Messapic language

Messapic (/mɛˈsæpɪk, mə-, -ˈs-/; also known as Messapian; or as Iapygian) is an extinct Indo-European Paleo-Balkanic language of the southeastern Italian Peninsula, once spoken in Salento by the Iapygian peoples of the region: the Calabri and Salentini (known collectively as the Messapii), the Peucetians and the Daunians. Messapic was the pre-Roman, non-Italic language of Apulia. It has been preserved in about 600 inscriptions written in an alphabet derived from a Western Greek model and dating from the mid-6th to at least the 2nd century BC, when it went extinct following the Roman conquest of the region.

Messapic
Messapian
RegionApulian region of Italy
Eraattested 6th to 2nd century BC
Messapic alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3cms
cms
Glottologmess1244
Ethnolinguistic map of Italy in the Iron Age, before the Roman expansion and conquest of Italy
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