1. Introduction
Scholarly understanding of the nature of the linguistic variation characteristic of pre-modern Middle Arabic texts has evolved in recent decades, from it being a distinct linguistic phase corresponding to a period of history (as in, e.g., Blau Reference Blau1977), to a sociolinguistic phenomenon which has existed for as long as Arabic has existed, and which continues to the present (Lentin Reference Lentin and Versteegh2008; Khan Reference Khan and Weninger2011; Den Heijer Reference Den Heijer, Zack and Schippers2012). Despite general acceptance of this re-conceptualization of Middle Arabic, many questions remain about both the linguistic origin and development of specific features attested in Middle Arabic, as well as whether, and to what degree, these features constituted a normative register at which a particular author was aiming. One such debate is the ongoing question of whether non-Classical Arabic features attested in Middle Arabic texts originated as hypercorrections, reflecting, originally at least, a lack of grammatical training or competency (as, e.g., Blau Reference Blau1966–67; Reference Blau1970; Reference Blau1999; see also Hary Reference Hary and Versteegh2007), or were deliberate but unsystematically used colloquialisms (as in, e.g., Lentin Reference Lentin and Versteegh2008: 219), or rather reflect the systematic use of innovative hybrid compromises between Classical Arabic and dialectal grammars (Bellem and Smith Reference Bellem, Rex Smith, Elmaz and Watson2014). Despite differences in approaching and answering such questions, however, scholars of Middle Arabic by and large share the fundamental assumption, namely that Middle Arabic as a phenomenon “is a continuum, or a mix, between the H variety (usually identified as Standard or Classical Arabic) and the L variety (colloquial Arabic, also dubbed Neo-Arabic” (Den Heijer Reference Den Heijer, Zack and Schippers2012: 6, emphasis mine). In other words, even once distinct Middle Arabic registers formed, thereby becoming prestigious vehicles of literary production in their own right (as, among others, Classical Judaeo-Arabic), they still originated – and remained sociolinguistically situated – in the middle of a spectrum between standard Classical Arabic at the high end, and colloquial dialects at the low one.
In this paper I seek first to challenge this shared assumption and, second, to add to the typology of Middle Arabic features, in the context of a close linguistic study of a unique medieval gospel translation in Arabic preserved in three manuscripts: Vatican Arabic 17 (1009 ce), Vatican Arabic 18 (993 ce), and Leiden Or. 561 (fifteenth c. ce). The translation is unique insofar as it imitates the style and lexicon of the Quran, even when these differ from what became normative Classical Arabic. Linguistically, forms specific to the Quran are mixed with features from not only the ClAr tradition, including, e.g., poetic archaisms not associated with standard ClAr, but also from Christian Middle Arabic, and even possibly colloquialisms. The three manuscripts attest very little variation in the consonantal frame of the translation; however, Vatican Arabic 17 and 18 (VAr. 17 and VAr. 18) are nearly fully vocalized, whereas Leiden Or. 561 (henceforth Or. 561) is much less, though not rarely, vocalized. And while the vocalization and orthoepic markings in the two earlier manuscripts, VAr. 17 and 18, are very similar to Classical Arabic, there are nevertheless several differences which have likely parallels in the language of the Quran. The phonology attested in the vocalization layer of the later manuscript, Or. 561, is much further from Classical Arabic, being virtually identical to that attested in other vocalized Christian gospel manuscripts from the medieval period. Or. 561 thus represents a deliberate Christianization of the recitation of the gospel.
There are several important implications of the data from the translation, and the manuscript witnesses to it, for the scholarly study of Middle Arabic. First, what we think of as typical, normative Classical Arabic (ClAr) features were not the only ones with which authors were interacting and mixing during the medieval period. In fact, the data – here and elsewhere – increasingly suggest the early linguistic diversity, reported by the early grammarians and attested in, e.g., vocalized Quranic manuscripts, was not forgotten completely but remained in use, even prestigious, among some groups of Christians for longer even than among Muslims. Second, I argue that several of the salient Christian phonological features attested in the vocalization layer of Leiden Or. 561 (such as tanwīn) which are both non-ClAr and also absent from any modern dialect, nevertheless originated as living features. At some point these features died out in the living speech of many, even eventually most, but not before becoming prestigious variants in their own right. As such, they were not ever pseudo-corrections, not always living colloquialisms (insofar as they were likely not living features of all scribes who employed them), nor ClAr/colloquial grammar hybrids; rather, they belong to a fourth category made up of once-living features which subsequently became prestigious variants for composition and recitation of (at least) the gospels. Such features were mixed with ones from ClAr or Quranic recitation traditions, as well as still others – archaic and innovative – in a high (H) register that was much more dynamic than conventionally conceptualized. I conclude that what is now normative ClAr represented, for at least some Christian communities, but one of several clusters of prestigious forms that might be used and mixed.
In what follows I begin with a discussion of several salient linguistic features attested in the consonantal skeleton of the text. These features are common to all three manuscripts. Subsequently, I discuss the vocalizations attested in VAr. 17 and 18, followed by those of Or. 561. I conclude by elaborating on the implications of these manuscripts for the study of Middle Arabic.
1.1. Description of the MSS
The three manuscript witnesses to this Quranic style gospel translation are: Vatican Arabic 17 (VAr. 17), Vatican Arabic 18 (VAr. 18), and Leiden Codex Or. 561 (Or. 561). The earliest of the three manuscripts is VAr. 18, which was produced according to the colophon in 993 ce. It contains only the Gospel of Luke, although it originally contained a complete translation of the four gospels. It consists of 93 folia of paper. VAr. 17 was produced just a few years later, in 1009 ce, and is a virtually complete copy of the four gospels. It contains 299 folia of paper. The colophons of these two codices indicate that they were in use both in Egypt and Constantinople, perhaps in contexts in which Christians and Muslims shared close social connections and in which Christians might want a gospel text that was comprehensible, and linguistically respectable, to Muslims (Kashouh Reference Kashouh2012: 128). Indeed, VAr. 17 was copied by a Muslim named Ḥamdān ʿAlī. Finally, Or. 561 is the latest copy of this version, datable to the fifteenth century ce. It consists of 151 folia of paper. Kashouh has suggested that this translation represents a translation from the Peshitta, independent of other translations attested in the Christian gospel manuscripts (Kashouh Reference Kashouh2012: 128–30).
Each of the three manuscripts is available online.Footnote 1 Of the three manuscripts, Or. 561, is still clear and well-scanned. VAr. 17 is legible in most places, although the paper has darkened so as to make legibility challenging in some contexts. VAr. 18 is the least legible of the three manuscripts, with darkening of the paper presenting a challenge, as well as an apparent smudging of the ink used.
While there is relatively little difference between the consonantal texts of the three manuscripts, there are some orthographic differences, especially between VAr. 17 and 18 on the one hand, and Or. 561 on the other. More significantly, the vocalizations differ between the two groups. In VAr. 17 and 18, the vocalizations are essentially identical to what one would find in a normative ClAr manuscript. Vocalization is nearly ubiquitous, with a few exceptions (on which see below). In Or. 561, on the other hand, vocalization is much sparser, though not rare. Significantly, the linguistic patterns attested in the vocalization layer of Or. 561 differ from VAr. 17 and Var. 18, but with features in common with other Christian manuscripts.
2. Linguistic notes on the consonantal skeleton
In the description of the consonantal text of the translation I draw from Leiden Or. 561 unless otherwise noted. This decision is due not only to the consistent clarity and legibility of the text in that manuscript compared with the other two, but also because it is the most complete. As noted previously, there are very few differences, and those differences are typically lexical rather than grammatical (Kashouh Reference Kashouh2012: 129; see also a collation of his test passages in appendix one, §12.6). The data, description, and examples in this and following sections are drawn from a systematic analysis of the entirety of the Gospel of Matthew, and 20 per cent each of the Gospels of Mark, Luke, and John.
2.1. Orthography and phonology
Each of the manuscripts is written in naskh script, and the orthography generally conforms to the norms of Classical Arabic with some notable exceptions, which I will discuss briefly here. Note that throughout this paper, the Arabic text is replicated from the manuscript exactly wherever possible. If this is not possible due to the limits of type font, I note the difference in parentheses.
Archaic spellings occur throughout the translation, often standing alongside later, more standard, spellings of the same words. One common orthographic archaism is the absence of word-internal alif to indicate a long vowel, especially in the words salām, e.g. السلم عليك يا من كان لليهود مليكًا “Greetings to you, king of the Jews” (40a), and ṯalāṯ(ah), e.g. ثلث أيام وثلث ليالٍ “three days and three nights” (16a). Another archaism is the writing of the imperfect of ClAr yasʾal without the medial alif, e.g. تسلون “you (mpl) ask” (7b), and تسله شيًا “you ask him something” (27b). On the other hand, the imperative from the root sʾl is attested in the masculine plural written اسلوا تعطوا “ask (mpl) and you (mpl) will be given” (8b). This hybrid form, between Quranic سل and ClAr اسأل , suggests the presence of the medial hamzah of the root, /isʾal/, rather than the Hijazi /sal/, and it is indeed written with a hamzah above the sīn in VAr. 17 (180r). Outside of these contexts, as well as other words which even in ClAr orthography are never spelled with alif, such as the demonstratives hāḏā / hāḏihī / ḏālika, long ā is spelled with alif consistently. This strongly suggests an intentional archaizing of the spelling in certain places, closer – though not always identical – to the Quranic spelling where it differs from ClAr.
Another category of words spelled variably, with archaic and standard spellings, are ones which in the Quran are spelled with a final <-wh> / -وه when absolute. Of these, two – صلوه “prayer”, and حيوه “life” – occur in this translation. The word ṣalāt, “prayer”, is attested numerous times, mostly with the Quranic spelling صلوه <ṣlwh> (7a; 23b). The word حيوه <ḥywh> “life” is likewise attested with both archaic and standard spellings, and in one place (24b) the phrase dār al-ḥayāt “eternal life” is spelled once each دار الحياه <ḥyʾh> and several lines later دار الحيوه <ḥywh>. Similarly, the word tawrāh “Torah” alternates between Quranic توريه <twryh> (15a) and standard توراه <twrʾh> (14a; 14b) spellings. These spellings again attest to a deliberate attempt to mimic the Quran orthographically, in addition to linguistically (on which see further below).
Perhaps the most saliently Quranic features of the translation is the frequent spelling of assimilation with verbal V and VI, which occur alongside unassimilated ones, just as in the Quran (Fischer Reference Fischer and Rogers2002: §47), listed in Table 1.
The example from folio 7a, اتروي <ʾtrwy> attests a prothetic alif but is etymologically unclear. The context, hypocrites wanting to be seen praying (Matthew 6: 5 ff.), suggests it is a form V from the root *rʾy, in which case it perhaps reflects a variant from a variety in which hamzah had been lost and the middle root consonant shifted to a w, although this is the only example of such a variant in the portions of the manuscripts studied for this paper.
Another assimilation pattern that occasionally occurs is the spelling of the nūn of the preposition min, “from”, to following nouns, typically when the noun is prefixed with the definite article, listed in Table 2.
Unlike the assimilation in verbal forms V and VI, this type of assimilation is not found in the Quran, nor is it standard ClAr. These spellings could therefore reflect a living feature. This is not the only option, however, and given the otherwise standard nature of the orthography, we should consider other alternatives. In fact, a parallel in non-standard ClAr practice is attested. Wright lists the following kind of variation involving the preposition min among so-called poetic licenses: فَمَا أَبْقَتِ الأَيَّامُ مِلْمَالِ عِنْدَنَا , “Fate has left no wealth in our possession”, where مِلْمَال ِ <milmʾl> = مِنَ الْمَالِ (Wright II: §242, pp. 380–81). If the latter phenomenon – a poetic or H register variant used in the text for stylistic purposes – is correct, then it provides another example of the non-normative ClAr features which are sprinkled throughout.
One example the parsing of which is not totally clear is:
(23) فهذا جنسٍ لا يطاق الا بصلوة خلصت وامصيام <wʾmṣyʾm>, “And this is not possible except with faithful prayer and fasting”.
The prefixed mīm is familiar from the other examples of the assimilated form of min. Different, however, is the prothetic alif, which is absent in the other examples of assimilated min, as well as the absence of the definite article. The previous noun is preceded by the preposition bi, bi-ṣalāt “with prayer”, and it seems likely that the preposition would have been the same, i.e. bi-ṣalāt … wa-bi-ṣiyām. In this case, the mīm underwent an unexpected nasalization of sorts, from the bilabial stop to nasal, perhaps due to an anticipatory assimilation to the final mīm, although this is not at all certain. The prothetic alif is most likely interpreted as representing a prothetic I, thus /im-ṣiyām/.
Despite the presence of clearly archaic, and in some cases specifically Quranic spellings, there are differences between the spelling of some categories of words in the Quran and the present translation, which in this case follows the ClAr orthography. The most prominent of these cases is the spelling of etymological III-Y roots with pronominal suffixes. In ClAr orthography, III-Y verbs are spelled with alif maqṣūrah when word-final; however, before pronominal suffixes it is spelled alif mamdūdah: بنى “he built”, but بناهُ <bnʾh> “He built it”. In the Quran, however, both of these are spelled with the yāʾ: بنى and بنىه <bnyh>. This reflects the fact that, phonetically, in the language behind the Quranic consonantal text III-Y verbs were realized with final /ē/ or /ay/, not ClAr /ā/ (Van Putten Reference Van Putten2017: §6–§7, pp. 55–9). Already by the eighth and ninth centuries ce, the ClAr spelling of these forms is attested ubiquitously in the corpora of the papyri and inscriptions (Van Putten Reference Van Putten2022: §5.8, p. 118). Thus, in terms of the combination of orthographic features, this translation is Quranic and archaizing but only to the point of imitating practices of the post-eighth century ce period.
Perhaps the most salient difference between the patterns of consonantal orthography in the translation, and Quranic and ClAr orthography, concerns the use of alif, especially to indicate the presence of the glottal stop in ways that classical orthography does not. Indeed, alif is used in numerous places to spell a glottal stop where, in ClAr orthography, either a glide or the hamzah would be used, e.g. (11b) وبرأت <brʾt> “she was healed” (= ClAr بُرئَت ). In most cases of non-Quranic and ClAr spellings, word-internal combinations of vowels and the glottal stop lead to sequences of two consecutive alifs, which, along with sequences of two glides, were disallowed in Quranic spellings. In a few cases, the sequence spells etymological combinations of short vowels and glottal stop, as in the examples listed in Table 3. Most such sequences spell combinations of glottal stop and a long ā, shown in Table 4.
These spellings become even more frequent in Middle Arabic texts from the Ottoman period, for example (Lentin Reference Lentin1997: 111–2). One final orthographic usage of the alif that, though rare, occurs in the translation and is contrary to Quranic and ClAr orthography is the occasional use of alif presumably to mark overlong ā in the perfect 3ms of the verb qāl, e.g. (9b) قاال “he said” <qʾʾl>. While the pattern of non-ClAr usage of alif to mark combinations of a vowels and the glottal stop is medieval and later, it is not qualitatively unique. Indeed, as Puin (Reference Puin and Reynolds2011: 170, 173) notes, such spellings of ʾ with alif are attested in an early Quranic manuscript, Ṣanʿāʾ DAM 01–29.1. Despite Puin's arguments for the historical anteriority of this practice, Van Putten (Reference Van Putten2018: 114–6) argues convincingly that this practice was innovative. Thus from very early on, and increasingly over time, the absence of a single letter with a single shape that represents glottal stop, especially given the dual role of alif to mark both glottal stop and long ā, gave rise independently to several scribal practices which use alif to mark glottal stop, even when it contradicts ClAr norms.
Phonetic spellings occasionally occur and are worth mentioning here. First, in a handful of cases, a prothetic alif is written before verbs that in other varieties of Arabic are form I:
• (22a) لان انسيتم زادكم “because you have forgotten your provisions”, presumably /insī-tum/ instead of /nasī-tum/
• (26b) ومن اترك بيوتا “And whoever has left a house (to follow me)”, presumably /itrak/ instead of /tarak/
• (21a) فليكن لك ما اطلبت “So let you receive whatever you ask for”, presumably /iṭlab-t(a)/ instead of /ṭalab-ta/
• (12b) واذا انزلتم ارضا “And when you enter a land”, presumably /inzal-tum/ instead of /nazal-tum/
Another example is (9b) فلما اطهر “And when he was healed”. It is not clear, however, whether the verb is passive, referring to the man whom Jesus healed (i.e. “When he was healed”), or active, referring to Jesus (i.e. “When he had healed”). In either case, since form IV is virtually unattested with this verb, it is likely that either underlying /iṭhar/ or possibly passive /Vṭhir/ is indicated.Footnote 2 Lastly, in one place, etymological *ẓ is spelled with a ḍād instead of ẓāʾ, the sole example of an otherwise well-known and attested phenomenon already in the earliest Islamic era documents (Hopkins Reference Hopkins1984: 40–1): (38a) فايقضوا “so wake (him) up” instead of ClAr فايقظوا . These phonetic spellings often (although not always) occur in contexts of direct speech, which might reflect their intentional use to create contrast between the refined narrative and character speech. If so, it is a helpful reminder that such colloquialisms need not reflect inability on the part of the composer of a text, but can be artfully and skilfully mixed with even quite refined texts, such as this.
2.2. Morphology
The present section presents phenomena that are saliently distinct from standard ClAr orthography, which include archaisms of various kinds, varied spellings of the same underlying form, and innovative spellings based on analogy. I address each of these categories in turn.
A number of non-ClAr archaic morphological forms are used, often alongside the standard ClAr forms. This is most commonly seen in the various forms of the demonstrative and relative pronouns used. According to the early grammarians, there were morphological differences between the demonstrative pronouns in eastern (Najdi) Arabic dialects and those of the Hijaz. The Hijazi forms are characterized by a final -h on the feminine singular, which is lacking from the Najdi form: Hijazi hāḏihī vs. Najdi hāḏī. The distal set is distinguished by the presence of an element l(i) in the Hijaz that is absent in the Najdi forms: Hijazi ḏālika (msg) / tilka (fsg) vs Najdi ḏāka (msg) / tīka (fsg) (Sībawayh Reference Sībawayh and Hārūn1988: II, 5, 77 f.; IV: 182, 411; al-Farrāʾ Reference al-Farrāʾ and ʿAbd Allāh al-Sarīʿ2014: 11–12, 22, 94). The Hijazi forms are characteristic of the Quran, as well as in standard ClAr, whereas the Najdi forms are mostly limited to poetry. Proximal forms from both sets are found throughout the manuscript:
Old Hijazi:
(14b) هذه فالام بذاتهِ “This is the essence of the matter”.
Old Najdi:
(42a; 8a) وفشت هذي الكلمه “And this word spread”.
(21a) فكان ذاك زولًا “And that (man) was wise”.
Additionally, addressee agreement – in which a suffixed -kum is added to various demonstrative and deictic forms when addressing a group of people – is well-attested in the manuscript, always with the Hijazi forms with infixed l(i):
(12b; 16a) ذلكم الذے عليكم اسمي “That one who (comes) in my name”.
(8a) تلكم مريدهٍ من أناس “This is the desire of men”.
This feature is regular in the Quran, but is not regular in standard ClAr (Van Putten Reference Van Putten2022: §A.4.4; Fischer Reference Fischer and Rogers2002: 146, 147). This feature is extended via analogy to other forms based on deictics which end in -ka, especially hunālikum and kaḏālikum:
(15a) وهنالكم ما هو اعظم من هيكلكم “And there is one who is greater than your temple”.
(25a) كان كذلكم فے السمآءِ “It is likewise (bound) in heaven”.
Finally, alternative variants are attested, such as the masculine singular distal demonstrative hāḏāk, e.g. (37b) هذاك لي دم “That is my blood”. This variant is well-attested in the modern dialects, from the Levant to Morocco (Vicente Reference Vicente and Versteegh2006: 569–72). However, it is also an archaic feature (Wright I: 268). With cases such as these, where a form is both archaic and dialectal, it can be difficult to determine the proper explanation of its occurrence. Yet perhaps we do not have to make such a choice. It seems to me quite likely that both aspects can play a role. The composer of this translation clearly chose intentionally from among a number of variants, but the fact that this form was both archaic and dialectal, but rare in writing, could have made it all the more appealing. The more frequent form is ḏālik(a), well known from the Quran and ClAr, e.g. (12b) وما ذلك كافيا “But this is not enough”.
The relative pronouns attested in the version are Hijazi, which are also those attested in standard ClAr, in each of singular, dual, and masculine plural contexts:
Masc.Sg. – (37b) الذي قلت فانهُ اياه “The one whom I told you, it is him”
Fem.Sg. – (22a) الآية التي كانت للنبي يونس “The sign which was (give) to the prophet Jonah”
Masc.Dual – (12a) ويعقوب ويحيي اللذان هُما لزبدي ابنان “And James and John, who are the two sons of Zebedi”
Masc.Pl. – (27b) الذين ترااسوا في الأمم “Those who presided over the peoples”
Fem.Pl. – (35a)واما الخمس الاتي جهلن “And as for the five (virgins) who ignored” and (35a)
تبعه اللواتي استعددن “Those women who had prepared, followed him”.
Here again, though, there are alternative forms which are peppered throughout the text. In one case, the form اللذ ّ /allaḏ(i)/, a by-form of allaḏī, occurs: (21b) واللذّ نالت منهُ زمانه “And the one who was struck by a chronic illness”. Another intriguing variant used in the manuscript is the feminine plural الالي /al-ʾulā/, which is a rare archaic form, beside the more common forms allātī and allawātī, reported above (on the variation in these forms, see Wright II: 271): (34a) فيا ويلات الحوامل والالي رضعن في تلكم من ايام “Woe to the pregnant women, and those who are breastfeeding in those days”. The selection of demonstrative and relative pronominal forms is clearly intentionally archaic, in this case incorporating forms not common in standard ClAr. But whereas elsewhere the Quranic forms were less common, here the Quranic forms became standard for ClAr, and the use of archaic ones resulted in deviation from Quranic morphology. Still, the productive use of addressee agreement in demonstrative and other deictic forms clearly draws on the Quran against later ClAr norms.
There are several other cases in which archaisms are used alongside forms which are more common and more typical of ClAr. For example, in addition to the use of ladā, “at, by the side of”, the archaic form ladun is attested, in combination with the preposition min, as well as with pronominal suffixes:
(4a) ليتم الذي قيل من لدن الرب “To fulfil that which had been spoken by the Lord”.
(25b) افما كان الاجذر بك ان تحنوا على لدنك كما حنوت عليك “Would it not have been better for you to have compassion on your (debtor) as I have had compassion on you?”
Another possible archaism is the use of tifʿāl / tafʿāl nouns as maṣdars of form II verbs instead of the more common tafʿīl patterns (on which, see Wright II: 115–6):
(22a) وسال الحواريين عما يعزوه اليهِ الناس تحداثا وتسنادا “And he asked the disciples about whom the people claim him to be”.
(22a) فما ابرمته في الأرض كان مبرمًا في السمأءِ توثاقًا وتعقادا “And what you have bound on earth will be bound in heaven”.
(31b) وما اجتروا بعد علے تسال “And they did not dare to ask (him anything) again”.
(35b) وانهُ لك توفاه “It is for you a recompense”.
In the case of the example of (31b), I am interpreting the form تسال as representing an underlying tisʾāl due to the fact that it is in a series of rhymes with CāC. The examples of توثاق and توفاه , with the retained wāw, would suggest /tawṯāq/ instead of /tiwṯāq/ and /tawfāh/ instead of /tiwfāh/. While these forms are far less common in Classical Arabic than tafʿīl, they are attested in various modern dialects, and indeed are the more common form in some North African dialects, such as Algerian (e.g. Dhina Reference Dhina1938: 327) and Moroccan (Harrell Reference Harrell1962: 63). It is thus possible that, as with the case of hāḏāk above, we are dealing with forms chosen both for their local familiarity and the fact that they are accepted archaic forms which nevertheless go against the standard ClAr forms.
Also worth mentioning among the general stock of archaic forms used in the translation is the vocative suffix -āh, on nouns followed by the vocative particle yā: (21) اعني سيداه “save me, master!” A final feature worth mentioning here is that the combination of prepositions + mā, which when used as interrogatives are spelled short without alif (bi-mā spelled as بم ), are productive in this translation, including the following forms:
(20b; 23a) حتام “until when?” (= حتّى ما ).
(23a) الام “until when?” (= إلى ما ).
(20a) قالْ لهُ عيسي علام شككت “He said to him, ‘Why do you doubt?’” (= على ما ).
Some archaisms are connected more explicitly with the language of the Quran. One is the use of shortened jussive forms of kān, spelled يك (ClAr yaku; Old Hijazi yak; Van Putten and Stokes Reference Van Putten and Stokes2018: 169):
(9b) فليك لك عن مقدار “So let it be equally to you”.
(13b) والطوبے للذے لم يك فے ريب مني “Blessed to the one who does not doubt me”.
These occur alongside the typical ClAr form yakun:
(21a) فليكن لك ما اطلبت “So may you receive what you have requested”.
(6a) ومن يقل يا جاهل فربه يكن معروضًا علے نار “And whoever says to his lord, ‘you ignoramus!’ will be subject to fire”.
Another archaism connected with the language of the Quran over against what became standard ClAr is the shape of the jussive and imperative forms of geminate (II=III) verbs. In the Hijaz, un-metathesized forms were used, whereas elsewhere metathesized forms were the norm (Rabin Reference Rabin1951: 161 f.): Hijazi urdud “return” vs. non-Hijazi rudd(a/u/i). In this gospel translation, the Hijazi forms, which are the norm in the Quran, are regularly used:
(38a) هبوا نمرر “let us pass!”.
(38b) اردد السيف “put your sword back!”.
(22b) ومن يحبب احيا نفسه “And whoever desires to save his life…”.
These un-metathesized forms are the norm for the manuscript. The determinative pronoun set, indicating “possessor(s) of X”, are frequently used in the text:
(21b) اني لذو اشناق “I have compassion”.
(6a) الي ذي سلطنه “to the one who has authority”.
(12a) ولا يك احدكم ذا سربالين “And no one of you will have two pairs of trousers”.
In the plural, while both ḏawū and ʾulū forms are attested, the latter are more common:
(3b) ذوُوُ البيت “The owners of the house”.
but:
(6a) اولي السابقه “those with priority”.
(14b) الحكمآءِ واولو الفهم “the sages and ones with understanding”.
Finally, the locative adverb set differs between Old Hijazi hunālika “there”, with a deictic li-, and Old Najdi hunāka without it. In standard ClAr, the Najdi form hunāka is more common, whereas in the Quran, the Hijazi form hunālika is more common. In this translation, the Hijazi/Quranic form is more common:
(21a) ما هنالك “that which is there”.
As noted above, this form also inflects for addressee agreement:
(15a) هنالكم ما هو اعظم من هيكلكم “There is someone who is greater than your temple”.
In most cases, other than the archaisms, as well as Quranic forms mentioned above, the morphology follows ClAr norms. This is notable especially when it comes to, e.g., forms of the imperative of I-ʾ verbs, which vary depending on whether they occur by themselves or with a prefixed fa- or wa- (Fischer Reference Fischer and Rogers2002: 128). In the gospel translation, these forms occur with the same distribution:
(19b) ايذن للناس يمضوا الي القُري “Allow the people to go to the villages”.
(20a) فاذن لِي اتِك على المآءِ “So allow me to come to you on the water”.
Also following the ClAr pattern are verbs such as ʾamara “he ordered”, which when by itself is typically realized mur “order (msg)!”, but when prefixed with a fa- or wa- is spelled with the alif:
(21b) مروا الناس ياخذوا مجالسهم “Order the people to take their seats”.
(10) فامرنا “So order us”.
In a few cases, however, there is some variation in the spelling of what are apparently the same form. For example, the imperative of ʾatā, “he came”, is spelled both ايتوني and اتوني :
(23b) اتوني بهِ “Bring him to me”.
(30b) ايتوني بدينار “Bring me a denarius”.
Relatedly, in cases where III-W verbs occur alongside III-Y by-forms in ClAr, the present translation attests similar variation, sometimes using the III-W form, while elsewhere III-Y ones. For example, the root ḥnw “to be compassionate” occurs in some corpora as ḥny. In this translation, the III-W root form is used, e.g. (25b) حنوت عليك “I have treated you compassionately”. On the other hand, the root ksw “to clothe” likewise attests a by-form ksy, which is the form used in this translation, e.g. فكسيتمون “And you clothed me”. Forms that are consistently III-W in Quranic and ClAr remain III-W in this translation. In that way, it is unlike the modern dialects, which attest a near-complete merger of III-Y/W verbs > III-Y.
In addition to archaic and standard ClAr forms, a few innovative morphological forms, relative to Quranic and ClAr, occur in the translation. Here again, many of the innovative forms involve III-W/Y roots. Perhaps most notable are the spellings of form I participles from III-W/Y roots, which are spelled with two yāʾs, indicating an analogical restoration of the root consonant, as in pre-modern corpora and some modern dialects (Blau Reference Blau1966–67: §101, 199–200). Examples from the translation include:
(33a) الماضيين “Those leaving”, presumably underlying /al-māḍiyīn/ (= ClAr الماضين /al-māḍīna/).
(24b) الملقيين “Those casting”, presumably underlying /mulqiyīn/ (= ClAr الملقين /al-mulqīna/).
(28b) مُشتريين “ones purchasing”, presumably underlying /muštariyīn/ (= ClAr مشترين /muštarīna/).
(28b) للمصليين “to those praying”, presumably underlying /li-l-muṣalliyīn/ (= ClAr للمُصلّين /li-l-muṣallīna/).
This feature seems like a good candidate for colloquialism, insofar as it likely reflects the way this sequence (i.e. /iyī/) was realized in the speech of many authors. The fact that it is consistent in the text suggests that its usage was intentional.
2.3. Morpho-syntax
More than any other features, those of nominal case inflection and verbal mood inflection, and specifically the differences between ClAr and all non-ClAr corpora, have framed and shaped the discussion of Arabic linguistic history in general, and the distinction between the pre- and Islamic periods specifically (Blau Reference Blau1966–67; Reference Blau1977; Reference Blau1999; Reference Blau2002; Reference Blau, Borbone, Mengozzi and Tosco2006; Hopkins Reference Hopkins1984).Footnote 3 Due to this framework, and the pervasive belief that Middle Arabic texts are, by definition, characterized by non-ClAr nominal and verbal inflection, Middle Arabic texts are rarely subjected to systematic analysis in which a percentage, or the whole, text is tagged and the different inflections quantified and plotted. I have done just such a quantification for these categories. As we will see, the different layers of vocalized texts are each significant in the case of this translation. The manifestations of nominal case represented in the consonantal skeleton are almost completely standard, whereas those represented by the vocalization markings vary.
2.3.1. Nominal case inflection
The present section discusses those features associated with nominal case inflection that are represented orthographically by consonants, which include: the accusative when written on orthographically eligible words with an alif; the five nouns in construct (on which a glide corresponding to triptotic case is written); duals and sound masculine plural forms. The topic of nominal case inflection written only with vocalization markings will be discussed in each manuscript's respective vocalization section below.
2.3.1.1. Accusative alif
According to my count, the accusative alif (or tanwīn alif) occurs 758 times in the included manuscript sections, of which 743 occur in standard ClAr accusative roles (98%). In other words, the overwhelming majority of tanwīn alif usages are standard ClAr. There are only 15 non-accusative, and thus non-ClAr, usages of tanwīn alif. These 15 cluster in three main syntactic categories: genitive (7/15), subject of a verb (including laysa; 4/15), and numbers that are typically marked with genitive (2/15). Examples of syntactic genitives marked with tanwīn alif include:
(33b) ويكون موت وجوع ورجف فے ارض بعد ارضا “And there will be death and hunger and disturbances in land after land”.
(44a) ذلك بانه كان يعلم كذي سلطانا لا كما يفعل السافرون “Because he teaches as one with authority, and not as the scribes”.
Examples of subjects marked with tanwīn alif include:
(24b) وما الذے ترتاون فے ذي مايه من ضان فضل منها واحدا “And what do you think about a man who owns 100 sheep, and one of them gets lost”.
(21a) قال لها ما حسنًا ان يوخذ خبيزًا لابنآءِ ويباح كلابا “And he said to her, ‘It is not good for bread for the children (of Israel) to be taken and given to the dogs’”.
Examples of non-ClAr number marking include:
(21b) الحفت بنا اياما ثلثه “And she has been here begging us for three days”.
(21b) وعده الاكلين اربعه الف رجالاً “And the number of those who ate is four thousand men”.
The final two examples include one predicate of *ʾinna, as well as one example which is opaque:
(47a) ذلك بما قالوه من انهُ روحًا من نجس قديم “They said of him that he is an unclean spirit”.
(21b) قال عيسي للحواريون اني لذو اشناق على امُةٍ جمآءِ عقيرا “And Jesus said to the disciples, ‘I am burdened for a childless nation’”.
What are we to make of these non-ClAr usages of tanwīn alif? Are they pseudo-correction (hyper/hypocorrections), as Blau has argued (Reference Blau1966–67: 317–45)? It is, of course, possible. However, these contexts are precisely the same as those in which non-ClAr tanwīn alif occurs elsewhere in the corpus of vocalized Christian gospels from St Catherine's monastery in the Sinai Peninsula. Stokes (Reference Stokes2023b) has argued that this pattern is connected with non-standard usages of tanwīn alif in unvocalized manuscripts, especially Sinai Arabic 72, 74, and 75. In the Christian gospels he studies, subjects of verbs, as well as, e.g., the use of the plural form of the noun with the tanwīn alif following numbers in the thousands, are each common. In a subset of manuscripts, the genitive is also occasionally written with the tanwīn alif as well. Stokes argues that this distribution is due to several factors. Phonetically a development from phonemic distinction before tanwīn (*un/*in/*an) merged to a single, non-phonemic vowel (variously realized, thus written -Vn). At the same time, early on there was only tanwīn alif which was used to write tanwīn. The variation in attested distribution of tanwīn alif was based on the degree to which scribes decided to adhere to orthographic and grammatical norms associated with the writing tradition they learned. Early on, they basically did so, with few exceptions (cf. Sinai Arabic 72, 74, and 54), although Sinai Arabic 75 is a notable exception. The development of vocalizations – namely fatḥatān, kasratān, and ḍammatān – enabled nuance that was impossible using only the consonantal spellings. The non-ClAr usages attested in this translation align with those from elsewhere in the Christian tradition and, as we will see, the vocalization patterns of tanwīn in Or. 561 is identical to those attested in vocalized Christian manuscripts as well.
2.3.1.2. Five nouns in construct
When in construct, the so-called “five nouns” (Arabic al-ʾasmāʾ al-ḫamsah) – ʾab “father”, ʾaḫ “brother”, ḥam “father-in-law”, fam “mouth”, and ḏū “possessor” – are written with a consonant corresponding to its triptotic case. Each of the five nouns occurs in construct in this translation. In total, there are 118 occurrences of one of these nouns in construct and, of these, 115 inflect as in ClAr (98%). In each of the three non-ClAr inflections, the nominative form occurs in a syntactically accusative role:
(12b) فكان قد اسلم الأخ اخوه للموت وما وجم والابن ابوه وما رحم “And it is that a brother will turn his brother over to death and not regret, and a son his father and feel not compassion”.
(50a) فاخرج كلًا الا أبو الجاريه وامها والذين كانوا معهُ قاصدين “And he sent away everyone except the young girl's father and her mother, and those who were wanting him”.
Once again, the vast majority of cases inflect as in ClAr. The three exceptions follow the pattern found by Kootstra (Reference Kootstra2022) in a detailed study of the papyri of the first three Islamic centuries, where the nominative form was by far the most commonly used form in non-standard roles.
2.3.1.3. Duals
A total of 99 occurrences of nominal forms inflected for the dual occur in the portion of the translation studied here. Of those, 96 are inflected as in ClAr (97%). In each of the three instances of non-ClAr inflection, the oblique occurs in a syntactically nominative context:
(25a) وحيث اجتمعا اثنين او ثلثه علے اسمي فاني بينهم فے المقام “And wherever two or three have gathered in my name, indeed I am among them”.
(27b) وانتوي عيسے ان يلم بالبيت المقدس ومعه الاثني عشر حواريا “And Jesus decided to go to the temple, and the twelve disciples were with him”.
(50a) وكان لها الاثني عشر سنة وهم يتهوكون “And she was twelve years old, and they were in awe (of her healing)”.
Interestingly, the three examples of non-ClAr inflection each involve the word “two” (iṯnayn) or “twelve” (iṯnay ʿašar). While it is tempting to see colloquial influence in these examples, another interpretation is possible. Elsewhere in the Christian corpus, the phrase “the twelve” (al-iṯnā ʿašar) is frequently either nominative or oblique, regardless of case. This is true even in manuscripts in which the dual is otherwise regularly inflected. For example, in Sinai Arabic 76, the dual is inflected as in ClAr, with a few exceptions. In the first 20% of that manuscript, 66 of 71 duals are inflected as in ClAr; of the five which were not, two were iṯnay ʿašar “(the) twelve”, both of which were oblique in nominative contexts, e.g. (Sinai Arabic 76, 37) هاولاى الأثنى عشر “These are the twelve”. It is thus possible, perhaps even preferable, to see these examples in the present gospel translation in a sense as intentional Christianisms – the use of a very familiar phrase in a way that contravenes typical inflection for a sociolinguistic purpose.
2.3.1.4. Sound masculine plurals
In the portions of the translation included in this study I identified 778 instances of sound masculine plural. Of those, 766 (98%) inflect as in ClAr. Of the 12 instances of non-ClAr inflection, nine are cases of a nominative form in a non-nominative context, and three cases of an oblique form in a nominative context. Of the nine nominatives in non-nominative contexts, eight involve the word ḥawāriyy, “disciple”:
(26b) قال عيسے للحواريون لقد استعصي ان يصل ذو غني الي دار النعيم “Jesus said to the disciples, ‘It is impossible for a rich man to enter into the kingdom’”.
(38a) وعاك الي الحواريون فالفاهم راقدين “And he approached the disciples and found them sleeping”.
(38a) ووجد الحواريون فے عودته هاجعين “And when he returned, he found the disciplesFootnote 4 sleeping”.
Of the three cases of oblique forms in nominative contexts, two are participles functioning as predicates in nominative sentences:
(24b) ومن يغمم صغيرا من الذين هم بي مومنين “And whoever misleads a small child among those who believe in me…”.
(79a) وقالوا ما بال فريق يحيي على دومهم صايمين “And they said, ‘why do John's followers always fast (but yours do not)?’”.
Here again, given that the overwhelming majority of cases are inflected correctly, it is difficult to take these examples as unintentional mistakes. While they might be, the clustering of these non-ClAr inflections among certain lexemes, a pattern in common with the dual inflection as well, suggests it is more likely that these Christianized forms were intentionally mixed in with the otherwise ClAr inflection.
2.3.1.5. Case inflection in consonantal text – summary
The various manifestations of morpho-syntactic case inflection in the consonantal framework – shared across the manuscripts – occur as in the Quranic and ClAr systems. The few instances in which it does not align are so relatively few in number, and cluster in contexts and lexemes that are familiar from other corpora in such a way that it suggests intentional use of non-ClAr inflection, perhaps in order to index a particularly Christian Arabic, or otherwise more colloquial sound.
2.3.2. Modal inflection
This section discussions the features of verbal mood inflection that are detectable in the consonantal frame of the translation, which include distinctions between indicative/non-indicative in dual and plural forms, as well as jussive/non-jussive distinctions in forms from II-W/Y, III-W/Y, and II=III (i.e. C2=C3) roots. The topic of modal inflection represented only by vocalization markings will be discussed in each manuscript's respective vocalization section below. The data collected for verbal mood is drawn from the first 20% of manuscript (Leiden Or. 561), which includes the entirety of the Gospel of Matthew.
2.3.2.1. Dual and plural – indicative vs. non-indicative
Due to the fact that in the dual and plural, there is no morphological distinction between subjective and jussive, thus the only meaningful categories are indicative, marked morphologically with a final V-ni (dual) / V-na (masculine plural) and a non-indicative ending with final V-ø. In total, 68 dual or plural verbs in indicative syntactic contexts occur in the first 20% of the Gospel of Matthew, of which 67 are inflected as in Quran and ClAr (99%). The lone exception is an indicative form which occurs after لو / law, “if” which typically takes either a perfect or jussive form:
(7a) فما اجركم لو تدرون “(If you love only those who love you), then what, do you think, is your reward?”
However, Fischer (Reference Fischer and Rogers2002: §453, p. 231) mentions that in “earlier stages of Arabic” indicatives were also used, depending on the context and desired verbal aspect. Further, in this example the verb تدرون occurs in rhyme position in a section in which the rhyme is CūR/CīR. It is thus probable that the indicative was used in order to maintain the rhyme. Indeed, the translation itself is paraphrasing here, since there is no verb with this meaning in the Syriac or Greek versions of Matthew.
In terms of non-indicative contexts, 92 occur in this portion of Matthew, with all 92 (100%) inflecting as in Quranic and ClAr.
2.3.2.2. II/III-W/Y and II=II – non-jussive vs. jussive
Similar to the data from indicative/non-indicative categories, II-W/Y, III-W/Y and II=III verbs, which distinguish morphologically between non-jussive and jussive forms in the consonantal text, follow Quranic and ClAr. In the selected portion of the manuscript 50 instances of verbs from one of these three categories occur in jussive contexts, with all 50 (100%) inflecting as in Quranic and ClAr. Of the 60 verbs from these three categories that occur in non-jussive contexts, all 60 (100%) are likewise inflected in line with Quranic and ClAr.
2.3.2.3. Modal inflection in consonantal text – summary
As with nominal case marking, verbal moods which are explicitly marked in the consonantal portion of the translation inflect as in ClAr.
2.4. Syntax
The syntax of this translation is remarkable in a number of respects, to the degree that it deserves – and requires – a full treatment. Further, it requires a nuanced and detailed study of the Quran, which it clearly imitates throughout, in order to fully understand. Due to the lack of such a study, as well as space limitations here, I offer only a few notes about some of the more salient recurring aspects of its syntax, especially when they stand apart from textbook ClAr.
Numerous aspects of the patterns of negation either pattern with the Quran against what later became normative ClAr, or attest interesting variations worth noting here. The best-known feature which patterns with the Quran, and Old Hijazi, against what became normative in ClAr is the use of mā to negate nominal sentences, either taking the predicate in the accusative case or introduced by the prefix bi, both of which are common:
(20b) وان هو اكل وما يداه بمغسولتين “He eats with unwashed hands”.
(6a) وما انت ببارحه “You are not passing”.
(21b) وما ذلك كافيا “But that is not sufficient”.
(10a) ومالے حيث يسند منهُ راسًا ارجًا “But I do not have a place where he [sic] might lay his head”.
(21a) قال لها ما حسنًا ان يوخذ خبيزًا لابنآءِ ويُباح كلابا “He said to her, ‘It is not good for the bread of the children (of Israel) to be taken and given to dogs’”.
The use of mā in this context is associated with the Quran, especially when unmediated by the prefix bi-, i.e. when it takes its predicate in the accusative, which is called mā al-ḥiǧāziyyah, “The Hijazi mā”, which is primarily attested in the Quran (Fischer Reference Fischer and Rogers2002: §367.1, p. 191). The pseudo-verb laysa is also well-attested as a nominal negator:
(10a) او ليس للثعالب وجرٌ “Do the foxes not have dens?”.
(14a) فلقد جآء يحيي وليس بذي ماكل ولا مشرب “John came and did not drink or eat”.
Of these two options, mā, either with bi- or without, is slightly more common than laysa. Out of 34 nominal sentences from the first 20% of the Gospel of Matthew in which one of the two negators occurs, laysa occurs 14 times (41%) while mā occurs 20 (59%). Finally, the negator ʾin occurs rarely by itself to negate a nominal sentence:
(19a) فان فيهم الا مليم “there is only evil among them” (lit. “there is not among them except evil”).
While the negator ʾin by itself is relatively rare, it is much more common following the negator mā, the combination of which is used to negate both verbal and nominal sentences:
(8a) فما ان هي بزارعة “It does not sow”.
(8b) وما ان قذيت ما بك “And you having not removed (the plank) in you”.
(170a) وما إن تَسْتطِيعُ “And you are unable”.
The combination of mā + ʾin is attested in ClAr, but is rare and considered by Wright to be indicative of “elevated” style (Wright Reference Wright1896/2005: 301). Noteworthy also is the use of negators other than lan (especially lā and mā + ʾin) to negate the future, while the negator lan is occasionally used to negate the present:
(33a) وما ان ترونني ملآن حتي تقولوا بورك الوارد باسم الرحمن “And you will not see me from now until you say, ‘Blessed is the one who comes in the name of God’”.
(33a) قال اولن تروا الجميع ذلكم قالوا بلي “He said, ‘Do you not see all of them?’ They replied, ‘we do!’”.
Negation in this translation thus draws on some specifically Quranic patterns, especially the use of mā as a nominal negator, mixed with other archaic forms, likely designed to lend a feeling of sophistication to the text.
Other notable syntactic features include, e.g., the use of the particle qad + imperfect to express certainty in the present or future, rather than uncertainty or possibility:
(5b) هكذا قد تنيرون فے الناس اذا شاهدوا الصالح من اعمالكم “Thus you will shine among men, when they see your righteous works”.
(31b) فانهم قد يقولون ولايفعلون “For they talk but do not do”.
There are numerous instances of variation in agreement throughout the manuscript, e.g.:
(9b) وسحّ الوابل وجري الوادے وعصفت الرياح وناطحن البيت فثبت “The torrent flowed, and the river ran, and the winds blew, and they rammed the house, but it remained steadfast”.
In this example, the noun ar-riyāḥ “the winds” triggers a 3fs perfect (ʿaṣafat), but the following verb (nāṭaḥna) is a 3fp, despite the fact that, whatever the subject – just “the winds” or all of the previously mentioned elements – the inanimacy should theoretically trigger the same 3fs inflection. Another example is:
(18b–19a) وانقضت الامثال الذي ضربها “And then the parables that he had given ended”.
Here, a feminine singular head noun is modified by a relative clause headed by a masculine singular relative pronoun.
Finally, a phenomenon relevant to a famous debate in the history of the native Arabic linguistic tradition is found in (37b) الذي قلت فانهُ اياه “What you said is the truth” (lit. “That which you have said, it is it”). The final part of the sentence فانهُ اياه , “it is the truth” (lit. “it is it”) is directly parallel to the famous masʾalah zunbūriyyah, “Question of the Hornet”, a famous debate between the Baṣran grammarian Sībawayh and the Kufan grammarian Al-Kisāʾī, over the final clause of the sentence:
كُنْتُ أَظُنُّ أَنَّ الْعَقْرَبَ أَشَدُّ لَسْعَةً مِنَ الزُّنْبُورِ، فَإِذَا هُوَ هِيَ \ إِيَّاهَا “I always thought that the scorpion had a more painful sting than the hornet, and it is true”.
When asked whether the pronouns in the final clause should both be subject pronouns (i.e. huwa hiya) or the first subject and the second object (i.e. huwa ʾiyyāhā), Sībawayh answered the former while Al-Kisāʾī answered the latter. A Bedouin arbiter was called in and, having purportedly been bribed, answered that Al-Kisāʾī was correct. In later tradition, Sībawayh was venerated (Versteegh Reference Versteegh2014: 72). Whether this story is consciously alluded to here in this construction, or rather reflects some stylistic preference – whether based on his own dialect or some other aesthetic preference unknown to us – is unclear. However, given the deep familiarity of the composer(s) with various archaic morphological and stylistic variants, and indeed a seeming preference for non-standard alternatives, it would not be surprising at all if he intentionally used the (by then) less common variant of the two; in this case, subject pronoun + object pronoun.
2.5. Lexicon
Among the most remarkable things about the language of this translation relative to other Christian Arabic translations of the gospels is the use of Islamic forms of the names of Jesus, his disciples, and other figures, instead of the Christian Arabic ones. Jesus is in most cases عيسي instead of يسوع \ ايسوع \ ايشوع ; John is يحيي instead of يوحنان \ يوحنا , etc. (Kashouh Reference Kashouh2012: 128). Further, religious terms are often explicitly Islamic, such as the use of Islamic epithets of God like raḥmān (33a), as well as the reference to Jesus’ followers as اشياع عيسي “partisans of Jesus”, the plural of šīʿah (38b). Additionally, there are words and terms that are either rare or non-existent in the ClAr lexica, but which are rather typical of the Quran (e.g. حوب، إِنْ and the sound masculine plural نبيون , “prophets”, instead of the broken plural الأنبياء ). Table 5 presents a far-from-exhaustive list of some salient lexical forms from the portions of the manuscript included in this study, with the hope that a fuller treatment of the lexicon of this translation will be undertaken in the near future.
2.6. Rhyme
While Quranic forms and terminology pervade all linguistic domains of the translation, the language and style of the translation is most recognizably Quranic in its rhyme scheme. I will first present the rhyme schemata attested in the first 20% of Or. 561 (41 folia), followed by a discussion of the most significant aspects of the rhyme for an understanding of the nature of the language of the translation. For clarity and convenience, I have adopted the signs from Van Putten (Reference Van Putten2019: 8–9):
The following section includes a list of the schemata, along with the relevant folia in which each occurs. It should be noted that, as in the Quran, the translation often switches back and forth between rhymes, thus any given folio might be listed as attesting more than one rhyme scheme.
2.6.1. VC rhymes
As with the Quran, these rhyme variants are among the most common in the gospel translation as well:
VR: 3b–4b; 6a–7b; 8b; 9a; 23b; 24a; 24b; 25b; 26a–26b; 27b; 28b–29a; 30a; 30b–33b; 36a; 36b; 36b–37a; 37a–39b; 39b–40a; 40b;
VǦ: 4b; 14b–15a; 28b; 40a;
VH: 5b–6a; 19b-20a; 24a; 39b.
By far the most common is VR, many of which are sound masculine plural -ūn/īn. Of the VǦ variants, the most common is Cūḏ (4b)/Cūd (28b; 40a). The most common VH variants are Cūh (5b–6a;39b) and Cīh (19b–20a; 24a). Among the best evidence that final short vowels are not realized in rhyming position in this translation, as in the Quran, is the rhyme of 3ms pronominal suffixes with, e.g., adjective ending in -ūh, as in (6a) when the indefinite adjective منقوه “coward, good-for-nothing”, rhymes with تجفوه “it (the people) will treat him harshly”.
2.6.2. vC rhymes
While relatively less common the vH pattern is not uncommon. These patterns are always combinations of the genitive i followed by a 3ms pronominal suffix (Ci-h). The fact that these are realized as genitives is highly likely given that the sentences are written so as to ensure that each final noun is syntactically genitive:
vR: 7b–8a
vH: 10b–11a; 13b; 14a–14b; 16b; 26b–27b; 36a.
2.6.3. AC rhymes
AR: 4b; 11b–12a; 23b; 28a–28b; 34a; 36a–36b;
AǦ: 5a; 7b; 10a–10b; 11a; 13a; 21b; 25a; 26a; 35a; 40a; 40b;
AH: 8a–8b; 24b; 26a; 34a; 35a; 36a.
The rhyme pattern AC is among the most commonly used in the translation, again reflecting its popularity in the Quran. Of note are the instances of AǦ rhymes, which reveal and corroborate aspects of the underlying realization of the rhyme. First, many AǦ rhymes involve nouns ending in *-āʾv, which rhymes with other nouns ending in AC. Second, many examples, such as (5a) where all forms end in Cāq, involve words which are in different syntactic contexts and would therefore have different final vowels. This corroborates evidence from elsewhere that word-final vowels were not realized, at least in rhyme position, in the language of the consonantal text. Of the AH rhymes, the most common is Cās and Cāt.
2.6.4. aC rhymes
aH: 5a–5b; 10b; 12a–12b; 20a–20b; 25a–25b.
aǦ: 8b–9a; 14a; 29a–29b; 30a–30b.
aR: 23a–23b; (39b?); (40b?).
All instances of aH are feminine singular nouns ending in -ah. The rhyme, however, tends to involve recurring nominal patterns as well. For example, (5a–5b) involves feminine singular active participles of form I verbs, i.e. CāCilah forms; (10b) involves mostly Caʿīlah forms; (12a–12b) are nouns ending in the feminine singular genitilic -iyyah; (20a–20b) consist of mostly mufāʿalah and fāʿilah forms; and (25a–25b) are mostly II-ʾ feminine singular participles of form I verbs, i.e. Cāyilah forms. As elsewhere, case is not consistent, which strongly suggests that these are realized Cah. Corroborating this realization is the fact that of the aǦ patterns, Cat occurs but only with strings of 3fs perfect verbs, not tāʾ marbūṭah.
2.6.5. CA rhymes
The broad category of CA is popular, and includes III-Y verbs (alif maqṣūrah), III-W verbs (alif mamdūdah), III-Y nouns (alif maqṣūrah), III-W nouns (alif mamdūdah), as well as indefinite accusative *an (realized /ā/ and written with alif mamdūdah = tanwīn alif), and, in one place, the 3fs pronominal suffix -hā.
*ay (alif maqṣūrah): 16b–17b; 19a–19b; 33b;
*an (indefinite accusative): 9a–9b; 20b–21b; 21b; 22a–23a; 36b*; 39b; 40b;
*aw (alif mamdūdah): 18b; 36b*;
*-hā (3fs PN Suffix): 13a.
In most cases, nouns or verbs from one of these categories do not rhyme with each other. This is as in the Quran, where, with two exceptions, words ending in *ayv (alif maqṣūrah) and *awv (alif mamdūdah) do not rhyme with the other. However, while the dis-preference for rhyming nouns and verbs from the different categories is predominant in the translation, there are more exceptions to it than in the Quran. Interestingly, in the few places where III-W (alif mamdūdah) forms are regularly rhymed, they are not interrupted by III-Y (alif maqṣūrah) forms, but are occasionally interrupted by indefinite accusative ones, as in (18b).
Stretches of alif maqṣūrahs are sometimes interrupted by III-W forms:
(16b–17b) stretch of III-Y forms interrupted by qasā “it was solid, hard” (III-W);
(19a–19b) stretch of III-Y forms interrupted by ṣafā “to be pure” (III-W).
However, these interruptions are few in number compared with others, such as III-W and indefinite accusatives. Importantly, final -ī / -iyy is occasionally rhymed with III-Y forms (as in, e.g., 19b where al-muḍiyy “the departure” (written with shaddah over the yāʾ) is rhymed with preceding ʾaġnā “richer” and following lil-qurā “to the villages”), but not with III-W forms or indefinite accusatives.
The most common of the CA rhyme patterns involves rhyming indefinite accusative nouns. Here again, the vast majority of the time the pattern is observed; in a few cases, however, it is interrupted, either by III-Y forms (as in, e.g., 9a–9b where masrā “place of departure” interrupts the pattern), or by III-W (as in, e.g., 36b, where half of the words in the section are III-W, the other half are indefinite accusative).
Thus, while final ā forms appear to rhyme with each other, the integrity of each pattern is generally maintained. III-W and indefinite accusatives rhyme with each other more frequently than with III-Y forms, and the latter rhyme with final -ī / -iyy forms, but neither of the others does. The likeliest interpretation of this is that the phonetic realization of each is /ā/, but that the scribe who composed the translation was intimately familiar with the Quranic rhyme scheme, which included the orthographic distinction between alif maqṣūrah and alif mamdūdah forms.
2.6.6. aCC rhymes
In one stretch, final nouns and verbs consistently end in a geminate aRR rhyme pattern:
aRR: 15a–15b
The nouns are in varying syntactic contexts, which confirms again the lack of realization of final short vowels in rhyme.
2.6.7. vCC rhymes
The least common rhyme pattern is one in which nouns ending in masculine singular gentilic ending -iyy rhyme:
vǦǦ: 18a
2.6.8. Summary of rhyme patterns
The rhyme patterns attested in this gospel translation replicate most of those attested in the Quran, with VR, AC, and CA (indefinite accusatives) among the most commonly attested. Final short vowels were not realized in rhyme position. The CA rhymes further demonstrate the intimate familiarity of the composing scribe with the details of the Quran by largely maintaining the distinction between III-Y forms and others realized with final -ā, such as III-W and indefinite accusative ones, despite the fact that the occasional overlap between each suggests that, as in standard ClAr, the phonetic realization of all of these forms was /ā/.
3. Linguistic remarks on vocalization of VAr. 17 and 18
The earliest manuscript witness to this gospel translation, VAr. 18 (993 ce), is vocalized often, though not fully. The next oldest manuscript, VAr. 17 (1009 ce), is almost fully vocalized. In both, the vocalizations are, with a few exceptions, identical to standard ClAr patterns. For example, case marking, where noted, fully conforms to ClAr. The assimilation of third person pronominal suffixes to preceding Ci, Cī, and Cay is also standard ClAr, with singular, dual and plural forms assimilating in these contexts. Other vocalizations are also consistent with ClAr, such as final *-āʾv ones, whereas, as we will see, this is not the case with Or. 561: (VAr. 18, 13v) لقد جآء َ “He has come”.
Despite the basic identity of vocalizations in both VAr. 17 and VAr. 18 with ClAr ones, VAr. 17 nevertheless attests two orthographic practices, both related to the spelling of the glottal stop in certain contexts, which could suggest significant differences with ClAr. VAr. 17 regularly, but again not ubiquitously, spells glottal stop in the expected places based on etymology:
(169r) فإذا ما ألقَيتُموُهُ “And when you have found him”.
(169r) سَمِعَ فے الرَامهِ مِنْ بُكَأٍ “He heard wailing in Ramah”.
(170v) قَاَلَ وَقَد رَأِى “He said, ‘He has seen’”.
This explicit marking of the glottal stop with the hamzah includes contexts in which the consonantal spellings do not contain the typical seat (kursī), such as the archaic/Quranic spelling of tasʾal “you ask”, so examples like (179v) تسلوا “(if) you ask” are written with a hamzah atop the sīn. While there are cases in which words with etymological hamzah are written without it, in many, perhaps most cases it is included. Remarkably, with very few exceptions, active participles from II-ʾ and II-W/Y roots, which in ClAr attest a glottal stop instead of glide (i.e. fāʾil instead of fāyil) are never written with a glottal stop:
(168v) السايلين “Those asking” (= ClAr السائلين )
(169v) القايلين “Those saying” (= ClAr القائلين )
(180r) فَالسَآيِلُ مُجابٌ “The who who asks is answered” (= ClAr فالسائِل ).
In many cases, the alif of the participle is spelled with maddah, as in (180r) فَالسَآيِلُ , which in many ClAr manuscripts indicates the presence of the glottal stop even without an explicit hamzah. While it is possible that the maddah was doing such double duty in this manuscript as well, this is unlikely due to the fact that the maddah is written very frequently (although again, not ubiquitously) to mark internal ā even when no glottal stop was present:
(180r) وَأقْرَعُوا ألْبآبَ “So knock on the door!”.
(180r) وَألْطآلِبُ واجِدٌ “The one who seeks, finds”.
A possible exception to this could exist if the use of sukūn can be interpreted as indicative of glottal stop in, e.g., (167v) رايْين “seeing (mpl)”. Elsewhere, derived forms from the same root apparently attest the glottal stop in participles, e.g. (168r) مُتَرأييًا “appearing (msg)”. If so, it could be that certain roots were produced with a ClAr glottal stop, while most were not. But at the same time, a form I participle is attested with a shaddah over the initial yāʾ instead of a sukūn: (168v) رايّين , suggesting /rāyyīna/.
I suggest that the most natural interpretation of this disparity between the regular marking of glottal stop with a hamzah in most instances and its virtually complete absence marking form I active participles with the ClAr shape fāʾil in others, is that it was not realized in these participles, and that their shape was fāyil. And although it is of course possible that this feature is an unintentional colloquialism in the text, the fact that the vocalizations are otherwise typical of ClAr makes it unlikely that it was unintentional. Still, such a distribution, if accurate, seems rather odd. If it does not reflect a (somewhat inexplicable) intentional colloquialism, it could perhaps be explained as an archaism. Van Putten (Reference Van Putten2018) has argued based on a close study of the Quranic consonantal text, including evidence from internal rhymes, that the variety underlying the Quranic text lacked the glottal stop in most cases, with the exception of word-final *-āʾ, where it was apparently retained. Thus, the language of the Quran likely had fāyil participles, and it is also a possibility that this phonological feature is echoed here. As with the orthography and morphology, where archaisms are intentionally mixed in variously throughout the text, so too here is a phonological archaism included in the recitation reflected in VAr. 17 (and likely, as we will see, in Or. 561 as well).
A second noteworthy feature regards the spelling of the alif of the definite article and the prefix alif before perfects of verbal forms VII through X. In ClAr, these are hamzat al-waṣls, i.e. a non-phonemic vowel inserted to resolve what would have been a consonant cluster, e.g.:
Definite Article: l-kitāb > al-kitāb
Form VII: nfaʿala > infaʿala
Form VIII: ftaʿala > iftaʿala.
In the ClAr orthographic tradition, the alif is marked with a sign called a waṣlah ٱ to indicate the hamzat al-waṣl (instead of a phonemic hamzah, called a hamzat al-qaṭʿ, which was written with the hamzah sign). In VAr. 17, many of these instances of hamzat al-waṣls are written with a hamzah sign without a waṣlah, suggesting they could have been realized as hamzat al-qaṭʿ, contrary to ClAr norms:
(167v) مِن رُوحِ ألقُدُسِ “from the Holy Spirit”.
(168r) من لَدُنِ رَبِّ ألْعَلَمِينَ “from the Lord of the word”.
(170r) فے ألْحُلُم “in the dream”.
(168v) أذْهَبُوا “Go! (mpl)”.
(169r) فَحِينَ أستَمَعُوا “And when they heard”.
(170r) أسْتشْعَرَ خَوْفَاً “And he felt fear”.
In places where etymological *ʾi occurs, the hamzah is written below the alif, as in (169r)وَدَخَلُوا إلى ألبَيتِ “And they entered the house”. This is regular throughout the manuscript, and is good evidence that, were these cases of form I imperatives and derived form perfects realized i- or ʾi-, they would have likely been written with the hamzah below the alif. These spellings thus strongly suggest that at least the imperatives, perfects of derived verbal forms VII through X, and the definite article were realized as hamzat al-qaṭʿs, and primarily with a a vowel. Here again, the consistency (though not the ubiquity) of the spelling of these forms with hamzah signs atop the alif is too regular to be unintentional mistakes. And as with the lack of hamzah in participles discussed above, this feature is very possibly an archaism. It is clear from the Damascus Psalm Fragment that the derived forms VII through X were realized with hamzat al-qaṭʿ rather than the ClAr hamzat al-waṣl (Al-Jallad Reference Al-Jallad2020: 79 f.):
(V. 56) Οα.αβ.τε.λευ /wa-ʾabtalaw/ “they tempted”.
(V. 57) φα.ανκα.λε.β(ο)υ. /fa-ʾanqalabū/ “and they turned their backs”.
The evidence from the Quran is less clear, but there is some evidence that these categories were realized with hamzat al-qaṭʿ in at least some instances (Van Putten Reference Van Putten2022: §A.3.10). Here again, then, there is evidence for phonological archaisms in VAr. 17, along with the morphological and syntactic ones discussed above, which also differ from standard ClAr.
4. Linguistic notes on the vocalization layer of Leiden Or. 561
Unlike VAr. 17 and 18, Or. 561 is not fully, or even mostly, vocalized. Vocalization is not, however, rare; indeed, it occurs in certain contexts, especially: contexts where ḍammah is used with participles of verbal forms II–X; vocalizations of tanwīn (on which, see below); suffixed pronouns, especially the 3ms; and certain lexemes. Vocalization further occurs somewhat randomly, which nevertheless sheds some light on the phonetic and phonological layers of the underlying variety. I turn now to a brief discussion of those aspects of the vocalization that are both non-ClAr and which recur.
At various places in Or. 561, a later hand makes various edits of the underlying text and vocalization. These edits are always clearly distinct from the original text because the original ink is light brown in colour, whereas the later editing hand is written in black ink. It is unclear how soon after copying the edits were made. The edits are of several kinds. First, where the original text has become unclear due to damage or smudging, the editor fills in what he thinks belongs, as in Figure 1.Footnote 5
Second, in numerous places, the editing hand adds vocalizations, especially related to nominal case inflection. These case-related changes often involve marking out the non-ClAr ones and replacing them with the standard variants, as in Figure 2.
Third, certain words are crossed out and replaced with another word, as in Figure 3.
The grammatical edits and additions to the text are always in the direction of making the text closer to standard ClAr, and it is likely that the lexical replacements were geared towards replacing words felt either too unfamiliar or colloquial with words more commonly used and associated with ClAr as perceived by the editor. Other examples of this lexical replacement include:
(4b) دوب “honey” was replaced with عسل
(5a) حوب “fault” was replaced with ذنب .
Interestingly, the later editor did not replace overtly Islamic words with others felt to be less Islamic.
4.1. Orthography and phonology
While vocalization of nominal and verbal forms is inconsistent and sparse compared with VAr. 17 and 18, there are nevertheless indications of non-ClAr phonetic and phonological features based on what vocalizations are present. The first category of such features involves ḍammah marking to indicate apparent rounding or backing of etymological *a and *i. For example, ḍammah is often found in the context of bilabials, indicating a rounding of the vowel, as in the examples listed in Table 6.
In a few of the above examples, such as ʿumādan and ġaḍub, it is possible that the pharyngeal (in the former) or the emphatic (in the latter) also influenced the vowel, thereby representing a backing effect on the vowel. This is attested elsewhere, as in the examples listed in Table 7.
In a final example attested in the portion of the manuscript included in this study, an example of ḍammah in a root in which i is expected, despite the absence of a bilabial or emphatic:
(20b) فزُدنا فيهِ تبصيرًا وتنقيبا “And we increased in insight and discernment”.
The context in which vocalizations are most consistently used throughout the manuscript are those in which etymological glottal stop occurs. Of the various contexts, the three most relevant from the perspective of the vocalizations in Or. 561 are glottal stop in phonetic contexts other than *-āʾv, glottal stop in word-internal -āʾi contexts (i.e. form I active participles of II-Y/W roots and faʿāʾil plurals), and word-final *-āʾv contexts. The patterns and variation for each context will be reviewed in turn.
Marking of the glottal stop with the hamzah sign outside of *āʾv contexts is variable, with hamzah occasionally written, though more frequently it is omitted. For example, ʾisrāʾīl is spelled variously:
(4a; 21a) اسراييل but (3b) اسراييل (with a hamzah above the initial yāʾ; ClAr اسرائيل ).
The word *šayʾ is likewise spelled with and without hamzah:
(23b; 27b) شي but (31b) بشيء
(20a) كييبًا “depressed” (with hamzah above the initial yāʾ).
Frequently on the same folio, within a few lines of each other, two forms with essentially the same phonetic combination are written variously, one with and one without hamzah: (13a) يومن “he believes” but روُوسكم “your heads”. Given this type of variation in inclusion or omission of the hamzah sign, while it is possible that forms with and without glottal stop were included, it seems more likely that in such cases the glottal stop was assumed present, but only occasionally written. The primary exception is apparently the combination *īʾ, which is always spelled without hamzah, but with a shaddah, indicating a regular shift of *īʾ > iyy, e.g.:
(14b) مُشيّاتهِ “his desires”, ClAr مَشِيئَاته
(39b) نبيّ “a prophet” and (31b) النبيّون “the prophets”.
The latter form is regular in ClAr for the lexeme, even though etymologically it is clear that the hamzah was etymological.Footnote 6
The maddah sign is used to write the glottal stop, often without the use of the hamzah sign. The most frequent of these contexts is *ʾā. This is a regular part of the ClAr orthographic tradition, and is the most common context in which the maddah is used to this day:
(5b) والآيه “and the sign”;
(9b) وآت العتيره “And bring (impv) goat for slaughter”;
(15a) آل “tribe, family”;
(16b) والآصره “and the obligation”;
(33a; 34b) ملآن “from now”;
(33b) آذنت “you announced”.
Another familiar context is to mark the combination of *ʾaʾ, e.g. (21b; 22a) اآنتم “are you (mpl)?” and (13b) اآنت “are you (msg)?” Finally, combinations of short vowels and the glottal stop are rarely written with a maddah instead of the hamzah sign:
(19a) يعطيها ساآلتها “(that) he gives her her request”;
(25a) فحين ابتدآ بها “And when he began it”;
(39b) قال اني اخطآت “And he said, ‘Indeed I have sinned’”.
In some places, however, maddah is used where long ā occurs but where no etymological glottal stop is reconstructed when the syllable is word-final:
(9b) قاآل الابرص “The leper said”;
(21b) اآنتم العارفون باعلآم السمآءِ “Are you not those who know the signs of the heavens?”.
This practice, while relatively rare, could be parallel to the practice common among the Quranic reciters of reciting as overlong vowels that, due to pausal loss of final short vowels, would result in an overlong syllable: non-pausal qāla “he said”, but pausal qāāl. So the scribe who vocalized Or. 561 used maddah frequently to a mark glottal stop, in both contexts in which it would be used in the ClAr orthographic tradition (i.e. to mark combinations of the glottal stop and long ā) and non-ClAr contexts as well, without necessarily writing the hamzah. He also seems to have used maddah to mark long ā vowels, perhaps indicating an overlong ā, in words lacking the glottal stop completely when the vowel occurs in the final syllable of the word.
With one exception, the spelling of *āʾv forms are very consistently spelled to indicate the presence of a glottal stop, which is, however, accomplished variously with either the maddah sign written atop an alif, or the hamzah sign, both together, or the combination of alif + hamzah + kasrah (-اءِ ). Examples with just maddah include:
(4b; 8b; 9a) وجآ “And he came”;
(5b) وما يلغي اليآ “And the yāʾ will not be abrogated”;
(12a) قد اقتربت الملكوت السمآاييّه “The heavenly kingdom has come near”;
(16b) والملآ علي الساحل “And the crowd on the shore”;
(16b) قضآ ارابهِ “And the fulfilment of wishes”;
(28b; 41a) ورآ المدينه “Behind the city”;
(34a) سناآ لبرق “the flash of lightning”;
(39a) وفآ الي مدخلهم “And he returned to their entrance”.
Also common is the combination of maddah + hamzah signs:
(3b) جآؤوا “they came”;
(9a) وجآءت الاوديه “And the losses came”;
(13b) ولقد جآء الكتاب “And the book came”.
Finally, the use of the combination of alif + hamzah marked with a kasrah (-اءِ ) is commonly used to mark etymological *-āʾv contexts when they occur word-finally, regardless of syntactic context:
(5b) لجيه الانبياءِ “To the coming of the prophets”;
(9b) وقال اني شاءِ “And he said, ‘I desire’”;
(10a) هلكهٍ شنعاءِ “a horrible loss”;
(12a) فهاولآءِ “these (mpl)”;
(15a) ليتم ما جآءِ بهِ شعُيبَ “to fulfil what Isaiah said”;
(21a) تناديه بغواث ندآءِ “You will call him for help”.
This practice is widespread in later texts, and has been explained as either indicating ʾimālah (Talmon Reference Talmon2004: 225–6), or as marking either word-final āʾ or perhaps simply word-final ā (Lentin Reference Lentin, Zack and Schippers2012: 228–9). This practice is also widely attested in vocalized Christian manuscripts, where it likely indicates word-final āʾ (Stokes Reference Stokes2023a). That the same interpretation holds true in Or. 561 is suggested by numerous examples, but perhaps most clearly by (16b) wa-laysa fī-hā māʾi-un “And there is no water in it,” where the grapheme <āʾi> is used but is further marked with tanwīn ḍammah.
The primary exception to the practice of writing *āʾv in a way so as to indicate the presence of the glottal stop is the almost total absence of any means for indicating it for word-internal *āʾi sequences, primarily, but not solely, in the active participles of form I hollow and hamzated verbs (i.e. II-Y/W/ʾ):
(4a) القايلين “The ones who say”;
(7b) ذخايركم “Their treasures”;
(8b) فالسايل “The one who asks”;
(20a) يقول القايل “One saying”;
(24b) فاملاكهم راييه “Their angels see”;
(25a) للملكوُت الجاييه “For the coming kingdom”.
The counter-examples that occur in the portions of the manuscripts included in this study are predominantly found in one of three roots: ǧyʾ, šyʾ, and rʾy. In one example from ǧyʾ, the alif of the participle is marked with maddah + yāʾ: (20a) اني انا الجآي “I am the one who is to come”. A second, more intriguing example is from the root šyʾ: (9b) وقال اني شآءِ “And he said, ‘I desire’”. Here, the alif + hamzah + kasrah grapheme (-اءِ ) is used, which as was argued above usually represents underlying /āʾ/. In this case there are two apparent possibilities: either (-اءِ ) can occasionally also represent underlying /āʾi/ (and thus this spelling represents underlying /šāʾi/), or the participle form from this root was realized /šāʾ/. If the latter, it is probably from another variety than the tanwīn feature, since /šāʾ/ would presumably reflect a historical loss of word-final *in, i.e. *šāʾin > šāʾi (loss of final -n) > šāʾ. This is similar to the loss of -n underlying Quranic forms such as لم يك , which probably represent an underlying /lam yak/ (Van Putten and Stokes Reference Van Putten and Stokes2018: 169). Finally, on rare occasions, the participle of the form I of raʾā “he saw”, is marked with a hamzah: (8a) وانتم راؤون “And you see”. Elsewhere, however, the same form is written with a shaddah over the first yāʾ, e.g. (168v) لقد كنّا رايّين “We were indeed seeing”, suggesting a vocalization of /rāyyīn/.
The significant disparity between the majority of -āʾi forms which lack any indication of glottal stop on the one hand, and the other contexts – reviewed above – in which glottal stop is frequently indicated in at least some occurrences of the forms which recur, suggests that these word-internal -āʾi forms lacked regular realization of the glottal stop, which I have argued is also characteristic of the vocalization in VAr. 17.
There are, finally, a few words that, when vocalized, attest to a vocalization which is different from ClAr and other varieties of Arabic, especially *man “who(m)?” which is vocalized مِن /min/ (6a) and *ʿan which is spelled عِن /ʿin/ (6b; 15a; 41a).
4.2. Morpho-syntax of triptotes
Nominal case inflection as represented in the consonantal frame of the gospel is discussed above (Section 2.3.1). In this section, only those categories expressed in the vocalization layer of Or. 561 will be discussed, namely third person pronominal suffix harmonization patterns, and the distribution of the three vocalic markings which, in ClAr orthography, correspond to nominative, genitive, and accusative cases: (or “two ḍammahs”), kasratān (or “two karahs”) and fatḥatān (or “two fatḥahs”). Each occurs, although fatḥatān is by far the most commonly attested (occurring 695x), followed by kasratān (460x) and then ḍammatān (36x). I will describe the distribution of each in turn, followed by an analysis and comparison with other vocalized Christian manuscripts.
4.2.1. Distribution of fatḥatān
As with tanwīn alif, the fatḥatān is overwhelmingly used to indicate syntactically accusative roles. Of the 695 instances of fatḥatān in the portions of Or. 561 included in this study, 670 (96%) mark accusatives. The 25 instances in which fatḥatān occurs are, again as with tanwīn alif, clustered in three main syntactic contexts: genitives (12), predicates (5), and subjects of verbs (5). Examples in genitive contexts include:
(3b) اذا بمجوسً وفوُد “There was a group of Magi”;
(44a) كذي سلطانًا “as one with authority”;
(126a) كے يكرم كل احدً ابنًا “In order that everyone honour a son”.
However, in a few instances of fatḥatān in genitive contexts, the scribe appears to mis-parse the consonantal text:
(21a) يجوب الي صور وصيدًا وارضًا سهوبا “He went up to Tyre and Sidon, a flat land”.
In the first word, Ṣaydā, the final alif was likely part of the spelling of the name, but perhaps the scribe was influenced to write fatḥatān.
Other examples of possible mis-parsing include the following two examples:
(123a) ما الانسان بقادر ان يصنِع شيًا من لدن نفسهِ الا بعطيه من علًا “A man is not able to do anything of himself, except that which has been given to him from above”;
(124b) ويجمع ثمارً الحياه الخلود “And he will gather the fruits of eternal life”.
In the former example, a final alif mamdūdah is part of the root; in the latter, fatḥatān is written on a noun lacking tanwīn alif and in construct.
Examples of predicates include:
(41b) والقمه مرداةً ضخمت “And the peak was a large stone”;
(43b) ولهُ اجازةً بالصبغه “And he has the authority by baptism”.
Examples of subjects of verbs include:
(25a) وضرب مثلًا للملكوت الجاييه ملكًا شآ ان يبلوا عبيده “And he told them a parable of the coming kingdom, ‘A king wanted to test his slaves’”;
(41b) قال لهم فيلاط او ليس لكم رجلًا “Pilate said to them ‘You do not have any man’”.
There are two further examples of non-ClAr numbers, each with a different syntax, marked with fatḥatān:
(21b) وعده الاكلين اربعه الف رجالًا دون النسآءِ “And the number of those who had eaten was four thousand men, not including women”;
(21b) الحفت بنا ايامًا ثلثه “She has been pleading with us for three days”.
In the first of these examples, the counted noun, raǧul, is in the plural accusative, whereas in ClAr it would be singular genitive. In the second example, the number follows the counted noun, and is in the accusative. It is possible to interpret the accusative of ʾayyām as a sort of tamyīz, but the word order is clearly poetic.
4.2.2. Distribution of kasrah / kasratān
Whereas the vast majority of fatḥatāns occur in syntactically accusative contexts, 338 of the 459 instances (74%) occur in syntactically genitive contexts. Of the 121 non-genitive usages of kasratān, 62 (51%) occur in syntactically accusative contexts, while 58 (48%) occur in nominative ones, and one (<1%) occurs where in ClAr the adverb is marked u.
Of the 62 cases of kasrah or kasratān which occur in accusative contexts, 42 (68%) occur on nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭah. Of the remaining 20, 17 (85%) end in one of the following consonants: d (4x), r (7x), m (2x), n (1x), b (1x), l (1x) and ṣ (1x). Most of these are voiced consonants, including the liquids and nasals. The inclusion of ṣād, while only occurring once, is a bit perplexing, since it is a voiceless consonant. One intriguing explanation, which would unite these consonants, is that while according to Sībawayh the ṣād is a mahmūs consonant, in the Quran the ṣād patterns with the maǧhūr consonants in terms of rhyme scheme (Van Putten Reference Van Putten2019: 17). While it must of course remain purely speculative, it is possible that some aspect of the phonetics of these consonants triggered a front vowel.
In eight of these 20 instances of kasrah or kasratān in accusative contexts there is a mixed spelling, with a tanwīn alif spelled in the consonantal text but where the scribe of Or. 561 writes kasratān instead of fatḥatān. Here only nouns ending in dāl or rāʾ are thus spelled:Footnote 7
(4a) واخرجوا حقايبهم فاذا هم منها مهدون ذَهبًا ومراٍ ومن اللبان “And they took from their bags gifts of gold, and frankincense, and myrrh”;
(5b) انهم ليرون الله جهاراٍ رويهٍ عالمه “For they will see God”;
(5b) يدع فے الملكوت كبيراٍ “He will be called great in the kingdom”;
(24a) اذهب قاصداٍ الے يم “God straight away to the sea”;
(30a) وتضرم ديارها نارٍا اسعرت “And her house will catch fire”;
(46a) كيلا يجذب جديداٍ باليًا “So it is not turn apart anew”;
(70a) ويعد الشعب الكامل للربّ اعداداٍ سويًا “And (may) the whole people return together to the Lord”.
A final three examples involve kasrah where either fatḥah or ḍammah would occur. In two of the three, the word allāh “God” is marked with kasrah despite being in syntactically accusative:
(45a) وهل يقدر علي غفر الخطايا من احَد الا “Is anyone able to forgive sins but God?”
(126a) ليس لنقضهِ السبت لكن بمقاله ان ابوه “Not for his abrogating the sabbath, but by his claim that God is his father”.
In a third example, the phrase fī-mā baʿd is written with a kasrah, i.e. fī-mā baʿdi instead of ClAr fī-mā baʿdu:
(26b) افتري ما الذے يكون لنا فيما بعدِ “He lied about what will happen to us afterward”.
Turning to the occurrences of kasrah or kasratān in nominative contexts, a combination of morphology, syntax, and semantics is salient in terms of its distribution. Morphologically, for example, as with accusative, nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭa constitute a significant number of nouns marked with kasratān instead of ḍammatān in nominative contexts, with 15 of the 57 cases (26%):
(5b) وكان قد وصلتهم نظرةٍ راحمه “And he was merciful to them” (lit. “a merciful view arrived them”);
(120a) وانها لشهادةٍ من يحيي “It is indeed a confession from John”;
(127b) ليس لكم فے محبةٍ “You do not have a love of God”.
Syntactically, the overwhelming majority of cases occur in one of three syntactic contexts: subjects of verbs, especially verbs of motion; subjects of possessive/existential clauses (often with kān); and nominal predicates. First, subjects of certain verbs, especially verbs of motion, are among the most likely to be marked with kasratān, accounting for 19 of the 57 (33%) instances:
(24b) وان يحن عليك اخٍ “And if a brother feels regret for you”;
(33b) فيشف امرٍ امرًا ويسلم رجل رجلًا “And a man will reveal another, and one will turn over another”;
(33b) ولقد يناصب شعبٍ شعبًا وملوك ملوُكًا “And a people will war with another, and kings other kings”;
(45a) وجآهُ قومٍ “A group of people came to him”;
(45a) ومضت ايامٍ فعاد الي كفر ناحم “And days passed, then he returned to Capernaum”;
(124a) سوف تاتي ساعةٍ “the hour will come".
Note that, while in many cases the verb is intransitive, this is not always the case (cf. the example from 33b).
Second, subjects of clauses expressing existence or possession constitute 16 of the 57 (28%) instances. Subjects marked with kasratān in these clauses occur in base nominal sentences, as well as with kān or the nominal negator laysa. Examples in base nominal sentences include:
(14a) وبهِ جوعةٍ اذ دخل الي بيت الله صحبهُ جميعًا “And he was hungry, then he entered the temple of God and they all followed him”;
(32a) ما الاكرم عندكم اذهب ام بيتٍ “What is holier to you, gold or temple?”;
(32b) وفے باطنكم غلٍ “And malice is within you”;
(32b) وفے الحافها الداخله عظام الموتي ورجسٍ خبيث “But in its inner wrappings are the bones of the dead and evil filth”;
(28b) ولما ابتكر فے رجعاه وبهِ احساسٍ من جوعٍ بصر فے الطريق بشجرة من شجر التين “And when he had started early returning, and he had a feeling of hunger, he looked in the path and saw an olive tree”.
Examples of subjects of kān when expressing possession or existence include:
(28b) قال لها لا كانت فيك ثمرةٍ حتي الابد “And he said to it, ‘You will never again bear fruit’”
(29a) حقًا انهُ ان يكن فيكم ايمانٍ “Truly, if you have faith”;
(76a) كيلا يكون لقدمك من حجرٍ “In order that it not be a stumbling block to your foot”.
Examples of nominal predicates, especially participles, include:
(23b) فهذا جنسٍ لا يطاق “This is an impossible thing”;
(45b) لتعلموا ان ابن البشر مسلطٍ “So that you might know that the son of man has authority”;
(123b) وانا امراةٍ من السامره “And I am a woman from Samaria”.
Semantics also frequently correlates with the likelihood of marking. Specifically, words for groups of things, especially people, as well as a single person are marked with a high frequency, accounting for 13 out of the 57 instances (23%):
(10a) وتغلوه مَنهُما قوطٍ ترعي “And a distance from them there was a flock of sheep”;
(23b) فهذا جنسٍ لا يطاق “And this thing is not possible”;
(74b) يا قومٍ اني صابغكم بالمآءِ “Oh people, I baptize you with water…”;
(76b) وكان ببني اسراييل ايام اليشع النبي خلقٍ من الاوضحين “And there was among the Israelites in the days of Elisha the prophet a group of lepers”;
(78b) واتاهُ قومٍ “And a group of people came to him”;
(127a) وتلاهُ جمعٍ كثير لرويتهم “And a large group followed him to see them”.
Finally, the marking of kasrah/kasratān, in both genitive and non-genitive contexts, is frequently characterized by the same distribution which characterizes so-called dialectal tanwīn, where, e.g., pre-modern and modern dialects attest tanwīn marked on nouns when followed by adjectives, but in which the adjective is unmarked. Out of all the eligible noun + adjective combinations marked with kasrah/kasratān, in any context, 34 of 48 of these are characterized by this dialectal tanwīn pattern, wherein the noun is marked but the adjective is unmarked. Further, there is no apparent difference between ClAr and non-ClAr roles; for example, 21 of the 29 examples which occur in genitive syntactic contexts are characterized by this pattern. Examples from each context include:
(16a) لتطلب آيةٍ شاهره “Then you will request a conspicuous sign”;
(78a) واجتمع الي عيسي خلقٍ عظيم لسماع منهُ “And a large group gathered around Jesus to hear from him”;
(127b) والتج البحر عليهم بهبوب ريحٍ عقيم “And the sea groaned around them with intense winds”.
4.2.3. Distribution of ḍammatān
Of the three vocalizations discussed here, ḍammatān is the least frequently used by far. As with fatḥatān, it closely tracks the contexts in which it is found in ClAr. Of the 36 instances of ḍammah or ḍammatān in the portions of Or. 561 included in this study, 33 (92%) occur in syntactically nominative contexts. The three exceptions each occur in syntactically genitive contexts, two of which occur in the context of numbers, once with a number in a genitive context marked with ḍammatān, another with a (diptotic) noun for “groups of people” marked thus:
(25b) ثلثه عصايبٌ كثرت عليهِ “Three groups gathered against him”;
(122a) قال لهُ اليهود لفي ستٌ واربعين من السنين “And the Jews said to him, ‘In 46 years (was this temple built)’”.
The nominative contexts in which ḍammatān is used are not randomly distributed; rather, they cluster in the same contexts as the kasratān in nominative contexts does, namely subjects of certain verbs, predicates, and subjects of possession or existential clauses.
Examples of subjects of active verbs include:
(16a) قال فريقٍ من المعتزله وفريقٌ من السافره “So a group of the Pharisees and a group from the Sadducees so to him”;
(19b) واكُل كُلٌّ واكتفے “And everyone ate and was satisfied”;
(34b) فلو استيقن رجلٌ من الناس ان يهجم علے مباتهِ “So if a man ascertains from others that someone will attack his house”.
Examples of nominal predicates, especially participles, marked include:
(8b) فسايل مُجابٌ “For he who asks is answered”;
(16a) ثمرها طيبٌ “Its fruit is good”;
(11b) لم تمت بل هي راقدهٌ “She did not die, rather she is merely asleep”.
Examples of subjects of possessive and existential clauses include:
(11b) وقال كما امنُتمّا فليك لكما بصرٌ “And he said, ‘As you have believed so let you have sight’”;
(10a) قال او ليس للثعالب وجرٌ ولطير السمآءِ وكرٌ “And he said, ‘Is it not that foxes have their dens and birds of the sky have nests’”;
(18a) مثل الزوان الذي كان معه برنقيٌ “The parable of the wheat, which had good earth”.
Finally, the marking of ḍammatān in contexts where dialects, both pre-modern and modern, mark tanwīn on the noun but not the adjective (i.e. dialectal tanwīn), the marking of ḍammatān follows the dialectal pattern. In five of six instances of nouns followed immediately by attributive adjectives in nominative contexts marked with ḍammatān, four of five (80%) attest a lack of tanwīn on the adjective, and in three of four the adjective lacks the ḍammah as well:
(18a) شجرٌ قويُ “A strong tree”;
(18a) وقال المسيح الزارع ربٌ وفيّ “And he said, ‘The Messiah, the farmer, is a faithful lord”;
(8b) هذا عهدٌ عظيم “This is an ancient covenant”.
None of the three instances of ḍammatān in non-nominative contexts included a noun + adjective combination.
4.2.4. Analysis of tanwīn distribution
The nominal case inflection attested in the vocalizations of Or. 561 are a bit complex and deserve some unpacking. First, in terms of frequency, fatḥatān and kasratān are used far more frequently than ḍammatān. Second, in terms of correspondence with the pattern found in ClAr, each of the vocalizations is attested in their predicted contexts, between 76% (kasrah/kasratān for genitive) and 96% (fatḥah/fatḥatān for accusative) of the time. So while there is a great deal more variation than is attested in the manifestations of case in the consonantal text, it is absolutely the case that the scribe used each vocalization primarily where it would have been written in ClAr.
Regarding the non-ClAr elements, it is clear that while they exist, they are regular and patterned. The most significant of these patterns include:
• Accusatives are written with fatḥatān, with the primary exceptions conditioned morphologically by the presence of tāʾ marbūṭah or a maǧhūr consonant.
• Genitives are written with kasratān, with the primary exceptions being numerals/number constructions (marked with ḍammatān), a few nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭah (marked with fatḥatān) or ending in an alif mamdūdah (marked fatḥatān).
• Nominatives are marked with either ḍammatān or kasratān, in about the same proportion, and clustering in a few syntactic contexts, including subjects of certain active verbs, subjects of existential/possessive clauses, and nominal predicates; kasratān is more frequently used when the subject is a lexeme for either a group, or a single individual of a species.
Especially noteworthy in terms of distribution is the likelihood of nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭah to be marked with kasratān, regardless of syntactic context, exemplified by examples such as the following:
(16a) امّا اغترستم شجرةٍ طيبةٍ ثمرها طيبٌ او شجرهً خبيثةٍ خبثها ثامره “As for when you plant a good tree, its fruit is good, or a bad plant, its rottenness likewise produces fruit”.
In this example, three of the four nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭah are written with kasratān, despite being in syntactically accusative contexts. However, the adjective ṭayyib “good”, which lacks a tāʾ marbūṭah and is in a syntactically nominative context, is marked with ḍammatān.
While it is tempting to appeal to the oft-cited “pseudo-correction”, this seems unlikely based on the aspects of the distributions noted above. Indeed, fatḥatān and ḍammatān are rarely used to mark roles that do not align with their ClAr ones. The kasratān is the default, occurring in both accusative and nominative contexts. Further, when kasratān is used in accusative contexts instead of fatḥatān, it is almost always phonologically conditioned; when used in nominative contexts, it occurs in precisely the same contexts as ḍammatān in nominative ones. What are we to make of this distribution? I propose that the most likely scenario is that the variety of Arabic underlying the vocalization layer in Or. 561 is one in which tanwīn had historically been retained, but in which the phonemic contrast had been lost in the short vowel preceding:
*un/in/an > Vn / C_n #
Given the fact that kasratān seems to be the default spelling of this morpheme, it is likely that the vowel was realized as something like /i/ or /ə/. This is the realization of the same morpheme in many modern dialects which have retained dialectal tanwīn (Stokes Reference Stokes2020).
If this proposal is correct, then the peculiarities of the orthography remain to be explained. Specifically, we might wonder why the scribe did not simply spell all instances of tanwīn with kasratān if he is intentionally trying to represent such a phonetic reality. In order to answer that question, it is useful first to compare these data, and the orthographic details reviewed above, from other Christian manuscripts.
4.2.5. Comparison with other Christian manuscripts
A comparison with other vocalized manuscripts containing Christian translations of the gospels into Arabic reveals a spectrum of similarities, both in terms of the orthographic practices when noting non-standard tanwīn patterns, as well as the syntactic roles in which these instances occur. Regarding the former, in some, such as Vatican Borg. Arabic 71, only fatḥatān is used to note all instances of tanwīn. In a number of such manuscripts, there is a morphological distinction between how tanwīn is written in accusative and non-accusative contexts: in accusative contexts, both tanwīn alif and fatḥatān are used; in non-accusative ones, only fatḥatān is used:
(Vatican Borg. Arabic 71, 3v) حينيذً استدعا هيرودس المجوس سرًا “Then Herod summoned the Magi in secret”.
In this example, the first word with tanwīn, ḥīnaʾiḏin, is written with fatḥatān but without tanwīn alif since, in ClAr, it would be written with kasratān. The second noun, sirran, is an accusative, and is thus written with tanwīn alif.
In another group of manuscripts, including Sinai Arabic 82, 84, 90, and 91, scribes used fatḥatān and kasratān (but not ḍammatān), where fatḥatān and kasratān largely overlap, but with kasratān often predominating on, e.g., nouns ending in tāʾ marbūṭah.
(Sinai Arabic 82, 32) فمن اين فيه زوانًا “So then from where are there tares in it?”
(Sinai Arabic 82, 14) لا يجوز من الناموس والانبيا ايةٍ واحده “Not a jot will pass away from the law or the prophets”.
Finally, a few manuscripts, including Sinai Arabic 76 and 112, pattern with Or. 561 in using all three. The distribution of the three vocalizations in, e.g., Sinai Arabic 76 matches the one attested here in Or. 561 in virtually every detail: fatḥatān is used in accusative contexts, with kasratān marking genitives, accusatives with tāʾ marbūṭah, and marking the same syntactic and semantic groups as here (subjects of verbs of motion, predicates, and words for individuals or groups of people). Further, as in Or. 561, Sinai Arabic 76 attests a more frequent use of kasratān than ḍammatān in nominative contexts, with the latter occurring in contexts with, e.g., numbers, just as in Or. 561:
(Sinai Arabic 76, 22) صام أَربعين نهارا ؤَاربعين ليلهٍ “He fasted for forty days and forty nights”
(Sinai Arabic 76, 43) قال لهم ايّ انسان منكم له نعجهٍ واحده “And he said to them, ‘What man who has a single ewe…’”
(Sinai Arabic 76, 83) فخمس منهُنّ كُنّ عاقلات وخمسٌ جاهلات “Five of them were wise, and five of them were foolish”.
The significant overlap between the patterns of vocalization in Or. 561 and those employed across the Arabic gospel manuscripts constitutes overwhelming evidence for a shared set of traditions, both linguistic and scribal. As argued in Stokes (Reference Stokes2023b), the variety behind the vocalizations across the Christian manuscripts can be explained as above, namely as evidence for a variety in which short vowels before tanwīn had merged. It seems likely that at the point at which this merger took place, some contexts had ceased to be marked by case vowels + tanwīn, with accusative roles, especially adverbs, as well as subjects of certain verbs, lexemes of highly specific or individuated nouns, and nominal predicates were more salient – and thus more consistently marked explicitly – than others. When the merger occurred, these contexts were still marked, but with a morpheme, composed of the single vowel and tanwīn (-Vn). When scribes attempted to write such a variety, they had to make use of the orthographic tools at their disposal, namely the three vocalization signs. Some made use of just one, others alternated fatḥatān and kasratān, while still others used all three. Crucially, most scribes attempted both to represent the underlying variety and adhere to the conventions of the writing tradition in which they had been trained. They accomplished this to varying degrees and in different ways.
4.2.6. Third person pronominal suffix harmonization
Along with tanwīn vocalizations, the patterns of vocalization of the 3ms, 3mp and 3fp pronominal suffixes are also relevant for the study of morpho-syntactic case in Or. 561. As is well known, standard ClAr is characterized by harmonization of the vowel of the 3ms, 3mp and 3fp suffixes to a previous i vowel, whether long or short, as well as a preceding diphthong -ay:
3ms kitāb-u-hū “his book (nominative)” but kitāb-i-hī “idem (genitive)”;
3mp kitāb-u-hum “their (mpl) book (nominative)” but kitāb-i-him “idem (genitive)”;
3fp kitāb-u-hunna “their book (nominative) but kitāb-i-hinna “idem (genitive)”.
This, however, is not the only pattern documented by the early grammarians, nor did they canonize it as the only acceptable one. Further, there are alternative patterns attested among both the canonical Quranic recitation traditions, as well as others found in vocalized Quranic manuscripts (Van Putten and Sidky Reference Van Putten, Sidky and Villanoforthcoming).
As shown in Table 8, in Or. 561 a very consistent non-ClAr pattern of harmonization is attested in which the 3ms suffix harmonizes to preceding Ci, Cī, and Cay (as in ClAr), but the dual (and presumably the plural) forms do not.
Significantly, the 3ms pronominal suffix is written -hi (length is not indicated) not only after the preposition bi-, but also nouns in genitive contexts. While case endings are not written explicitly, this alternation all but guarantees its presence. The dual pronominal suffixes do not assimilate after either Ci or Cī. The plural pronominal suffixes are not vocalized following Ci, Cī, or Cay in Or. 561; however, it seems a priori likely that they would pattern with the dual, which is attested in multiple places with a ḍammah, indicating a lack of harmonization. It is impossible to know whether nominative u or accusative a were realized.
Whether this harmonization pattern was ever a living feature, or rather was one of numerous variants which were aesthetically motivated, is uncertain. The complicating factor is the lack of attested vocalization of 3mp and 3fp forms. It is possible, for example, that the bilabial nasal /m/ in, e.g., the dual and 3mp suffixes, led to the rounded vowel /u/, whereas those without it (3ms, 3fp) assimilated. Regardless of whether or not it was once a living feature, it is consistently used throughout Or. 561, and was clearly prestigious. Similar assimilation patterns are attested in the Quranic tradition (Van Putten and Sidky Reference Van Putten, Sidky and Villanoforthcoming) as well as in other vocalized Christian manuscripts (Stokes Reference Stokes2023a).
4.2.7. Overview of the case system in Or. 561
The evidence for morpho-syntactic case inflection in Or. 561 suggests a system in which final short case vowels were realized when non-word final, at least before pronominal suffixes, as evidenced by the assimilation of the 3ms and 3du pronouns when suffixed to nouns in the genitive. Formerly indefinite triptotes are marked with tanwīn, which was probably realized with a single vowel, reconstructed here as /in/ or /ən/. Despite the loss of phonemic contrast between short vowels before tanwīn, the morpheme continued to mark a set of salient syntactic roles, including adverbs, subjects of certain verbs and clauses expressing existence or possession, as well as lexemes expressing groups or single members of a species.
5. General discussion
The three manuscript witnesses to the gospel translation under examination in this paper attest several linguistic layers, each of which is relevant for the study of Middle Arabic. The consonantal layer reflects a mixing of various forms, especially of archaisms, many of which were associated with the language of the Quran, while others were archaic poetic forms. While many of these archaisms are mentioned, and accepted, by the Arabic language grammarians, they are often not typical in standard ClAr. Also attested in the consonantal layer of the translation are a minority of forms which are common in Middle Arabic, with specific manifestations – such as the non-ClAr use of terms for “the twelve (disciples)” – that are salient in other Christian gospel translations as well. The result is a text that is highly Quranic, and generally sophisticated and archaic, with Christian-specific features sprinkled in here and there.
The vocalizations in the three manuscripts also communicate a great deal. While VAr. 18 and VAr. 17 both generally follow standard ClAr, VAr. 17 especially apparently mixes in still other features, possibly associated with a Hijazi and/or Quranic style, reflected especially in the use of fāyil as the form I active participle pattern, rather than the ClAr fāʾil one, as well as the apparent non-ClAr use of hamzat al-qaṭʿ for the definite article, imperatives, and derived stem perfects.
The vocalization attested in Or. 561 is distinctly non-ClAr in most cases, reflecting a deliberate Christianization of the phonology of the text. While we cannot be certain whether the scribe who copied Or. 561 relied on either VAr. 18 or VAr. 17, it is very possible that he did. In that case, the scribe had a copy not only of the consonantal text, but also vocalizations, which he then deliberately changed. The quality of the copying of the consonantal portion of the text, which is neater and more skilfully done in some respects than in either VAr. 18 or VAr. 17, rules out incompetence or carelessness. Further, the commonality of many of the features, such as the patterns of tanwīn and writing of final -āʾ, also suggests that rather than reflecting a very localized tradition, the scribe intentionally targeted a variety of Arabic associated to some degree with Christians, or at least commonly used by Christians to recite the gospels.
Returning to the topics of the linguistic nature of the features in Middle Arabic texts, as well as about the spectrum along which Middle Arabic texts are situated, the evidence in the translation – drawn from each of the three witnesses – argues against many of the standard assumptions of the field. First, the assumption that if authors don't intentionally target a particular Middle Arabic sub-variety, they would target standard ClAr, is clearly not safe in every instance and must be demonstrated by close reading of the text, rather than assumed. In this translation, both the consonantal text and vocalization layers the use of features that are not standard ClAr. In some cases, the target was Quranic Arabic, even when it disagreed with standard ClAr. Elsewhere, archaic forms were used rather than more commonly prescribed ClAr ones. In still other cases, such as the fāyil participles, it seems as though the target is Old Hijazi, perhaps an early prestigious variety in the Umayyad Levant (Al-Jallad Reference Al-Jallad2020). Finally, features likely associated with the vernacular of the composer or copyist were identified, as for example the occasional phonemic spellings of perfects, likely indicating syncope of the initial short vowel in an open syllable, as well as the shift of *ẓ > ḍ. Interestingly, the phonemic spellings almost always occur in direct speech, which possibly reflects a deliberate choice by the scribe to use a more vernacular register in those contexts.
Second, evidence from this gospel translation suggests that in at least some cases, Middle Arabic features which do not conform to ClAr norms, nor occur in modern dialects, are nevertheless most plausibly derived from once-living features, and can be included in discussions of the historical development of Arabic. I have argued here that the distribution of the tanwīn vocalizations attested in Or. 561 are virtually identical in many ways to those attested in other Christian gospels, which reflect a historical change, namely the merging of short vowels before nunation to a single vowel, likely realized /in/ or /ən/, which nevertheless retained for a while at least some salient syntactic functions. The harmonization of the 3ms pronominal suffix to preceding i, ī, and ay, but the lack of harmonization of the dual (and, presumably, plural) suffixes in the same contexts is another example. Both of these features are intentionally used, here and elsewhere (for tanwīn in Christian Arabic, see Stokes Reference Stokes2023b; for the pronominal harmonization, see Stokes Reference Stokes2021 for the same distribution in Judaeo-Arabic, and Reference Stokes2023a for a discussion of this and other patterns in Christian Arabic gospel translations).
Therefore, many of these Christian Middle Arabic features likely originated in living features, which became prestigious variants, and thus constituted a regular part of the H register. While it is questionable, even doubtful, that the feature of non-ClAr tanwīn was a living feature of the dialects of every scribe who employed it, it is also not clear when it ceased to be living, and in any event was clearly prestigious for centuries. We thus need to broaden the nature of the H register, at least for a subset of Middle Arabic texts, beyond textbook ClAr to include linguistic variation associated with the Quran and its recitation, as well as other variants which were prestigious in the centuries before a single set of prescriptive norms associated with ClAr became established. There were clearly multiple features and variants which held prestige, and were mixed to different effects, depending on the audience, genre, and likely other variables as well. The proposal here thus differs from previous ones in several ways, namely I argue regarding the phenomena attested in this gospel translation that: 1) non-standard features which also do not occur in modern dialects can reflect (at least originally) living features; 2) these features became prestigious; and 3) they were included in a nexus of prestigious variants which could, and among Christians often did, include ones not only from the ClAr tradition, but also Quranic recitation in its broadest sense, even preserving archaic features otherwise forgotten or proscribed over time among Muslims.Footnote 8
6. Conclusion
This translation of the gospels into Arabic is so far unique in the Christian Arabic corpus insofar as it linguistically imitates the Quran in a multitude of ways, especially in the lexicon and rhyme scheme. The composing scribe mixes archaic forms, some of which are peculiar to the Quran or Old Hijazi, while others are attested primarily in poetry. Each of the three manuscript witnesses to the translation is vocalized to some degree. The earliest two manuscripts, VAr. 17 and 18, are vocalized in basically standard ClAr; however, VAr. 17 attests several phonological features that are not normal in ClAr, but may indeed be archaic. The third and latest manuscript, Or. 561, differs in many respects from ClAr on the one hand, and is nearly identical in those cases to features found in other Christian Middle Arabic translations of the gospels. There is therefore a movement away from a mix of ClAr, Quranic and other archaic features in the consonantal base of the translation, vocalized in basically ClAr early on, but Christianized in terms of phonology and morpho-syntax by the fifteenth century ce. It was argued that the mix of features demonstrates that, at least for some scribes, the high (H) register was much more varied and diverse than what has become normative ClAr, extending not only to archaic and Quranic forms, but also prestigious forms that were never a part of the ClAr tradition. Finally, several features, such as the non-ClAr distribution of tanwīn vocalizations in Or. 561 that likewise differs from dialectal tanwīn in modern dialects, were argued to have originated as living features which subsequently became prestigious variants in their own right. In addition to the unique mix of features, as well as the sophisticated imitation of Quranic rhyme, this translation – and the manuscript witnesses to it – require broadening of the spectrum along which Middle Arabic texts are plotted in the medieval period, as well as more nuanced typological categories for the non-ClAr features attested therein.
Acknowledgement
I wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers of this paper for the helpful comments and suggestions. All remaining errors are my own.