Language The Iapygians were a "relatively homogeneous linguistic community" speaking a non-
Italic,
Indo-European language, commonly called '
Messapic'. The language, written in variants of the Greek alphabet, is attested from the mid-6th to the late-2nd century BC. Some scholars have argued that the term 'Iapygian languages' should be preferred to refer to those dialects, and the term 'Messapic' reserved to the inscriptions found in the
Salento peninsula, where the specific
Messapian people dwelt in the pre-Roman era. Messapic is grouped in the same Indo-European branch with
Albanian, titled
Albanoid or Illyric. Hyllested & Joseph (2022), in agreement with recent bibliography, identify
Graeco-Phrygian as the IE branch closest to the Albanian-Messapic one. These two branches form an areal grouping – which is often called "Balkan IE" – with Armenian. During the 6th century BC, Messapia, and more marginally Peucetia, underwent Hellenizing cultural influences, mainly from the nearby
Taras. The use of writing systems was introduced in this period, with the acquisition of the Laconian-Tarantine alphabet and its adaptation to the Messapic language. The second great Hellenizing wave occurred during the 4th century BC, this time also involving Daunia and marking the beginning of
Peucetian and
Daunian epigraphic records, in a local variant of the Hellenistic alphabet that replaced the older Messapic script. Since its settlement, Messapic was in contact with the
Italic languages of the region. In the centuries before Roman annexation, the frontier between Messapic and
Oscan ran through Frentania-
Irpinia-
Lucania-Apulia. A gradual process of 'Oscanization' and 'Samnitization' took place, attested in contemporary sources by the coexistence of dual identities within individual settlements. In these regions, Oscan- and Lucanian-speaking groups interacted and intermingled with the Daunian population in varying configurations. Thus,
Larinum, while being described as a "Daunian city", has produced a large body of Oscan onomastics.
Horace, a native of
Venusia in the borderland between Daunian and Lucanian territories, characterised himself as "Lucanian or Apulian". From the early 4th century BCE onward, the establishment of Roman colonies in southern Italy profoundly altered this landscape, accelerating the process of Latinisation in the area. By the 4th century BC, inscriptions from central Iapygia suggest that the local artisan class had acquired some proficiency in the
Greek language, while the whole regional elite was used to learning
Latin by the 3rd century BC. The
Oscan language became also widespread after Italic peoples had occupied the territory in that period. Along with the Messapic dialects, Greek, Oscan and Latin were consequently spoken and written all together in the whole region of
Iapygia during the Romanization period, and bilingualism in Greek and Messapic was probably common in the
Salento peninsula.
Religion The late pre-Roman religion of the Iapygians appears as a substrate of indigenous beliefs mixed with
Greek elements. The Roman conquest probably accelerated the hellenisation of a region already influenced by contacts with
Magna Grecia from the 8th century BC onward.
Aphrodite and
Athena were thus worshipped in Iapygia as
Aprodita and
Athana, respectively. Some deities of native origin have also been highlighted by scholars, such as
Zis ('sky-god'),
Menzanas ('lord of horses'),
Venas ('desire'),
Taotor ('the people, community'), and perhaps
Damatura ('mother-earth'). Pre-Roman religious cults have also left few material traces. Preserved evidence indicates that indigenous Iapygian beliefs featured the worship of the Indo-European sky god
Zis, the practice of living
horse sacrifice to
Zis Menzanas (Iovis/Iuppiter Menzanas), the fulfilling of oracles for anyone who slept wrapped in the skin of a sacrificed ewe, and the curative powers of the waters at the of the god
Podalirius, preserved in Greek tales. Several cave sanctuaries have been identified on the coast, most notably the Grotta Porcinara sanctuary (
Santa Maria di Leuca), in which both Messapian and Greek marines used to write their vows on the walls. It is likely that
Peucetians had no civic cult requiring public buildings, and if urban sanctuaries have been identified in
Daunia (at
Teanum Apulum,
Lavello, or
Canosa), no conspicuous buildings are found before the Romanization period.
Dress The Iapygian peoples were noted for their ornamental dress. By the 7th century BC, the Daunian aristocracy were wearing highly ornate costumes and much jewellery, a custom that persisted into the classical period, with depictions of Iapygians with long hair, wearing highly patterned short tunics with elaborate fringes. Young women were portrayed with long tunics belted at the waist, generally with a headband or diadem. On ritual or ceremonial occasions, the women of central Iapygia wore a distinctive form of mantle over their heads that left the headband visible above the brow.
Burial Iapygian funeral traditions were distinct from those of neighbouring Italic peoples: whereas the latter banished adult burials to the fringes of their settlements, the inhabitants of Iapygia buried their dead both outside and inside their own settlements. Although females might occasionally be buried with weapons, arms, and armour, such grave-goods were normally reserved for male funerals. Until the end of the 4th century BC, the normal practice among
Daunians and
Peucetians was to lay out the body in a fetal position with the legs drawn up towards the chest, perhaps symbolising the rebirth of the soul in the womb of Mother Earth. Messapians, by contrast, laid out their dead in the extended position as did other Italic peoples. From the 3rd century BC, extended burials with the body lying on its back began to appear in Daunia and Peucetia, although the previous custom survived well into the 2nd century BC in some areas. == History ==