of the five dialects, or manners of speaking, which obtained among the Greeks.
It was first used by the Lacedemonians, and particularly those of Argos; thence it passed into Epirus, Libya, Sicily, the islands of Rhodes and Crete. In this dialect, Archimedes and Theocritus wrote, who were both of Syracuse; as likewise Pindar.
In strictness, however, we should rather define Doric, the manner of speaking peculiar to the Dorians, after their recess near Parnassus and Asopus; and which afterwards came to obtain among the Lacedemonians, &c. Some even distinguish between the Lacedemonian and Doric; but in reality, they were the same; setting aside a few particularities in the language of the Lacedemonians; as is shown by Rulandus, in his excellent treatise De Lingua Graeca ejusque Dialectis, lib. v.
Beside the authors already mentioned to have written in the Doric dialect, we might add Archytas of Tarentum, Bion, Callinus, Simonides, Bacchylides, Cypselas, Alcman, and Sophron.
Most of the medals of the cities of Graecia Magna, and Sicily, savour of the Doric dialect in their inscription: witness, ΑΜΒΡΑΚΙΩΝΤΑΝ, ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΙΑΤΑΝ, ΑΧΕΟΠΟΝΤΑΝ, ΑΧΥΡΙΤΑΝ, ΗΡΑΧΑΕΩΤΑΝ, ΤΡΑΞΙΝΙΩΝ, ΘΕΡΙΤΑΝ, ΚΑΤΑΝΙΑΤΑΝ, ΚΟΙΠΙΑΤΑΝ, ΤΑΥΡΟΜΕΝΙΤΑΝ, &c. Which shows the countries wherein the Doric dialect was used.
The general rules of this dialect are thus given by the Port Royalists.
Dit Hva d'w grand, d't d'a et d'u l'a fait le Dore. D'u fait vra; d'u, u; et d'u av fait encore. Oste i de l'infini; et pour le singulier Se sert au feminin du nombre plurier.
But they are much better explained in the fourth book of Rulandus; where he even notes the minuter differences of the dialects of Sicily, Crete, Tarentum, Rhodes, Lacedemon, Laconia, Macedonia, and Thessaly.
The a abounds everywhere in the Doric; but this dialect bears so near a conformity to the Æolic, that many reckon them but one.