The Origins of Hebrew

2021 ж. 13 Сәу.
1 160 137 Рет қаралды

Watch the series here: • Excavating the History...
www.patheos.com/blogs/religio...
As the name suggests, the Hebrew Bible is written, mostly, in Hebrew. But what is the earliest history of this language? What language did the ancient Israelites speak? This episode examines the origins of Hebrew and its relationship with Canaanite dialects in the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age. The episode will explore archaeological artifacts such as an inscription from Izbet Sarteh in Israel, which may be one of the earliest inscriptions of the Hebrew language.
Producer: Andrew M. Henry
Academic Consultant: Melissa Cradic
Writer: Shane M. Thompson

Пікірлер
  • Watch the series here!: kzhead.info/channel/PLRnXSS4SzUG66tF70EKGgzIV2B5-qnXmJ.html

    @ReligionForBreakfast@ReligionForBreakfast3 жыл бұрын
    • @@theexile1155 you are not predestined ('Ezekiel' 18:20-32/rom. 6:16), the one who has an ear to hear let that one hear ('Mark' 4:9). HalleluYAH yes, not Hallelu-'Jesus'.

      @littleandre4957@littleandre49573 жыл бұрын
    • God created the universe in the divine Hebrew language. When all the numerical values of Hebrew names of the elements/planets/etc are graphed against their properties - it consistently produces a straight line. By Prof Haim Shore. kzhead.info/sun/odOQXd2AoZODiZE/bejne.html kzhead.info/sun/hNqEnLRvn3elYIk/bejne.html kzhead.info/sun/ib2le8-BppOsoXk/bejne.html (hidden codes in the books of moses) kzhead.info/sun/dKZqj8iCp4BjbKs/bejne.html (hidden codes in the books of moses)

      @Raverraver9999@Raverraver99993 жыл бұрын
    • I wonder if the ancient Israelites would’ve felt quite so grateful to the Canaanites.

      @j0nnyism@j0nnyism3 жыл бұрын
    • Isaac was born 2000BC + about 191 yrs later Jacob moves to Egypt + 430 years to the Law (i.e. Pentateuch) so Moses wrote the law in approx. 1379/80 BC - if anything he was educated in Egypt and spent 40 years with the Midianites. The Papyrus Harris, dated to 1150BC (housed at the British Museum) was written in Egyptian - the style is not unlike Arabic - Just sayin' ! So Moses must have written in something similar - although I do remember a silver scroll that was found and the writing is paleo Hebrew dated to about 600BC (although probably much older, one cannot date a stable element with any accuracy - it contains verses from the book of Numbers) I suppose no one will ever know !!!

      @jesussaves1875@jesussaves18753 жыл бұрын
    • @Infinite Flow You do know that Noah lived in Ur (Mesopotamia) right ? - that's where they found the stele

      @jesussaves1875@jesussaves18753 жыл бұрын
  • I can imagine a youth in an Ancient Levantine Scribal School bemoaning the fact that he’ll probably have to get a “stable job” inscribing economic transactions or court records when all he wants is to write literature and stories

    @rachel_sj@rachel_sj3 жыл бұрын
    • The more things change the more they stay the same.

      @TensileStrength@TensileStrength3 жыл бұрын
    • "The aphabet again? When are we going to write something important in this class?"

      @colleenforrest7936@colleenforrest79363 жыл бұрын
    • Years ago, I came across an account of a deciphered tablet from this area whose subject matter was a student writing home for more money.

      @Archimedes616@Archimedes6163 жыл бұрын
    • ...had he succeeded ,then we would need a chart and a horse to carry a novel...and yo had to be noble for being allowed to read...

      @lyrachrome6222@lyrachrome62223 жыл бұрын
    • If you read the bible, it seems those who didn‘t cut it as scribes for economic transactions and court records ended up writing the fiction...

      @MrAranton@MrAranton3 жыл бұрын
  • I wish you included Aramaic too with modern Arabic, Hebrew, Ge’ez because it’s still spoken today

    @kevinwahl5610@kevinwahl56103 жыл бұрын
    • Good idea but i think it would delude the meaning of the video

      @squidy2902@squidy29023 жыл бұрын
    • @@curtiswilson859 nope, almost a million people speak it to this day in their day-to-day life. Look up Maaloula, Qaraqosh, Alqosh, or Södertälje

      @kevinwahl5610@kevinwahl56103 жыл бұрын
    • @@kevinwahl5610 very nice, thanks for the clarification! I’d love an episode or two on this channel devoted to dead or dying languages and their relationship to liturgies that help keep them alive so long.

      @curtiswilson859@curtiswilson8593 жыл бұрын
    • @@curtiswilson859 No. Some dialects of Aramaic (for instance, Jewish Babylonian Aramaic and Jewish Palestinian Aramaic) are only liturgical and preserved in writing (e.g., the Talmud; certain prayers), but some are still spoken languages today - Assyrian Neo-Aramaic is one.

      @oaktree__@oaktree__3 жыл бұрын
    • @@curtiswilson859 Also in southern Turkey is spoken the central mountain vernacular of Aramaic the Toroyo language while liturgical Syriac is used in the church and spoken by a few scholars, monks, priests etc

      @Aj-zr8dz@Aj-zr8dz3 жыл бұрын
  • What’s fascinating about language is how it can change significantly over time based on the accumulating of small changes, even from one generation to the next. For example, the narrator of this video, who appears to be at least 20-30 years younger than me, seems to pronounce “Isrealites” with only three syllables - “Iz-ruh-lites” - which is different from how I was taught as a youngster to pronounce it with 4 syllables 5+ decades ago - “Iz-ree-uhl-ites”. And this compression of the middle two syllables of “Israelites” into one syllable is something I’ve noticed a few other folks on KZhead of the same generation as this narrator do even though they pronounce the root of that word itself- “Israel” - with three syllables. Fascinating!

    @phdtobe@phdtobe2 жыл бұрын
    • I think the change could be of which syllables is stressed, instead of the amount of syllables

      @katethegoat7507@katethegoat75072 жыл бұрын
    • Regional accents and things. There are phrases that now have the opposite meaning they used to. Look in to "positive anymore". I know a few people who use it, and it is regional - but still sounds very strange to me. Changes or differences like that are common.

      @TurtleRocker12@TurtleRocker122 жыл бұрын
    • Isn't it said like iz-rah-eh-lite?

      @brujo_millonario@brujo_millonario Жыл бұрын
    • @@brujo_millonario If one normally pronounces “Israel” as “Iz-rah-el”, yes. But the typical English language speaker normally pronounces it “Iz-ree-uhl”, so the “ite” adds an additional syllable to that pronunciation.

      @phdtobe@phdtobe Жыл бұрын
    • I hear four syllables...

      @thegreatgazoo2334@thegreatgazoo2334 Жыл бұрын
  • Brilliant presentations, thank you. Very helpful to know. Someone was presenting stages of the Old Testament writings through the lense of how languages in that region, changed and impacted the manuscrips that Ezra had to translate in modern Hebrew alphabet o 22 letters

    @mariannehuston3814@mariannehuston38143 жыл бұрын
  • I have friend who studies akkadian. She once told me that there is some evidence that the Amarna letters may actually be written in a dialect of ancient caananite, as opposed to akkadian. They often feature a number of characteristics that would be unorthodox in akkadian as such. For example it is very common in the Amarna letters to find verbs in the middle of a sentence, whereas in "proper" akkadian verbs are always at the end of a sentence. Markers for person and number in verb conjugations are also often entirely wrong. As the hypothesis goes the ancient caananites would written out entire akkadian words in syllabic cuneiform, treating the syllables as if they were simply a giant logogram for a whole word and then adding native caananite conjugation markers at the end. This may sound far-fetched to modern ears but there is extensive evidence that akkadian can written like this using sumerian words. In fact there is a term "sumerogram" that refers to situations where akkadian speaking scribes chose to replace an akkadian word with a sumerian one in spelling.

    @thomashygum5310@thomashygum53103 жыл бұрын
    • Cool, Canaanite Akkadograms !!

      @ishmamahmed9306@ishmamahmed93063 жыл бұрын
    • That makes perfect sense, like the widespread use of Sinitic characters across East Asia. The use of a character doesn't make a word or a text Chinese, Japanese, or Korean. You have to dig deeper and look at the text as a whole to figure out which it is.

      @ivandiaz5791@ivandiaz57913 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. It is seems counterintutive for many westerners, myself included, because we are not used to considering logograms, and the many peculiarities that languages that regularly use logograms have. It is worth mentioning here, because he skipped over it in the video, that Akkadian uses a lot of logograms in addition to its syllabic signs. In fact many signs can act both as logograms and as syllabograms depending on the context (which can be hard to figure out). The hittite language is very famous for doing this kind of thing too. The hittites adapted their cuneiform writing system from the akkadian one, which is in turn adapted from sumerian. In Akkadian it is almost always assumed that a literate person is literate in both sumerian and akkadian, and as such that it is perfectly fine to substitute a sumerian word in for an akkadian one, or even to create a rebus of sumerian and akkadian words. In hittite it is in turn assumed that the scribe will be literate in all three of sumerian, akkadian and hittite which means that scribes can go ham and create a mixture of all three languages in writing. It makes for a famously very difficult script to read. It strikes me that this may well be the case for a correspondence apparently written in akkadian, but exchanged between an egyptian speaker and a caananite speaker. They may well have had all sorts of common implied rules and shorthands that we cannot know about today unless more documentation of ancient caaninte comes to light.

      @thomashygum5310@thomashygum53103 жыл бұрын
    • Nupuqi Om-Re Khonectcis will guide you

      @IshtarLinqu@IshtarLinqu3 жыл бұрын
    • That’s really interesting! That reminds me of how modern Japanese incorporated Chinese characters in writing, but using their native grammar & adding particles/markers/verb endings to accomplish this

      @nachtegaelw5389@nachtegaelw53892 жыл бұрын
  • The names of the Hebrew letters themselves, even in modern times, are still mostly actual Hebrew words from the original Proto-Sinaitic: Pe is "mouth", Ain is "eye", Vav is "hook" and so on.

    @EladLerner@EladLerner3 жыл бұрын
    • Alef is definitely not bull though. I wonder how that got so far off.

      @GaviLazan@GaviLazan3 жыл бұрын
    • Hebrew letters are also numbers

      @robertrude3573@robertrude35733 жыл бұрын
    • @@robertrude3573 not entirely. They can be used as numbers, but they aren't "numbers". Hebrew speakers don't say "I have yud bet apples"... At least not in daily life. But they are used as date and day markers (Yom - day - alef, or kaf vav of kislev).

      @GaviLazan@GaviLazan3 жыл бұрын
    • @@GaviLazan in the Bible Aleph IS a bull. Also, the word le'aleph (to train an animal) comes from the same root. he.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D7%90%D7%9C%D7%A3

      @EladLerner@EladLerner3 жыл бұрын
    • @@EladLerner I guess you're right, totally forgot about "שגר אלפיך" but even in the Bible the word שור is much more common. That wikitionary link seems to rely on the malbim's perush saying that that word meant specifically "bulls trained to plow". Very interesting.

      @GaviLazan@GaviLazan3 жыл бұрын
  • Very interesting and well done. Good imagery, good script, good pace.

    @juliamacdonald3767@juliamacdonald37676 ай бұрын
  • Whoaaaah! You look exactly how Job looks in my mind, minus the prescription glasses. Goosebumps!!!!

    @toshiyukisuzuki7610@toshiyukisuzuki76102 жыл бұрын
  • More linguistics/ancient languages please!

    @CO-dv6py@CO-dv6py3 жыл бұрын
  • The origins of writing systems are always fascinating to me. Great video!

    @merrittanimation7721@merrittanimation77213 жыл бұрын
  • Your videos are amazing! This one completely blew my mind. I'll never look at the letter A the same way again.

    @Morariu94@Morariu943 жыл бұрын
  • Considering the importance of Aramaic in the short passages of Daniel, along with the Targum of 1st-2nd century CE, it would have been nice to learn about it. This was a really enjoyable video. Thank you.

    @aspektx@aspektx2 жыл бұрын
    • In the Greek version of the Old Testament, Sam (Shem) have a son called Aram . In the Old testament the children of Sam ( Shem ) are : 1- Elam, 2- Asshur, 3- Arphaxad, 4- Lud, and 5- Aram The Classical Arabic name for the region is بلاد اَلشَّأم ("The land of Shem") eldest son of Noah. The name of بلاد اَلشَّأم in the ancient world was never called the land of Aram. In Assyrian annals it was called the land of Hittites, and earlier it was called The Land of Amorites. The only reference mentioned as the Land of Aram was in the Old Testament around 500 BC and after the fall of the Assyrian Empire. The Greek replaced the name of Aram with Suria, simply because by the time the Old Testament translation to Greek was completed, the Romans were ruling بلاد اَلشَّأم, and the Romans had established a province called Suria. The ancient Arameans never labeled themselves as Surians . Another interesting think is that Armenians had a king called Aram, and the Greeks called him Aram too. Despite that, they continues to call land of Aram as Suria. All Arameans have been Assyrianized, hence the Greeks called them Surians which is in English short for Assyrians الآشوريين Here are Greek and Roman historians equating the term Suria, Syria/Syrian with Assyria/Assyrian. Arabic and Hebrew languages are derived from Aramaic. It is said that 3500 years ago, Abraham spoke Aramaic but Ishmael spoke the Arabic.

      @RH-vr7cs@RH-vr7cs Жыл бұрын
    • Isn't Hebrew older than Aramaic, and some scholars argue was the original pre Babel language, or is that Talmudic Rabbinical propaganda?

      @Daniel1132Micah5@Daniel1132Micah54 ай бұрын
  • I don't like to be a downer, but I feel the need to offer some constructive criticism. I think the structure of the video was confusing. You started with proto-Canaanite script, went to paleo-Hebrew, then jumped backwards to proto-Sinaitic. It would be much easier to follow if you started with the very beginning of the alphabet and went forward chronologically. You said nothing about the development of the square Hebrew script, or the separate evolution of Samaritan, which I think would be very relevant. Also, I think you ought to have made the distinction between script and language a bit clearer, and maybe talked just a bit more about language/dialect continua. Part of the problem may be that the video was too short for the topic. Perhaps if the topic were split, with one video, of around fifteen minutes, quickly going through the evolution of the alphabet up to paleo-Hebrew, and then another about the later development of the modern Hebrew script and divergence of the Hebrew language from common West Semitic. I must add that I enjoy this channel, even if I never comment. Usually your videos are very good. I just found this one surprisingly frustrating. I hope this comment doesn't come across as too negative.

    @johanobesusfatjohn5836@johanobesusfatjohn58363 жыл бұрын
    • I think this video was a very poor introduction to a very complicated subject that is made even more complicated by anachronistic terminology. "Paleo-Hebrew" is just the Canaanite/Phoenician script adn the "square-script" is called Ashurit ("Assyrian") because they adopted it from Aramaic around the time of the exile. If you point to all the foreign influences on the Hebrew language (like there is for ANY language) then things become more clear. It's only when these details are ignored that things make no sense.

      @LordJagd@LordJagd3 жыл бұрын
    • Largely agreed, there were a lot of good nuggets of info, but in structure I was confused

      @odinfredrikrustad7450@odinfredrikrustad74503 жыл бұрын
    • And then some ! i watched this video because Stan Tenen calls it a "construction language" , and i heard nothing about that ! kzhead.info/sun/pMeCgaaqm6N4f3A/bejne.html

      @qedqubit@qedqubit3 жыл бұрын
    • Proclaiming the Bible as history was his greatest leap of faith to begin with 😂 By the way that scripture looked eerily similar to linear writing

      @epimetheus9053@epimetheus90533 жыл бұрын
    • @@epimetheus9053 It's funny because there's no problem with people suggesting that, for example, the Phoenician script influenced the Greek alphabet, but because Hebrew is supposed to be a "holy language/script" so much of the research on the subject is tangled in belief.

      @LordJagd@LordJagd3 жыл бұрын
  • As a former Mormon, the ethnolinguistic field is fascinating to me because for the Book of Mormon to be true, the native Americans would have to be speaking some sort of the Hebrew language. Yet, well studied linguistic academics know this to not be the case. And for any former Mormons playing the drinking game at home, B.H. Roberts noticed this problem back in the early 1900s. But I digress. Thanks for this video. It was a joy to learn a little more about the origins. Cheers.

    @losttribe3001@losttribe30013 жыл бұрын
    • I would be surprised to find Mormons playing a drinking game 🤣

      @sargecad3t@sargecad3t3 жыл бұрын
    • @@sargecad3t They wrote "_former_" Mormons. :D

      @varana@varana3 жыл бұрын
    • I know there's some real questionable claims in Mormonism but there's a theory that Phoenicians may have once explored the Americas, might have influenced some cultures and the Phoenician language is mostly identical with Hebrew but there's no evidence any natives spoke the language.

      @Aj-zr8dz@Aj-zr8dz3 жыл бұрын
    • @@Aj-zr8dz instead of “theory”, I prefer “hypothesis” because it’s a much better way to talk about the scientific method we use to gain knowledge...there are sorts of hypothesis like that, but those are just unjustified speculations. In fact, I’ve seen everything from ancient Egyptians to Irish monks to the Chinese visiting the Americas pre Columbus. But that’s not how academics work and a person needs evidence to back it up. For example, we know that the Norse Vikings visited the Americas; not because of the sagas, but because we have archeologically found a community in Newfoundland at L’Anse aux Meadows. It’s there that they found the footings of structures that matched with Viking homes, rivets used in Viking boats, and slag from the production of iron...which, is one reason we know the Book of Mormon to be full of crap. There are stories of great armies with swords and chariots...yet, there would be massive slag heaps found somewhere in the Americas for that to be true. It’s why the Book of Mormon is not taught at manor university as a historical record. Things suck as genetics, archeology, metallurgy, linguistics, and agriculture all disprove the BoM to be fiction and is why it can be seen as nothing but fiction. I left years and years ago, but if anyone really wants to get into the weeds, the CES Letter is a great place to start...unless if you’re a Mormon apologists. Then more power to you. You just have ignore soooooooooo much. So could the Phoenicians found themselves in the Americas...maybe...but until theirs better evidence, I don’t buy it.

      @losttribe3001@losttribe30013 жыл бұрын
    • @@losttribe3001 I guess I was using the word "theory" loosely as indeed it was speculation without hard evidence. I've dealt with Mormons, know the history well, know all about shady joe Smith, enjoyed the south park episode etc I do think it's very possible the Phoenicians or a related group might have reached the Americas and might have spread the cults of human sacrifice but this is all speculation.

      @Aj-zr8dz@Aj-zr8dz3 жыл бұрын
  • This was all really fascinating. Truly, that part of the world has a very rich history and is worth looking into it. Thanks for this awesome video.

    @ntmn8444@ntmn84442 жыл бұрын
    • It has an insane amount of history that will never be explored because of the political and religious problems surrounding the area.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx2 жыл бұрын
  • This was absolutely fascinating. Thank you!

    @scottythetrex5197@scottythetrex51972 жыл бұрын
  • This is so cool! I love learning about the ancient world, and the history of writing and the alphabet is so fascinating.

    @Robin-vn7bj@Robin-vn7bj3 жыл бұрын
  • Very cool video! Thanks for sharing; I learned a lot and I'm looking forward to watching the earlier videos in this series.

    @MM-jf1me@MM-jf1me3 жыл бұрын
  • Your presentations are excellent; informative and enjoyable.

    @banba317@banba317 Жыл бұрын
  • I wish more dating of the texts were included, always wondered why the scribes in Alexandria used Hebrew when by then Aramaic, Greek and Coptic were way more popular. My theory is Hebrew was used to make it appear that these writing were older then they really were, for example there's never been any writing about the exodus and Moses before the Septuagint.

    @theautoman22@theautoman222 жыл бұрын
    • "tsar feodore IV": perhap cause a woman ? ( Alexandria the great )a christian who studied hebrew .

      @theodoremacewko7757@theodoremacewko77572 жыл бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/p9WImZyCjZuMmKs/bejne.html

      @josephzammit8483@josephzammit8483 Жыл бұрын
  • This has quickly become one of my favorite channels, amazing work!

    @TheLostAge@TheLostAge3 жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for the kind words!

      @ReligionForBreakfast@ReligionForBreakfast3 жыл бұрын
    • @@ReligionForBreakfast Hebrew is a recent language, like all Semitic. The Hamito branch is the origin/daddy!

      @ra8682ra@ra8682ra3 жыл бұрын
    • @@ReligionForBreakfast Thank/Praise Yah. What is called "Phoenician Hebrew" (because of the area) according to Historians is the oldest language on earth though.

      @littleandre4957@littleandre49573 жыл бұрын
    • Why do you europeans lie and distort simple truths! Hebrew is a North East African language point blank! That is so clear! The middle east huh! G.O.politics! So where is the middle west? The middle north and the middle south? You creat these terms to confuse the masses, Israel is a north east African country! The children of Israel are north east African people, and Hebrew is a north east African Language Facts!

      @benlinley1522@benlinley15223 жыл бұрын
    • @@benlinley1522 proof?

      @yoavmend1909@yoavmend19092 жыл бұрын
  • God, I'm such a nerd for enjoying this so much. Beautiful job! Can't wait to check out other videos

    @JasonScottWeisinger@JasonScottWeisinger Жыл бұрын
  • I watched a documentary about the development of the alphabet and it was truly amazing and informative, history can be very interesting and actually fun when done properly

    @vjara94@vjara94 Жыл бұрын
  • I always thought the letters and direction of writing varied over time because, if you stand next to or in front of someone that is writing that are doing it in a different direction and the letter orientation is different. The modern A is upside down from the origin and we write left to right, they write right to left.

    @alpha9526@alpha95263 жыл бұрын
    • Intriguingly, though, the Akkadian and Ugaritic he mentions read left-to-right.

      @peterblinn7946@peterblinn79462 жыл бұрын
  • I love this channel. Linguistics is a nice bonus!

    @cordoba7@cordoba73 жыл бұрын
  • Very interesting and packed with information. I didn't set out today to learn about Hebrew, but the algorithm tossed this video up on my home page and I decided to click on it, being something of a bibliophile and lover of etymology. I enjoyed, thank you!

    @brindlebucker4741@brindlebucker4741 Жыл бұрын
  • This sheds an interesting light on the story of Moses called to the mountain to receive the law written on stone tablets, since this would have happened long before evidence for written Hebrew or possibly a distinct Hebrew language. An obvious explanation is that this detail of the story is a later interpolation by literate Hebrews of post exilic times. But if one believes that the Moses stories are ultimately based on an historical person who was brought up in the Egyptian royal court mileu in the 14th or 13th century BC, the writing system he and the Hebrews would have been familiar with would have been hieroglyphics. The story suggests that the law was of such central importance that it could have only been written in the monumental writing system of the Egyptian kings, on the preferred medium of stone.

    @earlystrings1@earlystrings12 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed. In rabbinic judaism this topic is discussed as "on which alphabet were the tablets written?". There were different opinions on the subject on the Talmud. An interesting thing is that judaic exegesis claims that the tablets were engraved trough all the material, and the rounded letters had a central piece of stone floating as a miracle. But ... in modern hebrew script these rounded letters are for example samech, while in proto hebrew the rounded ones were other letters.

      @sac7404@sac74042 жыл бұрын
    • To associate God's law & commandments given to Moses had to have been written in writing system of Egyptians kings suggest you don't comprehend how much more superior God was, & is, to the Egyptians & all other kingdoms that has ever existed- till this day. God nor Moses didn't think so highly of the Egyptians ways & when He called them out of bondage He's intent was to have a peculiar people unto Himself, not a people to mimic the very people who enslaved them.

      @lewisb3483@lewisb34832 жыл бұрын
    • Lewis may be going down a strong opinion that might not work, unless the G-d of Moses, I Am altered all the minds ofl the assembled masses of recently liberated Israel to understand the holy writings of Hebrew, or at least the Levites. That would go against the notion of free will on a societal scale....which would have kept the Israelites from descending into civil war just a few weeks later or fashioning the golden calf. Lewis makes a point which is encapsulated in the golden calf. An attempt by the newly liberated children of Jacob to revert to Egyptian unholy ways. Instead they are instructed by Moses to stick only with the word of G-d, written himself with his mighty hand. No more paraded idols. So back to the decameron. If it was written by I Am, then it would need to make sense to The People and to Moses himself. Did the people hold to the written language of Jacob while in bandage? Was there one, as tradition holds that Moses wrote the 5 books from his intimate conversations with I Am. So did Moses learn the written language of I Am before he climbed the mount. Does I Am need a written language. In his life he would have been trained in the palace language of Pharoh. After he killed the architect and fled to Midian....did he pick up the commercial written language of the Midian shepards before he returned to Egypt to confront Pharoh? In either case, if the tablets are to be read by The People or at least by the Levite elders....it would have to be in a symbol language they already understood. Since Mises broke the tablets of I Am, then he had to transcribe them as replacements. Would Moses have transcribed them in a language know to his people, in an inspired symbolic writing of heaven or in a language of Midian? Interesting questions. Not important to adherence, piety or salvation,...but interesting musings.

      @STho205@STho2052 жыл бұрын
    • @@lewisb3483 maybe you could try using words that aren't as combative. You don't know how the tablets were written. And at what point did God throw into a conversation that he wasn't fond of Egyptians? It's an opinion same as the person commenting.

      @joeymaximus8146@joeymaximus81462 жыл бұрын
    • Not to mention that the Laws are dictated twice (Ex. 30 and Ex. 34) since Moses broke the first set when seeing the Golden calf and went back to the mountains and... the two sets of Laws are different!! So did JHVH have writing difficulties, or short-term memory problems?

      @solyluna4545@solyluna4545 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you fir your series. You’re doing amazing amazing job allowing the rest of us to learn new things.

    @flastable9842@flastable98423 жыл бұрын
  • Amazing content !!! How did the KZhead algorithms guess that I would like such content ?

    @luyombojonathan7715@luyombojonathan77153 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for this introduction. I'm curious about the grammar and differences between Hebrew and Arabic etc. Even if don't know a Sinitic language, it would be good to compare word order, cognates and so on and examples of this.

    @alaindubois1505@alaindubois1505 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you sir. For someone from Israel, I never truly took the time to appreciate the historical gravity of the ancient times of my home land. This video is both very informative and fascinating at the same time. It gives me the urge to further explore my land's ancient history and culture. Therefore, I consider myself very lucky to have the privilege to do that as an Israeli citizen. שלום!

    @TheJake3@TheJake3 Жыл бұрын
    • free palestine

      @ts-wo6pp@ts-wo6pp Жыл бұрын
    • @@ts-wo6pp from what

      @eit2000@eit2000 Жыл бұрын
    • @@eit2000 the colonial project known as israel

      @ts-wo6pp@ts-wo6pp Жыл бұрын
    • @@ts-wo6pp cry arab

      @ashiracohan9189@ashiracohan9189 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ts-wo6pp Talk to your leadership.

      @TheJake3@TheJake3 Жыл бұрын
  • It wasn't mentioned in this video, but I'm impressed with how similar modern Hebrew cursive is to older Semitic alphabets!

    @architeuthis3476@architeuthis34763 жыл бұрын
    • I remember cursive Hebrew in school. What a nightmare... Lol Honestly, I believe that cursive writing in any language was used simply to save time writing.

      @TheJake3@TheJake3 Жыл бұрын
  • A couple of months ago, NOVA had an excellent episode on this topic.

    @gregm766@gregm7663 жыл бұрын
    • @@Nah_Bohdi Baa

      @gregm766@gregm7663 жыл бұрын
    • Is it available somewhere on the Internet?

      @webbess1@webbess13 жыл бұрын
    • @@webbess1 I'm sure it is pbs.org

      @beachmasterX@beachmasterX3 жыл бұрын
    • @@webbess1 I am not sure. There take was slightly different in as they were talking about the archaeology of finding a sorta of Rosetta stone that should the early Hebrew/Cainite alphabet and their translation in hieroglyphics. They then should how the letters evolved from the ancient Hebrew/Cainite into our current alphabet.

      @gregm766@gregm7663 жыл бұрын
    • Nupuqi Om-Re Khonectics will guide you

      @IshtarLinqu@IshtarLinqu3 жыл бұрын
  • This is so fascinating and cool -- thank you!

    @queeniez1970@queeniez19703 жыл бұрын
  • This is really interesting. I have often wondered where the symbols that make up letters came from. What is the study of this called? Specifically the writing part? I'm curious how the method of writing(pressing clay vs. carving vs, whatever else) affected the way scripts developed. Totally novice, but my curiosity is sparked.

    @mikeeasley6670@mikeeasley6670 Жыл бұрын
  • Love learning about the long lost languages and how they born our modern ones. Cuneiform is still my favorite... seems the core start.

    @bruisedhelmet8819@bruisedhelmet88193 жыл бұрын
  • I get the impression that literacy rates in pre-modern history of alphabet-using societies are often underestimated. This is especially true of the medieval period, but may also apply to earlier times. After all, an alphabet is relatively easy to learn, compared to some other writing systems. As long as you are able to use it with your native language, you can pick it up rather quickly.

    @Qba86@Qba863 жыл бұрын
    • I agree, and the author of the video alluded to it when he spoke of degrees of literacy. This is certainly true for ancient Akkadian written in cuneiform (or Sumerian, for that matter). The reality is that while in any given period the Akkadian (or Sumerian) written may have a full inventory of 600+ signs, when one reads the texts, the sign inventory is really made up of under a hundred. The rest were esoteric signs used by scribes trying to show off when writing literature or whatever (that last part I made up, but I am pretty sure that that's true for some periods). And on a final note re alphabets and their one-grapheme-per-phoneme (more or less) system vs. other systems, I am not sure that the former is necessarily easier than the latter. I know virtually nothing about Chinese, but it has a huge (as I understand it) sign inventory. But literacy in China is pretty high right now despite this. On the surface, it seems logical to think that with fewer signs (or letters or glyphs or graphemes or whatever), it should be easier to read. But the reality suggests that there's a lot more at play.

      @Lank55@Lank55 Жыл бұрын
    • My grandparents are considered uneducated because of no schooling past 3rd grade. Yet they could read the newspaper, do their housekeeping math and build thriving businesses. One g father owned a shoe factory the other a sales business where he had basic conversation skills in 7 languages to talk to customers. People usually know a lot more than others give them credit for. (Yes, ending with a preposition. That's the language now!)

      @cycy2425@cycy2425 Жыл бұрын
    • @@cycy2425 The whole 'rule' about not ending with a preposition is an example of applying Latin rules to a *Germanic* language (English) and is generally considered irrelevant as German has prepositions that are actually separate components of verbs (schlussen *an*, anschlussen, etc.)

      @jillpruett4772@jillpruett4772 Жыл бұрын
    • There are some documentaries of illiteracy in Kentucky that made me re-evaluate how common it is for people to learn to read

      @macrosense@macrosense8 ай бұрын
  • This video was very interesting and informative. Thank you.

    @stephanieyee9784@stephanieyee9784 Жыл бұрын
  • This ancient "proto-Canaanite" alphabet was the basis of the Phoenician and Aramaic alphabets, too. The Aramaic alphabet was used across Persia and taken to ancient India, where it contributed to the development of the Indian alphabets via the ancient Brahmi script. There may have been a later influence of Aramaic on the development of the modern Korean script, too, since some Aramaic scripts were taken to Mongolia, forming the basis of the old Mongolian script. The letter M in Korean is a box shape like Hebrew.

    @phillipkeane1059@phillipkeane1059 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes. I believe it too.

      @shahidachoudhury6925@shahidachoudhury6925 Жыл бұрын
    • English is obviously indirectly derived from Hebrew

      @adamprice3466@adamprice3466 Жыл бұрын
    • I thought the Korean characters were supposed to be designed to represent the shape that the mouth forms when making those sounds?

      @magister343@magister3436 ай бұрын
  • That look at the Proto-Sinaitic script (which I had never heard of before) was intriguing. It's like the NATO phonetic alphabet in reverse (Alfa Bravo Charlie Delta). Using a picture of a longer word that starts with that sound as a visual shorthand for only that sound, as opposed to creating longer code words out of single existing letters...

    @michaelantosch9888@michaelantosch98883 жыл бұрын
  • Facinating. We rarely stop to wonder about the historical origin of writting.

    @lshulman58@lshulman583 жыл бұрын
    • I wonder about it all the time.

      @mavenfeliciano1710@mavenfeliciano17102 жыл бұрын
    • FASCINATING!!!

      @narakajohn7421@narakajohn74212 жыл бұрын
  • Good stuff! It seems the intermediary stage between hieroglyphs and alphabets lasted much longer than I had realized. It also turns out that I wasn't current on the newest discoveries of the oldest examples of proto-Canaanite.

    @stevenbollinger9776@stevenbollinger97762 жыл бұрын
  • I love this channel! Would love to see some history of Abrahamic religions in the US or even some deep dives into ones like Mormonism, 7th day, and Pentecostal like how they evolved and their historic artifacts!

    @jacobtahiliani6501@jacobtahiliani65013 жыл бұрын
  • loving these! look forward to them every week.

    @immortal5383@immortal53833 жыл бұрын
  • now every time I look at the letter A I think of an ox and it's so cute ;;

    @justsomeguy898@justsomeguy8983 жыл бұрын
    • ox, house, camel, door, window lol write your name in pictures

      @Aj-zr8dz@Aj-zr8dz3 жыл бұрын
    • It actually was originally meant to mean ship. The triangle represents the body of the ship and the vertical line that cuts through it represents the sails.

      @David-ex6hv@David-ex6hv3 жыл бұрын
    • @@David-ex6hv yes as they were sea fairing people

      @roflswamp6@roflswamp63 жыл бұрын
    • The A is of axin,oxin one the helps with axels pulling a cart..farmers..with a ploy

      @dianheffernan3436@dianheffernan34363 жыл бұрын
    • @ABRAHAM i thought it was from celtic mixed with hebrew Arabic and a tiny bit if goth

      @roflswamp6@roflswamp63 жыл бұрын
  • The best line of the entire video was the punch line! :) Well done!

    @144Donn@144Donn3 жыл бұрын
  • Great video! So much packed into it.

    @cycy2425@cycy2425 Жыл бұрын
  • love your work! really interested in the evolution of Vodun through diasporas - any suggestions appreciated (or a video!)

    @isabelnihte@isabelnihte3 жыл бұрын
    • There are two really nice documentaries, although they are in Spanish, about the Ifa religion and Yoruba traditions inherited in Cuba, they're called Ikú Lobi Ocha (Roughly translates to Death births the Saint) and Aña, la Magia del Tambor (Aña is the religious drums, Batas, the magic of the drum). Ikú Lobi Ocha also speaks about the Palo Mayombe religion we inherited from Congo. There's also one called Los Misterios del Vudú, I'm not particularly fond of how some of the information is presented but they do show different traditions and rituals in Africa and throughout the diaspora.

      @bellariosofficial@bellariosofficial2 жыл бұрын
  • Extremely interesting and educative again. Keep it up, I love watching these!

    @DerMessiasderSatire@DerMessiasderSatire3 жыл бұрын
  • I appreciate your plain language approach to these topics. I wouldn't spend the time to take a semester long course explaining what you did in eleven minutes (and would forget most of that course, of course).

    @mnoliberal7335@mnoliberal7335 Жыл бұрын
  • I just added my name to your channel. What I found interesting, is that Syria is also where the Younger Dryas occured. It may be that the usage of Genesis 1, which depicts an ice age, can be a description of said Younger Dryas.

    @q09876543@q09876543 Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome video brother. Incredibly informative, and a wealth of knowledge. It was definitely a blessing. I pray you continue to be touched by our Lord God.

    @Maestro75@Maestro753 жыл бұрын
  • Love your videos! You are a great source for me and my imagination:) I'm an artist and musician and for some reason even thou I don't consider myself religious I am fascinated by it and it's history and it's ideas. I doubt you would need my bands type of music, is original but sounds like 90s grunge But if you ever want to use any of it in part or in whole you have my ...blessing:) anyway thank you for all your knowledge and work. Also like I said I'm an artist so if you ever need anything drawn or make for a video I'd be happy to do it at no cost just to show support:)

    @aeulogyforsociety2375@aeulogyforsociety23753 жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoy your content thank you for your channel thank you for your hard work and God bless

    @randellhillspeaks753@randellhillspeaks7533 жыл бұрын
  • This KZhead channel is gold. Thanks for this and all of your videos.

    @israeldr26@israeldr262 жыл бұрын
  • Can you imagine that in the past there were multilingual people who spoke multiple languages that nobody has heard now for generations...

    @starsINSPACE@starsINSPACE3 жыл бұрын
    • Mayan, Yucatec, nahuatl and other languages in mesoamerica

      @ericktellez7632@ericktellez76323 жыл бұрын
    • @@ericktellez7632 Some people still speak those languages - there is an active effort to revitalize Nawat in El Salvador, for instance. The descendents of these ancient peoples are still here, living, today. Take care not to insinuate they're all dead or relics of the past.

      @oaktree__@oaktree__3 жыл бұрын
  • One of the jokes I remember from doing a class on the history of Hebrew was how the ox that made up the original Aleph died and went belly up, and that's how we ended up with the Greek/Latin letter A. Good times.

    @luisdizon2486@luisdizon24863 жыл бұрын
    • Alef became "Alpha" in Greek then "A" in Latin

      @adamprice3466@adamprice3466 Жыл бұрын
  • This is so cool! I know *some* Hebrew, but not a lot, and this really helps fill out my sense of the language.

    @st.bernadetteparish2540@st.bernadetteparish2540 Жыл бұрын
  • Such a rich video, I have needed to watch it numerous times to digest the wisdom. Masterful RFB

    @readingforwisdom7037@readingforwisdom7037 Жыл бұрын
  • @ 8:15 has a Carthaginian or Phoenician vibe. I would love a video on Etruscan, Basque, and the various European hieroglyphics etc. Ogham

    @BaltimoresBerzerker@BaltimoresBerzerker3 жыл бұрын
    • Ditto

      @lapislazulii141@lapislazulii1413 жыл бұрын
  • I just realized the tip of a yad looks just like the mouse pointer in Windows when it's over something you can click and turns into the hand with the finger. What an odd coincidence... or is it?

    @halonothing1@halonothing13 жыл бұрын
  • I have no idea why I am watching this, but I can’t stop. Love your videos!

    @peterpayne2219@peterpayne2219 Жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoy your videos. A minor comment: The abecedary you show is upside down. It should be flipped for proper reading. I would love it if you expanded on this subject and went into more detail; it’s really fascinating.

    @ericgoldstein4734@ericgoldstein47342 жыл бұрын
  • Literally was having breakfast and watching this. Great stuff!

    @darthvader7450@darthvader74503 жыл бұрын
    • Why would "having breakfast" need the word "literally" before it?

      @judahdaneshtaol@judahdaneshtaol2 жыл бұрын
    • @@judahdaneshtaol because he was literally having breakfast

      @ludovicodemolina@ludovicodemolina2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ludovicodemolina "He was having breakfast and watching this" - what does "literally" have to do with it?

      @judahdaneshtaol@judahdaneshtaol2 жыл бұрын
    • Even the Maltese language is Semetic language. It is very similiar to arabic, but it is written in Roman alphabet. Best regards from Malta. God bless you all.

      @maryellul6234@maryellul62342 жыл бұрын
  • Whenever I'm writing something, I love to remember that these letters ultimately come from the Egyptian hieroglyphics, and it's quite awesome

    @brunopereira6789@brunopereira67893 жыл бұрын
    • Hieroglyphics pre-date the establishment of the Kingdom of Egypt. The Writing system should be called Nile or Nile Valley or African or East African Writing system.

      @ohlangeni@ohlangeni2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ohlangeni I'd love to learn more about the ancient history of the hieroglyphs and how they came to be!

      @brunopereira6789@brunopereira67892 жыл бұрын
  • This was amazing. This is the first unbiased explanation that I have seen.

    @stevewhitt9109@stevewhitt9109 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for the videos, I really enjoy watching them.

    @juantrevino1919@juantrevino19193 жыл бұрын
  • That was really interesting, as some things we see in everyday life are never given a second thought.

    @kakarroto007@kakarroto0073 жыл бұрын
  • As a sometimes student of Biblical Hebrew, I be diggin' this! Mahalo shalom! 🤙

    @jonkomatsu8192@jonkomatsu81923 жыл бұрын
    • Maholo🤙Shalom from an Australian. 😁

      @barryblackwood6050@barryblackwood60502 жыл бұрын
    • I'm a native Hebrew speaker. What is 'mahalo'?

      @Gideon01@Gideon012 жыл бұрын
    • @@Gideon01 Mahalo is the Hawaiian greeting & farewell. Like Shalom. Love, well wishes & peace to you & yours. Hawaiians are a beautiful people in that nature. Shalom Mahalo. ❤️🙏

      @barryblackwood6050@barryblackwood60502 жыл бұрын
    • @@barryblackwood6050 Oh, all right. I thought it was supposed to be something in Hebrew. I was only familiar with 'aloha'. Mahalo, then, and shalom u'vracha to you!

      @Gideon01@Gideon012 жыл бұрын
    • @@Gideon01 Hawaiian for "Thank you." I was born and grew up there. 🤙

      @jonkomatsu8192@jonkomatsu81922 жыл бұрын
  • very informative and interesting. thanks

    @babakpedram7561@babakpedram75619 ай бұрын
  • You are one smart dude. And you have a boat load of common sense to boot. I appreciate your scholarly research as I find the origins of modern religious beliefs intriguing. Please keep these posts coming as you discover additional historic evidence that relates to modern religious theory.

    @paulkoza8652@paulkoza8652 Жыл бұрын
  • I never realized nor had imagined "A" as an inverted Ox.

    @kirbymarchbarcena@kirbymarchbarcena3 жыл бұрын
    • The hebrew letter Aleph, A is the Ox, means "oneness with God, Strong arm, authority or "name" of God" So when the isrealites made the Golden Calf in Exodus, they were not making a "cow or bull", they were making an Aleph representing God. God got angry over it because He commanded them to NEVER make a carved image to represent Him or any other pagan diety.

      @moniquefleming3738@moniquefleming37382 жыл бұрын
  • Remember how easy it was to learn your ABCs? Thank the Phonecians.

    @Griffologee@Griffologee3 жыл бұрын
    • I think that's a phony explanation

      @dlevi67@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
    • @@dlevi67 zing

      @jonnykhatru@jonnykhatru3 жыл бұрын
    • @@dlevi67 Subtle wit.

      @ANDROLOMA@ANDROLOMA3 жыл бұрын
    • "Although this was one of the least of the cultural effects of printing, it should serve to recall that one of the big factors in the Greek adoption of the letters of the phonetic alphabet was the prestige and currency of the number system of the Phoenician traders. The Romans got the Phoenician letters from the Greeks but retained a number system that was much more ancient." [Understanding Media: The Extension of Man, Marshall McLuhan, 1964, Ch. 11: Number]

      @chalinofalcone871@chalinofalcone8713 жыл бұрын
    • @@chalinofalcone871 Hooked on phonics. How Phoenician.

      @ANDROLOMA@ANDROLOMA3 жыл бұрын
  • Very informative and useful video. Thank you

    @aleenashafaat2295@aleenashafaat2295 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for information. I learned a lot .

    @thanhcarmen4623@thanhcarmen4623 Жыл бұрын
  • There should be a clear distinction between the history of the Hebrew (spoken) language, and the history of the written script that is used to write Hebrew. The square script that we usually associate with Hebrew can also be used to write languages that are nothing like Hebrew, and indeed, it was used that way to write Yiddish and Ladino, for instance, which are more closely related to Medieval German and Spanish, respectively. Conversely, the Hebrew language was written using the Paleo-hebraic script for much of the first temple period, but the square script derives more from the Western form of the Aramaic script (e.g. Palmyra). But it can be written in other scripts as well, and you can easily find prayer books with glosses using our Roman alphabet for use in US synagogues, for instance. The script is not the language. And they have different histories.

    @kiga14@kiga143 жыл бұрын
  • The use of Alphabetical writing in Canaan began around the 18th century BC, so it's quite logical that by the time the kingdom of Judea is formed, the literacy rates among the population is very high. They've had almost a 1000 years of practice by then. Second, I think that Amharic, the principal language spoken in Ethiopia, is also a Semitic language.

    @yonatanyahav@yonatanyahav3 жыл бұрын
    • Yes: Amharic, Ge'ez and Tigrinya. For example, one of these South Semitic languages features yaman ('the right hand'), cognate to the -yamin in Hebrew Ben-yamin ('son of the right hand').

      @seamusjames458@seamusjames458 Жыл бұрын
  • This is Don from Charlotte North Carolina USA. Thank you for this video. I am a long term student of the Hebrew language, I am very interested in the Israeli people, as I read and study Hebrew, learning to read and write and hopefully speak the current Hebrew language.

    @dontroutman6699@dontroutman66992 жыл бұрын
    • Shalom

      @lumia_dayZ@lumia_dayZ2 жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating! I'm no scholar... just a carpenter/handyman...9th grade drop-out, and randomly stumbled on this. I wouldn't have guessed how interesting the origins of an alphabet would be.

    @theobserver9131@theobserver91312 жыл бұрын
    • Also, though I'm not interested in participating in any religion, I AM interested in the subject of religion. Religion is pertinent to all modern civilization. Subscribed.

      @theobserver9131@theobserver91312 жыл бұрын
  • Please do more ancient languages

    @Astral_Wave@Astral_Wave2 жыл бұрын
  • There are some other great examples of English letters that still resemble the Phoenician style: "M" still looks like waves of water, "I" like an outstretched arm, "K" like an opened hand, etc. The more you know both letter systems, the more you see the similarities.

    @zackmano@zackmano3 жыл бұрын
    • Hebrew - "Alef, Bet, Gimmel, Dalet" became Greek - "Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta" became Latin "A,B, C, D"

      @adamprice3466@adamprice3466 Жыл бұрын
  • Respected sir, its nice interesting information.

    @MRVICTORSMITH-tj2gw@MRVICTORSMITH-tj2gw2 жыл бұрын
  • Great research.... much needed!

    @eswn1816@eswn18163 жыл бұрын
  • 1:48 Brudi nicht in Englisch

    @rxjnbxjljjrjbbxlzbjbnpdb8586@rxjnbxjljjrjbbxlzbjbnpdb8586 Жыл бұрын
  • Been to Searbit El Khadim, saw proto-sinaitic in several places. Read Petrie's notes and Beno Rothenberg there. Also talked with the Bedouins there and explored their deep connection with the place. There are movies waiting to be done on this place.

    @mabroukatis@mabroukatis3 жыл бұрын
    • Why? Say more!

      @koppler84@koppler845 ай бұрын
    • @@koppler84 Sounds like a cliche, but Bedouins there are living "The Bible". I'm native Egyptian and I still feel like Moses in dealing with them and exploring their culture. And, man, there's enough to right more books of the Bible and you won't miss a beat. As for languages, scripts and petroglyphs, enough to say that once you know your way in the desert routes, you'll see it everywhere and they tell the longest story ever told. Remember this is the middle east, cradle of everything and Sinai is the node that binds it.

      @mabroukatis@mabroukatis5 ай бұрын
  • Have you heard about the curse tablet, written in a proto-Hebraic script found on Mount Ebal? It was just found a few months ago. So I was wondering how relevant it may be to the topic of this video.

    @malechid.7381@malechid.7381 Жыл бұрын
  • i have a question about handwriting algorythms used in this context. is this a bespoke algorythm for dealing with text carved in stone or clay by people of, we have some reason to believe, middling literacy? cuase if it's a standard one recallabrated slightly we're taking the massive leap of faith that it is not significantly easier to have a constistant handwriting when using pen, ink, and paper, than it is when using whatever kind of stilus and clay...

    @MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing@MonkeyWhoWouldBeKing Жыл бұрын
  • This is so COOL. No really, it is, because I'm both a philosophy an English scholar, so it's super interesting to see all the potential links that can be drawn.

    @ActiveAdvocate1@ActiveAdvocate13 жыл бұрын
    • I wonder what links could be drawn here, between linguistical history and philosophy. I'm genuinely interested.

      @assaz9317@assaz93173 жыл бұрын
    • @@thevulture5750 Aren't you supposed to be making a Tower of Babel reference instead?

      @Duiker36@Duiker363 жыл бұрын
  • I'm Jewish and I have a particular affection for this language. Every Jew on earth should make it a strong priority to learn. Aramaic and Hebrew are not mutually intelligible but it's pretty close. A Hebrew speaker can understand probably 50% of what's being said and vice versa.

    @EzraB123@EzraB1232 жыл бұрын
    • @Ai7A Because there are thousands upon thousands of Hebrew manuscripts, books, scrolls, cave carvings, tombs, place names, prayers, etc written in Hebrew, one of which is the most popular book in human history: The Bible. Hebrew never really died out either. The language was maintained as a religious language and was used in (and still is) synagogues. If you go to any Orthodox/Conservative service the vast majority of the service is in Hebrew, and Jewish prayers are almost exclusively said in Hebrew.

      @EzraB123@EzraB1232 жыл бұрын
    • @LEO&LAMB Lol are you stupid?Hebrew never actually died...

      @yakov95000@yakov95000 Жыл бұрын
    • אני לא יהודי, אבל אני אוהב עברית ❤️

      @ElSauxy02@ElSauxy02 Жыл бұрын
    • @LEO&LAMBAdam and Eve is a fictional story so it doesn’t matter what language it says they spoke.

      @jaredf6205@jaredf6205 Жыл бұрын
    • @LEO&LAMB Hebrew spoken 3.335 years ago is closer to modern Hebrew than Shakespeare's English is from modern English. That's why I understand your question, from an English speaking perspective.

      @RaphaelKaufmann@RaphaelKaufmann Жыл бұрын
  • Do you think you could do something on the Hussites sometime? I'm finding difficult to find decent information on them and their beliefs.

    @daylan528@daylan5283 жыл бұрын
  • is this Canaanite language related to Minoan Linear A perhaps? I noticed a few of the symbols look like symbols on the Phaistos disc, and as I had read a theory that the Philistines in the bible may have been related to Early Greek peoples I wonder if there is a connection or if these symbols being used in both may have just been via cultural exchange (it seems likely to me that Minoans and Phoenicians would have traded in antiquity, if not outright being one and the same people referred to in different names)

    @cameronstewart3600@cameronstewart36002 жыл бұрын
  • The Hebrew alphabet is highly adaptable. Jews have used it to write in the language of the land they inhabit where ever might that be. Ladino in Spain, Yiddish in Germany, Judeo-Arabic in Arabia!

    @danielcuevas5899@danielcuevas58993 жыл бұрын
    • Or Latin (and coincidentally modern Italian and Spanish - the words are literally the same in all three, plus or minus a couple of diacritics) in the sign at 9:57

      @dlevi67@dlevi673 жыл бұрын
    • Even the script of Hindi language which is called Devnagri seems to have developed from the Hebrew language too

      @ghanvedsingh8946@ghanvedsingh89463 жыл бұрын
    • Yea since 1881

      @michelleearl8063@michelleearl80633 жыл бұрын
    • @@ghanvedsingh8946 more likely from Aramaic though...

      @jonstfrancis@jonstfrancis3 жыл бұрын
    • @Somewhere No it didn't.

      @jonstfrancis@jonstfrancis2 жыл бұрын
  • We still call the alphabet "abecedario" in spanish anf other romance languages

    @Alex-fv2qs@Alex-fv2qs3 жыл бұрын
    • In Polish we have two words: "abecadło" which is basically the name of alphabet in learning (just as im the video), and "alfabet" - literally the synonym of "alphabet".

      @kasiapaucka9184@kasiapaucka91843 жыл бұрын
    • in Filipino we have “Alpabeto” and “Abesedaryo”

      @somemaycallthisjunkmeicall133@somemaycallthisjunkmeicall1333 жыл бұрын
    • We don't actually, because we have the world ALFABETO. The abecedário is a tool which contains the alphabet for learning purposes, we have abecedários in primary school for example.

      @capybaraRed@capybaraRed3 жыл бұрын
    • @@capybaraRed In English we call that “The a-b-c’s.”

      @rathersane@rathersane3 жыл бұрын
    • In old Norse it is called a Futhark, because the norse alphabet begins with F.U.

      @Carewolf@Carewolf3 жыл бұрын
  • The wadi el hol inscription c. 1800 BCE, and the inscriptions at serabit al khadim also contain the Hebrew alphabet, and are earlier than izbet sartah.

    @Y0S3F@Y0S3F2 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing!. Very interesting material!.

    @blancabeltravelazquez1139@blancabeltravelazquez1139 Жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating! It's a wonderful (and, dare I say, deeply unifying) notion that many of the scripts we use today are derived from a common ancestor. However, don't forget that the parent script of Proto-Sinaitic is undeniably that of Egyptian hieroglyphs. One could say that we owe a great deal to them as well.

    @AdamRHemmings@AdamRHemmings3 жыл бұрын
  • Imagine if every day you woke up a year earlier, somewhere around the Mediterranean. If you already speak some modern languages, particularly Italian, Spanish, Arabic, maybe French - then you could slowly morph that into ancient languages, and watch the writing change as well.

    @HeatherSpoonheim@HeatherSpoonheim3 жыл бұрын
    • Sounds fun

      @verl0000@verl00003 жыл бұрын
    • Masks are disgusting. Obey!

      @bluellamaslearnbeyondthele2456@bluellamaslearnbeyondthele24563 жыл бұрын
    • @@Bdfhvj I remember hearing about a piece of pottery that had 'recorded' someone speaking during the turning process. I doubt that to be true for several reasons - but I love the idea of it. It would be so cool to hear people speaking thousands of years ago.

      @HeatherSpoonheim@HeatherSpoonheim3 жыл бұрын
    • This is honestly a top tier story concept

      @pancakeofdestiny@pancakeofdestiny3 жыл бұрын
    • That sounds like an epic journey to take! I got English, Urdu, Punjabi, Spanish, French and some Tagalog down, I'd be OK for at least a little while...🤔

      @nimblehuman@nimblehuman3 жыл бұрын
  • Fascinating subject - thank you !

    @TheTradWarrior@TheTradWarrior2 жыл бұрын
  • I ADORE watching how letters and numbera and words have changed over time.

    @SunlightHugger@SunlightHugger2 жыл бұрын
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