Dacian language
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Dacian | ||
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Spoken in: | Romania, Moldova, parts of Ukraine, Hungary, Serbia, and Northern Bulgaria | |
Language extinction: | probably by the sixth century AD | |
Language family: | Indo-European Dacian |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | none | |
ISO 639-2: | ine | |
ISO 639-3: | xdc | |
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Indo-European topics |
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Indo-European languages |
Albanian · Armenian · Baltic Celtic · Germanic · Greek Indo-Iranian (Indo-Aryan, Iranian) Italic · Slavic extinct: Anatolian · Paleo-Balkans (Dacian, |
Indo-European peoples |
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Urheimat hypotheses |
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Indo-European studies |
The Dacian language was spoken by the ancient inhabitants of Dacia. It belongs to the Indo-European language family.
Dacian is often considered to be a dialect of the same language as Thracian or to be a separate language from Thracian but closely related to it. (See Daco-Thracian.)
Contents |
[edit] Characteristics and sources
Many characteristics of the Dacian language are disputed or unknown. The only extant documents in Dacian are a handful of short inscriptions. What is known about the language derives from:
- The Dacian names of about fifty plants written in Greek and Roman sources (see List of Dacian plant names). Etymologies have been established for only a few of them[1].
- Substratum words found in Romanian[citation needed], the language that is spoken in most of the places where Dacians lived[citation needed]. These include about 400 words of uncertain origin (such as brânză 'cheese' and balaur 'dragon'). About 160 of these words have cognates in Albanian.
- Dacian writings. The longest inscription known is DECEBALUS PER SCORILO. Its meaning is disputed but is generally thought to be 'Decebalus, Scorilo’s son', if indeed it is in Dacian, or 'Decebalus through Scorilo', if it is actually a Latin inscription.
- The Roman poet Ovid claimed that he learned the Dacian language after being exiled to Tomis (today Constanţa) in Dacia. In his Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto he claimed to have composed poems in the language. If this is true, they have not been preserved.
[edit] Geographic distribution
Dacian used to be one of the major languages of South-Eastern Europe, spoken from what is now Eastern Hungary to the Black Sea shore[citation needed]. Based on archaeological findings, the origins of the Dacian culture are believed to lie in Moldavia, being identified as an evolution of the Iron Age Basarabi culture.
[edit] Sound changes from Proto-Indo-European
Dacian was a satem language. For details of its sound changes, see Proto-Indo-European to Dacian sound changes.
[edit] Classification
In the 1950s the Bulgarian linguist Vladimir Georgiev published a work[2] in which he argued that the phonology of Dacian is close to that of Albanian, supporting the theory that Dacian was on the same language branch as the Albanian language, a language branch termed Daco-Moesian (or Daco-Mysian) — Moesian (or Mysian) being thought of as a transitional dialect between Dacian and Thracian.
There are cognates between Daco-Thracian and Albanian. These cognates may be evidence of a Daco-Thracian-Albanian language affinity.
The ancient Greek geographer Strabo claimed that the Getae spoke the same language as the Thracians.[3] However, Georgiev argued that Dacian and Thracian are two different languages, with two different phonetic systems, supporting this view with the evidence of placenames, which end in -dava in Dacian and Moesian, as opposed to -para in Thracian placenames.[2] (See List of Dacian cities and List of ancient Thracian cities.)
[edit] The fate of Dacian
It is unclear exactly when the Dacian language became extinct, or even whether it has a living descendant. The initial Roman conquest of part of Dacia did not put an end to the language, as Free Dacian tribes such as the Carpi may have continued to speak Dacian in the area northeast of the Carpathians (in the areas of modern Moldova and Ukraine) as late as the 6th or 7th century AD.
- According to one hypothesis, a branch of Dacian continued as the Albanian language (Hasdeu, 1901).
- Another hypothesis considers Albanian to be a Daco-Moesian dialect that split off from Dacian before 300 BC and that Dacian itself became extinct.
The argument for this early split (before 300 BC) is the following: Inherited Albanian words (e.g. Alb motër 'sister' < Late IE ma:ter 'mother') show the transformation Late IE /a:/ > Alb /o/, but all the Latin loans in Albanian having an /a:/ show Latin a: > Alb a. This indicates that the transformation PAlb /a:/ > PAlb /o/ happened and ended before the Roman arrival in the Balkans.
On the other hand, Romanian substratum words shared with Albanian show a Romanian /a/ that corresponds to an Albanian /o/ when the source of both sounds is an original Common /a:/ (mazãre / modhull < *ma:dzula 'pea', raţã / rosë < *ra:tya: 'duck'), indicating that when these words had the same Common form in Pre-Romanian and Proto-Albanian the transformation PAlb /a:/ > PAlb /o/ had not yet begun.
The correlation between these two facts indicates that the split between the Pre-Roman Dacians (those Dacians who were later Romanized) and Proto-Albanian happened before the Roman arrival in the Balkans.
[edit] Substratum of Proto-Romanian
- Main article: Eastern Romance substratum
The Dacian language may form the substratum of the Proto-Romanian language, which developed from the Vulgar Latin spoken in the Balkans north of the Jirecek line, which roughly divides Latin influence from Greek influence.
Whether Dacian in fact forms the substratum of Proto-Romanian is disputed (see Origin of the Romanians), yet this theory does not rely on the Romanization having occurred in Dacia, as Dacian was also spoken in Moesia, and as far south as northern Dardania. About 300 words in Eastern Romance (Romanian, Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, Istro-Romanian) may derive from Dacian, and many of these show a satem-reflex, as one would expect in Daco-Thracian words.
[edit] In Romanian culture
The Romanian philologist Nicolae Densuşianu argued in his book Dacia Preistorică that Latin and Dacian were the same language or mutually intelligible dialects. His work was disregarded by mainstream linguists as pseudoscience, but it was revived by the Nicolae Ceauşescu regime, which encouraged an ideology called Protochronism and stressed the important role of the Dacians in the creation of the modern Romanian people.
The first article to revive Densuşianu's theory was an unsigned article named "The Beginnings of the History of the Romanian People" published in Anale de istorie[4], a journal published by the Romanian Communist Party's "Institute of History of the Party".[5]
The article claims that the Thracian language was a pre-Romance or Latin language using a demonstration which Lucian Boia describes as "a lack of basic professionalism and a straightforward contempt for the truth". Arguments used in the article include the lack of interpreters between the Dacians and the Romans, as depicted on the bas-reliefs of Trajan's column.[5] The bibliography includes, apart from Densuşianu, the work of a French academician Louis Armand (who is in fact an engineer), who allegedly showed that "the Thraco-Dacians spoke a pre-Romance language". Similar arguments are found in Iosif Constantin Drăgan's We, the Thracians (1976).[5]
This generated a great interest on researching of history of Dacia and many (often non-rigorous) works were published, among them Ion Horaţiu Crişan's "Burebista and His Age" (1975), who concluded the need of writing a monograph on the subject of "Dacian philosophy".[5] There were voices claiming the need of reconstructing the language and of the creation of a Dacian Language department at the University of Bucharest, but such proposals failed because of the lack of the object of study.[5]
After the 1989 Romanian Revolution, this theory continued being supported by Drăgan and the New York City-based physician Napoleon Săvescu, who published a book named We are not Rome's Descendents.[6] Together, they issue the magazine Noi, Dacii ("Us Dacians") and organize a yearly "International Congress of Dacology".[7]
[edit] See also
- List of Dacian cities
- List of Dacian kings
- List of Dacian plant names
- List of Romanian words of possible Dacian origin
- Sinaia lead plates
[edit] Notes
- ^ Daicoviciu, p.27
- ^ a b Georgiev, Raporturi..."
- ^ Strabo, "Geographica" Book VII, Chapter 3, 10
- ^ Anale de istorie, 4th issue (1976)
- ^ a b c d e Lucian Boia, History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness, Central European University Press, 2001, p.103-105. ISBN 9639116971.
- ^ Napoleon Săvescu, "Noi nu suntem urmaşii Romei"
- ^ "Ca şi cînd precedentele reuniuni n-ar fi fost de ajuns, dacologii bat cîmpii in centrul Capitalei", in Evenimentul Zilei, 22 June 2002
[edit] References
- I. I. Russu, Limba traco-dacilor, Bucharest, Editura Ştiinţifică, 1967
- Vladimir Georgiev (Gheorghiev), Raporturile dintre limbile dacă, tracă şi frigiană, "Studii Clasice" Journal, II, 1960, 39-58
- Hadrian Daicoviciu, Dacii, Editura Enciclopedică Română, 1972
- Dimiter Detschew, Die thrakischen Sprachreste, Wien 1957.
[edit] External links
- Dacian-Thracian being Centum languages that developed Satem features
- Books written by linguist Sorin Paliga about thracian and proto-romanian influences in slavic languages
- Sorin Olteanu's Thraco-Daco-Moesian Languages Project (SoLTDM) (sources, thesaurus, textual criticism, phonetics and morphology, substratum, historical geography a.o.)
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