Английская Википедия:Babylonian vocalization

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Bab voc fragment 1.jpg
Ezekiel 34:22-25, from a manuscript with Babylonian vocalization from the Cairo Geniza
Файл:Bab voc fragment 2.jpg
A verse-by-verse interlinear Hebrew-Aramaic text of Deuteronomy 14:4-19 with Babylonian vocalization from the Cairo Geniza

The Babylonian vocalization, also known as Babylonian supralinear punctuation, or Babylonian pointing or Babylonian niqqud Hebrew: Шаблон:Script/Hebrew) is a system of diacritics (niqqud) and vowel symbols assigned above the text and devised by the Masoretes of Babylon to add to the consonantal text of the Hebrew Bible to indicate the proper pronunciation of words (vowel quality), reflecting the Hebrew of Babylon. The Babylonian notation is no longer in use in any Jewish community, having been supplanted by the sublinear Tiberian vocalization. However, the Babylonian pronunciation as reflected in that notation appears to be the ancestor of that used by Yemenite Jews.

History

The simple Babylonian vocalization system was created between the 6th and 7th centuries, while the complex system developed later.[1] There is evidence that Babylonian Hebrew had emerged as a distinct dialect by the end of the 9th century.[2] Babylonian Hebrew reached its peak in the 8th to 9th centuries, being used from Persia to Yemen.[3] Under Muslim hegemony in the 10th century, the main academies disappeared and the Babylonian vocalization was replaced by the Tiberian vocalization.[3] However, contemporary Yemenite Hebrew is thought to be the descendant of a variety of Babylonian Hebrew, as represented in the Babylonian system.[4] The first example of the Babylonian vocalization to become known to modern scholars was a codex of the Prophets discovered in 1839 at Chufut-Kale.[5]

Description

The Babylonian vocalization, along with the Palestinian vocalization, are known as the supralinear vocalizations because they place the vowel graphemes above the consonant letters, rather than both above and below as in the Tiberian system.[6] As in the Palestinian vocalization, only the most important vowels are indicated.[7]

Two Babylonian systems developed: an earlier simple (or Шаблон:Lang, E) system, and a later complex (or Шаблон:Lang, K) system.[8] The following vowel graphemes were used in the simple system:[9]

niqqud with ב Файл:Bab patah.jpg Файл:Bab qamats.jpg Файл:Bab tsere.jpg Файл:Bab hirik.jpg Файл:Bab holam.jpg Файл:Bab shuruq.jpg Файл:Bab shwa.jpg
Tiberian
analogue
patah,
segol
qamatz tzere hiriq holam qubutz,
shuruq
shva mobile
(shva na)
value Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA Шаблон:IPA

The simple system also has signs corresponding to Tiberian dagesh and rafe, though not used identically.[9] Shva quiescens (shva nah) is unmarked.[9]

The complex system may be subdivided into perfect and imperfect systems.[9] The former, unlike the latter, "has special signs for each kind of syllable and uses them consistently."[9] It marks allophones of /a e i u/, consonant gemination, distinguishes vocalic and consonantal א and ה, and marks shva mobile and quiescens with a single grapheme.[8] The perfect system is most notably employed by the Codex Babylonicus Petropolitanus.

A number of manuscripts with features intermediate between Tiberian and Babylonian also exist.[10] Later Yemenite manuscripts, using both simple and complex systems, show Yemenite features such as confusion between patah and shva and between tsere and holam.[10]

Файл:Babylonian Supralinear Punctuation, from Yemenite Siddur, April 2015.jpg
Section of Yemenite Siddur, with Babylonian supralinear punctuation (Pirke Avot)

Cantillation

The Babylonian system uses cantillation similarly to the Tiberian system.[11] The oldest manuscripts (which use the simple system) mark only disjunctive accents (pauses), do not write the accent over the stressed syllable, and do not mark mappiq, while later manuscripts do.[11] In the simple system there are only eight types of pause, and they are denoted by small Hebrew letters written after the word, in much the same way as the punctuation of the Quran.

See also

Файл:Siddur - Night of Rosh Hashanah.jpg
Yemenite Siddur written with Babylonian supralinear punctuation

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Bibliography

Шаблон:Hebrew language