The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge [u. a.]
Cambridge Univ. Press
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 828 S. Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780521881494 0521881498 |
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100 | 1 | |a Adams, J. N. |d 1943- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)137466293 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |c J. N. Adams |
250 | |a 1. publ. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge [u. a.] |b Cambridge Univ. Press |c 2007 | |
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650 | 4 | |a Latin language / Variation | |
650 | 7 | |a Taalgeografie |2 gtt | |
650 | 7 | |a Taalvariatie |2 gtt | |
650 | 4 | |a Latin language |x History | |
650 | 4 | |a Latin language |x Variation | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
List of maps
page
xii
Preface
XV
List of abbreviations
xviii
I Introduction
1
1
Aims, methods and findings
1
2
Some definitions: dialect and accent
8
3
Dialect terms/words
12
4
Standard varieties and language standardisation
13
5
Cities and forms of dialect diffusion
18
6
Dialects and colonisation
21
7
Old and new dialects
27
8
Shrinkage , isolation and archaism
31
9
Regions , areas of the Roman Empire
32
10
Recapitulation: themes applicable to Rome that have come
up so far
33
11
A recent account of the reasons for the diversity of colonial speech
34
12
Final questions
35
13
Plan and some limitations
35
II The Republic: inscriptions
37
1
Introduction
37
2
Inscriptions
39
3
The genitive in -us
40
4
The digraph
o/and
long
и
A4
5
The first-declension dative in -a
46
6
e
for ei
52
7
о
and
ou
64
8
і
for long
e
67
9
і
and
e in
hiatus
68
10
и
for Latin long
o: Osean
influence?
72
11
Monophthongisation of ai/ae
78
12
Mircurius and comparable forms
89
vi
Contents
13
Loss of final -tl-d
92
14
Names of the god Mars
93
15
The name Hercules
95
16
Lexical mixing in a regional inscription
96
17
Some nominative forms in
Etruria
97
18
Latin and Faliscan
100
19
A lexical item in an inscription of Praeneste
107
20
The intermediate vowel in the late Republic
107
21
Conclusions
108
III Explicit evidence for regional variation:
the Republic
114
1
Introduction
114
2
The Republic: introduction
118
3
Plautus, Lucilius and the Latin of Praeneste
119
4
Cicero
123
4.1
The city sound : smoothness versus harshness
124
4.2
Athens and Rome
129
4.3
Some further Ciceronian evidence
132
4.4
rustícus
and agrestis
143
4.5
Cicero: some conclusions
145
5
Asinius Pollio and the Patavinitas of Livy
147
6
Varro
153
7
Nigidius Figulus
174
8
Other republican and Augustan
testimonia
174
9
Some conclusions
182
9.1
The existence of regional variety
182
9.2
Places named
184
9.3
General regional features identified by the sources
185
9.4
Determinants of variation
186
9.5
What dialects were there?
187
IV Explicit evidence: the Empire
188
1
Italy
188
1.2
Romanness and related ideas
188
1.2.1
Martial
189
1.2.2
Panegirici Latini
191
1.2.3
Augustine
192
1.2.4
Quintilian and Statius
194
1.2.5
A passage of the Younger Pliny
196
1.2.6
Apuleius
197
1.2.7
Sidonius Apollinaris
198
1.2.8
Macrobius
199
1.2.9
Ausonius
200
1.2.10
Consentius
200
Contents
vii
v
1.2.11
Some
conclusions
200
1.2.12
The other side of the coin
202
1.3
Specific usages from parts of Italy
206
1.3.1
Columella, Pliny and Julius Romanus on Campania and
some other parts of Italy
206
1.3.2
Columella again: Italy
213
1.3.3
Pliny
216
1.3.4
Contrastive
observations
218
1.3.5
Further evidence to do with Italy
222
1.3.6
Names of winds
224
1.3.7
Conclusions
230
2
Spain
231
2.1
Spanish accent
231
2.2
Spanish
testimonia:
Columella
233
2.3
Spanish
testimonia:
Pliny
235
2.4
Spanish
testimonia:
Isidore
238
3
Gaul
240
3.1
Aquitania: a new twist to an old
topos
240
3.2
Some phonetic evidence
244
3.3
Some lexical evidence
250
3.4
Miscellaneous
258
3.5
Some conclusions
258
4
Africa
259
4.1
Some vague
testimonia
260
4.2
Vowel system
260
4.3
Labdacism
265
4.4
A passage of Jerome
268
4.5
Lexical
testimonia
269
4.6
Conclusion
269
5
General conclusions
270
5.1
The rhetoric of metalinguistic comments
270
5.2
Patterns of variation
271
5.3
Causes of regional variation
272
5.4
Strong regionalisms
273
5.5
Ancient
testimonia
and the Romance languages
273
5.6
False regionalisms
273
5.7
Romanness
275
Regionalisms in provincial texts: Gaul
276
1
Introduction: some points of methodology
276
2
Early texts from Gaul: La Graufesenque
281
3
Later imperial Gallic texts of known provenance
289
3.1
Marcellus
of Bordeaux
(?)
289
3.2
Caesarius of Aries
293
3.3
Polemius Silvius
295
viii Contents
3.4 Endlicher
s
glossary
299
3.5
The catalogue offish in Ausonius Mosella
304
3.6
A Gallic inscription with moritex
311
4
Germanic law codes
313
4.1
Pactus legis Salicae
313
4.2
Lex Burgundionum
320
4.3
Leges Alamannorum
323
4.4
Lex Ribuaria
327
4.5
Some conclusions
327
5
Some texts of uncertain provenance
329
5.1
Anthimus
329
5.2
Eucheria
335
5.3
A school exercise
337
5.4
Actus
Petri cum
Simone
338
5.5
Peregrinatio Aetheriae
342
6
Miscellaneous
353
7
General conclusions
356
7.1
Two questions
356
7.2
Linguistic criteria for locating a text or the origin of its author
357
7.3
Strong and weak dialect terms
360
7.4
Some stages in die regional diversification of Gallic Latin
365
7.5
How do regionalisms get into written texts?
366
7.6
Forms of substrate influence
368
7.7
Causes of regional variation
368
VI Spain
370
1
Introduction
370
2
The supposed conservatism of Spanish Latin
372
3
Some possible Hispanisms in classical Latin
402
4
The alleged
Osean
influence on Spanish (and Italian dialects)
406
5
Some imperial evidence for Spanish regionalisms
421
6
Some conclusions
428
VII
Italy
432
1
Introduction
432
2
Varro
433
3
Virgil
435
4
Petronius
437
5
Pompeii
441
6
Campanian Latin and the Johns Hopkins defixiones
443
7
Columella
451
8
The
Regula
of Benedict
452
9
Miscellaneous spellings
453
10
A matter of syntax
456
11
Linguistic evidence for the provenance of some late texts
457
Contents ix
11.1
The Ravenna papyri
457
11.2
Compositiones
Lucernes
465
11.3
The Latin translations of Oribasius
472
11.3.1
Introduction
473
11.3.2
Northern Italian and Italian elements in the
translation of Oribasius
475
11.3.3
Conclusions
487
11.3.4
Miscellaneous
489
11.3.5
Appendix: some signs of linguistic unity in texts
attributed to the Ravenna school
497
11.4
The commentary on Galen
501
11.5
Physica
Plinii Bambergensis
503
11.6
Some conclusions: regional Latin and medical texts
507
11.7
Edictus Rothari
511
11.8
Itinerarium Antonini
Piacentini
513
12
Some final remarks
513
VIII
Africa
516
1
Africitas
516
1.1
African Latin as archaic
518
1.2
Two usages
519
2
Some sources of information about African Latin
520
3
A revealing lexical example:
buda
522
4
Some medical texts identifiable as African on linguistic
evidence
528
4.1
Mustio
529
4.2
Cassius Felix
530
4.3
Dioscorides
533
4.4
Liber tertius
534
4.5
Some further features of the above texts
534
4.6
Some conclusions
540
4.7
Some further, more marginal, usages
542
5
Possible Africanisms in Nonius
Marcellus
546
6 Tablettes
Alberimi
549
7
The
Bu
Njem ostraca
562
8
Recapitulation
565
9
Miscellaneous lexical items, and Sardinia again
566
10
Some remarks on Punic and Libyan
569
11
Conclusions
573
IX Britain
577
1
The coming of Latin to Britain
577
2
Newly discovered Latin from Britain
579
3
The origin of those who have left writing in Britain
580
4
Evidence of Latin loan-words in British Celtic
583
χ
Contents
5 Jacksons
twelve points
587
6
Social gradience
593
7
Features of the Latin of Britain shared with that of Gaul
596
8
A special case: excussorium threshing-floor and excutio thresh
604
9
Another special case: corticivs
606
10
Some correspondences between Latin attested in Britain and
loan-words in Celtic
609
11
Some conclusions
612
12
Vindolanda and British medieval Latin
614
13
The Celtic inscriptions of Britain
616
14
Hibernisms in Irish Latin
620
15
Conclusions
622
X Inscriptions
624
1
Introduction
624
2
Specific phenomena
626
2.1
The confusion of
В
and V
626
2.2
В
and V and the Romance evidence
627
2.3
The confusion of
e
and
і
(representing original short i)
628
3
Misspellings in inscriptions as evidence for dialectalisation? Some
methodological considerations
629
4
A comparative method of assessing the regional significance of
spelling errors
635
5
A comparison region by region
636
6
Alleged causes of the merger of/b/and/w/
663
7
Vocalic misspellings again
666
7.1
The Roman accent and its alleged effects
666
7.2
The
Danubian
provinces
668
7.3
Vocalic spellings around the Adriatic coast
669
8
Inscriptions and dialect geography ; some miscellaneous studies
670
9
Some conclusions
676
10
Lexicon
677
11
Inscripţionai
or pseudo -regionalisms
678
12
Final remarks
682
XI Conclusion
684
1
Unitary and differential theories
684
2
Metalinguistic comments: some patterns
685
3
Some aspects of the history of regional Latin
690
3.1
Diversity and language contact in republican Italy
690
3.2
The ideal of Romanness; Romanisation
696
3.3
Other influential urban centres
697
3.4
Koineisation
698
3.5
Regional continuities
698
3.6
Developments in micro-communities
701
Contents xi
3.7
Wider areas: those crossing geographical or political boundaries
705
3.8
Provinces
710
4
Causes of regional variety
711
4.1
Archaisms
712
4.2
Innovation
714
4.3
A different way of looking at archaism and innovation: lexical
change at the centre or margins of an empire
715
4Л
Language contact
716
4.5
Diffusion
717
4.6
Differential rates of linguistic change in different places
719
4.7
Isolation
720
4.8
Local specificities
720
5
Further themes and problems
721
5.1
Flora and fauna
721
5.2
Dialects , Latin and Romance
723
5.3
The lexicon, phonology and the problem of syntax
726
5.4
The localising of literary and other texts
731
5.5
Regional language and Latin literature
731
Maps
733
Bibliography
747
Index
verborum
786
Subject index
797
Index bcorum
808
!!§|ş§sieal
Latin appears to be without regional dialects,^
liatin
evolved in little more than a millennium into a
л
§
Шйийу
of different languages (the Romance languages:
йі
Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, etc.). Was regional
diversity apparent from the earliest times, obscured
perhaps by the standardisation of writing, or did some
catastrophic event in late antiquity cause the language to
vary? These questions have long intrigued Latinists and
Romance philologists, struck by the apparent uniformity
of Latin alongside the variety of Romance. This book
establishes that Latin was never geographically uniform.
The changing patterns of diversity and the determinants
of variation are examined from the time of the early
inscriptions of Italy, through to late antiquity and the
beginnings of the Romance dialects in the western Roman
provinces. This is the most comprehensive treatment ever
undertaken of the regional diversification of Latin
throughout its history in the Roman period.
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of maps
page
xii
Preface
XV
List of abbreviations
xviii
I Introduction
1
1
Aims, methods and findings
1
2
Some definitions: 'dialect' and 'accent'
8
3
'Dialect terms/words'
12
4
'Standard' varieties and 'language standardisation'
13
5
Cities and forms of dialect diffusion
18
6
Dialects and colonisation
21
7
Old and new dialects
27
8
'Shrinkage', isolation and archaism
31
9
'Regions', 'areas' of the Roman Empire
32
10
Recapitulation: themes applicable to Rome that have come
up so far
33
11
A recent account of the reasons for the diversity of colonial speech
34
12
Final questions
35
13
Plan and some limitations
35
II The Republic: inscriptions
37
1
Introduction
37
2
Inscriptions
39
3
The genitive in -us
40
4
The digraph
o/and
long
и
A4
5
The first-declension dative in -a
46
6
e
for ei
52
7
о
and
ou
64
8
і
for long
e
67
9
і
and
e in
hiatus
68
10
и
for Latin long
o: Osean
influence?
72
11
Monophthongisation of ai/ae
78
12
Mircurius and comparable forms
89
vi
Contents
13
Loss of final -tl-d
92
14
Names of the god Mars
93
15
The name Hercules
95
16
Lexical mixing in a regional inscription
96
17
Some 'nominative' forms in
Etruria
97
18
Latin and Faliscan
100
19
A lexical item in an inscription of Praeneste
107
20
The 'intermediate' vowel in the late Republic
107
21
Conclusions
108
III Explicit evidence for regional variation:
the Republic
114
1
Introduction
114
2
The Republic: introduction
118
3
Plautus, Lucilius and the Latin of Praeneste
119
4
Cicero
123
4.1
The city'sound':'smoothness'versus'harshness'
124
4.2
Athens and Rome
129
4.3
Some further Ciceronian evidence
132
4.4
rustícus
and agrestis
143
4.5
Cicero: some conclusions
145
5
Asinius Pollio and the Patavinitas of Livy
147
6
Varro
153
7
Nigidius Figulus
174
8
Other republican and Augustan
testimonia
174
9
Some conclusions
182
9.1
The existence of regional variety
182
9.2
Places named
184
9.3
General regional features identified by the sources
185
9.4
Determinants of variation
186
9.5
What dialects were there?
187
IV Explicit evidence: the Empire
188
1
Italy
188
1.2
Romanness and related ideas
188
1.2.1
Martial
189
1.2.2
Panegirici Latini
191
1.2.3
Augustine
192
1.2.4
Quintilian and Statius
194
1.2.5
A passage of the Younger Pliny
196
1.2.6
Apuleius
197
1.2.7
Sidonius Apollinaris
198
1.2.8
Macrobius
199
1.2.9
Ausonius
200
1.2.10
Consentius
200
Contents
vii
v
1.2.11
Some
conclusions
200
1.2.12
The other side of the coin
202
1.3
Specific usages from parts of Italy
206
1.3.1
Columella, Pliny and Julius Romanus on Campania and
some other parts of Italy
206
1.3.2
Columella again: Italy
213
1.3.3
Pliny
216
1.3.4
Contrastive
observations
218
1.3.5
Further evidence to do with Italy
222
1.3.6
Names of winds
224
1.3.7
Conclusions
230
2
Spain
231
2.1
Spanish accent
231
2.2
Spanish
testimonia:
Columella
233
2.3
Spanish
testimonia:
Pliny
235
2.4
Spanish
testimonia:
Isidore
238
3
Gaul
240
3.1
Aquitania: a new twist to an old
topos
240
3.2
Some phonetic evidence
244
3.3
Some lexical evidence
250
3.4
Miscellaneous
258
3.5
Some conclusions
258
4
Africa
259
4.1
Some vague
testimonia
260
4.2
Vowel system
260
4.3
'Labdacism'
265
4.4
A passage of Jerome
268
4.5
Lexical
testimonia
269
4.6
Conclusion
269
5
General conclusions
270
5.1
The rhetoric of metalinguistic comments
270
5.2
Patterns of variation
271
5.3
Causes of regional variation
272
5.4
Strong regionalisms
273
5.5
Ancient
testimonia
and the Romance languages
273
5.6
False regionalisms
273
5.7
Romanness
275
Regionalisms in provincial texts: Gaul
276
1
Introduction: some points of methodology
276
2
Early texts from Gaul: La Graufesenque
281
3
Later imperial Gallic texts of known provenance
289
3.1
Marcellus
of Bordeaux
(?)
289
3.2
Caesarius of Aries
293
3.3
Polemius Silvius
295
viii Contents
3.4 Endlicher
s
glossary
299
3.5
The catalogue offish in Ausonius' Mosella
304
3.6
A Gallic inscription with moritex
311
4
Germanic law codes
313
4.1
Pactus legis Salicae
313
4.2
Lex Burgundionum
320
4.3
Leges Alamannorum
323
4.4
Lex Ribuaria
327
4.5
Some conclusions
327
5
Some texts of uncertain provenance
329
5.1
Anthimus
329
5.2
Eucheria
335
5.3
A school exercise
337
5.4
Actus
Petri cum
Simone
338
5.5
Peregrinatio Aetheriae
342
6
Miscellaneous
353
7
General conclusions
356
7.1
Two questions
356
7.2
Linguistic criteria for locating a text or the origin of its author
357
7.3
Strong and weak dialect terms
360
7.4
Some stages in die regional diversification of Gallic Latin
365
7.5
How do regionalisms get into written texts?
366
7.6
Forms of substrate influence
368
7.7
Causes of regional variation
368
VI Spain
370
1
Introduction
370
2
The supposed conservatism of Spanish Latin
372
3
Some possible Hispanisms in classical Latin
402
4
The alleged
Osean
influence on Spanish (and Italian dialects)
406
5
Some imperial evidence for Spanish regionalisms
421
6
Some conclusions
428
VII
Italy
432
1
Introduction
432
2
Varro
433
3
Virgil
435
4
Petronius
437
5
Pompeii
441
6
'Campanian' Latin and the Johns Hopkins defixiones
443
7
Columella
451
8
The
Regula
of Benedict
452
9
Miscellaneous spellings
453
10
A matter of syntax
456
11
Linguistic evidence for the provenance of some late texts
457
Contents ix
11.1
The Ravenna papyri
457
11.2
Compositiones
Lucernes
465
11.3
The Latin translations of Oribasius
472
11.3.1
Introduction
473
11.3.2
Northern Italian and Italian elements in the
translation of Oribasius
475
11.3.3
Conclusions
487
11.3.4
Miscellaneous
489
11.3.5
Appendix: some signs of linguistic unity in texts
attributed to the 'Ravenna school'
497
11.4
The commentary on Galen
501
11.5
Physica
Plinii Bambergensis
503
11.6
Some conclusions: regional Latin and medical texts
507
11.7
Edictus Rothari
511
11.8
Itinerarium Antonini
Piacentini
513
12
Some final remarks
513
VIII
Africa
516
1
Africitas
516
1.1
African Latin as'archaic'
518
1.2
Two usages
519
2
Some sources of information about African Latin
520
3
A revealing lexical example:
buda
522
4
Some medical texts identifiable as African on linguistic
evidence
528
4.1
Mustio
529
4.2
Cassius Felix
530
4.3
Dioscorides
533
4.4
Liber tertius
534
4.5
Some further features of the above texts
534
4.6
Some conclusions
540
4.7
Some further, more marginal, usages
542
5
Possible Africanisms in Nonius
Marcellus
546
6 Tablettes
Alberimi
549
7
The
Bu
Njem ostraca
562
8
Recapitulation
565
9
Miscellaneous lexical items, and Sardinia again
566
10
Some remarks on Punic and Libyan
569
11
Conclusions
573
IX Britain
577
1
The coming of Latin to Britain
577
2
Newly discovered Latin from Britain
579
3
The origin of those who have left writing in Britain
580
4
Evidence of Latin loan-words in British Celtic
583
χ
Contents
5 Jacksons
twelve points
587
6
'Social gradience'
593
7
Features of the Latin of Britain shared with that of Gaul
596
8
A special case: excussorium 'threshing-floor' and excutio 'thresh'
604
9
Another special case: corticivs
606
10
Some correspondences between Latin attested in Britain and
loan-words in Celtic
609
11
Some conclusions
612
12
Vindolanda and British medieval Latin
614
13
The'Celtic'inscriptions of Britain
616
14
Hibernisms in Irish Latin
620
15
Conclusions
622
X Inscriptions
624
1
Introduction
624
2
Specific phenomena
626
2.1
The confusion of
В
and V
626
2.2
В
and V and the Romance evidence
627
2.3
The confusion of
e
and
і
(representing original short i)
628
3
Misspellings in inscriptions as evidence for dialectalisation? Some
methodological considerations
629
4
A comparative method of assessing the regional significance of
spelling errors
635
5
A comparison region by region
636
6
Alleged causes of the merger of/b/and/w/
663
7
Vocalic misspellings again
666
7.1
The 'Roman accent' and its alleged effects
666
7.2
The
Danubian
provinces
668
7.3
Vocalic spellings around the Adriatic coast
669
8
Inscriptions and 'dialect geography'; some miscellaneous studies
670
9
Some conclusions
676
10
Lexicon
677
11
'Inscripţionai'
or 'pseudo'-regionalisms
678
12
Final remarks
682
XI Conclusion
684
1
'Unitary' and 'differential' theories
684
2
Metalinguistic comments: some patterns
685
3
Some aspects of the history of regional Latin
690
3.1
Diversity and language contact in republican Italy
690
3.2
The ideal of Romanness; Romanisation
696
3.3
Other influential urban centres
697
3.4
Koineisation
698
3.5
Regional continuities
698
3.6
Developments in micro-communities
701
Contents xi
3.7
Wider areas: those crossing geographical or political boundaries
705
3.8
Provinces
710
4
Causes of regional variety
711
4.1
Archaisms
712
4.2
Innovation
714
4.3
A different way of looking at archaism and innovation: lexical
change at the centre or margins of an empire
715
4Л
Language contact
716
4.5
Diffusion
717
4.6
Differential rates of linguistic change in different places
719
4.7
Isolation
720
4.8
Local specificities
720
5
Further themes and problems
721
5.1
Flora and fauna
721
5.2
'Dialects', Latin and Romance
723
5.3
The lexicon, phonology and the problem of syntax
726
5.4
The localising of literary and other texts
731
5.5
Regional language and Latin literature
731
Maps
733
Bibliography
747
Index
verborum
786
Subject index
797
Index bcorum
808
!!§|ş§sieal
Latin appears to be without regional dialects,^
liatin
evolved in little more than a millennium into a
'
л
§
Шйийу
of different languages (the Romance languages:
йі
"Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, etc.). Was regional
diversity apparent from the earliest times, obscured
perhaps by the standardisation of writing, or did some
catastrophic event in late antiquity cause the language to
vary? These questions have long intrigued Latinists and
Romance philologists, struck by the apparent uniformity
of Latin alongside the variety of Romance. This book
establishes that Latin was never geographically uniform.
The changing patterns of diversity and the determinants
of variation are examined from the time of the early
inscriptions of Italy, through to late antiquity and the
beginnings of the Romance dialects in the western Roman
provinces. This is the most comprehensive treatment ever
undertaken of the regional diversification of Latin
throughout its history in the Roman period. |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Adams, J. N. 1943- |
author_GND | (DE-588)137466293 |
author_facet | Adams, J. N. 1943- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Adams, J. N. 1943- |
author_variant | j n a jn jna |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV023197959 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PA2057 |
callnumber-raw | PA2057 |
callnumber-search | PA2057 |
callnumber-sort | PA 42057 |
callnumber-subject | PA - Latin and Greek |
classification_rvk | FN 6021 FN 6651 IS 1725 |
ctrlnum | (gbd)0902209 (OCoLC)154706407 (DE-599)BVBBV023197959 |
dewey-full | 470 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 470 - Latin and related Italic languages |
dewey-raw | 470 |
dewey-search | 470 |
dewey-sort | 3470 |
dewey-tens | 470 - Latin and related Italic languages |
discipline | Philologie / Byzantinistik / Neulatein Romanistik |
discipline_str_mv | Philologie / Byzantinistik / Neulatein Romanistik |
edition | 1. publ. |
era | Geschichte 200 v. Chr.-600 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 200 v. Chr.-600 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV023197959 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T20:07:08Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:12:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780521881494 0521881498 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016384246 |
oclc_num | 154706407 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-739 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-M491 DE-29 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-739 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-M491 DE-29 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-188 |
physical | XIX, 828 S. Kt. |
psigel | gbd_4_0804 |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Adams, J. N. 1943- Verfasser (DE-588)137466293 aut The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 J. N. Adams 1. publ. Cambridge [u. a.] Cambridge Univ. Press 2007 XIX, 828 S. Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte 200 v. Chr.-600 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte Latein Latijn gtt Latin language / History Latin language / Variation Taalgeografie gtt Taalvariatie gtt Latin language History Latin language Variation Diversifikation Linguistik (DE-588)4293734-6 gnd rswk-swf Latein (DE-588)4114364-4 gnd rswk-swf Altitalienisch (DE-588)4260566-0 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte der lateinischen Sprache (DE-2581)TH000005735 gbd Lateinische Sprache (DE-2581)TH000005733 gbd Latein (DE-588)4114364-4 s Diversifikation Linguistik (DE-588)4293734-6 s Altitalienisch (DE-588)4260566-0 s Geschichte 200 v. Chr.-600 z DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-511-48297-7 (DE-604)BV043929186 Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016384246&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016384246&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Adams, J. N. 1943- The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 Geschichte Latein Latijn gtt Latin language / History Latin language / Variation Taalgeografie gtt Taalvariatie gtt Latin language History Latin language Variation Diversifikation Linguistik (DE-588)4293734-6 gnd Latein (DE-588)4114364-4 gnd Altitalienisch (DE-588)4260566-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4293734-6 (DE-588)4114364-4 (DE-588)4260566-0 |
title | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |
title_auth | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |
title_exact_search | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |
title_exact_search_txtP | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |
title_full | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 J. N. Adams |
title_fullStr | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 J. N. Adams |
title_full_unstemmed | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 J. N. Adams |
title_short | The regional diversification of Latin 200 BC - AD 600 |
title_sort | the regional diversification of latin 200 bc ad 600 |
topic | Geschichte Latein Latijn gtt Latin language / History Latin language / Variation Taalgeografie gtt Taalvariatie gtt Latin language History Latin language Variation Diversifikation Linguistik (DE-588)4293734-6 gnd Latein (DE-588)4114364-4 gnd Altitalienisch (DE-588)4260566-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Geschichte Latein Latijn Latin language / History Latin language / Variation Taalgeografie Taalvariatie Latin language History Latin language Variation Diversifikation Linguistik Altitalienisch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016384246&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016384246&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT adamsjn theregionaldiversificationoflatin200bcad600 |