-
- Alphabet Originated
Centuries
- Earlier in Ancient
Nubia
-
-
- Reported: Nov. 23, 1999
-
- Sometime during the beginning of the
second millennium B.C., long before ancient biblical times, a
traveler passing through a desert valley of what is now southern
Egypt which was ancient Ethiopia, stopped at a rock and inscribed
on it his name, his title and probably a short prayer for safe
passage.
-
- The discovery of this traveler's ancient
calling card, and another one similar to it, indicates that the
first alphabet, from which all modern alphabets have evolved,
is centuries older than previously believed. It was probably
not invented in Egypt, as previously thought, or in the Levant
Region, what is now Syria, Lebanon and Israel [western Asia].
-
- Until now, scholars believed that the
forefather of written Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, virtually all alphabets,
including ours, was invented in the 1700s B.C. The inscriptions
in Egypt now point towards an origin in the 1900s B.C. The significance
of the discovery was determined by a team of scholars from The
Johns Hopkins University, Yale University, Princeton Theological
Seminary and the West Semitic Research Project in California.
The group presented its findings at an American Oriental Society
conference Nov. 22.
-
- "These inscriptions are for epigraphers
what Lucy was for palaeontologists," said Kyle McCarter
Jr., the William Foxwell Albright Chair in Biblical and Ancient
Near Eastern Studies at Johns Hopkins University and an expert
in epigraphy, the study of ancient writings. The inscriptions
were discovered in the summer of 1998 in a desert valley called,
in Arabic language, "The Valley of Horrors." The finder
was Egyptologist John Darnell, an assistant professor at Yale
and former Hopkins undergrad.
-
- Darnell, who stumbled across the rock
while surveying the area, was unfamiliar with the writings. When
he returned to the United States, he brought photos of them to
Chip Dobbs-Allsopp, who studies the writings of the Iron Age,
or ancient Biblical times.
-
- Dobbs-Allsopp, who received his graduate
degree at Hopkins and is now an assistant professor at Princeton
Theological Seminary, immediately suspected that these inscriptions
predated anything seen before. He contacted McCarter, his mentor
at Hopkins and one of the few people in the world who can decipher
archaic alphabetic inscriptions.
-
- McCarter, who has translated some of
the Dead Sea Scrolls and other artifacts, has spent much of his
career tracking down the origins of the alphabet. "Until
now, we believed that the alphabet had been invented by Semitic-speaking
people of the Levant Valley [area in western Asia], who were
inspired by the Egyptian hieroglyphics," McCarter said.
-
- "This discovery suggests that
it was invented at least two centuries earlier that we believed.
It also tells us that the alphabet was probably invented in Egypt
by some of the many Semitic-speaking people [ancient Ethiopians]
who lived or worked in [ancient Kemet] Egypt."
-
- Last summer, accompanied by Egyptian
soldiers for protection, a team of scientists including Darnell,
Dobbs-Allsopp and Bruce Zuckerman and Marilyn Lundberg of the
West Semitic Research Project of the University of Southern California,
visited the desert valley site to record the inscriptions. The
area can be dangerous; it is an inhospitable, sparsely populated
region in southern Egypt [which was ancient Ethiopia].
-
- Especially threatening are some of
its inhabitants: deadly snakes and scorpions and desert animals
that come out at night. The group worked there for several days
in 120 degree heat, taking high resolution photographs and documenting
the inscriptions.
-
- Translating the inscriptions is tricky,
said McCarter. "The earliest examples of a writing system
can never quite be read; it isn't until later when the system
becomes conventionalized that the chances of a clear reading
become more likely," he said. "However, it does bear
some clear elements of Semitic writing, like the words god'
and chief' and a few others.
With our limited understanding of the words, there is a fear
of forcing an interpretation of the inscription. But I think
we can safely say that it is an inscription of the two men's
personal names, their titles and possibly a prayer to a local
god." McCarter believes that a better translation will come,
however, as the early alphabet becomes better understood and
more examples are found.
-
-
- Note: This information has
been adapted from a news release issued by Johns Hopkins University
for the media and other members of the public. If you wish to
quote from any part of this story, please credit Johns Hopkins
University as the original source.
-
- Source: Johns Hopkins University
(http://www.jhu.edu) Contact: Leslie Newkirk Rice, News &
Information Representative Email: lnr@jhu.edu
-
- Give us your
thoughts and opinions!
-
- |
NEWSLETTERS | KINGDOM |
-
- |
KINGDOM | ABOUT US | BOOKS | SCULPTURES | MUSIC |
- | SHOPPING CART | CUSTOMER SERVICE |
| GLOSSARY OF TERMS | OPEN OUR EYES | NEWSLETTERS |
- | BEYOND
WORDS
| YOUR EYES |
- |
KNOWLEDGE LINKS | NEW BEGINNINGS | WHAT'S
GOING ON
|
-
- ©A.B.N.
Enterprises, 1999-2008, all rights reserved. The words
- African
By Nature are registered trademarks of A.B.N. Enterprises.
- Copyright
-