The Sogdian language was an Eastern Iranian language spoken mainly in the region of Sogdia (capital: Samarkand; other chief cities: Panjakent, Fergana, Khujand, and Bukhara), located in modern-day Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan;Barthold, W. "Balāsāg̲h̲ūn or Balāsaḳūn." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2008. Brill Online. Universiteitsbibliotheek Leiden. 11 March 2008
The Sogdian language is usually assigned to a Northeastern group of the Iranian languages. No direct evidence of an earlier version of the language ("Old Sogdian") has been found although mention of the area in the Old Persian inscriptions means that a separate and recognisable Sogdia existed at least since the Achaemenid Empire (559–323 BCE).
Like Khotanese, Sogdian may have possessed a more conservative grammar and morphology than Middle Persian. The modern Eastern Iranian language Yaghnobi is the descendant of a dialect of Sogdian spoken around the 8th century in Osrushana, south of Sogdia.
The economic and political importance of Sogdian guaranteed its survival in the first few centuries after the Muslim conquest of Sogdia in the early eighth century.Richard Foltz, A History of the Tajiks: Iranians of the East, London: Bloomsbury, 2019, pp. 4-5. A dialect of Sogdian spoken around the 8th century in Osrushana (capital: Bunjikat, near present-day Istaravshan, Tajikistan), a region to the south of Sogdia, developed into the Yaghnobi language and has survived into the 21st century. It is spoken by the Yaghnobi people.
Aurel Stein discovered five letters written in Sogdian, known as the "Ancient Letters", in an abandoned watchtower near Dunhuang in 1907, dating to the end of the Western Jin dynasty.Sogdian Ancient Letter No. 3. Reproduced from Susan Whitfield (ed.), The Silk Road: Trade, Travel, War and Faith (2004) p. 248.
Various Sogdian pieces have been found in the Turpan text corpus by the German Turfan expeditions. These expeditions were controlled by the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. These pieces consist almost entirely of religious works by Manichaean and Christian writers, including translations of the Bible. Most of the Sogdian religious works are from the 9th and 10th centuries. "Iranian Languages"(2009). Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved on 2009-04-09
Dunhuang and Turfan were the two most plentiful sites of Manichean, Buddhist, and Christian Sogdian texts. Sogdiana itself actually contained a much smaller collection of texts, discovered in the early 1930s near Mount Mug in Tajikistan. The texts, related to business, belonged to a minor Sogdian king, Divashtich. They dated back to the time of the Muslim conquest, about 700.
Between 1996 and 2018, a number of inscribed fragments have been found at Kultobe in Kazakhstan. They date back to the Kangju culture, are significantly earlier than the 4th century AD and showcase an archaic state of Sogdian.
In the years between 2003 and 2020, three new bilingual Chinese-Sogdian epitaphs have been discovered and published.
As in other writing systems descended from the Proto-Sinaitic script, there are no special signs for vowels. As in the parent Aramaic system, the consonantal signs ’ y w can be used as mater lectionis for the long vowels a: respectively. However, unlike it, the consonant signs would also sometimes serve to express the short vowels, which could also sometimes be left unexpressed and always are in the parent systems. To distinguish long vowels from short ones, an additional aleph can be written before the sign that denotes the long vowel.Clauson, Gerard. 2002. Studies in Turkic and Mongolic linguistics. P.103-104.
Sogdian also used the Manichaean alphabet, which consists of 29 letters.Gershevitch, Ilya. (1954). A Grammar of Manichean Sogdian. p.1. Oxford: Blackwell.
In transcribing Sogdian script into Roman letters, Aramaic ideograms are often noted by means of capitals.
Sogdian also has three rhotacized vowels: ər, ir, ur.
The diphthongs in Sogdian are āi, āu and those whose second element is a rhotacized vowel or a nasal element ṃ.
Phonology
Consonants
>
!
!Labial consonant
!Dental consonant
!Alveolar
!Palatal
!Velar consonant/Glottal
Vowels
Morphology
Nouns
Light stems
-ta, -īšt, -(y)a -te, -īšt(e), -(y)a -tya, -īštī, -ān(u) -tya, -īštī, -ān(u) -tya, -īštī, -ān(u) -tya, -īštī, -ān(u)
Heavy stems
-t -te -tī, -ān -tī, -ān -tī, -ān -tī, -ān
Contracted stems
-ēt, -āt -ēte, -āte -ētī, -ātī -ētī, -ātī -ētī, -ātī -ētī, -ātī
Verbs
Present indicative
-am -∅, -ē -t -ēm(an) -θ(a), -t(a) -and
Imperfect indicative
-∅, -u -∅, -i -∅ -ēm(u), -ēm(an) -θ(a), -t(a) -and
Sources
External links
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Introduction to Manichaean Sogdian by P. Oktor Skjærvø
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Introduction to Manichaean Sogdian (full text)
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