Khwarazmian | |
---|---|
Chorasmian | |
Native to | Khwarezm |
Region | Central Asia |
Era | 550 BCE – 1200 AD[1] |
Indo-European
| |
Aramaic alphabet, Sogdian alphabet, Pahlavi script, Arabic script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | xco |
xco | |
Glottolog | khwa1238 [2] |
Khwarazmian (Khwarezmian, Khorezmian, Chorasmian) is an extinct East Iranian language[3][4][5][6] closely related to Sogdian. The language was spoken in the area of Khwarezm (Chorasmia), centered in the lower Amu Darya south of the Aral Sea (the northern part of the modern Republic of Uzbekistan, and the adjacent areas of Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan).
Knowledge of Khwarazmian is limited to its Middle Iranian stage and, as with Sogdian, little is known of its ancient form.
From the writings of the great Khwarazmian scholars, Al-Biruni and Zamakhshari, we know that the language was in use at least until the 13th century, when it was gradually replaced by Persian for the most part, as well as several dialects of Turkic.[7]
Other than the astronomical terms used by Al-Biruni, our other sources of Khwarazmian include Zamakhshari's Arabic–Persian–Khwarazmian dictionary and several legal texts that use Khwarazmian terms to explain certain legal concepts.[7]
The noted scholar W.B. Henning was preparing a dictionary of Khwarazmian when he died, leaving it unfinished.[citation needed]
Before the advance of Islam in Transoxiana (early 8th century), Khwarazmian was written in a script close to that of Sogdian and Pahlavi with its roots in the imperial Aramaic script. From the few surviving examples of this script on coins and artifacts it has been observed that written Khwarazmian included Aramaic logograms or ideograms, that is Aramaic words written to represent native spoken ones.
After the advance of Islam, Khwarazmian was written using an adapted version of the Perso-Arabic alphabet with a few extra signs to reflect specific Khwarazmian sounds, such as the letter څ, which represents /ts/ and /dz/, as in the traditional Pashto orthography.[8]