Ancient Aramaic Village Rediscovered After Being Considered Lost For Centuries
Archaeologists working in eastern Turkey have identified a settlement whose surviving inhabitants still speak a variant of biblical Aramaic — one of the last living communities to do so.
In a remote district of eastern Turkey, archaeologists working with linguists have documented a small settlement whose surviving inhabitants continue to speak a variant of Neo-Aramaic — a family of languages closely related to the Aramaic spoken in biblical times.
The community, numbering fewer than 400 people, had been considered lost by academic linguists for at least a century.
Their spoken variant preserves grammatical features found in fifth-century texts but nowhere in any modern published grammar of Aramaic.
The rediscovery has prompted urgent documentation efforts, including audio recordings of elderly speakers and the compilation of a preliminary dictionary. Younger community members are largely bilingual in Aramaic and Turkish.
Linguists caution that the language remains critically endangered. But the finding has already extended the documented continuum of Aramaic by more than a millennium.
"It is like finding a species presumed extinct," one of the researchers said. "You cannot save what you do not know is there."
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