Cedilla: Difference between revisions
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* [http://www.staff.uni-mainz.de/klump/20041202-10093458-Cedille.pdf Zur Geschichte und Bezeichnung der Cédille in den romanischen Sprachen], [[Wikipedia:PDF|PDF]] by Dr. Andre Klump, Mainz (in German). | * [http://www.staff.uni-mainz.de/klump/20041202-10093458-Cedille.pdf Zur Geschichte und Bezeichnung der Cédille in den romanischen Sprachen], [[Wikipedia:PDF|PDF]] by Dr. Andre Klump, Mainz (in German). | ||
* [http://www.nd.edu/~medvllib/apocalypse/beatscript.html Another image showing Visigothic script] from the [http://www.library.nd.edu/medieval_library/index.shtml Library of the Medieval Institute] at University of Notre Dame. AFAICT unfortunately without any example of '''z''' which of course was uncommon in Latin text. | * [http://www.nd.edu/~medvllib/apocalypse/beatscript.html Another image showing Visigothic script] from the [http://www.library.nd.edu/medieval_library/index.shtml Library of the Medieval Institute] at University of Notre Dame. AFAICT unfortunately without any example of '''z''' which of course was uncommon in Latin text. | ||
[[Category:Natscripts]] |
Revision as of 14:55, 12 June 2009
A Visigothic z.[1]
The origin of ç
The letter ç originated in the Visigothic script used in Spain in early medieval times. Contrary to what the modern shape and name c-cedilla suggest it is not in origin a c with a diacritic, but a swash form of the letter z.
A form of z like the ʒ now used in IPA for the French sound of j, with a downward curved swash replacing the lower horizontal line, was widespread in medieval scripts. In Spain this form developed a variant with also the upper horizontal line becoming a curved swash. In time this form (No. 3 in the image) became differentiated in use, denoting the voiceless coronal affricate /ts/ while form (1) or (2) denoted the corresponding voiced affricate /dz/. Perhaps it was the use of this letter form for the same sound as c represented before the letters e, i and y that prompted its further development into a form like a c with a tail, through increasing the size of the upper curve while decreasing the size of the lower part.
The name "cedilla"
The word cedilla is originally a diminutive of zeda or ceda, the Spanish name for the letter z, and thus was originally a name for the letter ç, and not just for the ostensible diacritic. Alternative forms in older Spanish were cerilla and ceril. Incidentally cerilla means "friction match" in modern Spanish!
Sources
- ^ The image of the Visigothic z was borrowed from Dr Dianne Tillotson's medieval writing site. She in turn got it from the British Library.
External links
- Cedilla at Wikipedia.
- Visigothic script at Wikipedia.
- Visigothic Script at Dr Dianne Tillotson's medieval writing site.
- Zur Geschichte und Bezeichnung der Cédille in den romanischen Sprachen, PDF by Dr. Andre Klump, Mainz (in German).
- Another image showing Visigothic script from the Library of the Medieval Institute at University of Notre Dame. AFAICT unfortunately without any example of z which of course was uncommon in Latin text.