As one coming from the world of ancient Indo-European (IE) and as editor of a journal 
on IE out of UCLA, I am in support of the Phoenician proposal. 

In Indo-European, the origins of the Greek alphabet are of interest, and hence the 
materials that discuss Phoenician as the possible source for the rise of the Greek 
alphabet are important (as discussed, for example, in Barry Powell's _Homer and the 
Origin of the Greek Alphabet_, Cambridge, 1991).  

>From my perspective, I would like to be able to see in plain text the Phoenician as 
>it appears in inscriptions where the purported Phoenician to Greek transmission may 
>have occurred (Hama or Al Mina, Syria, for example, in the first half of the first 
>millennium B.C.).  A facsimile could capture the inscription, but I would like to be 
>able to cite and discuss the words and letters in plain text, particularly to compare 
>the Phoenician letters to the Greek letter forms. (Powell's book includes inline 
>examples of the Phoenician and Greek letters.) In order to do this, I need Phoenician 
>to appear, and not Hebrew, and would use a Phoenician encoding (if in Unicode). 

Also, as a advocate of the use of Unicode in the journal I edit--which will eventually 
be made available online (in XML)--I need to be make sure that if an article on 
Greek/Phoenician were published online, users will see the Phoenician letters, and not 
Hebrew, which a Phoenician encoding would allow.

Additionally, I am myself interested in tracking the use of the PHOENICIAN WORD 
SEPARATOR and what its relation to the AEGEAN WORD SEPARATOR DOT (and AEGEAN WORD 
SEPARATOR LINE) may be. 
(There is a different opinion on the origin of the Greek script by Roger Woodard, 
_Greek Writing from Knossos to Homer_ [Oxford, 1997] in which he instead puts the 
"invention" of the Greek script in the hands of Cypriot syllabary scribes during 
Mycenaean times. But here, too, the ultimate origin of the Greek script lies with the 
Phoenician script.)

With best regards,
Deborah Anderson

Deborah Anderson
Researcher, Dept. of Linguistics
UC Berkeley
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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