Birthplace of Indoeuropean Languages Found
phantomfive writes "Language geeks might be interested in a recent study that suggests Turkey as the birthplace of the Indo-European language family. The Indo-European family is the largest, and includes languages as diverse as English, Russian, and Hindi. The New York Times made a pretty graph showing the spread."
Ahh, the second-most important language family on the planet, after the C/C++/C#/Java family.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
While being very plausible I think it is to early to say found for certain yet - this is a theory that sounds plausible and nothing more
But it could be aliens.
That would explain why they speak English in all the films
Bizarre, because the now dominiant language of Turkey, Turkish, isn't Indo-European. So it spread everywhere, but was pushed out of it's own back yard.
Noah came to a landing on a mountain in Turkey; then the languages spread out from there. So the 8k years is slightly off.
...from the frequent 'discovery' of Atlantis. Finding the birthplace of the IE languages has gone out of style.
On the basis of dialect geography I would put it in the Balkans or lower Danube. There's a curious fact about languages, namely that there's a bigger pile-up of dialects in the homeland than on the frontiers. E.g., compare the variety of Midland dialects in the UK vs. the (relative) homogeneity in the USA, Canada, or Oz.
So given what we know about the locations of the various IE languages, and what we know about migrations, Danube/Balkans makes a lot of sense. Illyrian, Thracian, Greek, Macedonian, Albanian, Dacian, Paionian, all right there. Two families of Italic languages thought to be intrusive from that region, whether across the water or around by land. Armenian thought to have migrated from that region. Anatolian languages easily placed by short migration across the Bosporus, Celtic by a migration up the Danube.
The big problem is Indo-Iranian, but it's a big problem for *any* homeland hypothesis: it stretched from Iran and India, around the eastern side of the Caspian Sea, and across the steppes to eastern Europe. These people were mobile. But easier to explain, IMO, by anchoring everything where we have the known pile-up of dialects and let Indo-Iranian, Tocharian, and Celtic be the expansive frontiers. Fits what we know about how languages spread perfectly.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Where was the first post, 'tho?
I think it came out of someone's ...
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
But the folk memory of the flooding of the ending of the ice age recorded in Indo-European languages is very dramatic. It is sudden. It is by an angry God displeased by the sinfulness of mankind, and only one person was spared. It is the story of First Avatar of Vishnu in Hindu scriptures. Lord Vishnu takes the avatar of a fish and saves one man, Manu, from the impending global flood that kills all. The well known Noah's story is common to Islam, Christianity and Judaism. Mesapotamian flood legend is similar too.
The conjecture is that, during the ice age, the Mediterranean sea was lower, and the straits of Bhosporus was actually an isthmus connecting Asia Minor with Europe. As the sea levels rose, the Med over-topped the isthmus and flooded into the Black Sea, which was a fresh water lake at that time. The southern and the eastern shores of the lake had gradual slope and was populated by agricultural settlements. As the lake level started rising relentlessly the few who took to the boats survived. Those who could not bear to leave their beloved agricultural fields and homes were left stranded and were drowned. The folk memory of the survivors morphed into the Noah's and other flood legends.
I wonder how the flood and the rising of the sea levels is remembered in the northern branches of the Indo-European family.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
> Phoenician
> Scythian
> UK
Suuure. And we never landed on the moon, and the world is controlled by the Illuminati, who are really trans-dimensional lizard people.
Climate Progress - Hell and High Water
when I see the fossil record.
This still seems to hold to the archaic view that Europeans migrated from the middle east to Europe were as it's now believed the earlier migration was from the north. That would also support the Eurasian origin of those languages. It also explains pesky issues like similar words in Russian dialects which the up from Turkey route fails to explain. Much like the migrations themselves the languages more than likely had multiple sources. It's a little like looking for Adam and Eve when we interbred with multiple branches of the family tree. Modern humans are hybrids as are our languages.
If those scientists could prove that Finno-Ugric languages don't have extra-terrestrial origin I would be glad.
Je me souviens.
...Until we get a time machine to check ourselves. Interesting, yes. But I am still for the Steppes theory. Pacifism would be nice, but it is not likely, judging by the high amount of warrior-hero myths found in IE cultures.
Turks hate Arabs because they think they're not Arabs - they think they're better than the Arabs.
Arabs hate the Turks because they think they're not Arabs and, though they'd never admit it, the Arabs think the Turks are better than them.
They both hate the Iranians.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
That would be, if memory serves, 1453.
I doubt it was particularly civilized then. Heck, most civilized countries weren't civilized at that point in time.
Maybe back when it was called Cappuccino, or Galaxia (where Saint Paul used to send episodes to).
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
But it could be aliens.
That would explain why they speak English in all the films
I was amused (or annoyed) to see the bobot in Prometheus studying the IE languages in preparation for meeting the aliens who created us. But that was about 30th down on the ridiculosity list.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Disclaimer: I have only a casual understanding of the science I am presenting. Someone with a real understanding may want to comment. The authors are using the statistical methods used to analyze DNA in phylogeny to study the "tree of life". In biology, these statistical methods are founded on a very plausible scientific model which offered a variety of consistency checks. Nevertheless, the uncritical use of these methods lead to a lot of mistakes. My understanding is that the limitations of these methods are now more or less understood in phylogeny. However, the application of the same methods to a much more complex problem of language evolution cannot be straight forward. Two obvious things make the situation in biology simpler. First, once two species separate, their gene pools no longer interact. Thus, if two animals share the same gene, it is reasonably safe to say that they also share a common ancestor. Second, there are redundant codes in DNA. That is, there are cases where changing a DNA base pair doesn't change the protein that is being encoded. Variations in these redundant codes are thought to be more or less benign, i.e. they do not significantly influence the survival of the individuals involved. Furthermore, it is plausible that these variations accumulate at a more or less constant rate throughout the genome. Thus, there are lot's of opportunities for consistency checks. My understanding is that these checks frequently turned up problems.
The graph may be pretty, but when it comes to science, any undergrad student could have done the same, and easily better. I've been studying languages for almost my whole life, and the timeline at the bottom of the graph is so off, that they should have just left it away - according to them, old dialects like Breton are younger than French (which of course isn't, French replaced those dialects), and the oldest modern language is English, whereas Polish and other Slavic languages appeared much later (... rright.) It's actually the opposite. Old, early examples of Polish, Russian, Italian, from between the 9th and 12th century are still intelligible, modern French really appeared in the 16th century and is maybe the European language which has had the fewest changes since then (compared to German and English, the difference is striking)...
/. already? There always used to be many bad articles posted, but now it jsut seems that everything is getting past the filters now, no matter how much it goes against the most basic knowledge!!!.
Are there no other slashdotters in linguistics? Or is everybody giving up on
Phoenicia was roughly where Lebanon is now, and Scythia is more like Ukraine/Kazakhstan. How do you get the United Kingdom?
According to the biblical account, a united humanity of the generations following the Great Flood, speaking a single language and migrating from the east, came to the land of Shinar, where they resolved to build a city with a tower "with its top in the heavens...lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the Earth". God came down to see what they did and said: "They are one people and have one language, and nothing will be withholden from them which they purpose to do." So God said, "Come, let us go down and confound their speech." And so God scattered them upon the face of the Earth, and confused their languages, and they left off building the city, which was called Babel "because God there confounded the language of all the Earth" (Genesis 11:5–8).
There have been two competing ideas on PIE for some time: Anatolia, and the Caspian sea steppes. Both could be correct.
Fugue for Aaron Swartz
Does the Queen's genealogy even date to 3,000 years ago? Weren't her ancestors German at that time?
Enough said.
Now there's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time. I actually tried to learn Snobol once with a failure so complete it's only matched by the utterness of my failure to learn Lisp
I said - don't look Ethel!..., but it was too late..., she'd already looked.
If the Altaic family of languages no longer exists then where is Korean? Sometimes Koreans get a look about their noses that is rather Turkish and my wife can tell Koreans at a glance by the grace with which they walk - I don't see it myself but she has demonstrated her ability to me time and time again so I have to believe her. The Altaic origins of Korean always fit nicely with my preconceptions and I find myself uncomfortable with the idea of two isolates (Japanese and Korean) living side by side with no connection to each other and no related languages anywhere else.
I said - don't look Ethel!..., but it was too late..., she'd already looked.
Languages don't always follow population groups. Even if the Koreans have similar genetic background to the Turkic peoples, it doesn't mean the languages are related.
"This quest for the origins of the Indo-Europeans has all the fascination of an electric light in the open air on a summer night: it tends to attract every species of scholar or would-be savant who can take pen to hand. ... It is no easy task to get one's bearings in a problem where most of the proposed solutions show a remarkable ability to be dismembered and securely entombed in one generation only to rise again to haunt later scholars. One does not ask 'where is the Indo-European homeland?' but rather 'where do they put it _now_?'"
IIRC, Mallory wrote his In Search of the Indo-Europeans specifically to refute Renfrew's then-new hypothesis that the IE languages arose where this new study puts it.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Turks hate Arabs because they think they're not Arabs - they think they're better than the Arabs.
Arabs hate the Turks because they think they're not Arabs and, though they'd never admit it, the Arabs think the Turks are better than them.
They both hate the Iranians.
It's jealousy - the Iranians got more brains than the two combined
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
For quite some wile we see these studies which depict turkey as the ancient cradle of everything. The Turkish state sponsors this kind of research.
That sort of thing is a very common concomitant of nationalism, and exists or has existed in lots of countries.
People like to think that their ancestors spoke the original language and invented writing, sliced bread, etc. There are many examples on Wikipedia, though I don't know of a centralised "List of" page to help you find it.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
They never endured long and lasting conquests. The horsemen tribes which ruled there (Huns, Magyars, Mongols, Tatars) did so only for a short time and never managed to establish lasting kingdoms there. The Migration Period which caused many tribes to move west was stopped for more than 500 years at the Roman Limes (if we count the wandering Cimberians and Teutons in 101 BC as the first tribes of the Migration), and when it finally gave way in the 4th and 5th century, mainly german tribes settled in the former Roman provinces, and the established Franconian kingdom soon started to push east again.
Apologies, I missed someone out.
Even the Kurds don't like the Kurds!
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
The Turkey where Indo-European languages was born was totally different from even medeaveal Turkey, let alone modern. The Turks don't originate from Turkey - they originate from Turkestan - the modern ex-Soviet 'stans'. Those people started there, were part of the Sassanid empire of Persia and converted to Islam when Persia fell to the Arabs. Then in medeaveal times, they had huge empires - first the Seljuk, and later, the Ottoman empires, which got into Turkey. That empire extended from Bosnia to Arabia, and on the African coast, covered much of North Africa. After WWI, the Turks were left w/ just the Anatolian peninsula, while the Russians (and later the Soviets) had conquered Central Asia.
So the Turks aren't to blame for your foreign language requirements. Their language is not Indo-European - it is Turkic - the same family of languages as Turkmen, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uzbek and Azeri. Unless you had to take one of these in college. But you can blame the Persians (the pre-Islamic ones), since it was during the time that Anatolia was under their rule (even before Alexander the Great) that the root language there would have originated. Persian, unlike Turkish or Arabic, is an Indo-European language.
I won't believe any of it until I see the birth certificate.
Nothing whatsoever to do with the article at hand. In fact it looks like it was inadvertently posted on the wrong thread.
Drill baby drill - on Mars
Clearly they came from Indoeuropea.
Translation:
"My hovercraft is full of eels."
By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
IIRC he hasnt abandoned it, so much as modified it slightly. Originally he postulated a relatively early PIE in Anatolia, spread wide by migrating farmers. There is a lot of evidence that points this way, but the criticism of course was that words associated with later technology (wheeled chariots) are very widespread through IE languages, yet could not have arisen that early. The critics postulate a significantly later date for PIE as a result.
However the counter-counter argument is that the Anatolian group which split first lacks those cognates. So what Renfrew has done is really to change his vocabulary, not his theory. He now refers to what he first called PIE as 'pre-proto-indo-european' or PPIE instead, and postulates that PPIE split first into proto-anatolian and PIE, before the wheel, and then the PIE branch splits into more families later on, after the wheel. This is more a change of definition than of substance - if you define Anatolian as a branch of IE (which most do,) then the older date for PIE is required. If you define Anatolian instead as a sister language to PIE, then PIE gets a later date, but the older date goes to PPIE, the common ancestor to both.
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Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
We're about to have a Mormon president in these United States.
Is President Obama converting? Or do you believe that Romney will win?
The oldest EXAMPLES of posts ... more recent, IIRC around 30kyr, Siberian or Ukrainian "bone huts" built of mammoth bones, but that might stretch your meaning of "post". But posts to support a spit roast would stretch the definition the other way, and that would make posts made by non-humans a lot older than First Post jokes on Slashdot.
Why do I waste my time feeding the AC trolls?
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
Stop injecting facts into what is clearly intended to be a bigoted diatribe. That's my job!
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
I admire, slightly, your persistence in getting to 30-odd. I'd given up on it being SF long before then, and just laid back to look at the SFX. Disappointed.
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"