Proto-Iberian

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Proto-Iberian
Dankwā/Ibērom
Pronunciation[ˈdan.kwaː]
Created byIohanen
SettingIberia
EthnicityEast Iberians/Graeco-Iberians
Indo-European
  • Proto-Iberian
Iberian Empire.svg
The borders of the Iberian Empire

The Proto-Iberian language is the ancestor language (though not really proto-) of the Iberian branch of the Indo-European languages. The Proto-Iberian language is associated with the 1200 BCE to 100 BC timestamp. although its division from Proto-Indo-European occured much earlier.

The Iberians as an ethnicity are known to have appeared as a very small group of tribes in East Iberia that later united and expanded to the entirety of Iberia (that would later result into two distinct languages) within the centuries. Its vocabulary is almost entirely derived from Proto-Indo-European with exceptions of late borrowings from Ancient Greek and, sometimes, Latin.

Terminology

The language name derives itself from an Ancient Greek reborrowing that comes from the River Ibēr (actual River Ebro in Spain), named by the Celtici.

History

The Iberian tribes territory in 800 BC. The Vrāteres were not Iberians (Ibēres) but a Celto-Iberian tribe that was later assimilated.

The Iberian peoples are an Indo-European people that first appeared during the Atlantic Bronze Age, migrating from the Southwest of modern France to the Southeast of Iberia. There, they developed into many divided tribes who would later - with the arrival of the Ancient Greeks and their contact with them - reunite into a single tribe ruled by a so called Teutārēks (a leader similar to a king without leadership of the army). Their territory was about the same until the arrival of the Ancient Greeks in Emporion.

When the Greeks arrived and founded the cities of Rhode and Emporion, the Iberians had already expanded into the region and thereafter established commercial relations with them. As the time passed and the contact became stronger, the Iberians adopted Greek technologies (state and army organization, philosophy, capital, etc.), including their alphabet, and parts of culture/religion (architecture, gods, statues). After about 100 years of direct contact (c. 480 BC), the Greeks were integrated into the new Iberian state, though the contact with Massalia was kept and Emporion and Rhode became the main commercial centres in Iberia.

With the new concepts adopted from the Greeks, the Iberians seeked to expand westwards to gather more resources and comercialize them (mostly with Greeks and Romans). The tribes located in the center of Iberia were quickly dominated as they had a similar culture and language as the Iberians. While expandind westwards, they found the bellicose tribes of the Callaeci and Lusitani, which resisted against their control. After years of war, the Lusitani had accepted a truce as being a state under Iberian control, holding total state autonomy while having to provide soldiers or army supplies if needed. The Callaeci still resisted until much after.

Map of the Iberian state in 140 BC.

At the start of the 1st century AC, the Proto-Iberian language had already started to diverge into more languages. The reason for its late preservation is the fact that it was, at early, an isolated language compared to other European languages.

Romanization

Romanizing is pretty straightforward, there are only 5 vowels (all of which have long variants) and 17 consonants that are one-to-one correspondences totalizing 27 letters.

Romanization of Proto-Iberian
Aa Āā Bb Dd Ðð Ee Ēē  Ff Gg Ii Īī Jj Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo Ōō  Pp Rr Ss Tt Uu Ūū  Vv Ww Zz

Phonology

Consonants

Proto-Iberian Consonants
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Labial-velar
Nasal m n
Stop p b t d k g kʷ ɡʷ
Fricative f v ð (θ) s z
Approximant j w
Lateral l
Trill r
  • [θ] is an allophone of [ð] on initial position.
  • [z] appears in between vowels and only in native words of Proto-Indo-European origin. It can be sometimes considered an allophone of [s] before a nasal. Example: auzom ("gold")

Vowels

Proto-Iberian vowels
Front Central Back
Close i iː u uː
Mid e eː o oː
Open ä äː
  • At a later stage of the language, [i] could be realized as [ɪ].

Diphthongs

Proto-Iberian diphthongs
-i/j -u/w
a- ā- aj aːj aw aːw
e- ē- ej eːj ew eːw
o- ō- oj oːj ow oːw