Verse:Irta/Knench/Religion

From Linguifex
Revision as of 03:02, 28 April 2026 by IlL (talk | contribs) (Hadīqūt)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Main difference from OTL: Ashokan missionaries get to Carthage, whose lect of Canaanite also somewhat differs from OTL

Hadīqūt

Hadīqūt (a loan translation from Greek eusébeia, which translates dharma) is the Ancient Knench Buddhism-influenced offshoot of Punic religion that among other things condemns both human and animal sacrifice; poorly attested because of Christian suppression, but evidence survives in Latin and Greek texts

It is forbidden to overexploit sacred groves (2šrym/2ašērīm, 2šr/2ōšēr is collectivized from 2šrt/2ašērō)

(The name of the religion should be whatever the best translation of "dharma" is in Ancient Canaanite; 𐤃𐤓𐤊 𐤄𐤄𐤃𐤉𐤒𐤅𐤕 𐤅𐤁𐤋 𐤄𐤏𐤅𐤋𐤕 drk hhdyqwt wbl h3wlt "Way of Piety and Nonviolence")

In translation, a Hadīqūt teacher is described as teaching as follows: "The Way of Piety is justice and righteousness; lovingkindness towards every soul and refraining from violence towards any of them; and steadfast devotion to the study and practice of Piety."

Middle Knench religion

Middle Knench Christian Bible translation codifies the modern Literary Knench register

Modern Knench religion

Ḥirom ven-Ḥenni revives and reconstructs Hadīqūt; he translates many Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts into Knench