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“Each letter of the alphabet is a steadfast loyal soldier in a great army of words, sentences, paragraphs, and stories. One letter falls, and the entire language falters.” - Vera Nazarian
The Latin alphabet, the basis of the Latin language, was born around 6th century BC in Italy. It is known across almost all Western countries. At the time, the writing direction was not exactly defined. Inscriptions were written from right to left on a fibula (a gold pin) while in other cases they are written from left to right, or alternating between a line from left to right and one from right to left. At the beginning, there were nineteen letters. The graphics were very simple and reveal a mixed Phoenician, Greek and Etruscan origin.
- How has the Latin alphabet evolved?
Superprof charts the history of the classical language from its origins to its use today. Find a dedicated Latin teacher here.
Etruscan, the Ancestor of the Latin Alphabet
Latin Alphabet: The Roman Writing System
Writing depends on speech. It's sole purpose is to transcribe oral language.
There were only capitals in the Latin alphabet until the Carolingian period (9th century) when writing gradually took a step away from the spoken word and lowercase letters were introduced. Discover Superprof's top picks for the best dictionaries to learn Latin with!
The Latin Alphabet: From Uppercase to the Arrival of Lowercase
- Capitalis rustica (1st century BC), characterised by a certain freedom and a slender line,
- Capitalis quadrata (IVth century), characterised by a greater discipline and a square form.
Writing was used to transcribe poems like those of Virgil and literary stories, but it was also a way of conveying the merits of citizens on the City walls and immortalising speeches in bronze or stone.
But it is in everyday life that writing experiences its greatest evolution.
Being used for letters, diplomas, graffiti and even sales contracts, it soon became rounded, simplified and links are gradually made between the letters. The height of capital letters start to differ giving rise to the writing style called Roman cursive. Lowercase appears in the third century as a result of vulgar writing (of the people) in Latin languages. The letters, which were originally very square, become progressively more round, especially in Christian religious texts. It was Charlemagne who endorsed the use of lowercase letters to establish his authority when he came to power in 771. He thus began a reform of writing. All texts must now be copied in caroline miniscule. Our current form of writing stems from this standardisation. Find out what languages evolved from Latin...
Some Interesting Facts About the Roman Alphabet
- There was no distinction between the U and the V. Only the V existed as the writing was still very square at this time,
- The letter G did not exist. The consonant C expressed both the phonemes /k/ and /g/, inherited directly from Greek,
- The letter K was redundant with the letter C and was kept only in a few words and when in front of an A,
- The letter Z did not exist as it was rendered useless due to phonetic changes,
- The letter Q was a variant of the letter K, used only in front of a U.
In its archaic version, the Latin alphabet had 20 letters: A, B, C, D, E, F, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, V, X. Whereas in its classical writing, after the 3rd century, it had 23: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, V, X, Y, Z. You will note the absence of the letters J, U and W which appear later on, as the rounding of letters and their usage develops. Satisfy your curiosity with everything you need to know about the Latin language...
The Arrival of the Printing Press and the Modern Evolution of Our Alphabet
Did you know? The Bible was the first piece of work to be printed using movable type.
But after this we didn't suddenly stop writing by hand. On the contrary, several writing styles were developed:
- Gothic style: letter of civility (15th century),
- The financial (15th century),
- The round (17th century),
- The bastard (17th century),
- The casting (17th century),
- The English: from the Italian bastard, it is easier to draw and faster to write (18th century).
Until the twentieth century, it is the latter which served as a basis for writing in schools. Today, the letters are still changing. Just look at the current tags to be convinced. Since the advent of computer science (a tool through which you can consult Latin quotations for free), it is the Latin alphabetical system that is recognised first. For each glyph corresponds to a code manipulated by the computer apparatus. From the ASCI standard to the ISO 8859, all alphabets are now manipulated by computers:
- Ancient languages such as Aramaic or Hebrew,
- Greek language, modern Greek,
- Arabic language, Turkish,
- Armenian,
- Sanskrit,
- Chinese characters,
- The Cyrillic alphabet, the Russian alphabet,
- European languages such as Germanic languages, French (with its circumflex, acute and grave accents), Spanish (with its tilde), Romanian, Croatian, etc.
Our alphabet hasn't experienced further modification after being finally set at 26 letters. It has, however, some minor variations depending on the language. For example, the Spanish alphabet contains 28 letters ("ll" and "ñ") and the circumflex accent, directly inherited from Greek, does not exist in all languages. Now challenge your knowledge of Latin: do you know these quotes?
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