Languages using an alphabet
Lycian
The Lycian language was spoken in southwestern Anatolia in the 1st millennium bce. Two varieties of the language are distinguished, Lycian A and Lycian B (sometimes known as Milyan), although there are only a handful of texts in the latter. The Lycian alphabet was related to the Greek alphabet.
The majority of the nearly 200 examples of written Lycian are inscriptions on coins and tombs; the coins derive from the period between 500 and about 360 bce, while the tradition of the Lycian monumental inscriptions is thought to have continued into the 3rd century bce. There are also some longer texts of a historical nature. One of these is a stela at Xanthus, the ancient Lycian capital. Another is a trilingual text in Aramaic, Greek, and Lycian dedicating a shrine to the goddess Leto; found in 1973, it consolidated the modern understanding of the language.
In the first phase of research, which ended about 1880, Lycian was investigated by an etymological method in which it was linked up either with Greek or with the Iranian languages. Later a more reliable combinatory method, in which passages expressing similar contents are compared in order to obtain a better understanding of a language’s structure, was introduced. In 1945 linguist Holger Pedersen published a synthesis that proved conclusively that Lycian belongs to the Anatolian branch of Indo-European languages and indicated a relationship of Lycian with Hittite. This conclusion was slightly modified when Franz J. Tritsch (in 1950) and, later, Emmanuel Laroche showed that Lycian should be more specifically compared to Luwian. It is now known that Lycian shares many features with Hittite, Luwian, and Lydian, although crucial divergences from each of these languages establish it as an independent branch of the Anatolian subgroup.
Lydian
The Lydian language was spoken in western Anatolia in the 1st millennium bce. The more than 100 Lydian texts, written in an alphabet related to the Greek alphabet, were found chiefly at the ancient capital of Sardis (near present-day İzmir, Tur.). They include decrees and epitaphs, some of which were composed in verse; most were written during the 5th and 4th centuries bce, although a few may have been created as early as the 7th century bce.
Early results concerning Lydian were reached using a strictly combinatory method. This research culminated in a conclusive article by Piero Meriggi on the Indo-European character of Lydian (1936). Subsequently other scholars published evaluations of the Lydian data, a dictionary, and a grammar book. The final obstacle to its classification as part of the Anatolian group of languages was removed in 1959 by linguist Onofrio Carruba, who proved that Lydian, like the other members of the group, does not possess a separate feminine gender.
Lydian grammar shows that the language belongs to the same subgroup as Hittite and Luwian of the 2nd millennium and Lycian of the 1st millennium. However, in many respects it differs markedly from its nearest relatives. Understanding of the Lydian lexicon, and hence of the details of the texts, remained severely limited in the early 21st century.
Carian
The Carian language was spoken in extreme southwestern Anatolia from the 1st millennium bce. The chief evidence for Carian consists of more than 100 tomb inscriptions and numerous instances of graffiti from Egypt. Most of these inscriptions are from the city of Memphis, the site of a sizable community of Carian mercenaries employed by pharaohs during the 7th to 5th centuries bce. A few texts on stone and other objects have also been found in Caria itself.
Serious study of Carian began only in 1980 with the initial partial decipherment of the script by Egyptologist John Ray, who found several grammatical features suggesting that Carian is related to Hittite and Luwian and is part of the Anatolian group. His approach was successfully continued by Ignacio Adiego Lajara and fully confirmed by the discovery of a Carian-Greek bilingual in Kaunos in 1996 and 1997. Much remains uncertain, but the grammatical features thus attested confirm that Carian is related to Hittite and Luwian and is part of the Anatolian group.
Sidetic and Pisidian
Sidetic and Pisidian are very poorly attested languages from the 3rd and 2nd centuries bce and the first two centuries ce, respectively. Sidetic texts include perhaps a half-dozen inscriptions and a few coins. Pisidian is known from perhaps two dozen texts, all short tomb inscriptions. Grammatical features demonstrate that both languages are related to Hittite and belong to the Anatolian group. The first reliable study of Sidetic was made by Bossert in 1950. The Sidetic texts are now included in the monumental work on the city of Side by Johannes Nollé. Claude Brixhe summarized what is known about Pisidian in 1988.