Attic Greek
Attic Greek is the Greek dialect of the ancient region of Attica, including the polis of Athens. Often called Classical Greek, it was the prestige dialect of the Greek world for centuries and remains the standard form of the language that is taught to students of Ancient Greek. As the basis of the Hellenistic Koine, it is the most similar of the ancient dialects to later Greek. Attic is traditionally classified as a member or sister dialect of the Ionic branch.
Origin and range
is the primary member of the Hellenic branch of the Indo-European language family. In ancient times, Greek had already come to exist in several dialects, one of which was Attic. The earliest attestations of Greek, dating from the 16th to 11th centuries BC, are written in Linear B, an archaic writing system used by the Mycenaean Greeks in writing their language; the distinction between Eastern and Western Greek is believed to have arisen by Mycenaean times or before. Mycenaean Greek represents an early form of Eastern Greek, the group to which Attic also belongs. Later Greek literature wrote about three main dialects: Aeolic, Doric, and Ionic; Attic was part of the Ionic dialect group. "Old Attic" is used in reference to the dialect of Thucydides and the dramatists of 5th-century Athens whereas "New Attic" is used for the language of later writers following conventionally the accession in 285 BC of Greek-speaking Ptolemy II to the throne of the Kingdom of Egypt. Ruling from Alexandria, Ptolemy launched the Alexandrian period, during which the city of Alexandria and its expatriate Greek-medium scholars flourished.The original range of the spoken Attic dialect included Attica and a number of the Aegean Islands; the closely related Ionic was also spoken along the western and northwestern coasts of Asia Minor in modern Turkey, in Chalcidice, Thrace, Euboea, and in some colonies of Magna Graecia. During the 4th century BC, Attic was formally adopted as the administrative language in the kingdom of Macedon, before being replaced by Koine Greek. Eventually, the texts of literary Attic were widely studied far beyond their homeland: first in the classical civilizations of the Mediterranean, including in Ancient Rome and the larger Hellenistic world, and later in the Muslim world, Europe, and other parts of the world touched by those civilizations.
Literature
The earliest Greek literature, which is attributed to Homer and is dated to the 8th or 7th centuries BC, is written in "Old Ionic" rather than Attic. Athens and its dialect remained relatively obscure until the establishment of its democracy following the reforms of Solon in the 6th century BC; so began the Classical period, one of great Athenian influence both in Greece and throughout the Mediterranean.The first extensive works of literature in Attic are the plays of dramatists Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes dating from the 5th century BC. The military exploits of the Athenians led to some universally read and admired history, as found in the works of Thucydides and Xenophon. Slightly less known because they are more technical and legal are the orations by Antiphon, Demosthenes, Lysias, Isocrates, and many others. The Attic Greek of philosophers Plato and his student Aristotle dates to the period of transition between Classical Attic and Koine.
Students who learn Ancient Greek usually begin with the Attic dialect and continue, depending upon their interests, to the later Koine of the New Testament and other early Christian writings, to the earlier Homeric Greek of Homer and Hesiod, or to the contemporaneous Ionic Greek of Herodotus and Hippocrates.
Alphabet
Attic Greek, like other dialects, was originally written in a local variant of the Greek alphabet. According to the classification of archaic Greek alphabets, which was introduced by Adolf Kirchhoff, the Old Attic system belongs to the "eastern" or "blue" type, as it uses the letters Ψ and Χ with their classical values, unlike "western" or "red" alphabets, which used Χ for and expressed with Ψ. In other respects, Old Attic shares many features with the neighbouring Euboean alphabet. Like the latter, it used an L-shaped variant of lambda and an S-shaped variant of sigma. It lacked the consonant symbols xi for and psi for, expressing these sound combinations with ΧΣ and ΦΣ, respectively. Moreover, like most other mainland Greek dialects, Attic did not yet use omega and eta for the long vowels and. Instead, it expressed the vowel phonemes with the letter Ο and with the letter Ε. Moreover, the letter Η was used as heta, with the consonantal value of rather than the vocalic value of.In the 5th century, Athenian writing gradually switched from this local system to the more widely used Ionic alphabet, native to the eastern Aegean Islands and Asia Minor. By the late 5th century, the concurrent use of elements of the Ionic system with the traditional local alphabet had become common in private writing, and in 403 BC, it was decreed that public writing would switch to the new Ionic orthography, as part of the reform following the Thirty Tyrants. This new system, also called the "Eucleidian" alphabet, after the name of the archon Eucleides, who oversaw the decision, was to become the classical Greek alphabet throughout the Greek-speaking world. The classical works of Attic literature were subsequently handed down to posterity in the new Ionic spelling, and it is the classical orthography in which they are read today.
Phonology
Vowels
Long a
long ā → Attic long ē, but ā after e, i, r. ⁓ Ionic ē in all positions. ⁓ Doric and Aeolic ā in all positions.- Proto-Greek and Doric mātēr → Attic mētēr "mother"
- Attic chōrā ⁓ Ionic chōrē "place", "country"
- Proto-Greek korwā → early Attic–Ionic *korwē → Attic kor'ē'''''
Short a
- Doric Artamis ⁓ Attic ''Artemis''
Sonorant clusters
- Proto-Indo-European *es-mi → Attic–Ionic ēmi ⁓ Lesbian–Thessalian emmi "I am"
Upsilon
- Boeotian kourios ⁓ Attic kyrios "lord"
Contraction
Attic contracts more than Ionic does.a + e → long ā.
- nika-e → nikā "conquer !"
- PIE *trey-es → Proto-Greek trees → Attic trēs =, "three"
- early *genes-os → Ionic geneos → Attic genous "of a kind"
Vowel shortening
- when it is followed by a short vowel, with lengthening of the short vowel : ēo → eō
- when it is followed by a long vowel: ēō → eō
- when it is followed by u and s: ēus → eus :
- basilēos → basileōs "of a king"
- basilēōn → basileōn
- basilēusi → ''basileusi''
Hyphaeresis
- Homeric boē-tho-os → Attic boēthos "running to a cry", "helper in battle"
Consonants
Palatalization
PIE *ky or *chy → Proto-Greek ts → Attic and Euboean Ionic tt — Cycladean/Anatolian Ionic and Koine ss.- Proto-Greek *glōkh-ya → Attic glōtta — East Ionic glōssa "tongue"
- PIE *kwetwores → Attic tettares — East Ionic tesseres, "four"
- Doric ti-the-nti → Attic tithēsi = "he places"
Shortening of ''ss''
- PIE *medh-yos → Homeric, messos → Attic, mesos
- Homeric → Attic, "I performed "
- Proto-Greek *podsi → Homeric → Attic, "by foot"
- Proto-Greek *hopot-yos → dialectal → Attic
Loss of ''w''
- Proto-Greek korwā → Attic korē, "girl"
Retention of ''h''
- Proto-Indo-European *si-sta-mes → Attic histamen — Cretan istamen, "we stand"
Movable ''n''
- pāsin élegon, "they spoke to everyone", vs. pāsi legousi
- pāsi, dative plural of "all"
- legousi, "they speak"
- elege, "he was speaking"
- titheisi, "he places", "makes"
Rr instead of rs.
- Attic → East Ionic, "peninsula"
- Attic → East Ionic, "male"
- Attic → East Ionic, "courage"