and while it did not find reception beyond the Apennines,
became naturalized among all the Sabellian tribes,
and especially among the Umbrians. In its further
course the alphabet experienced various fortunes in
connection with the several stocks, the Etruscans
on the Arno and around Capua, the Umbrians and the
Samnites; frequently the mediae were entirely or partially
lost, while elsewhere again new vowels and consonants
were developed. But that West-Etruscan reform
of the alphabet was not merely as old as the oldest
tombs found in Etruria; it was considerably older,
for the syllabarium just mentioned as found probably
in one of these tombs already presents the reformed
alphabet in an essentially modified and modernized
shape; and, as the reformed alphabet itself is relatively
recent as compared with the primitive one, the mind
almost fails in the effort to reach back to the time
when that alphabet came to Italy. While the Etruscans
thus appear as the instruments in diffusing the alphabet
in the north, east, and south of the peninsula, the
Latin alphabet on the other hand was confined to Latium,
and maintained its ground, upon the whole, there with
but few alterations; only the letters -"id:gamma”
-"id:kappa” and -"id:zeta” -"id:sigma”
gradually became coincident in sound, the consequence
of which was, that in each case one of the homophonous
signs (-"id:kappa” -"id:zeta”) disappeared
from writing. In Rome it can be shown that these
were already laid aside before the end of the fourth
century of the city,(15) and the whole monumental
and literary tradition that has reached us knows nothing
of them, with a single exception.(16) Now when we
consider that in the oldest abbreviations the distinction
between -"id:gamma” -"id:c” and -"id:kappa”
-"id:k” is still regularly maintained;(17) that
the period, accordingly, when the sounds became in
pronunciation coincident, and before that again the
period during which the abbreviations became fixed,
lies beyond the beginning of the Samnite wars; and
lastly, that a considerable interval must necessarily
have elapsed between the introduction of writing and
the establishment of a conventional system of abbreviation;
we must, both as regards Etruria and Latium, carry
back the commencement of the art of writing to an epoch
which more closely approximates to the first incidence
of the Egyptian Sirius-period within historical times,
the year 1321 B.C., than to the year 776, with which
the chronology of the Olympiads began in Greece.(18)
The high antiquity of the art of writing in Rome is
evinced otherwise by numerous and plain indications.
The existence of documents of the regal period is
sufficiently attested; such was the special treaty
between Rome and Gabii, which was concluded by a king
Tarquinius and probably not by the last of that name,
and which, written on the skin of the bullock sacrificed
on the occasion, was preserved in the temple of Sancus
on the Quirinal, which was rich in antiquities and