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  1. The Iberian scripts are the Paleohispanic scripts that were used to represent the extinct Iberian language. Most of them are typologically unusual in that they are semi-syllabic rather than purely alphabetic. [2] .

  2. A modified version of the Northern Iberian script was used to write Celtiberian, a Celtic language. The most recent inscriptions in these language date from the 2nd century AD and they are thought to have become extinct by then. Northern Iberian script. Southern Iberian script. Southwest Script

  3. Lead plaque from Ullastret using the dual variant of the northeastern Iberian script. The origin of the language is unknown. Although Iberian ceased to be written in the 1st century AD, it may have survived in some areas until the Visigothic period (ca. 500s to 700s), according to Menéndez Pidal.

  4. The northeastern Iberian script, also known as Levantine Iberian or Iberian, is a member of the epigraphic family of paleohispanic scripts located roughly in eastern Spain, concentrated in the northeast, and in Aquitaine of southern France. The term Levantine comes from an informal geographic designation, Levante, Spain, meaning ...

  5. Introduction. Three major writing systems were used in the Iberian Peninsula in protohistorical times — that is, from the end of Bronze Age down to the early moments of Roman occupation of the terri-tory — to write local Pre-Roman languages. They are referred to generically as Paleohispanic scripts.

    • Miguel Valério
    • 2008
  6. Cypro-Phoenician script. Neo-Punic alphabet. Iberian alphabet. Phoenician alphabet, writing system that developed out of the North Semitic alphabet and was spread over the Mediterranean area by Phoenician traders. It is the probable ancestor of the Greek alphabet and, hence, of all Western alphabets.

  7. Along the east coast it was written in Iberian script, a system of 28 syllabic and alphabetic characters, some derived from Greek and Phoenician systems but most of unknown origin. Many inscriptions in the script survive. Few words, however, except place-names on the coinage struck by many cities in the 3rd century bc, can be understood.