Vasconic languages
- This article is about the contemporary language group. See Vasconic theory for the "Vasconic languages" postulated for remote antiquity.
Vasconic | |
---|---|
Geographic distribution: | France, Spain |
Linguistic classification: | Language isolate |
Proto-language: | Proto-Basque |
Subdivisions: |
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ISO 639-2 / 5: | euq |
Glottolog: | (not evaluated) |
Vasconic languages (from Late Latin vasconĭce, from which Basque is derived) is a putative family of languages that includes Basque and the extinct Aquitanian language. The extinct Iberian languages are also frequently included.
The concept of the Vasconic languages is often linked to the Vasconic substratum hypothesis of Theo Vennemann, who speculated that the ancestors of the Basque spread across Europe at the end of the last Ice Age when the Cro-Magnons entered Europe and left traces in the modern languages of Europe. Along with other hypotheses that seek to relate Basque to other languages of the world, this is widely rejected by historical linguists.[1]
Proponents of a Vasconic language family argue that Basque and the extinct Aquitanian language are close relatives, or that the modern varieties of Basque are distinct languages rather than dialects. However, these notions contradict conventional views on these languages, in two areas.
(1) Theories regarding the relationship between Aquitainian and Basque, which suggest that either:
- Aquitanian is the ancestor of Basque, and as Larry Trask puts it: "Aquitanian is so closely related to Basque that we can, for practical purposes, regard it as being the more-or-less direct ancestor of Basque",[2]:402
- or that a hypothetical Proto-Basque is the parent language of Aquitanian,
(2) The view that varieties of Basque are dialects with varying degrees of mutual intelligibility.[3] This view is held by scholars such as Trask, Koldo Zuazo, and Koldo Mitxelena. Trask states: "Nonetheless, the diversification should not be exaggerated, as has often been done in the literature: the dialects are overwhelmingly congruent in their fundamentals and differ chiefly in vocabulary and in a few low-level phonological rules."[2]
Various attempts have been made to tie other languages, modern or extinct, such as Iberian, the language of the Cantabri and various others to Vasconic. None of these theories have been able to provide convincing data and are rejected by mainstream Basque linguists.[2]
Notes
- ↑ http://www.cls.psu.edu/pubs/pubs/LINGUA1158.pdf
- 1 2 3 Trask, L. The History of Basque Routledge: 1997 ISBN 0-415-13116-2
- ↑ Pagola, RM Euskalkiz Euskalki Basque Government 1984