Nilo-Saharan languages
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Nilo-Saharan | ||
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Geographic distribution: |
Central and East Africa | |
Genetic classification: |
suggested association with Niger-Congo | |
Subdivisions: | ||
The Nilo-Saharan languages are a group of African languages spoken mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers (whence the term "Nilo-"), including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of Nile meet. Its member languages extend, however, through 17 nations in the northern half of Africa: from Algeria and Mali in the northwest; to Benin, Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the south; and Egypt to Tanzania in the east (excluding Somalia). The largest part of its major subfamilies are found in the modern nation of Sudan, through which the Nile River flows in all its incarnations: the White and Blue Nile, which join to form the main Nile at Khartoum. As seen in the hyphenated name (compare map at right), Nilo-Saharan is primarily a family of the African interior, including the greater Nile basin and its tributaries as well as the central Sahara desert.
Roughly 11 million people spoke Nilo-Saharan languages as of 1987, according to Merritt Ruhlen's estimate. The family is internally extremely diverse - far more so than Indo-European, or even Niger-Congo - and is rather controversial; few historical linguists have attempted work on the family as a whole, and several have denied its validity. Particularly controversial is the inclusion of Songhay, the language of Timbuktu and its empire.
According to Joseph Greenberg (The Languages of Africa) as initially modified by Lionel Bender (and adopted by the Ethnologue), they are classified into the following branches:
- Komuz languages
- Saharan languages (including Kanuri language)
- Songhay languages
- Fur languages (including Fur language)
- Maban languages
- (Chari-Nile languages - later rejected, placing the 4 branches below on an equal footing with those above)
The Ethnologue by SIL, following Anbessa Tefera and Peter Unseth, considers the Shabo language to be Nilo-Saharan, but otherwise unclassified. It is sometimes considered a language isolate, following Christopher Ehret.
Some linguists, including Roger Blench, consider the Kadu languages (also called Kadugli languages or Tumtum) to be Nilo-Saharan, while others follow Greenberg in classing them as Kordofanian languages, or Ehret in considering them a small isolated family. Proposals have sometimes been made to add Mande (usually classed as Niger-Congo) to Nilo-Saharan, largely due to its many noteworthy similarities with Songhay.
The extinct Meroitic language of ancient Kush has sometimes been suggested as a probable member of Nilo-Saharan; however, too little is known of the language to classify it with any confidence. The same may reasonably be said of the rather more recently extinct Oropom language in Uganda (if it ever existed), for whom connections with Kuliak or Nilotic have been suggested.
Proposals for the external relationships of Nilo-Saharan typically center on Niger-Congo: Gregersen (1972) grouped the two together to form Kongo-Saharan, whereas Blench (1995) actually proposed that Niger-Congo may simply be a member of Nilo-Saharan (coordinate with Central Sudanic.) However, such theories are treated with reserve by most historical linguists.
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[edit] Major Languages
Within the larger Nilo-Saharan language family are a number of major African languages with at least half a million speakers (SIL Ethnologue, 2005 figures):
- Luo or Dholuo (3,465,000 speakers), extending from Kenya and eastern Uganda into Tanzania, and the language of the Luo, Kenya's third largest major ethnic group (after the Niger-Congo) Kikuyu and Luhya). (The term "Luo", somewhat confusingly, is also used for the larger classification within the Western Nilotic subfamily that includes Kenyan Luo/Dholuo among its 15 members.)
- Kanuri (3,340,000, all dialects), with speakers found from Niger to northeastern Nigeria, where it is a major national ethnic group.
- Dinka (2,000,000 +), found within Southern Sudan, the languge of one of the most powerful Southern Sudanese ethnic groups, including that of John Garang, late commander of the Sudanese Liberation Army.
- Lango (977,680), spoken by one of Uganda's major ethnicities, found in Lango Province in the center of the country. Along with the Acholi people (below), the Lango people were targets of severe ethnic persecution under dictator Idi Amin, a member of a fellow Nilo-Saharan ethnicity, the Kakwa.
- Acholi (791,796), the other member of the Luo-Acholi subfamily within Western Nilotic, spoken in the North Central Acholi District in Uganda and into Sudan. It is closely related to Lango.
- Songhay or Songhai (740,000, all dialects), with its speakers widely spread along the Niger River in Mali and Burkina Faso. The prestige dialect is that of the fabled Timbuktu, capital of the historic Songhai Empire.
- Fur (501,800), notable as one of the major languages of Darfur (lit. "the home of the Fur" in Arabic), the Sudanese province currently in the news for its humanitarian crisis.
- Nubian (495,000, all dialects), the language of Ancient Egypt's traditional nemesis Nubia, extending today from southern Egypt into northern Sudan.
[edit] Subclassification
[edit] Bender 1997
Lionel Bender classifies them as follows, slightly modifying his 1989 classification:
- Songay languages
- Saharan languages
- Kuliak languages
- Satellite-Core:
- Maban languages
- Fur languages
- Berta language
- Kunama language
- Core Nilo-Saharan languages
[edit] Ehret 2001
In his reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan, Christopher Ehret classifies them in a more detailed fashion, as follows:
- Koman languages
- Sudanic languages
- Central Sudanic languages
- North Sudanic languages
- Kunama language
- Saharo-Sahelian languages
- Saharan languages
- Sahelian languages
- For languages
- Trans-Sahel languages
- Western Sahelian languages
- Eastern Sahelian languages
- Astaboran languages
- Nara language (= Barea)
- Western Astaboran languages
- Kir-Abbaian languages
- Jebel languages
- Kir languages
- Nuba Hills (= Temein) (including Nyimang)
- Daju languages
- Surma-Nilotic languages
- Rub languages (= Kuliak, Teuso) (Ik et al.)
- Astaboran languages
[edit] Bibliography
- Lionel Bender, 1997. The Nilo-Saharan Languages: A Comparative Essay. München.
- Christopher Ehret, 2001. A Historical-Comparative Reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan. Köln.
- Joseph Greenberg, 1963. The Languages of Africa (International Journal of American Linguistics 29.1). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
[edit] External relationships
- Roger Blench. "Is Niger-Congo simply a branch of Nilo-Saharan?", in ed. Nicolai & Rottland, Fifth Nilo-Saharan Linguistics Colloquium. Nice, 24-29 August 1992. Proceedings. (Nilo-Saharan 10). Koeln: Koeppe Verlag. 1995. pp.36-49.
- Edgar Gregersen. "Kongo-Saharan". Journal of African Languages, 11, 1:69-89. 1972.