Thesis etd-05112018-122619 |
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Thesis type
Tesi di dottorato di ricerca
Author
COTUGNO, FRANCESCA
URN
etd-05112018-122619
Thesis title
The linguistic variation of Latin in Roman Britain
Academic discipline
L-LIN/01
Course of study
FILOLOGIA, LETTERATURA E LINGUISTICA
Supervisors
tutor Prof.ssa Marotta, Giovanna
tutor Prof. Galdi, Giovanbattista
tutor Prof. Galdi, Giovanbattista
Keywords
- Curse-tablets
- Latin sociolinguistics
- Londinium-Bloomberg
- Roman Britain
- Roman cursive
- Vindolanda
Graduation session start date
27/05/2018
Availability
Withheld
Release date
27/05/2088
Summary
The present thesis aims to record sociolinguistic variation in the non-literary texts written on tablets found in Roman Britain (1st-4th century CE) showing the differe 'micro-histories' of Latinization from this province. In general, the term ‘non-literary’ pinpoints documents like personal correspondence, private communication, lists, reports, curses and documents written on different writing materials like papyrus, ostraka, tablets or stone. For Roman Britain, the writing tablets written on wood (whether wax or ink-written tablets), represent the expressions of a single individual or community of speech situated in a precise geographical space between the first and third centuries.
The main corpora considered in this analysis are the Londinium-Bloomberg tablets (Tomlin 2016), the Carlisle writing tablets, the Vindolanda writing tablets and the Curse tablets. The rest of the documents written on tablets will compose the corpus that I have labelled as ‘Other’. The case studies analysed in this thesis are the following: vowel merger, syncope, gemination, degemination, h- insertion and deletion in initial position.
The main corpora considered in this analysis are the Londinium-Bloomberg tablets (Tomlin 2016), the Carlisle writing tablets, the Vindolanda writing tablets and the Curse tablets. The rest of the documents written on tablets will compose the corpus that I have labelled as ‘Other’. The case studies analysed in this thesis are the following: vowel merger, syncope, gemination, degemination, h- insertion and deletion in initial position.
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