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| History of the alphabet |
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Middle Bronze Age 19th c. BCE
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| Meroitic 3rd c. BCE |
| Ogham 4th c. |
| Hangul 1443 |
| Canadian Syllabics 1840 |
| Zhuyin 1913 |
| complete genealogy |
Various alphabetic writing systems were in use in Iron Age Anatolia to record Anatolian dialects and the Phrygian language. Previously several of these languages had been written with logographic and syllabic systems.
The alphabets of Asia Minor may be classified into two groups. The first of them (Phrygian and Lemnian) were early adaptations of regional variants of the Greek alphabet; the earliest Phrygian inscriptions are contemporary with early Greek inscriptions, but contain Greek innovations such as the letters Φ and Ψ which did not exist in the earliest forms of the Greek alphabet.
The second group (Carian, Para-Carian, Lydian, Para-Lydian, Lycian and Sidetic) are probably even older. They share many common characteristics that distinguish them from the earliest forms of the Greek alphabet. Many letters in these alphabets, although they resemble Greek letters, have unrelated readings, most extensively in the case of Carian.
The Anatolian alphabets fell out of use around the 4th century BC with the beginning Hellenistic period.
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