This volume aims to introduce classicists, ancient historians, and other scholars interested in sociolinguistic research to the evidence of bilingualism in the ancient Mediterranean world. The fifteen original essays in this collection, which have been written by well-regarded experts, cover theoretical and methodological issues and key aspects of the contact between Latin and Greek and among Latin, Greek, and other languages.
1. Introduction,
J.N. Adams and S. Swain2.
1. IntroductoryApproaching Bilingualism in Corpus Languages,
D. Langslow3. Dead or Alive? the Status of the Standard Language,
K. Versteegh4.
2. Greek-Latin BilingualismGreco-Romans and Greco-Latin: a Terminological Framework for Cases of Bilingualism,
F. Biville5. Bilingualism at Delos,
J.N. Adams6. Bilingualism in Cicero? The Evidence of Code-Switching,
S. Swain7. From Contact to Mixture: Bilingual Inscriptions from Italy,
M. Leiwo8.
3. Greek and other languagesInterference or Translationese? Some Patterns in Lycian-Greek Bilingualism,
I. Rutherford9. Bilingualism in Roman Egypt,
P. Fewster10. Greek and Phrygian in the High Roman Empire,
C. Brixhe11.
Res Gestae Divi Saporis: Greek and Middle Iranian in a Document of Sasanian, anti-Roman propaganda,
Z. Rubin12. Bilingualism and Diglossia in Late Antique Syria and Mesopotamia,
D. Taylor13. Aspects of Bilinigualism in the History of the Greek Language,
M. Janse14.
4. Latin and other languagesAssessing Latin-Gothic Interaction,
P. Burton15. Latin-Frankish Bilingualism in Sixth-Century Gaul: the Latin of Clovis,
P. Flobert Will remain a reference work of central importance. --
Religious Studies ReviewJ.N. Adams is Senior Research Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford M. Janse il3ª