Saka language
| Saka | |
|---|---|
| Khotanese, Tumshuqese | |
Khotanese animal zodiac BLI6 OR11252 1R2 1 | |
| Native to | Kingdom of Khotan, Tumshuq, Murtuq, Shule Kingdom, and Indo-Scythian Kingdom |
| Region | Tarim Basin (Xinjiang, China) |
| Ethnicity | Saka |
| Era | 100 BC – 1,000 AD developed into Wakhi |
| Dialects |
|
| Brahmi, Kharosthi | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-2 | kho |
| ISO 639-3 | Either:kho – Khotanesextq – Tumshuqese |
kho (Khotanese) | |
xtq (Tumshuqese) | |
| Glottolog | saka1298 |
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Saka, or Sakan, was a variety of Eastern Iranian languages, attested from the ancient Buddhist kingdoms of Khotan, Kashgar and Tumshuq in the Tarim Basin, in what is now southern Xinjiang, China. It is a Middle Iranian language. The two kingdoms differed in dialect, their speech known as Khotanese and Tumshuqese.
The Saka rulers of the western regions of the Indian subcontinent, such as the Indo-Scythians and Western Satraps, are traditionally assumed to have spoken practically the same language. This has however been questioned by more recent research.
Documents on wood and paper were written in modified Brahmi script with the addition of extra characters over time and unusual conjuncts such as ys for z. The documents date from the fourth to the eleventh century. Tumshuqese was more archaic than Khotanese, but it is much less understood because it appears in fewer manuscripts compared to Khotanese. The Khotanese dialect is believed to share features with the modern Wakhi and Pashto. Saka was known as "Hvatanai" (from which the name Khotan) in contemporary documents. Many Prakrit terms were borrowed from Khotanese into the Tocharian languages.