The Lutescan language was a language spoken in the north of the Mysia region (Hellespontica) of Asia Minor until ca. Mysia (Μυσία was a region in the northwest of ancient Asia Minor or Anatolia (part of modern Turkey) Anatolia (Anadolu Ανατολία Anatolía) or Asia minor, comprising most of modern Turkey, is the geographic region bounded by the Black 1000 BC.
Little is known about the phonology of the language. Phonology ( Greek φωνή (phōnē voice sound + λόγος (lógos word speech subject of discussion is the systematic use of sound to encode meaning It may have been an Anatolian language. The Anatolian languages are a group of extinct Indo-European languages which were spoken in Asia Minor, the best attested of them being the Hittite language It was spoken by the nomadic Lutescan people, who settled on the shores of Lake Artynia around 1200 BC. Once they became sedentary, their language and culture were abandoned as they became integrated with the Phrygians, and only a small number of references to the Lutescan language appear in contemporary surviving Aeolian writings of the period. In antiquity Phrygia (Φρυγία was a kingdom in the west central part of Anatolia, in what is now modern-day Turkey.
Titchener, J. B. (1926), "Synopsis of Greek and Roman Civilization", Cambridge MA