Aegean languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aegean languages are the language groups spoken around the Aegean Sea area prior to and along with Greek. One example is the Amathus Bilingual. The languages would have died out around the 3rd century BC in the Aegean (by assimilation of the speakers to Greek), and around the 1st century AD in Italy (by assimilation to Latin).
Tyrsenian (Tyrsenisch, also Tyrrhenian), after the Tyrrhenoi, is a proposed classification by Helmut Rix (1998), who argues for a close relationship of the Etruscan language and the Raetic language, together with the Lemnian language. Rix assumes a date for Proto-Tyrsenian of roughly 1000 BC.
A larger Aegean family including Eteocretan (Minoan language) and Eteocypriot has been proposed.[citation needed] If these languages could be shown to be related to Etruscan and Rhaetic, they would constitute a pre-Indo-European or "Pelasgian" phylum stretching from the Aegean islands and Crete across mainland Greece and the Italian peninsula to the Alps. It should be noted, however, that this is by no means a common view; there are just as serious attempts of linking Eteocretan and Eteocypriot with Semitic, and mainstream scholarship takes no position.
A relation with the Anatolian languages within Indo-European has been proposed (Steinbauer 1999; Palmer 1965), but is not generally accepted (although Palmer did show that some Linear A inscriptions were sensible as a variant of Luwian). If these languages are an early Indo-European stratum rather than pre-Indo-European, they would be associated with Krahe's Old European hydronymy and would date back to a "Kurganization" during the early Bronze Age.
[edit] References
- Dieter H. Steinbauer, Neues Handbuch des Etruskischen, St. Katharinen 1999
- Helmut Rix, Rätisch und Etruskisch, Innsbruck 1998
- L R Palmer, Mycenaeans and Minoans, Second ed. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 1965.