Avestan /əˈvɛstən/, formerly also known as "Zend", is an
Iranian language of the
Eastern Iranian division, known only from its use as the language of Zoroastrian scripture, i.e. the
Avesta, from which it derives its name. Its area of composition comprised ancient Arachosia,
Aria,
Margiana, and
Bactria, corresponding to the entirety of
Afghanistan and
Tajikistan and parts of
Iran,
Pakistan,
Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan. The
Yaz culture of Bactria-Margiana has been regarded as a likely archaeological reflection of the early Eastern Iranian culture described in the Avesta.
Avestan's status as a sacred language has ensured its continuing use for new compositions long after the language had ceased to be a living language. It is closely related to
Vedic Sanskrit, the oldest preserved
Indo-Aryan language.
Avestan, which is associated with northeastern Iran, and
Old Persian, which belongs to the southwest, together constitute what is called
Old Iranian." The Old Iranian language group is a branch of the
Indo-Iranian language group.
Iranian languages are traditionally classified as "eastern" or "western", and within this framework Avestan is classified as eastern. But this distinction is of limited meaning for Avestan, as the linguistic developments that later distinguish Eastern from
Western Iranian had not yet occurred. Avestan does not display some typical (South-)Western Iranian innovations already visible in Old Persian, and so in this sense, "eastern" only means "non-western". That is not to say that Avestan does not display any characteristic innovations of its own – e.g., the sibilant pronunciation of the consonant in aša, corresponding to original /rt/ that is preserved in the Old Persian form (arta), as well as Sanskrit
Old Avestan is closely related to Old Persian and also in some extent close in nature to Vedic Sanskrit. It is believed that it might be close to an ancestor dialect of
Pashto as well.
Forms and stages of development
The
Avestan language is attested in roughly two forms, known as "Old Avestan" (or "Gathic Avestan") and "
Younger Avestan". Younger Avestan did not evolve from Old Avestan; the two differ not only in time, but are also different dialects. Every Avestan text, regardless of whether originally composed in Old or Younger Avestan, underwent several transformations.
Karl Hoffmann traced the following stages for Avestan as found in the extant texts.
Many phonetic features cannot be ascribed with certainty to a particular stage since there may be more than one possibility. Every phonetic form that can be ascribed to the
Sasanian archetype on the basis of critical assessment of the manuscript evidence must have gone through the stages mentioned above so that "Old Avestan" and "
Young Avestan" really mean no more than "Old Avestan and Young Avestan of the
Sasanian period."
Alphabet
The script used for writing Avestan developed during the 3rd or
4th century AD. By then the language had been extinct for many centuries, and remained in use only as a liturgical language of the Avesta canon. As is still the case today, the liturgies were memorized by the priesthood and recited by rote.
The script devised to render Avestan was natively known as Din dabireh "religion writing". It has 53 distinct characters and is written right-to-left. Among the 53 characters are about 30 letters that are – through the addition of various loops and flourishes – variations of the 13 graphemes of the cursive
Pahlavi script (i.e. "
Book" Pahlavi) that is known from the post-Sassanian texts of Zoroastrian tradition. These symbols, like those of all the
Pahlavi scripts, are in turn based on
Aramaic script symbols. Avestan also incorporates several letters from other writing systems, most notably the vowels, which are mostly derived from
Greek minuscules. A few letters were free inventions, as were also the symbols used for punctuation. Also, the
Avestan alphabet has one letter that has no corresponding sound in the Avestan language; the character for /l/ (a sound that Avestan does not have) was added to write Pazend texts.
- published: 06 May 2015
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