions prefer monumental forms, and incised ones prefer the linear form, but the styles are in principle interchangeable. Texts of several lines are usually written in boustrophedon style. Within a line, signs are usually written in vertical columns of two to four signs, but as in Egyptian hieroglyphs, aesthetic considerations take precedence over correct reading order. Many texts also employ an explicit word divider character.[9]

One peculiarity of the Luwian writing system is that in some texts vowel signs, usually repeating the vowel of the preceding syllable, were used to fill up sign columns, so that new words would always start at the top of the line.[10] Some texts also exhibit the so-called "initial-a-final" pattern, where the word-initial a character is moved either to the top of the second column of signs or to the end of the word.[11]

Decipherment

Anatolian hieroglyphs first came to Western attention in the nineteenth century, when European explorers such as Johann Ludwig Burckhardt and Richard Francis Burton described pictographic inscriptions on walls in the city of Hama, Syria. The same characters were recorded in Boğazköy, and presumed by A. H. Sayce to be Hittite in origin.[12]

By 1915, with the Luwian language known from cuneiform, and a substantial quantity of Anatolian hieroglyphs transcribed and published, linguists started to make real progress in reading the script.[12] In the 1930s, it was partially deciphered by Ignace Gelb, Piero Meriggi, Emil Forrer, and Bedřich Hrozný. Its language was confirmed as Luwian in 1973 by J.D. Hawkins, Anna Morpurgo Davies and Günther Neumann, who corrected some previous errors about sign values, in particular emending the reading of symbols *376 and *377 from i, ī to zi, za.

Sign inventory

The script consists of on the order of 500 unique signs,[13] some with multiple values; a given sign may function as a logogram, a determinative or a syllabogram, or a combination thereof. The signs are numbered according to Laroche's sign list,[14] with a prefix of 'L.' or '*'. Logograms are transcribed in Latin in capital letters. For example, *90, an image of a foot, is transcribed as PES when used logographically, and with its phonemic value ti when used as a syllabogram. In the rare cases where the logogram cannot be transliterated into Latin, it is rendered through its approximate Hittite equivalent, recorded in Italic capitals, e.g. *216 ARHA. The most up-to-date sign list was compiled by Massimiliano Marazzi in 1998.[15]

Hawkins, Morpurgo-Davies and Neumann corrected some previous errors about sign values, in particular emending the reading of symbols *376 and *377 from i, ī to zi, za.

List of CV syllabograms

Anatolian Cv and vC syllabograms[16] [17]
Ca Ci Cu aC iC uc
a = 𔗷

á = 𔐓
ax ? = 𔗨

i = 𔓯

í = 𔕐

u = 𔑻
h- ha = 𔓷

ha ? = 𔔁
= 𔓟
hax = 𔕡

hi = 𔗒

= 𔕘

hu = 𔕙

= 𔖈

hw- hwa = 𔘰 hwi = 𔘰

hwix = 𔓎

k- ka = 𔗧

= 𔐾

ki = 𔗳

ki4 = 𔔓
kix = 𔔓

ku = 𔗜
kw- kwa = 𔕰 kwi = 𔕰
l- la = 𔓊

la = 𔗲
lax = 𔗽

li = 𔔹

li = 𔗲
= 𔒖
= 𔕇

lu = 𔗲
m- ma = 𔒅

= 𔖘
= 𔕖
max = 𔕖, 𔘅

mi = 𔖻

= 𔗘
= 𔖷

mu = 𔑿, 𔖛, 𔑾, 𔒀
n- na = 𔐤

= 𔕵

ni = 𔗐

= 𔓵
= 𔐽
nix = 𔗴

nu = 𔒴

= 𔖿

p- pa = 𔕸, 𔔁 ?

= 𔘅
pax = 𔓐

pi = 𔑉 pu = 𔕯

= 𔗣

r- ra = 𔖱 ri = 𔖱 ru = 𔗑

= 𔑳, 𔑵

ur = 𔖙
s- sa = 𔗔

= 𔗦
= 𔑷
sa4 = 𔗆
sa5 = 𔕮
sa6 = 𔔀
sa7 = 𔕣
sa8 = 𔖭

si = 𔓉

 ? = 𔗾

su = 𔖢

= 𔒂
= 𔗵

us = 𔗚
t- ta = 𔑰

= 𔐞
= 𔐬
ta4 = 𔕦
ta5 = 𔓇
ta6 = 𔑛
tax = 𔐭

ti = 𔑣

= 𔘟
 ? = 𔕦
ti4 ? = 𔓇

tu = 𔑡, 𔑢

= 𔕬
= 𔕭
tu4 = 𔔈

w- wa = 𔗬

= 𔓁
= 𔓀
wa4 = 𔓬
wa5 = 𔓩
wa6 = 𔓤
wa7 = 𔕁
wa9 = 𔔻

wi = 𔒻

wi = 𔗬
= 𔓁
= 𔓀
wi4 = 𔓬
wi5 = 𔓩
wi6 = 𔓤
wi7 = 𔕁
wi9 = 𔔻

y- ia = 𔓱

= 𔕑
= 𔖬

z- za = 𔖪, 𔖩

= 𔕹
= 𔕼
za4 = 𔒈
zax = 𔕽

zi = 𔖩

= 𔕠
= 𔕻
zi4 = 𔒚

zu ? = 𔗥, 𔕀

= 𔗵

Anatolian CVC(V) syllabograms[18] [17]
a+ra = 𔗸 a+ri = 𔗸 a+ = 𔐷
ara = 𔒟 ara = 𔒠 ari = 𔒟
ari = 𔒠
hara = 𔕆 hari = 𔕆 hur = 𔗹
i+ra = 𔓰 i+ri = 𔓰
kar = 𔕢
la+ra+a = 𔓍
pari = 𔐎
ra+a = 𔗸 ri+i = 𔓰
sara = 𔕕 sari = 𔕕
tal = 𔖞 tana = 𔗢 tapa = 𔒋
tár = 𔖤 tarax = 𔖤 tarix = 𔖤
tara = 𔖹 tari = 𔖹
zuwa = 𔕀
IUDEX+ra = 𔖤 IUDEX+ri = 𔖤

Transliteration of logograms is conventionally the term represented in Latin, in capital letters (e.g. PES for the logogram for "foot"). The syllabograms are transliterated, disambiguating homophonic signs analogously to cuneiform transliteration, e.g. ta=ta1, tá=ta2, and ta6 transliterate three distinct ways of representing phonemic /ta/.[19] Some of the homophonic signs have received further attention and new phonetic interpretation in recent years, e.g. tà has been argued to stand for /da/,[20] and á seems to have stood for /ʔa/ (distinct from /a/), representing the descendant of Proto-Indo-European */h1/.[21] One of the latest confirmed discoveries pertaining to the decipherment of Anatolian Hieroglyphs is the re-interpretation of the signs ta4 and ta5 as ⟨la/i⟩ and ⟨lá/í⟩ respectively [22]

List of Anatolian ideograms

Anatolian ideograms[23] [24]
ADORARE = 𔐅 AEDIFICARE = 𔔘, 𔒐 AEDIFICIUM = 𔔖 AEDIFICIUM.PONERE = 𔔘, 𔒐
AEDIFICIUM+MINUS = VASTUS) = 𔔗 ALA = 𔑗 AMPLECTI = 𔐈, 𔗱 ANIMAL = 𔗈
ANNUS = 𔕺 ANNUS+ANNUS = 𔖁 AQUA = 𔓳, 𔓴 AQUILA = 𔒟
ARGENTUM = 𔔣, 𔔤, 𔔦 ARHA = 𔓸, 𔓹 ASCIA = 𔔼 ASINUS = 𔑯, 𔒍
ASINUS2 = 𔑱 AUDIRE = 𔑒, 𔓅 AURIGA = 𔕄 AURIS+TU+MI = 𔑒, 𔓅
AVIS = 𔒚 AVIS2 = 𔒞 AVIS3 = 𔒜 AVIS4 = 𔒟
AVIS5 = 𔒝 AVISx = 𔒡 AVUS = 𔕳 BESTIA = 𔑫
BIBERE = 𔐇 BONUS = 𔕧 (2nd mil.), 𔓀 BONUS2 = 𔖢 BOS = 𔑺
BOS2 = 𔑼 BOS+MI = 𔑾 BOS.MI = 𔒀 BOS2.MI = 𔒁
BRACCHIUM = 𔐡 CAELUM = 𔓑 CANIS = 𔑬 CANIS2 = 𔑭
CAPERE = 𔐫 CAPERE+SCALPRUM = 𔕲 CAPERE2 = 𔐮, 𔒣 CAPERE2.CAPERE2 = 𔐭
CAPRA = 𔑶 CAPRA2 = 𔑸 CAPRA2A = 𔑹 CAPUT = 𔐉
CAPUT+SCALPRUM = 𔐊 CASTRUM = 𔔉, 𔔊, 𔔋 CENTUM = 𔗃, 𔕂, 𔕔 CERVUS = 𔑳
CERVUS2 = 𔑴 CERVUS3 = 𔑵 CONTRACTUS = 𔖅 COR = 𔖂
CORNU = 𔒂 CORNU+CAPUT = 𔙀 CRUS = 𔑛 CRUS2 = 𔑝
CRUS.CRUS = 𔑟, 𔑠 CRUS+FLUMEN = 𔑜 CRUX = 𔕛 CUBITUM = 𔔕
CULTER = 𔕿 CUM = 𔑀 CURRUS = 𔕃 DARE = 𔑈
DARE.DARE = 𔑊 DECEM = 𔗁 DELERE = 𔔚 DEUS = 𔖖
DEUS.DOMUS = 𔔛 (DEUS)VIA+TERRA = 𔓧 DIES = 𔖓, 𔖔, 𔖕 DOMINA = 𔐏
DOMINUS = 𔖺 DOMUS = 𔔙 DOMUS+MINUS = 𔔚 DOMUS+SCALA = 𔔞, 𔔟
DOMUS+X = 𔔝 EDERE = 𔐆 EGO = 𔐀, 𔘞 ? EGO2 = 𔐁
ENSIS = 𔐻 EQUUS = 𔑮 EUNUCHUS = 𔘑, 𔘐 EUNUCHUS2 =
EXERCITUS = 𔔰 FALX ? = 𔘝 FEMINA = 𔑘, 𔗌 FILIA = 𔐱
FILIUS = 𔐰 FILIUS.NEPOS = 𔕒 FINES = 𔓸 FINES+ha = 𔓹
FLAMMAE ? = 𔘔, 𔗅, 𔘖 FLUMEN = 𔓳, 𔓴 FONS = 𔓶 FORTIS = 𔐝
FRATER = 𔐰 FRATER2 = 𔔷 FRONS = 𔐚, 𔒉 FULGUR = 𔓣
FUSUS = 𔕗 GAZELLA = 𔑶 GENUFLECTERE = 𔑞 GRYLLUS = 𔒑
+LI = 𔓠 HALA = 𔕈 HALI = 𔕈 HALPA = 𔑞
HANA = 𔘮 HASTARIUS = 𔓈 HATTI = 𔓟 HATTI+li = 𔓠
HEROS = 𔐕 HORDEUM = 𔓎, 𔗻, 𔗼 HORREUM ? = 𔔡, 𔔢 HUR = 𔗹
HWI = 𔘰 IANUS = 𔒯 INFANS = 𔐰 INFRA = 𔐾, 𔐿
IRA = 𔐘 IŠUWA(URBS) = 𔔃 IUDEX = 𔖣 IUDEX.LA = 𔔸
IUSTITIA = 𔖣 IUSTITIA.LA = 𔔸 LA+LA = 𔓋 LAPIS = 𔔮
LAPIS+SCALPRUM = 𔔭 LECTUS = 𔕓 LEO = 𔑪 LEO2 = 𔑫
LEO+MONS.TU+LEO = 𔓭 LEPUS = 𔒋 LEPUS2 = 𔒌 LIx = 𔒗
LIBARE = 𔐜 LIBATIO = 𔒤 LIGARE = 𔐠 LIGNUM = 𔖰, 𔓄
LINGERE = 𔒈 LINGUA = 𔓊 LINGUA+CLAVUS = 𔓌 LIS = 𔐘
LITUUS = 𔖫 LITUUS+Á/LITUUS+á = 𔐔 LITUUS+na = 𔐥 LITUUS+u = 𔒊
LOCUS = 𔓤, 𔕝 LOQUI = 𔐖 LUNA = 𔓜 MAx = 𔒃
MAGNUS = 𔖙 MAGNUS.DOMINA = 𔐐 MAGNUS.DOMUS = 𔔜 MAGNUS.FILIA = 𔐴
MAGNUS.REX = 𔐒 MALLEUS = 𔔻 MALUS = 𔖟 MALUS2 = 𔖠
MANDARE = 𔑊 MANUS = 𔑁, 𔑂, 𔑂 MANUS.CULTER = 𔐺 MANUS+CULTER = 𔐻
MANUS+MINUS ? (LONGUS) = 𔑄, 𔑍 MATER = 𔑘, 𔗌 MENSA = 𔕊 MENSA2 = 𔕋
.REGIO = 𔔇 MILLE = 𔗄 MINISTRARE ? = 𔓐 MINUS = 𔖮
MONS = 𔓬 MONS2 = 𔐃 MONS.SARPA = 𔕍, 𔕎 MORI = 𔖯
MURUS ? = 𔔎 NEG = 𔕴 NEG2 = 𔕵 NEG3 = 𔕶
NEPOS = 𔕒 OCCIDENS = 𔖬 OCULUS = 𔐙 OMNIS(+MI) = 𔖝
OMNIS2 = 𔗣 ORIENS = 𔓛 OVIS = 𔒇 OVIS2 = 𔘺
PANIS = 𔓐 PANIS.SCUTELLA = 𔗛 PASTOR = 𔗫 PES = 𔑣
PES2 = 𔑦 PES2.PES = 𔑩 PES2.PES2 = 𔑨 PES.SCALA.ROTAE = 𔑤, 𔑥, 𔑧
PINCERNA = 𔖆, 𔖍, 𔖎, 𔖏, 𔘻 PISCIS = 𔒥 PITHOS = 𔕾 PITHOS.SCUTELLA/PITHOS = 𔕺
POCULUM = 𔖇 PODIUM = 𔔪 PONERE = 𔑇 PORTA = 𔔏, 𔔐
PORTA2 = 𔔑 POST = 𔐣 PRAE = 𔐍, 𔐎 PROPHETA ? = 𔙀
PUGNUS = 𔐨, 𔐪, 𔐯 PUGNUS+PUGNUS = 𔐠 PUGNUS+URBS = 𔐹 PUGNUS+X = 𔐩
PURUS = 𔕩, 𔕪 REGIO = 𔔆 REL = 𔕰 REX = 𔐑
REX.FILIA = 𔐳 REX.FILIUS = 𔐲 REX.INFANS = 𔐲 ROTA = 𔕈
SACERDOS = 𔖐 SACERDOS2 = 𔖥 SARA = 𔕕 SARI = 𔕕
SARMA = 𔑙, 𔑚 SARMA2 = 𔑙, 𔑚 SARPA = 𔕋 SCALPRUM = 𔔯
SCRIBA = 𔕭 SCUTELLA = 𔗆 SCUTUM = 𔔳 SERVUS = 𔖷
SIGILLUM = 𔕮 SOL = 𔓚, 𔘈, 𔘊 SOL2 = 𔓙 SOL2.MENSA = 𔕌
SOL2.THRONUS = 𔕌 SOLIUM = 𔕐 SPHINX = 𔒒 STATUA = 𔐌
STELE = 𔔭 SUB = 𔐾, 𔐿 SUPER = 𔔱 (earlier variant), 𔑏 (?) = 𔐞
TAL (?) = 𔖞 TALA (?) = 𔖞 TANA (?) = 𔗢 TELIPINU = 𔒲
TERRA = 𔓤, 𔕝 TEŠUB = 𔕥 THRONUS = 𔕊 THRONUS = 𔕋
THRONUS2 = 𔕏 TONITRUS = 𔓢 TURRIS ? = 𔔍 UNGULA = 𔒗
UNUS = 𔖭 UR = 𔖙 URBS = 𔔂 URBS+li = 𔔅
URBS-li = 𔔅 URBS-RA+li = 𔔄 URBS-RI?+li = 𔔄 URBS+RA-li = 𔔄
URBS+RI?-li = 𔔄 URCEUS = 𔖆, 𔖍, 𔖎, 𔖏, 𔘻 US = 𔗚 VACUUS = = 𔔗
VAS = 𔖂 VASTUS = 𔔗 VIA = 𔓾, 𔑕, 𔓿 VIA+TERRA.SCALPRUM = 𔓥
VIA+TERRA+SCALPRUM = 𔓦 VINUM = 𔒻 VIR = 𔕟 (earlier variant), 𔕠 VIR2 = 𔖶 (word separator)
VIR2.MINUS = 𔖯 VITA = 𔖡 VITELLUS = 𔒃 VITIS = 𔒻
2 = 𔖳 3 = 𔖸 4 = 𔖻 5 = 𔖼
8 = 𔖽 9 = 𔖿 12 = 𔘍

Unicode

Anatolian hieroglyphs were added to the Unicode Standard in June, 2015 with the release of version 8.0.

The Unicode block for Anatolian Hieroglyphs is U+14400–U+1467F:

  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+1440x 𔐀𔐁𔐂𔐃𔐄𔐅𔐆𔐇𔐈𔐉𔐊𔐋𔐌𔐍𔐎𔐏
U+1441x 𔐐𔐑𔐒𔐓𔐔𔐕𔐖𔐗𔐘𔐙𔐚𔐛𔐜𔐝𔐞𔐟
U+1442x 𔐠𔐡𔐢𔐣𔐤𔐥𔐦𔐧𔐨𔐩𔐪𔐫𔐬𔐭𔐮𔐯
U+1443x 𔐰𔐱𔐲𔐳𔐴𔐵𔐶𔐷𔐸𔐹𔐺𔐻𔐼𔐽𔐾𔐿
U+1444x 𔑀𔑁𔑂𔑃𔑄𔑅𔑆𔑇𔑈𔑉𔑊𔑋𔑌𔑍𔑎𔑏
U+1445x 𔑐𔑑𔑒𔑓𔑔𔑕𔑖𔑗𔑘𔑙𔑚𔑛𔑜𔑝𔑞𔑟
U+1446x 𔑠𔑡𔑢𔑣𔑤𔑥𔑦𔑧𔑨𔑩𔑪𔑫𔑬𔑭𔑮𔑯
U+1447x 𔑰𔑱𔑲𔑳𔑴𔑵𔑶𔑷𔑸𔑹𔑺𔑻𔑼𔑽𔑾𔑿
U+1448x 𔒀𔒁𔒂𔒃𔒄𔒅𔒆𔒇𔒈𔒉𔒊𔒋𔒌𔒍𔒎𔒏
U+1449x 𔒐𔒑𔒒𔒓𔒔𔒕𔒖𔒗𔒘𔒙𔒚𔒛𔒜𔒝𔒞𔒟
U+144Ax 𔒠𔒡𔒢𔒣𔒤𔒥𔒦𔒧𔒨𔒩𔒪𔒫𔒬𔒭𔒮𔒯
U+144Bx 𔒰𔒱𔒲𔒳𔒴𔒵𔒶𔒷𔒸𔒹𔒺𔒻𔒼𔒽𔒾𔒿
U+144Cx 𔓀𔓁𔓂𔓃𔓄𔓅𔓆𔓇𔓈𔓉𔓊𔓋𔓌𔓍𔓎𔓏
U+144Dx 𔓐𔓑𔓒𔓓𔓔𔓕𔓖𔓗𔓘𔓙𔓚𔓛𔓜𔓝𔓞𔓟
U+144Ex 𔓠𔓡𔓢𔓣𔓤𔓥𔓦𔓧𔓨𔓩𔓪𔓫𔓬𔓭𔓮𔓯
U+144Fx 𔓰𔓱𔓲𔓳𔓴𔓵𔓶𔓷𔓸𔓹𔓺𔓻𔓼𔓽𔓾𔓿
U+1450x 𔔀𔔁𔔂𔔃𔔄𔔅𔔆𔔇𔔈𔔉𔔊𔔋𔔌𔔍𔔎𔔏
U+1451x 𔔐𔔑𔔒𔔓𔔔𔔕𔔖𔔗𔔘𔔙𔔚𔔛𔔜𔔝𔔞𔔟
U+1452x 𔔠𔔡𔔢𔔣𔔤𔔥𔔦𔔧𔔨𔔩𔔪𔔫𔔬𔔭𔔮𔔯
U+1453x 𔔰𔔱𔔲𔔳𔔴𔔵𔔶𔔷𔔸𔔹𔔺𔔻𔔼𔔽𔔾𔔿
U+1454x 𔕀𔕁𔕂𔕃𔕄𔕅𔕆𔕇𔕈𔕉𔕊𔕋𔕌𔕍𔕎𔕏
U+1455x 𔕐𔕑𔕒𔕓𔕔𔕕𔕖𔕗𔕘𔕙𔕚𔕛𔕜𔕝𔕞𔕟
U+1456x 𔕠𔕡𔕢𔕣𔕤𔕥𔕦𔕧𔕨𔕩𔕪𔕫𔕬𔕭𔕮𔕯
U+1457x 𔕰𔕱𔕲𔕳𔕴𔕵𔕶𔕷𔕸𔕹𔕺𔕻𔕼𔕽𔕾𔕿
U+1458x 𔖀𔖁𔖂𔖃𔖄𔖅𔖆𔖇𔖈𔖉𔖊𔖋𔖌𔖍𔖎𔖏
U+1459x 𔖐𔖑𔖒𔖓𔖔𔖕𔖖𔖗𔖘𔖙𔖚𔖛𔖜𔖝𔖞𔖟
U+145Ax 𔖠𔖡𔖢𔖣𔖤𔖥𔖦𔖧𔖨𔖩𔖪𔖫𔖬𔖭𔖮𔖯
U+145Bx 𔖰𔖱𔖲𔖳𔖴𔖵𔖶𔖷𔖸𔖹𔖺𔖻𔖼𔖽𔖾𔖿
U+145Cx 𔗀𔗁𔗂𔗃𔗄𔗅𔗆𔗇𔗈𔗉𔗊𔗋𔗌𔗍𔗎𔗏
U+145Dx 𔗐𔗑𔗒𔗓𔗔𔗕𔗖𔗗𔗘𔗙𔗚𔗛𔗜𔗝𔗞𔗟
U+145Ex 𔗠𔗡𔗢𔗣𔗤𔗥𔗦𔗧𔗨𔗩𔗪𔗫𔗬𔗭𔗮𔗯
U+145Fx 𔗰𔗱𔗲𔗳𔗴𔗵𔗶𔗷𔗸𔗹𔗺𔗻𔗼𔗽𔗾𔗿
U+1460x 𔘀𔘁𔘂𔘃𔘄𔘅𔘆𔘇𔘈𔘉𔘊𔘋𔘌𔘍𔘎𔘏
U+1461x 𔘐𔘑𔘒𔘓𔘔𔘕𔘖𔘗𔘘𔘙𔘚𔘛𔘜𔘝𔘞𔘟
U+1462x 𔘠𔘡𔘢𔘣𔘤𔘥𔘦𔘧𔘨𔘩𔘪𔘫𔘬𔘭𔘮𔘯
U+1463x 𔘰𔘱𔘲𔘳𔘴𔘵𔘶𔘷𔘸𔘹𔘺𔘻𔘼𔘽𔘾𔘿
U+1464x 𔙀𔙁𔙂𔙃𔙄𔙅𔙆
U+1465x
U+1466x
U+1467x
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 16.0
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

See also

References

  1. ^ Final Accepted Script Proposal
  2. ^ Payne, A. (2004). Hieroglyphic Luwian. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. p. 1. ISBN 3-447-05026-8.
  3. ^ Melchert, H. Craig (2004). "Luvian". In Woodard, Roger D. (ed.). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56256-2.
  4. ^ Melchert, H. Craig (1996). "Anatolian Hieroglyphs". In Daniels, Peter T.; Bright, William (eds.). The World's Writing Systems . New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-507993-0.
  5. ^ Bryce, Trevor R. "The Trojan War: Is There Truth behind the Legend?" Near Eastern Archaeology, vol. 65, no. 3, 2002, pp. 182–95
  6. ^ For a Hurrian text written with Anatolian Hieroglyphs, see Hawkins, J.D. (2003). "Scripts and Texts", in Melchert, H.C. (ed.), The Luwians, Brill, p. 141. On loanwords from different languages in the hieroglyphic texts of the Iron age see Giusfredi, F. (2012). Note sui prestiti accadici e urartei in luvio-geroglifico di età del Ferro, in P. Cotticelli Kurras et al. (eds.), Interferenze linguistiche e contatti culturali in Anatolia tra II e I millennio a.C. Studi in onore di Onofrio Carruba in occasione del suo 80° compleanno, pp. 153–171.
  7. ^ Plöchl, R. (2003). Einführung ins Hieroglyphen-Luwische (in German). Dresden: Verlag der TU Dresden. p. 12. ISBN 3-86005-351-5.
  8. ^ Yakubovich, I. (2008). "Hittite-Luvian Bilingualism and the Origin of Anatolian Hieroglyphs". Acta Linguistica Petropolitana. 4 (1): 9–36.
  9. ^ Vertegaal 2020, p. 2.
  10. ^ Vertegaal 2020, p. 11-14.
  11. ^ Yakubovich, Ilya; Burgin, James M. (2024). ""Initial-a-final", Luwian low vowels, and language contact in the Syro-Anatolian world". Kadmos. 63 (1–2): 115–165.
  12. ^ a b Pope, Maurice (1999). The Story of Decipherment: From Egyptian Hieroglyphs to Mayan Script (rev. ed.). New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28105-X.
  13. ^ Laroche (1960) lists 524, but several signs separated by Laroche are now considered identical (e.g. *63 and *64 with *69, itself possibly a variant of *59 MANUS; *94 with *91 PES.SCALA.ROTAE (the "rollerskate" glyph); *136 with *43 CAPERE, etc.)
  14. ^ Laroche, Emmanuel (1960). Les Hiéroglyphes Hittites. Paris: Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
  15. ^ Payne 2010, p. 11.
  16. ^ Marazzi, Bolatti-Guzzo & Dardano 1998, p. 27–32.
  17. ^ a b Payne 2010, p. 203-206.
  18. ^ Marazzi, Bolatti-Guzzo & Dardano 1998, p. 33.
  19. ^ see also the article at the Indo-European Database Archived July 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Rieken, E. (2008): "Die Zeichen <ta>, <tá> und <tà> in den hieroglyphen-luwischen Inschriften der Nachgroßreichszeit." In: Archi, A.; Francia, R. (eds.): VI Congresso Internazionale die Ittitilogia, Roma, 5.-9. Settembre 2005. Roma: CNR, 637–647.
  21. ^ Simon, Zsolt (2013). "Once again on the Hieroglyphic Luwian sign *19 〈á〉". Indogermanische Forschungen. 118 (2013): 1–22. doi:10.1515/indo.2013.118.2013.1. S2CID 171055457.
  22. ^ Rieken, E. and Yakubovich I (2010): "The New Values of Luwian Signs L 319 and L 172." In: Singer, I.(ed.): Ipamati kistamati pari tumatimis: Luwian and Hittite studies presented to J. D. Hawkins on the occasion of his 70th birthday. Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Institute of Archaeology, 199–219.
  23. ^ Marazzi, Bolatti-Guzzo & Dardano 1998, pp. 24–70.
  24. ^ Payne 2010, p. 197-203.

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