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Ancient Greek , in Classical Antiquity before the development of the Koiné as the Lingua Franca of Hellenism , was divided into several ''' Dialect s'''. Likewise, ''' Modern Greek ''' is divided into several dialects, most of them deriving from the Koiné.


ANTIQUITY


  • The Dorian Invasion spread Doric Greek the coast of the Pelopennesus , for example of Sparta , Crete and the southernmost parts of the west coast of Asia Minor . Doric was standard for Greek lyric poetry, such as Pindar . '''North Western Greek''' used to be classified as a separate dialect, but is now usually subsumed under Doric. ''' Macedonian ''' is regarded by some authors as another Greek dialect, possibly related to Doric or NW Greek.It is as yet undetermined whether Macedonian was a separate yet sibling Language which was most closely related to Greek , a Dialect of Greek, or an independent Indo-European Language not especially close to Greek..



  • Ionic was mostly spoken along the west coast of Asia Minor, including Smyrna and the area to the south of it. Homer 's Iliad and Odyssey were written in ''' Homeric Greek ''', a kind of literary Ionic with some loan words from the other dialects. Ionic, therefore, became the primary literary language of ancient Greece, Epic Greek . ''' Attic Greek ''', a sub- or sister-dialect of Ionic, was for centuries the language of Athens . Because Attic was adopted in Macedon before the conquests of Alexander The Great and the subsequent rise of Hellenism, it became the "standard" dialect that evolved into the Koiné .


Important authors for the individual dialects include Thucydides for Attic, Herodotus and Archilochos Of Paros for Ionian, Alcman and Ibycus Of Rhegium for Doric, Sappho and Alcaeus for Aeolic (Lesbian), Corinna Of Tanagra for Boiotic. Thessalic and Arcado-Cypriot never became literary dialects and are only known from inscriptions, and to some extent by the comical parodies of Aristophanes . The dialect of Homer is a mixture of several dialects. According to Dion Chrysostomus , a mixture of Aeolic, Doric and Attic-Ionic; however, the "Doric" elements are not actually Doric but rather archaisms within Aeolic.

The dialects of Classical Antiquity are grouped slightly differently by various authorities. Pamphylia n is a marginal dialect of Asia Minor and usually left uncategorized. Note that Mycenaean was only deciphered in 1952 , and is therefore missing from the earlier schemes presented here.


Northwestern, Southeastern


Ernst Risch, ''Museum Helveticum'' ( 1955 ):

Alfred Heubeck:


Western, Central, Eastern

A. Thumb, E. Kieckers, ''Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte'' ( 1932 ):

W. Porzig, ''Die Gliederung des indogermanischen Sprachgebiets'' ( 1954 ):


Western, Thessalian, Boiotic, Eastern

C.D. Buck, ''The Greek Dialects'' ( 1973 ):


POST-HELLENISTIC




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