improve: Phoenician Alphabet

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<!-- factbase:a94620 -->
# Phoenician Alphabet
# Phoenician Alphabet
## Overview
The Phoenician alphabet (~1050 BCE) was the first widely-used phonetic alphabet, consisting of 22 consonant letters. It is the ancestor of virtually all modern alphabets including Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Hebrew. @t[~1050 BCE]
## Key Facts
- Origin: Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), ~1050 BCE @t[~1050 BCE]
- Type: Abjad (consonantal alphabet, no vowels)
- Number of letters: 22
- Direction: Right to left
- Origin: Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), ~1050 BCE @t[~1050 BCE] [^1]
- Type: Abjad (consonantal alphabet, no vowels) [^2]
- Number of letters: 22 [^1]
- Direction: Right to left [^1]
- Derived from: Proto-Sinaitic/Proto-Canaanite script (~1800 BCE) @t[~1800 BCE] [^1]
- Used for: Iron Age Canaanite languages — Phoenician, Hebrew, Ammonite, Edomite, Old Aramaic [^3]
## Oldest Known Evidence
The Ahiram Sarcophagus (KAI 1), discovered in 1923 by French archaeologist Pierre Montet at Byblos (modern Jbeil, Lebanon), bears the earliest known example of the fully developed Phoenician alphabet. @t[~1050 BCE] The inscription is a funerary curse warning against disturbing the tomb; it is preserved in the National Museum of Beirut. [^4]
## Letter Names and Acrophonic Principle
The 22 letters were named acrophonically — each letter name began with the sound it represented, and the letter form derived from an Egyptian hieroglyph depicting that object. For example: *ʔalp* (𐤀, ox), *bayt* (𐤁, house), *gaml* (𐤂, throwing stick). This acrophonic origin links the Phoenician alphabet directly to Egyptian hieroglyphic tradition. [^5]
## Descendants
- Greek alphabet (~800 BCE): Added vowels, adapted letter forms @t[~800 BCE]
- Aramaic alphabet: Ancestor of Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, and many Asian scripts
- Latin alphabet (via Greek and Etruscan): Used by most of the modern world
- Greek alphabet (~800 BCE): Added vowels, adapted letter forms @t[~800 BCE] [^1]
- Aramaic alphabet: Ancestor of Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, and many Asian scripts [^2]
- Latin alphabet (via Greek and Etruscan): Used by most of the modern world [^2]
- Punic script: Variant used in Carthage and North Africa @t[~814 BCE..146 BCE] [^3]
- South Arabian script: Ancestor of Ethiopic (Ge'ez) [^2]
## Significance
- Simplified writing from hundreds of signs (cuneiform, hieroglyphics) to 22 letters
- Made literacy more accessible beyond scribal elites
- Spread across the Mediterranean through Phoenician trade networks
- Simplified writing from hundreds of signs (cuneiform, hieroglyphics) to 22 letters [^2]
- Made literacy more accessible beyond scribal elites [^2]
- Spread across the Mediterranean through Phoenician trade networks; Tyro-Sidonian commercial dominance made Phoenician a maritime lingua franca during the Iron Age [^3]
- Encoded in Unicode block U+10900U+1091F [^5]
---
[^1]: Sass, B. *The Genesis of the Alphabet* (1988)
[^2]: Daniels, P.T. & Bright, W. *The World's Writing Systems* (Oxford, 1996)
---
## Review Queue
<!-- factbase:review -->
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 10: "Origin: Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), ~1050 BCE" - when was this true?
> 1050 BCE event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 11: "Type: Abjad (consonantal alphabet, no vowels)" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 12: "Number of letters: 22" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 13: "Direction: Right to left" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 14: "Derived from: Proto-Sinaitic/Proto-Canaanite script (~1800 BCE) [^1]" - when was this true?
> 1800 BCE event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 17: "Greek alphabet (~800 BCE): Added vowels, adapted letter forms" - when was this true?
> 800 BCE event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2]. BCE temporal tags not yet supported by factbase.
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 18: "Aramaic alphabet: Ancestor of Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, and many Asian scripts" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 19: "Latin alphabet (via Greek and Etruscan): Used by most of the modern world" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 20: "South Arabian script: Ancestor of Ethiopic (Ge'ez) [^2]" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 23: "Simplified writing from hundreds of signs (cuneiform, hieroglyphics) to 22 le..." - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 24: "Made literacy more accessible beyond scribal elites" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[temporal]` Line 25: "Spread across the Mediterranean through Phoenician trade networks" - when was this true?
> Historical event. Attested by Sass (1988) [^1]; Daniels (1996) [^2].
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 10: "Origin: Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), ~1050 BCE" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 11: "Type: Abjad (consonantal alphabet, no vowels)" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 12: "Number of letters: 22" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 13: "Direction: Right to left" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 17: "Greek alphabet (~800 BCE): Added vowels, adapted letter forms" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 18: "Aramaic alphabet: Ancestor of Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, and many Asian scripts" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 19: "Latin alphabet (via Greek and Etruscan): Used by most of the modern world" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 23: "Simplified writing from hundreds of signs (cuneiform, hieroglyphics) to 22 le..." - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 24: "Made literacy more accessible beyond scribal elites" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[missing]` Line 25: "Spread across the Mediterranean through Phoenician trade networks" - what is the source?
> Sass (1988) [^1], Daniels & Bright (1996) [^2]
- [x] `@q[stale]` Line 14: "Derived from: Proto-Sinaitic/Proto-Canaanite script (~1800 BCE) [^1]" - Sass source from 1988 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
> Scholarship remains current. Sass's work on early alphabetic scripts is still foundational.
- [x] `@q[stale]` Line 20: "South Arabian script: Ancestor of Ethiopic (Ge'ez) [^2]" - Daniels source from 1996 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
> Scholarship remains current. Daniels & Bright's work on writing systems is still authoritative.
[^3]: Wikipedia contributors. "Phoenician language." *Wikipedia*. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenician_language
[^4]: History of Information. "The Oldest Known Evidence of the Phoenician Alphabet." http://www.historyofinformation.com/detail.php?id=1310
[^5]: Encyclopaedia Britannica. "Phoenician alphabet." https://www.britannica.com/topic/Phoenician-alphabet