Insular Celtic languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Insular Celtic | |
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Geographic distribution: |
British Isles |
Genetic classification: |
Indo-European Celtic Insular Celtic |
Subdivisions: |
The Insular Celtic hypothesis concerns the origin of the Celtic languages. The six Celtic languages of modern times can be divided into:
- the Goidelic languages (Irish, Manx, and Scottish); and
- the Brythonic languages (Breton, Cornish and Welsh).
The term "Insular" refers to the place of origin of these languages, the British Isles, in contrast to the (now extinct) Continental Celtic languages of mainland Europe and Anatolia. There is a theory that the Brythonic and Goidelic languages evolved together in those islands, having a common ancestor more recent than any shared with the Continental Celtic languages such as Celtiberian, Gaulish, Galatian and Lepontic, among others, all of which are long extinct.
The proponents of the Insular Celtic hypothesis point to shared innovations among Insular Celtic languages, including inflected prepositions, shared use of certain verbal particles and VSO word order. They assert that a partition that lumps the Brythonic languages and Gaulish (P-Celtic) on one side and the Goidelic languages with Celtiberian (Q-Celtic) on the other may be a superficial one (i.e. owing to a language contact phenomenon), as the identical sound shift (Q to P) could have occurred independently in the predecessors of Gaulish and Brythonic.
The family tree of the Insular Celtic languages is thus as follows:
- Insular Celtic
- Goidelic
- Primitive Irish, ancestral to:
- Old Irish, ancestral to:
- Middle Irish, ancestral to:
- Old Irish, ancestral to:
- Primitive Irish, ancestral to:
- Brythonic
- Cumbric
- Pictish (possibly)
- Old Welsh, ancestral to
- Middle Welsh, ancestral to:
- Southwestern Brythonic, ancestral to:
- Goidelic