Man with beard and crisp collared shirt poses with a smile in front of an exhibit case and exhibit gallery

Talk: The Origins of the Alphabet and How It Spread Across the World with Wayne T. Pitard

Essentially all of the alphabetic scripts in the world descend from a single script invented probably during the 20th century BCE by a Canaanite in the southern Levant.

This lecture will provide a tour of the extraordinary development of the alphabet from its beginnings to its eventual spread across the Mediterranean and the world. We will examine the script’s origin and how the signs were conceptualized by their creator(s). We will look at the alphabet’s extension, first across the eastern Mediterranean where it developed into the distinctive Ugaritic, Phoenician, Hebrew, and Aramaic scripts, and then moved southward into the Arabian Peninsula, where it evolved into the Arabic system. Then we will examine how the early alphabet, which only expressed consonants, was revolutionized by the Greeks, who began using some of the letters as vowels.

We will follow the development of the Greek alphabet into both the Latin and the Cyrillic alphabets that exist throughout Europe and much of northern Asia. Finally, we will touch upon the spread of the Arabic alphabet across northern Africa and eastward into India, and the Latin alphabet’s movement to the Americas and parts of southern Africa during the European colonial period of the 15th-20th centuries. All of this has made the alphabetic writing system the most widespread method of writing in the world.

Sponsored by: AIA-Central Illinois (Urbana) Society, Archaeological Institute of America

Archaeological Institute of America seal with owl: founded 1879

Contact

For further information on this event, contact the Museum Information Desk at or (217) 333-2360.

All are welcome. To request disability-related accommodations for this event, please contact Brian Cudiamat at or (217) 244-5586.