Theo Vennemann

Theo Vennemann genannt Nierfeld (German: [ˈfɛnəman]; born 27 May 1937 in Oberhausen-Sterkrade) is a German historical linguist known for his controversial theories of a "Vasconic" and an "Atlantic" substratum in European languages, published since the 1990s.[1]

He was professor of Germanic and Theoretical linguistics at Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich from 1974 (retired 2005).

Theories

Vennemann's book Europa Vasconica - Europa Semitica (2003) was reviewed in Lingua by linguists Philip Baldi and B. Richard Page, who made reasoned dismissals of a number of his proposals. The reviewers still applauded Vennemann's "efforts to reassess the role and extent of language contact in the development of Indo-European languages in Europe".[2]

Vennemann's controversial claims about the prehistory of European languages include the following:

References

  1. "Basken, Semiten, Indogermanen. Urheimatfragen in linguistischer und anthropologischer Sicht." In: Wolfgang Meid (ed.): Sprache und Kultur der Indogermanen. Akten der X. Fachtagung der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft, 22.-28. September 1996. Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft. vol. 93. Innsbruck, 1998, pp. 119-138.
  2. Baldi and Page, Lingua 116 (2006) 2183–2220. archive.org: http://web.archive.org/web/20131027232420/http://www.cls.psu.edu/pubs/pubs/LINGUA1158.pdf
  3. Kitson, P.R. (November 1996). "British and European River Names". Transactions of the Philological Society. 94 (2): 73–118. doi:10.1111/j.1467-968X.1996.tb01178.x.
  4. English - a German dialect? Prof. em. Theo Vennemann, Ph.D. Rotary Club Munich International. 7 November 2005.
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