Gafat language explained

Gafat
States:Ethiopia
Extinct:?
Ethnicity:Gafat
Familycolor:Afro-Asiatic
Fam2:Semitic
Fam3:West Semitic
Fam4:South Semitic
Fam5:Ethiopic
Fam6:South
Fam7:Outer
Fam8:n-group
Iso3:gft
Linglist:gft.html
Glotto:gafa1240
Glottorefname:Gafat

The Gafat language is an extinct Ethio-Semitic language once spoken by the Gafat people along the Blue Nile in Ethiopia, and later, speakers pushed south of Gojjam in what is now East Welega Zone.[1] [2] Gafat was related to the Harari language and Eastern Gurage languages.[3] The records of this language are extremely sparse. There is a translation of the Song of Songs written in the 17th or 18th Century held at the Bodleian Library.

Charles Tilstone Beke collected a word list in the early 1840s with difficulty from the few who knew the language, having found that "the rising generation seem to be altogether ignorant of it; and those grown-up persons who profess to speak it are anything but familiar with it."[4] The most recent accounts of this language are the reports of Wolf Leslau, who visited the region in 1947 and after considerable work was able to find a total of four people who could still speak the language. Edward Ullendorff, in his brief exposition on Gafat, concludes that as of the time of his writing, "one may ... expect that it has now virtually breathed its last."[5]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lipiński, Edward. Edward Lipiński (orientalist)

    . Edward Lipiński (orientalist). Semitic Languages: Outline of a Comparative Grammar. 2001. Peeters Publishers. 978-90-429-0815-4. 89.

  2. Book: Fage. J. D.. J. D. Fage. Oliver. Roland. Roland Oliver. The Cambridge History of Africa. 1975. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-20981-6. 128.
  3. Book: Pankhurst, Richard. Richard Pankhurst (historian)

    . Richard Pankhurst (historian). The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century. 1997. The Red Sea Press. 978-0-932415-19-6. 89.

  4. Charles T. Beke, "Abyssinia: Being a Continuation of Routes in That Country", Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London, 14 (1844), p. 41
  5. Ullendorff, Edward. The Ethiopians: An Introduction to Country and People, Second Edition (London: Oxford University Press, 1965), p. 131.