[The History of Rome (Volumes 1-5) by Theodor Mommsen]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of Rome (Volumes 1-5) INTRODUCTION of Hellenic Alphabets into Italy 13/22
In the one case they employed for the sibilant--for which the Phoenician alphabet furnished two signs, the fourteenth ( -- "id:/\/\") for -- "id:sh" and the eighteenth (-- "id:E") for -- "id:s" -- not the latter, which was in sound the more suitable, but the former; and such was in earlier times the mode of writing in the eastern islands, in Corinth and Corcyra, and among the Italian Achaeans.
In the other case they substituted for the sign of -- "id:i" the simple stroke -- "id:I", which was by far the more usual, and at no very late date became at least so far general that the broken -- "id:iota S" everywhere disappeared, although individual communities retained the -- "id:s" in the form -- "id:/\/\" alongside of the -- "I" .-- III.
Of later date is the substitution of -- "id:\/" for -- "id:/\" (-- "id:lambda") which might readily be confounded with -- "id:GAMMA gamma".
This we meet with in Athens and Boeotia, while Corinth and the communities dependent on Corinth attained the same object by giving to the -- "id:gamma" the semicircular form -- "id:C" instead of the hook-shape .-- IV.
The forms for -- "id:p" -- "id:P (with broken-loop)" and -- "id:r" -- "id:P", likewise very liable to be confounded, were distinguished by transforming the latter into -- "id:R"; which more recent form was not used by the Greeks of Asia Minor, the Cretans, the Italian Achaeans, and a few other districts, but on the other hand greatly preponderated both in Greece proper and in Magna Graecia and Sicily.
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