Title: Language groups in Northern Eurasia
1Language groups inNorthern Eurasia
- F. Jacquesson
- Lacito-CNRS
2Proviso
- In order to present here a clear description, we
will exclude two massive components - Indo-European languages in the west
- Chinese languages in the East
- and will focus on the lesser known groups whose
speakers have had, and often still have, a major
role in the linguistic geography of Northern
Eurasia.
3(No Transcript)
4- 1. The situation now
- 2. Documentary evidence
5The situation now
Eastern Siberian
Fenno-Ugric
Eskaleut
Tungusic
Samoyedic
Ainu
Japanic
Koreanic
Nivx
Turkic
Mongolic
Yukagir
Ket
6- Finno-ougric
- Samoyedic
- Tungusic
- Mongolic
- Turkic
- Eastern Siberic (Chukchee)
- Eskaleut (EskimoAleut)
- Nivx
- Ket
- Yukagir
- Ainu
- Japanese
- Korean
Uralic
Uralo-Altaic ??
Altaic ?
???
7Looking into the past
- We can
- 1. study historical documents
- 2. analyse older linguistic data
- 3. compare present linguistic data
- We will give here an idea of points 1 and 2.
8Studying historical documents
- They give precious indications about the history
of populations. - But Do older names indicate the same people
as to-day ?
9Population layers in recent northern Eurasia
- The Russian colonization, since the 17th century
- The Muslim influence, since the 8th century
- The Chinese influence, since the beg. of CE.
- All these foreign intruders brought languages
and significantly modified the cultural landscape.
10Before Russian colonization the Dolgix map
- V. O. Dolgix specialized in Samoyeds.
- He studied the first Russian documents about
Siberian populations - in administration reports and merchants
narratives. - He organized his results in a famous map, that he
first published in 1960.
11Dolgix map Siberia in the 17th century
Light pink Yukagir
Eastern Siberian is red
Blue Samoyedic
Green Uralic
Yellow Turkic
Light green Tungusic
Dark pink Ieniseian
12According to Dolgix map
- Yakuts were few in Yakutia
- Yukagirs were numerous and far into the east
- Southern Samoyeds were still alive as such
- Yeniseian people were southerners
- Let us compare the 17th century situation with
present time in two striking cases
13Yukagir in the 17th century acc. to Dolgix
Kets to-day
Yukagir to-day
Ieniseian in the 17th century according to Dolgix
14Language change
- Of course, it does not mean that all these people
were assassinated. - It means they encouraged their children in
learning the language of the more powerful
people, - and in forgetting their own language.
- In such cases, which have been fairly widespread
at all times, but have become more on more
frequent recently, the lineages remain on the
spot, while the older languages disappear.
15Muslim and Chinese influence in Central Asia
- The first Turkic documents (inscriptions on
stone) give a detailed account of the relations
with Chinese, in the 8th century. - Chinese reports and annals help the understanding
of what happened in the steppe belt.
16Muslim Chinese clash in Talas 751 CE
- Mediaeval geographers and historians, writing in
Chinese, Arabic and later in Persian, make us
realize how different the distribution of power
then was, - and along which lines local populations were
intrumentalized, and sometimes transported. - For instance, it is important to realize that the
famous battle opposing Chinese and Muslim armies,
each with different Turkic allies, was fought not
so far from present Tashkent.
17Talas a passage between China and the West
18Talas 751 CE
Aral Lake
TALAS
Toshkent
Samarkand
Kashgar
The technique for making paper is supposed to
have been transmitted from China to the West by
Chinese prisonners at Talas.
19At that time
- Documents in Turkic languages are known only from
Mongolia. - Mongolian speaking peoples were maybe living
in eastern Mongolia and present Manchuria. - Most (known) people in Central Asia before the
Chinese/Muslim conflict were speaking Iranian
languages. - Muslim influence introduced Persian, an Iranian
language from the west. It slowly superseded the
eastern Iranian languages like Sogdian the
famous language of the Silk Road merchants.
20The other teaching
- Although the historical detail is fairly
complicated, - chronicles also bring to light a number of
reasons for the cultural shifts and/or population
movements. - These deeper factors help us understanding what
forces were shaping the human landscape in a more
remote past before the time of our documents. -
21Herding and mobility
- All pieces of evidence, from the inner Asian
groups themeselves or from their neighbours, - underline the contrast between mobile herders,
mounted on horses, and sedentary dwellers. - This contrast at first sight is graphically
summed up in the Great Walls of China.
22The steppe
- Although the steppe corridor is not the only
important geographical feature in our zone, - it played a major role in the population
movements. - This was reinforced by the asymmetry between the
rich grazing in the west, - and the more dangerous climate of the eastern
steppe - provoking the so-called Great Invasions that
ruined the (western) Roman Empire.
23Herding and the steppe corridor
24Yet
- The nomadic / sedentary contrast does not mean
the Wall was always high enough. - The influence of the cities of the south was
clearly felt in the north, as we see from the
graves, or from the ruins in the steppes - And the northern barbarians have been several
times in control of the south, in China as in
Russia. - This led to episodes of symbiosis.
25Timurs tombinSamarcand
26Older linguistic data
27Older linguistic data in Northern Eurasia
- Chinese
- Germanic (runic inscr. since the 3rd c. CE
- Turkic (c. 5th c., Orkhon inscr. are 8th c.)
- Tibetan (since 7th c.)
- Hungarian (since c. 1200)
- Mongolian (13th c., the Secret History is known
from a Chinese transcription)
28Cultural shift
- The development, in time and space, of cultural
and/or linguistic factors does not always imply
population movement. - This is exemplified by the borrowing of the
Semitic writing, which crossed the whole
continent from the Mediterranean to the Pacific. - And by the yoke and its name, which crossed the
whole continent from east to west.
29From west to east the Semitic alphabet
Manchu script
Mongol script
Sogdian script
Syriac script, beginning of CE
Uigur script
30From east to west the name for the yoke
André Haudricourt Géographie et ethnologie de
la voiture, 1948.
31To sum it up in 3 steps 1st step
- The present day linguistic map is far from being
a sufficient basis for reconstructing the
linguistic past of Northern Eurasia. - Even in the 17th c. a period quite close to
ours the situation was very different.
32To sum it up 2nd step
- The history of language distribution in Eurasia
is heavily dependant on ethnological factors - herding has been a major factor since the
domestication of the horse - the grazing areas are not evenly distributed
- relations between the steppe and the cities did
exist, either on a predatory or a trading mode - language replacement was a frequent feature,
linked with specific views about mobile
federations.
33To sum it up 3rd step
- The community of language (for instance the fact
that citizens of Turkey speak Turkic, or are
supposed to) captures only a part of the past
history sometimes a deceptive part. - The political innuendoes, or trumpets, behind
lanuage mapping are certainly not new. - A language community should then be seen with
some feeling for historical details and, when
possible, with some tact.
34Merci