Old Harari
Old Harari or Ancient Harari is the earliest recorded form of the Harari language, spoken in Harar, Ethiopia.[1][2][3] It used the Arabic script.[4]
History
[edit]Historian Ewald Wagner posited that Old Harari could uncover a common ancestry linking southern Ethiosemitic and Eastern Cushitic languages.[5] The early Zikr text is linked to Sayo Abdulmalik, who composed it in Old Harari. Tradition holds that Abdulmalik resided during the era of Abadir in the 13th century.[6] According to philologist Alessandro Bausi, the earliest known manuscript featuring a text in Old Harari dates back to 1460.[7] Historian Mohamed Nuuh Ali, who specializes in Somali studies, suggests that there are indications that Old Harari loanwords in Somali language stem from the western expansion of the Somali people.[8]
Subsequently, Middle Harari later emerged, characterized as a blend of both Modern and Old Harari.[9]
Linguist Giorgio Banti asserts that there is a common belief regarding the connection between the Harari language and the East Gurage languages, including Silt'e. However, this assertion is incorrect, as Old Harari is more similar to Modern Harari than to any of the East Gurage languages.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ Bausi, Alessandro. The Emergence of Multiple-Text Manuscripts. De Gruyter.
- ^ Roma, Elisa. Europe and the Mediterranean as Linguistic Areas Convergencies from a Historical and Typological Perspective. J. Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 6.
- ^ Huehnergard, John. The Semitic Languages. Taylor & Francis. p. 486.
- ^ Kelly, Samantha. A Companion to Medieval Ethiopia and Eritrea. Brill. p. 285.
- ^ Dombrowski, Franz. Reviewed Work: Harari-Texte in Arabischer Schrift Ewald Wagner. Journal of the American Oriental Society. p. 369.
- ^ Harari Literature. Encyclopedia Aethiopica.
- ^ Gori, Alessandro. Text Collections in the Arabic Manuscript Tradition of Harar: The Case of the Mawlid Collection and of šayḫ Hāšim’s al-Fatḥ al- Raḥmānī. De Gruyter. p. 62.
- ^ Ali, Mohamed. History in the Horn of Africa, 1000 B.C.-1500 A.D. Aspects of Social and Economic Change Between the Rift Valley and the Indian Ocean. UCLA. p. 151.
- ^ Banti, Giorgio. The literature of Harar until the end of the 19th century. Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura. p. 156.
- ^ Banti, Giorgio. Some Further Remarks on the Old Harari Kitab alfarayid (PDF). East and West. p. 274.