Proto-Canaanite, also referred to as Proto-Canaan, Old Canaanite, or Canaanite, [5] is the name given to either a script ancestral to the Phoenician or Paleo-Hebrew script with undefined affinity to Proto-Sinaitic, [7] or to the Proto-Sinaitic script (c. 16th century BC), when found in Canaan. [8][9][10][11] While no extant inscription in the Phoenician alphabet is older than c.
1050 BC, [12. Proto-Sinaitic / Proto. The earliest alphabet-from which all other alphabets in the world are derived-was invented in Canaan in the late 18th or early 17th century B.C.
This alphabet consisting of pictographs is referred to by scholars as the proto-Canaanite alphabet. Only a few short inscriptions in this alphabet have been found in Canaan, however. EARLY ATTEMPTS AT CANAANITE WRITING Byblian In the light of present information, the origin of the alphabet appears as the culmination of developments which took place in the Levant, where both Egyptian, and Mesopotamian (cuneiform) writing were known and occasionally used from the third millennium B.C.
onwards. That the earliest 'Canaanite' writing, from which the later Phoenician. The Proto-Canaanite system spread steadily throughout the ancient world and preempted the need for a second, parallel invention.
the mode of the system's development, based on acrophony, went unrecognized Gelb, who gave more attention to remote analogies drawn from different types writing systems than to concrete epigraphic data. *"Proto-Semitic alphabet" (font semear.ttf) is not a scholarly concept, nor is it historically attested, but is part of the theology of a particular religious group. The earliest Proto-Canaanite inscriptions, the so called Lachish dagger and perhaps also the Gezer potsherd, can be dated to 17th-15th century BC (on archaeological grounds), but the majority of the Proto-Canaanite inscriptions are dated some centuries later (13th-11th century BC).
The Proto. The choice of one or the other date decides whether it is proto-Sinaitic or proto-Canaanite, and by extension locates the invention of the alphabet in Egypt or Canaan respectively. [attribution needed][12] However, the discovery of the two Wadi el.
Proto-Canaanite, also referred to as Proto-Canaan, Old Canaanite, or Canaanite, is the name given to either a script ancestral to the Phoenician or Paleo-Hebrew script with undefined affinity to Proto-Sinaitic, or to the Proto-Sinaitic script (c. 16th century BC), when found in Canaan. While no extant inscription in the Phoenician alphabet is older than c.
1050 BC, Proto. Alan Millard examines the Proto.