Consonant h ) in the function of on the
ostrakon of
Megacles, son of Hippocrates, 487 BC. Inscription: . On display in the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens, housed in the
Stoa of Attalus.
calyx-krater, 515 BC. Amongst the depicted figures are
Hermes and
Hypnos. Inscriptions: – . The letter shape 'H' was originally used in most Greek dialects to represent the
voiceless glottal fricative, . In this function, it was borrowed in the 8th century BC by the
Etruscan and other Old Italic alphabets, which were based on the
Euboean form of the Greek alphabet. This also gave rise to the Latin alphabet with its letter
H. Other regional variants of the Greek alphabet (
epichoric alphabets), in dialects that still preserved the sound , employed various glyph shapes for consonantal
heta side by side with the new vocalic
eta for some time. In the southern Italian colonies of
Heraclea and
Tarentum, the letter shape was reduced to a "half-heta" lacking the right vertical stem (Ͱ). From this sign later developed the sign for
rough breathing or
spiritus asper, which brought back the marking of the sound into the standardized post-classical (
polytonic) orthography.
Dionysius Thrax in the second century BC records that the letter name was still pronounced
heta (ἥτα), correctly explaining this irregularity by stating "in the old days the letter Η served to stand for the rough breathing, as it still does with the Romans."
Long e In the East
Ionic dialect, however, the sound disappeared by the sixth century BC, and the letter was re-used initially to represent a development of a long
open front unrounded vowel, , which later merged in East Ionic with the long
open-mid front unrounded vowel, instead. In 403 BC,
Athens took over the Ionian spelling system and with it the vocalic use of H (even though it still also had the sound itself at that time). This later became the standard orthography in all of Greece.
Itacism During the time of post-classical
Koine Greek, the sound represented by eta was
raised and merged with several other formerly distinct vowels, a phenomenon called
iotacism or
itacism, after the new pronunciation of the letter name as
ita instead of
eta. Itacism is continued into
Modern Greek, where the letter name is pronounced and represents the
close front unrounded vowel, . It shares this function with several other letters (
ι,
υ) and
digraphs (ει, οι, υι), which are all pronounced alike.
Cyrillic script Eta was also borrowed with the sound value of into the
Cyrillic script, where it gave rise to the Cyrillic letter
И. ==Uses==