Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Latin and Punic in Contact? The Case of the Bu Njem Ostraca

View through CrossRef
The ostraca of Bu Njem come from a military outpost on the North African fringes of the Empire. Vernacular languages were spoken in the area. The ostraca record, among other things, contact between soldiers and the local population, and contain various African (Punic or ‘Libyan’) words and names, some of them previously unrecorded. The soldiers themselves have in many cases African names, or names with a special African connection, and it is likely that many were recruited locally. If so they may not have been fluent Latin speakers, and consequently the Latin which they wrote raises unusual questions. Is it Latin at all, or perhaps a pidgin or Creole? Or, on the contrary, is the language merely bureaucratic and formulaic Latin of no great interest? Do we, at last, have some hard evidence for a regional variety of Latin, in this case perhaps influenced by a substratum language or languages?.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Latin and Punic in Contact? The Case of the Bu Njem Ostraca
Description:
The ostraca of Bu Njem come from a military outpost on the North African fringes of the Empire.
Vernacular languages were spoken in the area.
The ostraca record, among other things, contact between soldiers and the local population, and contain various African (Punic or ‘Libyan’) words and names, some of them previously unrecorded.
The soldiers themselves have in many cases African names, or names with a special African connection, and it is likely that many were recruited locally.
If so they may not have been fluent Latin speakers, and consequently the Latin which they wrote raises unusual questions.
Is it Latin at all, or perhaps a pidgin or Creole? Or, on the contrary, is the language merely bureaucratic and formulaic Latin of no great interest? Do we, at last, have some hard evidence for a regional variety of Latin, in this case perhaps influenced by a substratum language or languages?.

Related Results

Rome, Carthage, and Numidia: Diplomatic Favouritism before the Third Punic War
Rome, Carthage, and Numidia: Diplomatic Favouritism before the Third Punic War
ABSTRACTThis article examines Rome’s diplomatic relations with Carthage and Numidia in the period between the Second and Third Punic Wars. Polybius’ suggestion that Rome consistent...
An Early-Tudor Oxford Schoolbook
An Early-Tudor Oxford Schoolbook
One of the most attractive genres of educational literature consists of the sets of Latin and English prose passages written by English schoolmasters during the fifteenth and sixte...
Knocking sovereign customers off their pedestals? When contact staff educate, amateurize, and penalize deviant customers
Knocking sovereign customers off their pedestals? When contact staff educate, amateurize, and penalize deviant customers
Promoted by marketing discourses, customer sovereignty is characterized by the cult of the customer and the belief that contact staff have to serve the customer. However, research ...
Blame the Boletus? Demystifying Mushrooms in Latin Literature
Blame the Boletus? Demystifying Mushrooms in Latin Literature
Keeping in mind Emily Gowers's dictum that ‘food, for the Roman writer who chose to discuss it, was simultaneously important and trivial’, let us go on a mushroom hunt through the ...
The Colors and Flavors of My Puerto Rico
The Colors and Flavors of My Puerto Rico
Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee’s song “Despacito” shattered numerous records to become one of the most successful Spanish-language songs in U.S. pop music history. Declared 2017’s “So...
Editor’s welcome, PORTAL, Vol. 5, No. 1, January 2008
Editor’s welcome, PORTAL, Vol. 5, No. 1, January 2008
The first issue of PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies for 2008 is a special issue with the title “Hyperworld(s): Language, Culture, and History in the Latin ...
Research in the Political Economy of Afro-Latin America
Research in the Political Economy of Afro-Latin America
Ideally, the study of the political economy of Afro-Latin America should be part and parcel of that of the political economy of Latin America as a whole. Unfortunately, true to the...

Recent Results


Back to Top