Roger D. Woodard
Author of The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology
About the Author
Roger D. Woodard is Andrew V. V. Raymond Professor of the Classics and professor of linguistics at the University of Buffalo (The State University of New York).
Series
Works by Roger D. Woodard
Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer: A Linguistic Interpretation of the Origin of the Greek Alphabet and the Continuity of Ancient Greek Literacy (1997) 18 copies
Aeolic and Aeolians: Origins of an Ancient Greek Language and its Community of Speakers (2024) 3 copies
Fasti 1 copy
Associated Works
The Atlas of Languages: The Origin and Development of Languages Throughout the World (1996) — Contributor — 428 copies, 4 reviews
Greeks and barbarians : essays on the interactions between Greeks and non-Greeks in antiquity and the consequences for Eurocentrism (1997) — Contributor — 5 copies
Arethusa, Volume 35, Number 1, Epos and Mythos: Language and Narrative in Homeric Epic — Contributor — 2 copies
Panhellenes at methone : graph in late geometric and protoarchaic methone (2017) — Contributor — 2 copies
Arethusa (vol 55 no 2) — Contributor — 1 copy
Arethusa (vol 56 no 3): Late Foucault & Classical Antiquity — Contributor — 1 copy
Arethusa (vol 57 no 1): Musical Structure in Greek Tragedy — Contributor — 1 copy
Arethusa (vol 57 no 2) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1951
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- University of Buffalo
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2527510.html
the European chapters extracted from the Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages, with a foreword explaining that the languages treated here are those with written records from before the fall of the Western Roman Empire (Cambridge University Press have generously put the whole thing online). That gives a shorter list than I would have thought, the chapters of the book covering Attic Greek, other Greek dialects, Latin, other Italic show more languages, Etruscan, continental Celtic, Gothic and ancient Nordic. I had not realised that written Irish was later than that. Obviously the chapters on Attic Greek and Latin have the most to say, but they are reasonably disciplined and establish a framework for the other languages that the reader may be less familiar with.
My discovery here is the weirdness of Etruscan, the only language on the list which is not from the Indo-European family. I'm intrigued by the numbers from one to ten - θu; zal; ci; huθ (or śa); maχ; śa (or huθ); semφ; cezp (probably); nurφ; śar - we don't even know whether huθ or śa is four or six. It's fascinating that the Etruscan word "zatlaθ", meaning axe carrier, became Latin "satelles" meaning bodyguard and is the origin of our word "satellite". I'm interested that like some Finno-Ugric languages, nouns take a lot of suffixes but have no gender. (Wikipedia says that the nouns did have gender, but Helmut Rix in this book says not.) And this language, long extinct, is a substratum for Latin which in turn has influenced every European language spoken today.
It is impressive that we have been able to reconstruct as much as we have, and I would have liked to read more about the process by which the ancient scripts were decoded. Most of them are at least vaguely related to the Latin and Greek alphabets which survive today, but only vaguely; if I were trying to decode them, I wouldn't know where to start. Some mysteries remain; the Gaulish letter known as the Tau Gallicum could have been pronounced st, ts, θ, or perhaps an emphatic t' like the Georgian ტ. Or possibly different Gauls pronounced it in different ways at different times.
And all of these languages are a melancholy reminder that life is short, and we have no idea what will survive. Many of the few surviving inscriptions in the lost language of Venetic are dedications to the goddess Reitia. Among other things, she is supposed to have been a goddess of writing, which is just as well as the other Venetic gods have been forgotten, as has any speaker of the language who did not leave their name in writing. And these languages, spoken by hundred of thousands who we could not now understand, are the exceptions rather than the rules. Humans have used language for hundreds of thousands of years, and the earliest European writing is the Linear B referred to in the extract above, from 3500 years ago, and the earliest Egyptian hieroglyphs are a thousand years older. So more than 95% of the thoughts ever thought, the stories ever told, the songs ever sung, are forgotten and cannot be retrieved. show less
the European chapters extracted from the Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages, with a foreword explaining that the languages treated here are those with written records from before the fall of the Western Roman Empire (Cambridge University Press have generously put the whole thing online). That gives a shorter list than I would have thought, the chapters of the book covering Attic Greek, other Greek dialects, Latin, other Italic show more languages, Etruscan, continental Celtic, Gothic and ancient Nordic. I had not realised that written Irish was later than that. Obviously the chapters on Attic Greek and Latin have the most to say, but they are reasonably disciplined and establish a framework for the other languages that the reader may be less familiar with.
My discovery here is the weirdness of Etruscan, the only language on the list which is not from the Indo-European family. I'm intrigued by the numbers from one to ten - θu; zal; ci; huθ (or śa); maχ; śa (or huθ); semφ; cezp (probably); nurφ; śar - we don't even know whether huθ or śa is four or six. It's fascinating that the Etruscan word "zatlaθ", meaning axe carrier, became Latin "satelles" meaning bodyguard and is the origin of our word "satellite". I'm interested that like some Finno-Ugric languages, nouns take a lot of suffixes but have no gender. (Wikipedia says that the nouns did have gender, but Helmut Rix in this book says not.) And this language, long extinct, is a substratum for Latin which in turn has influenced every European language spoken today.
It is impressive that we have been able to reconstruct as much as we have, and I would have liked to read more about the process by which the ancient scripts were decoded. Most of them are at least vaguely related to the Latin and Greek alphabets which survive today, but only vaguely; if I were trying to decode them, I wouldn't know where to start. Some mysteries remain; the Gaulish letter known as the Tau Gallicum could have been pronounced st, ts, θ, or perhaps an emphatic t' like the Georgian ტ. Or possibly different Gauls pronounced it in different ways at different times.
And all of these languages are a melancholy reminder that life is short, and we have no idea what will survive. Many of the few surviving inscriptions in the lost language of Venetic are dedications to the goddess Reitia. Among other things, she is supposed to have been a goddess of writing, which is just as well as the other Venetic gods have been forgotten, as has any speaker of the language who did not leave their name in writing. And these languages, spoken by hundred of thousands who we could not now understand, are the exceptions rather than the rules. Humans have used language for hundreds of thousands of years, and the earliest European writing is the Linear B referred to in the extract above, from 3500 years ago, and the earliest Egyptian hieroglyphs are a thousand years older. So more than 95% of the thoughts ever thought, the stories ever told, the songs ever sung, are forgotten and cannot be retrieved. show less
Contains a chapter summarizing the historical context, writing system(s), phonology, morphology, and syntax of about every reasonably well-known language attested before about AD 500, as well as a number of more fragmentarily known ones. Being written by different authors, the various chapters differ a bit in style, focus, and depth, but all maintain a similar format.
More-or-less all the information is, I expect, available online, and in some cases significant advances in our understanding show more have occurred since publication, but while getting all the information for free may be possible, it is certainly not easy - the WP articles on many of the languages covered are, for example, rather sorry compared to the treatments here. So if an encyclopaedia of ancient languages sounds like your sort of thing, and you can find a copy for a reasonable price, I do recommend it. show less
More-or-less all the information is, I expect, available online, and in some cases significant advances in our understanding show more have occurred since publication, but while getting all the information for free may be possible, it is certainly not easy - the WP articles on many of the languages covered are, for example, rather sorry compared to the treatments here. So if an encyclopaedia of ancient languages sounds like your sort of thing, and you can find a copy for a reasonable price, I do recommend it. show less
Lists
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 18
- Also by
- 10
- Members
- 426
- Popularity
- #57,312
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 64
- Favorited
- 1












