Título: | En torno al dialecto de Acaya y sus colonias en la Magna Grecia (A proposito de un reciente libro de Alberto Giacomelli) |
Autores: | Méndez Dosuna, Julián Víctor |
Tipo de documento: | texto impreso |
Editorial: | Ediciones Universidad de Valladolid, 2019-02-20 |
Dimensiones: | application/pdf |
Nota general: |
Minerva; No 5 (1991); 27-56 Minerva. Revista de Filología Clásica; Núm. 5 (1991); 27-56 2530-6480 10.24197/mrfc.5.1991 Derechos de autor 2019 Julián Víctor Méndez Dosuna http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 |
Idiomas: | Español |
Palabras clave: | Artículos |
Resumen: |
A book by A. Giacomelli provides occasion for this review-article where recent dialectological research on the inscriptions of Achaean colonies in Magna Graecia is critically surveyed. The problems addressed include some idiosyncratic uses of and , linguistic contact in Magna Graecia (pre-Achaean remnants, convergence, Doric Koiná), nom. H(έ)ρακλες, etc. Special attention is paid to the debate of whether the Achaean dialect originally belonged in the Doris mitior with a system of seven long vowels, as the evidence furnished by recent inscriptions in Peloponnesian Achaea seems to suggest, or -to judge from the scanty data available for the colonies- in the Doris severior with only five long vowels. Contrary to current opinion, it is the mother city which must have preserved the original situation. A book by A. Giacomelli provides occasion for this review-article where recent dialectological research on the inscriptions of Achaean colonies in Magna Graecia is critically surveyed. The problems addressed include some idiosyncratic uses of and , linguistic contact in Magna Graecia (pre-Achaean remnants, convergence, Doric Koiná), nom. H(έ)ρακλες, etc. Special attention is paid to the debate of whether the Achaean dialect originally belonged in the Doris mitior with a system of seven long vowels, as the evidence furnished by recent inscriptions in Peloponnesian Achaea seems to suggest, or -to judge from the scanty data available for the colonies- in the Doris severior with only five long vowels. Contrary to current opinion, it is the mother city which must have preserved the original situation. |
En línea: | https://revistas.uva.es/index.php/minerva/article/view/3210 |
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