Aramaic: The Empire's Lingua Franca Across 3,000 Years
11 November 2025

Aramaic: The Empire's Lingua Franca Across 3,000 Years

Intellectually Curious

About
From the administrative heart of ancient empires to the mountain villages where it clings to life, this quick deep dive traces Aramaic’s long arc. We explore imperial Aramaic as the standard for tax records and governance under the Neo-Assyrians, Neo-Babylonians, and Achaemenids; its writing system’s influence on the Hebrew alphabet and the later development of the Arabic script; and its central role in religion—from Jewish Babylonian Aramaic in the Talmud to classical Syriac. We then map the modern landscape of Neo-Aramaic: Eastern Aramaic survives in Syriac, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, and Turoyo, while Western Neo-Aramaic is critically endangered in a few villages. It’s a story of a once-unifying empire-wide lingua franca that fragments into a diverse, fragile tapestry, yet remains alive today through communities and diasporas across the world.


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