Kadmos 22 - Walter de Gruyter, 1983 - Berlin/New York - p. 56 - 61 Analysis of the Lydian text on an incense burner. Includes a note on the Lydian letter y.
Indogermanische Forschungen. Zeitschrift für Indogermanistik und historische Sprachwissenschaft. — 2017. — 122. Band. — S. 265-293. This paper addresses the interpretation of a Lydian text inscribed on a stele which was placed in the precinct of Artemis in the Anatolian town of Sardis at some point in the 5ᵗʰ–4ᵗʰ centuries BC. Its linguistic analysis is conducive to the...
Kadmos. — 1978. — Vol. 17, Iss. 1. — p. 55-66. Die verschiedenen Schriften, deren sich die Sprecher der sog. Kleineren anatolischen Sprachen des l. vorchr. Jahrtausends zur Aufzeichnung von Texten in ihren epichorischen Idiomen bedient haben, dürfen zum größeren Teil als entziffert gelten. Das gilt für die phrygische, lydische und lykische, im wesentlichen auch für die...
Glotta. — 1942. — Bd. 29, H. 3./4. — p. 148-155. Vor siebzehn Jahren nahm ich zu den damais vor kurzem durch Enno Littmann entzifferten lydischen Inschriften Stellung. Soweit meine Erkenntnisse die lydisch-aramâische Bilinguis betrafen, wurden sie von F. Sommer in seiner tiefschürfenden Abhandlung gebilligt und damit allseitig anerkannt. Meine sonstigen Deutungen aber sind...
Kadmos. — 1983. — Vol. 22, Iss. 1. — p. 56–60. In CRAI 1981, 199 f. hat Dietrich von Bothmer, der Chairman vom Department of Greek and Roman Art im Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, einen silbernen Weihrauchbrenner bekanntgemacht, der vor kurzem von jenem Museum erworben wurde (Classical Purchase Fund, 1980) und von dem auch eine gute Abbildung vorgelegt wird. Die...
Talanta, Proceedings of the Dutch Archaeological Society. — 1984-85. — Vol. XVI-XVII. — p. 91-113. As early as in the thirties of our present era Piero Meriggi, working from Luwian Hieroglyphic and Lycian, at once recognized the first person singular amu in Lydian. Unfortunately this promising line of research was much hampered at the time by three problematic signs, of which...
Talanta. — 2010-2011. — XLII - XLIII. — p. 207-213. In the relevant textbooks, the Lydian language is considered a separate entity within the Indo-European Anatolian language family. Sometimes affinities with Hittite, at other times relationships with Luwian are proposed, but its independent position within the Indo-European group of languages remains an item of faith. In my...
Unpublished handout (presentation made at Berkeley in May 2001). — Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen, Universität Innsbruck, 2001. — 27 p. The language of ancient Lydia has raised unsolvable questions for languages historians for a long time. It is therefore no coincidence that the number of publications on Lydian is only a fraction of the publications on the other...
With contributions by A. E. Cowley, B. Haussoullier, A. H. Sayce, A. H. Smith. — Leyden: E.J. Brill, 1924. — xiii, 100 p. — (Sardis: publications of the American Society for the Excavation of Sardis; v. 6). "Scholars will regret that this Second Part of Volume VI has not been prepared by the editor of Part I. But for his energy in issuing that first instalment, notwithstanding...
Leyden: E.J. Brill, 1916. — viii, 84 p. — (Sardis: publications of the American Society for the Excavation of Sardis; v. 6). It was at first my intention to publish what follows as a preliminary article or essay, because the novelty of the subject and the fresh light which is sure to be thrown on it by other scholars will cause many of the views here expressed to need...
Louvain-la-Neuve; Paris: Peeters, 2005. — 130 p. — ISBN: 9782877238496. This outline of historical-comparative grammar of Lydian language provides a very useful summary of recent work.
Heidelberg: Carl Winter, 1964. — 280 S. Lydian is an Anatolian language that was spoken in the western part of Asia Minor in the first millennium B.C. In this book Gusmani provides both a dictionary and an edition of inscriptions. One must keep in mind, however, that the meanings of many words in this book reflect no more than guesses of Gusmani or other scholars that are...