Alanic language

Alanic
Alanian
The Zelenchuk Inscription, an inscripton in Alanic.
Native toAlania, the Kingdom of the Alans in Hispania and the Kingdom of the Vandals and Alans
RegionNorth Caucasus, Pontic–Caspian steppe, Balkan peninsula, parts of Late Roman Gaul, Iberia and the Maghreb
EthnicityAlans
Era1st–13th century AD
developed into Ossetian and Jassic
unwritten, rarely Greek
Language codes
ISO 639-3Either:
xln  Alanic
oos  Old Ossetic
xln
Glottologoldo1234  Old Ossetic

Alanic (also known as Alanian) was a language spoken by the Alans from about the 1st to the 13th centuries AD. It formed a dialect directly descended from the earlier Scytho-Sarmatian languages, which in turn formed the Ossetian language. Byzantine Greek authors recorded only a few fragments of this language. The Alans, who were a part of the Migration Period, brought their language to Iberia and the Maghreb in 409 AD before being displaced by the invading Visigoths and the Byzantine Empire.

Unlike Pontic Scythian, Ossetian did not experience the evolution of the Proto-Scythian sound /d/ to /δ/ and then /l/, although the sound /d/ did evolve into /δ/ at the beginning of Ossetian words.

According to Magomet Isayev, the Zelenchuk inscription and other historical data give reason to assume that in the 10th-13th centuries, the Alans already had their own unique written language based on the Greek alphabet. However subsequent historical events resulted in this written tradition being lost.

After the Mongols destroyed the Alan state, they retreated to the mountains of the Caucasus and mixed with the indigenous population, forming the modern-day Ossetians and the Ossetian language.