Social:Armazic language

From HandWiki
Short description: Extinct written Aramaic language
Armazic
Native toCaucasus
Era0–200 CE
Afro-Asiatic
  • Semitic
    • Central Semitic
      • Aramaic
        • (?)
          • Armazic
Language codes
ISO 639-3xrm
xrm
GlottologNone
Armazi Bilingual.jpg

Armazic is an extinct written Aramaic language used as a language of administration in the South Caucasus in the first centuries AD.[1] Both the Armazic language and script were related to the Aramaic of northern Mesopotamia. The name "Armazic" was introduced by the Georgian scholar Giorgi Tsereteli in reference to Armazi, an ancient site near Mtskheta, Georgia, where several specimens of a local idiom of written Aramaic have been found. Beyond several sites in eastern Georgia, an Armazic-type inscription is also present on the temple of Garni in Armenia. The latest specimen of Armazic is an inscription of a 3rd-century plate from Bori, Georgia.[2]

References

  1. Mgaloblishvili, Tamila; Rapp, Stephen H. (2011). "Chapter Seventeen: Manichaeism in late antique Georgia?". in van den Berg, Jacob Albert; Kotzé, Annemaré; Nicklas, Tobias et al.. In Search of Truth: Augustine, Manichaeism and other Gnosticism: Studies for Johannes van Oort at Sixty. Leiden: Brill. p. 287f. ISBN 978-90-04-18997-3. https://books.google.com/books?id=qeYE234vlgwC&q=%22armazic%22&pg=PA287. Retrieved 1 September 2014. 
  2. Rapp, Stephen H. (2014). The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes: Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature. Ashgate Publishing. p. 215. ISBN 978-1472425522.