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You can read carefully, I wrote about list written documents:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_first_written_accounts
Before 1000 BC
Further information: Bronze Age writing
Seal impression from the tomb of Seth-Peribsen, containing the oldest known complete sentence in Egyptian
Writing first appeared in the Near East at the beginning of the 3rd millennium BC. A very limited number of languages are attested in the area from before the Bronze Age collapse and the rise of alphabetic writing:
In East Asia towards the end of the second millennium BC, the Sino-Tibetan family was represented by Old Chinese. There are also a number of undeciphered Bronze Age records:
- the Sumerian, Hurrian, Hattic and Elamite language isolates,
- Afro-Asiatic in the form of the Egyptian and Semitic languages and
- Indo-European (Anatolian languages and Mycenaean Greek).
- Proto-Elamite script and Linear Elamite
- the Indus script (claimed to record a "Harappan language")
- Cretan hieroglyphs and Linear A (encoding a possible "Minoan language")[3]
- the Cypro-Minoan syllabary
c. 2690 BC Egyptian Egyptian hieroglyphs in the tomb of Seth-Peribsen (2nd Dynasty),
Umm el-Qa'ab[4] "proto-hieroglyphic" inscriptions from about 3300 BC (Naqada III; see Abydos, Egypt, Narmer Palette)
c. 2600–2500 BC Sumerian Cuneiform texts from Shuruppak and Abu Salabikh (Fara period)[5][6] "proto-literate" period from about 3500 BC (see Kish tablet); administrative records at Uruk and Ur from c. 2900 BC.
c. 2400 BC Akkadian A few dozen pre-Sargonic texts from Mari and other sites in northern Babylonia[7] Some proper names attested in Sumerian texts at Tell Harmal from about 2800 BC.[8] Fragments of the Legend of Etana at Tell Harmal c. 2600 BC.[9]
c. 2400 BC Eblaite Ebla tablets
c. 2300 BC[10] Elamite Awan dynasty peace treaty with Naram-Sin
21st century BC Hurrian Temple inscription of Tish-atal in Urkesh[11]
c. 1650 BC Hittite Various cuneiform texts and Palace Chronicles written during the reign of Hattusili I, from the archives at Hattusa see Hittite cuneiform, Hittite texts
c. 1450 BC Greek Linear B tablet archive from Knossos[12][13][14]
c. 1400 BC Luwian Hieroglyphic Luwian monumental inscriptions, Cuneiform Luwian tablets in the Hattusa archives[15] Isolated hieroglyphs appear on seals from the 18th century BC.[15]
c. 1400 BC Hattic Hittite texts CTH 725–745
c. 1300 BC Ugaritic Tablets from Ugarit[16] see Ugaritic alphabet
c. 1200 BC Old Chinese
First millennium BC
The earliest known alphabetic inscriptions, at Serabit el-Khadim (c. 1500 BC), appear to record a Northwest Semitic language, though only one or two words have been deciphered. In the Early Iron Age, alphabetic writing spread across the Near East and southern Europe. With the emergence of the Brahmic family of scripts, languages of India are attested from after about 300 BC. The earliest examples of the Central American Isthmian script date from c. 500 BC, but a proposed decipherment remains controversial.[20]
The Ahiram epitaph is the earliest substantial inscription in Phoenician.
First millennium AD
- Phoenician - c. 1000 BC: Ahiram epitaph
- Aramaic - 10th century BC
- Hebrew - 10th century BC: Gezer calendar
- Ammonite - c. 850 BC: Amman Citadel inscription[21]
- Moabite - c. 840 BC: Mesha Stele
- Phrygian - c. 800 BC: Paleo-Phrygian inscriptions at Gordion
- Old North Arabian - c. 800 BC
- Old South Arabian - c. 800 BC
- Etruscan - c. 700 BC: proto-Corinthian vase found at Tarquinia[22]
- Latin - 7th century BC: Vetusia Inscription and Fibula Praenestrina from Praeneste[23]
- Umbrian - c. 600 BC
- North Picene - c. 600 BC
- Lepontic - c. 600 BC
- Tartessian - c. 600 BC
- Lydian - c. 600 BC[15]
- Carian - c. 600 BC[15]
- Thracian - c. 6th century BC
- Venetic - late 6th century BC: inscriptions at Este
- Old Persian - c. 500 BC: Behistun inscription
- South Picene - c. 500 BC
- Messapian - c. 500 BC
- Gaulish - c. 500 BC
- Oscan - c. 400 BC
- Iberian - c. 400 BC
- Meroitic - c. 300 BC
- Faliscan - c. 300 BC
- Volscian - c. 275 BC
- Middle Indo-Aryan (Prakrit) - c. 260 BC: Edicts of Ashoka[24][25] (Pottery inscriptions from Anuradhapura have been dated c. 400 BC.[26][27])
- Tamil - c. 200 BC: cave inscriptions and potsherds in Tamil Nadu[28][29]
- Galatian - c. 200 BC
- Pahlavi - c. 130–170 BC
- Celtiberian - c. 100 BC
From Late Antiquity, we have for the first time languages with earliest records in manuscript tradition (as opposed to epigraphy). Thus, Old Armenian is first attested in the Armenian Bible translation.
1000–1500 AD
- Bactrian - c. 150: Rabatak inscription
- Common Germanic/Proto-Norse - c. 160: Vimose inscriptions (c. 100 BC if the Negau helmet inscription is accepted as Germanic)
- Cham - c. 200
- Mayan - 250–300 (with brief undeciphered inscription at San Bartolo dated to 3rd century BC)[30]
- Gothic - c. 300: Gothic runic inscriptions
- Ge'ez - c. 300 (pre)-Ezana inscriptions
- Arabic - 328: Namara inscription
- Primitive Irish - 4th century: Ogham inscriptions
- Georgian - c. 430: inscription in a Georgian monastery founded by Peter the Iberian near Bethlehem
- Armenian - 434: Armenian Bible of Saint Mesrob Mashtots
- Kannada - c. 450: Halmidi inscription[31]
- West Germanic - 6th century:
- Old Low Franconian - c. 510: Salic law[32]
- Old High German - c. 550: Pforzen buckle
- Old English - Undley bracteate; c. 650: Franks Casket; West Heslerton brooch[33]
- Telugu - c. 575: Erragudipadu inscription[31]
- Korean - 591: Sinseong (新城) Stele in Namsan (Gyeongju)[34][35]
- Tocharian - 6th century: Dunhuang manuscripts[36]
- Old Irish - c. 540-600: Luin oc elaib[37]
- Cornish - c. 600 Phillack stone inscription CLOTUALI MOBRATTI, in modern Cornish klos-wal moh-breus, meaning glory-worthy great-judgement.[38]
- 9th century gloss in De Consolatione Philosophiae by Boethius: ud rocashaas meaning "it (the mind) hated the gloomy places".[39]
- Cambodian - c. 600
- Old Udi - c. 600: Mount Sinai palimpsest M13
- Tibetan - c. 650: Tibetan Annals
- Old Malay - c. 683: Kedukan Bukit Inscription
- Pyu - late 7th century: funeral urn inscriptions of kings of Sri Ksetra
- Welsh - c. 700: Tywyn inscriptions
- Japanese - 711–2: Kojiki
- Old Turkic - 732: Orkhon inscriptions
- Old Frisian - c. 750
- Persian - c. 750
- Old Hindi - 769: Dohakosh by Saraha
- Mozarabic - c. 800
- Old Norse - c. 800 (runic)
- Javanese - 804: initial part of the Sukabumi inscription[40]
- Malayalam - 9th century: Rajasekhara inscription at Vazhappally Maha Siva Temple[29]
- Old French - c. 842: Oaths of Strasbourg
- Old Church Slavonic - c. 862: religious literature translated by Cyril and Methodius
- Oriya language -c. 900 charyapada
- Assamese language -c. 900 charyapada
- Bengali Language -c. 900 charyapada
- Old Occitan - c. 900: Tomida femina
- Leonese - c. 959–974: Nodicia de Kesos
- Italian - c. 960–963: Placiti Cassinesi[41] (The Veronese Riddle, dated c. 800, is considered a mixture of Italian and Latin.[42])
- Khitan - 986: Memorial for Yelü Yanning
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- Slovene - 972–1093: Freising manuscripts
- Russian - c. 1000
- Balinese - c.1000
- Ossetic - c. 1000
- Punjabi - 1000-1150
- Marathi - c. 1000[43]
- Basque, Aragonese and Spanish - c. 1000: Glosas Emilianenses[a]
- Catalan - c. 1028: Jurament Feudal[44]
- Middle High German - 1050 (by convention)
- Middle English - 1066 (by convention)
- Croatian - c. 1100: Baška tablet
- Danish - c. 1100 (by convention)
- Swedish - c. 1100 (by convention; the Rök Stone (c. 9th century) is often cited as the beginning of Swedish literature)
- Burmese - 1113: Myazedi inscription
- Newari - 1114: palm-leaf manuscript from Uku Bahah[45]
- Middle Dutch - 1150 (by convention)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_languages_by_first_written_accounts#cite_note-47
[*]Portuguese and/or Galician - 1189
[*]Serbian - between 1186 and 1190: Miroslav Gospel
[*]Bosnian - 1189: Charter of Ban Kulin
[*]Hungarian - 1192: Funeral Sermon and Prayer; there are isolated fragments in earlier charters such as the charter of Veszprém (c. 1000) and the charter of Tihany (1055).
[*]Finnic - c. 1200: Birch bark letter no. 292 (Finnish proper: Abckiria, 1543)
[*]Czech - c. 1200–1230
[*]Mongolian - 1224–1225: Genghis stone
[*]Western Lombard - c. 1250: Sordello da Goito, "Sirventese lombardesco"
[*]Polish - c. 1270: Book of Henryków
[*]Yiddish - 1272
[*]Thai - c. 1292
[*]Tigrinya - 13th century: a text of laws found in Logosarda
[*]Old Norwegian - c. 1300
[*]Batak - c.1300
[*]Old Prussian - c. 1350
[*]Kashmiri - c. 1350
[*]Oghuz Turkic (including Azeri and Ottoman Turkish) - c. 1350 (Imadaddin Nasimi)
[*]Komi - 1372
[*]Vietnamese - c. 1440: Quốc âm thi tập[46] (isolated names in Chữ nôm date from the early 13th century)
[*]Albanian - 1462: Formula e Pagëzimit - Short baptismal formula in a letter of Archbishop Pal Engjëll[c]
[*]Maltese - c. 1470: Il Cantilena
[*]Early Modern English - 1470s (by convention)
[*]Yi - 1485: bronze bell inscription in Dafang County, Guizhou[47]
[*]Tulu - c. 1500[48]
According to written documents Albanian is young, as a written language.
...
You can see, Greek is written 1450 BC, and Greeks can say a lot in last 3.500 years according to this fact.
Yes there are written documents of Albanian language. Some of them predate Christ some are after Christ.
Those are archaeologically discovered documents.
There are written Albanian words with Greek letters or Latin letters all over ancient monuments. There has not been and there sill is not an Albanian alphabet.
Albanians don't have their own alphabet. We use Latin for the moment. In the antique times Greek or Latin Alphabet is used. Because you don't know about them it does not mean they don't exist.
Archaeology is another mean of proving our existence where we are now.
The artifacts are on the display in museums in Albania.
