Sorothaptic language

Sorothaptic (Spanish: sorotáptico, Catalan: sorotàptic, from Greek σορός sorós 'funerary urn' and θαπτός thaptós 'buried') is a name coined by Joan Coromines for the hypothetical language of the presumably Indo-European, but pre-Celtic, 1000 BC people of the Urnfield culture in the Iberian Peninsula.

Sorothaptic
RegionIberian peninsula
EthnicityUrnfield culture
Eraca. 200 CE
Indo-European
  • (unclassified)
    • Sorothaptic
Language codes
ISO 639-3sxo
sxo
GlottologNone

Coromines used the concept of Sorothaptic to explain problematic words in the Iberian Romance languages. He identified the language with inscriptions on lead tablets, ca. 2nd century CE, found at Amélie-les-Bains on the Catalan–French border; these include some Latin but also a non-Latin and non-Celtic component that Coromines believed to be Sorothaptic.[1][2]

References

  1. Coromines, 1976, Els ploms sorotàptics d'Arles, pp.142-216
  2. Brill's New Pauly, 2008, p. 50

Bibliography

  • Glanville Price, editor. 2000. Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe.
  • Cancik, Schneider,& Salazar, eds. 2008. Brill's New Pauly: Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World. Brill.
  • Coromines, Joan. 1976. Entre dos llenguatges (II). Curial Edicions Catalanes.
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