Hand of Irulegi: ancient bronze artefact could help trace origins of Basque language [View all]
The link to this Guardian article appeared in my Nature News Brief a few days back:
Hand of Irulegi: ancient bronze artefact could help trace origins of Basque language
An excerpt:
More than 2,000 years after it was probably hung from the door of a mud-brick house in northern Spain to bring luck, a flat, lifesize bronze hand engraved with dozens of strange symbols could help scholars trace the development of one of the worlds most mysterious languages.
Although the piece known as the Hand of Irulegi was discovered last year by archaeologists from the Aranzadi Science Society who have been digging near the city of Pamplona since 2017, its importance has only recently become clear.
Experts studying the hand and its inscriptions now believe it to be both the oldest written example of Proto-Basque and a find that upends much of what was previously known about the Vascones, a late iron age tribe who inhabited parts of northern Spain before the arrival of the Romans, and whose language is thought to have been an ancestor of modern-day Basque, or euskera.
Until now, scholars had supposed the Vascones had no proper written language save for words found on coins and only began writing after the Romans introduced the Latin alphabet. But the five words written in 40 characters identified as Vasconic, suggest otherwise.
The first and only word to be identified so far is sorioneku, a forerunner of the modern Basque word zorioneko, meaning good luck or good omen.
Javier Velaza, a professor of Latin philology at the University of Barcelona and one of the experts who deciphered the hand, said the discovery had finally confirmed the existence of a written Vasconic language...
Basque, along with Hungarian, is one of two languages in Europe that are not in the Indo-European family; other examples are languages in the Sami family of languages, which survive in Scandinavia and parts of North European Russia.