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Together with about 20 known Proto-Canaanite inscriptions, it is also known as Early Alphabetic, i.e. the earliest trace of alphabetic writing and the common ancestor of both the Ancient South Arabian script and the Phoenician alphabet, which led to many modern alphabets including the Greek alphabet.
- Mixed
- Egyptian hieroglyphsProto-Sinaitic script
Escrita protossinaítica. O alfabeto protossinaítico, também chamado alfabeto protocananeu, é um dos alfabetos mais antigos conhecidos. Esse é, através de derivações e modificações sucessivas, a origem da genealogia da maior parte dos alfabetos usados hoje.
- 1400 a.C. a 1050 a.C.
- HieróglifosEscrita protossinaítica
The earliest known alphabetic (or "proto-alphabetic") inscriptions are the so-called Proto-Sinaitic (or Proto-Canaanite) script sporadically attested in the Sinai and in Canaan in the late Middle and Late Bronze Age. The script was not widely used until the rise of Syro-Hittite states in the 13th and 12th centuries BC.
The Paleo-Hebrew and Phoenician alphabets developed in the wake of the Bronze Age collapse, out of their immediate predecessor script Proto-Canaanite (Late Proto-Sinaitic) during the 13th to 12th centuries BCE, and earlier Proto-Sinaitic scripts.
- Phoenician
Type of writing system: abjad / consonant alphabet; Writing direction: variable; Used to write: Canaanite or Paleo-Hebrew, an extinct Semitic language; Script family: Proto-Sinaitic / Proto-Canaanite; Proto-Sinaitic / Proto-Canaanite script. This is one version of the Proto-Canaanite script using Phoenician/Hebrew alphabetical order.
O alfabeto protossinaítico, também chamado alfabeto protocananeu, é um dos alfabetos mais antigos conhecidos. Esse é, através de derivações e modificações sucessivas, a origem da genealogia da maior parte dos alfabetos usados hoje.
From the shape of the signs, Proto-Sinaitic may be an alphabet, and the ancestor of the Phoenician alphabet, from which nearly all modern alphabets descend. There have been two major discoveries of inscriptions of the Proto-Sinaitic script. The first was in the winter of 1904–1905 in Sinai by Hilda and Flinders Petrie, dated to ...