The
Indo-European languages comprise a
family of several hundred related
languages and
dialects [1], including most of the major languages of
Europe, the northern
Indian subcontinent (
South Asia), the
Iranian plateau (
Southwest Asia), and much of
Central Asia. Indo-European (
Indo refers to the Indian subcontinent) has the largest numbers of speakers of the recognised families of languages in the world today, with its languages spoken by approximately three billion native speakers.
[2]
Of the
top 20 contemporary languages in terms of speakers according to
SIL Ethnologue, 12 are Indo-European:
Italian,
English,
Hindi,
Portuguese,
Bengali,
Russian,
Spanish,
German,
Marathi,
French,
Punjabi and
Urdu, accounting for over 1.6 billion native speakers. The
Indo-Iranian languages form the largest sub-branch of Indo-European in terms of the number of native speakers as well as in terms of the number of individual languages.
[3]
Classification
| Indo-European
|
Geographic distribution: |
Before the fifteenth century, Europe, and South, Central and Southwest Asia; today worldwide. |
Genetic classification: |
}} |
| Subdivisions: |
|
| ISO 639-2: | ine |
Dark green: countries with a majority of speakers of IE languages Light green: countries with an IE minority language with official status |
The various subgroups of the Indo-European language family include (in historical order of their first attestation):
- Anatolian languages, earliest attested branch, from the 18th century BC; extinct, most notably including the language of the Hittites.
- Indo-Iranian languages, descending from a common ancestor, Proto-Indo-Iranian
- Indo-Aryan languages, including Sanskrit, attested from the mid 2nd millennium BC.
- Iranian languages, attested from roughly 1000 BC in the form of Avestan, and from 520 BC in the form of Old Persian
- Dardic languages
- Nuristani languages
- Greek language, fragmentary records in Mycenaean from the 14th century BC; Homeric traditions date to the 8th century BC. (See Proto-Greek language, History of the Greek language.)
- Italic languages, including Latin and its descendants (the Romance languages), attested from the 7th century BC.
- Celtic languages, Gaulish inscriptions date as early as the 6th century BC; Old Irish texts from the 6th century AD, see Proto-Celtic language.
- Germanic languages (including Old English and English), earliest testimonies in runic inscriptions from around the 2nd century, earliest coherent texts in Gothic, 4th century AD, see Proto-Germanic language.
- Armenian language, attested from the 5th century AD.
- Tocharian languages, extinct tongues of the Tocharians, extant in two dialects, attested from roughly the 6th century AD.
- Balto-Slavic languages, believed by many Indo-Europeanists to derive from a common proto-language later than Proto-Indo-European, while skeptical Indo-Europeanists regard Baltic and Slavic as no more closely related than any other two branches of Indo-European.
- Slavic languages, attested from the 9th century, earliest texts in Old Church Slavonic.
- Baltic languages, attested from the 14th century, and, for languages attested that late, they retain unusually many archaic features attributed to Proto-Indo-European.
- Albanian language, attested from the 15th century; relations with Illyrian, Dacian, or Thracian proposed.
In addition to the classical ten branches listed above, several extinct and little-known languages have existed:
No doubt other Indo-European languages once existed which have now vanished without leaving a trace.
A large majority of
auxiliary languages can be considered Indo-European, at least in content. Examples include
Membership of languages in the same language family is determined by the presence of
shared retentions, i.e., features of the proto-language (or reflexes of such features) that cannot be explained better by chance or borrowing (convergence). Membership in a branch/group/subgroup
within a language family is determined by
shared innovations which are presumed to have taken place in a common ancestor. For example, what makes Germanic languages "Germanic" is that large parts of the structures of all the languages so designated can be stated just once for all of them. In other words, they can be treated as an innovation that took place in Proto-Germanic, the source of all the Germanic languages.
A problem, however, is that shared innovations can be acquired by borrowing or other means. It has been asserted, for example, that many of the more striking features shared by Italic languages (Latin, Oscan, Umbrian, etc.) might well be "areal" features. More certainly, very similar-looking alterations in the systems of long vowels in the West Germanic languages greatly postdate any possible notion of a proto-language innovation (and cannot readily be regarded as "areal", either, since English and continental West Germanic were not a linguistic area). In a similar vein, there are many similar innovations in Germanic and Baltic/Slavic that are far more likely to be areal features than traceable to a common proto-language, such as the uniform development of a
high vowel (*
u in the case of Germanic, *
i in the case of Baltic and Slavic) before the PIE syllabic resonants *
ṛ,* ḷ, *ṃ, *ṇ, unique to these two groups among IE languages. But legitimate uncertainty about whether shared innovations are areal features, coincidence, or inheritance from a common ancestor, leads to disagreement over the proper subdivisions of any large language family. Thus specialists have postulated the existence of such subfamilies (subgroups) as Germanic with Slavic,
Italo-Celtic and Graeco-Aryan. The vogue for such subgroups waxes and wanes (Italo-Celtic for example used to be an absolutely standard feature of the Indo-European landscape; nowadays it is little honored, in part because much of the striking evidence on the basis of which it was postulated has turned out to have been misinterpreted).
Indo-Hittite refers to the theory that Indo-European (sensu stricto, i.e. the proto-language of the Indo-European languages known before the discovery of Hittite), and Proto-Anatolian, split from a common proto-language called Proto-Indo-Hittite by its first theoretician, Edgar Sturtevant. Validation of such a theory would consist of identifying formal-functional structures that can be coherently reconstructed for both branches but which can only be traced to a formal-functional structure that is either (a) different from both or else (b) shows evidence of a very early, group-wide innovation. As an example of (a), it is obvious that the Indo-European perfect subsystem in the verbs is
formally superimposable on the Hittite
ḫi-verb subsystem, but there is no match-up functionally, such that (as has been held) the functional source must have been unlike both Hittite and Indo-European. As an example of (b), the solidly-reconstructable Indo-European deictic pronoun paradigm whose nominatives singular are *
so, *sā (*seH₂),
*tod has been compared to a collection of clause-marking particles in Hittite, the argument being that the coalescence of these particles into the familiar Indo-European paradigm was an innovation of that branch of Proto-Indo-Hittite.
Satem and Centum languages


Diachronic map showing the Centum (blue) and Satem (red) areals. The supposed area of origin of satemization is shown in darker red (
Sintashta/
Abashevo/
Srubna cultures).
Many scholars classify the Indo-European sub-branches into a
Satem group and a
Centum group. This terminology comes from the different treatment of the three original
velar rows. Satem languages lost the distinction between labiovelar and pure velar sounds, and at the same time
assibilated the palatal velars. The centum languages, on the other hand, lost the distinction between palatal velars and pure velars. Geographically, the "eastern" languages belong in the Satem group: Indo-Iranian and Balto-Slavic (but not including Tocharian and Anatolian); and the "western" languages represent the Centum group: Germanic, Italic, and Celtic. The
Satem-Centum isogloss runs right between the Greek (Centum) and Armenian (Satem) languages (which a number of scholars regard as closely related), with Greek exhibiting some marginal Satem features. Some scholars think that some languages classify neither as Satem nor as Centum (Anatolian, Tocharian, and possibly Albanian). Note that the grouping does not imply a claim of
monophyly: we do not need to postulate the existence of a "proto-Centum" or of a "proto-Satem". Areal contact among already distinct post-PIE languages (say, during the 3rd millennium BC) may have spread the sound changes involved. In any case, present-day specialists are rather less galvanized by the division than 19th cent. scholars were, partly because of the recognition that it is, after all, just one
isogloss among the multitudes that criss-cross Indo-European linguistic geography. (Together with the recognition that the Centum Languages are no subgroup: as mentioned above, subgroups are defined by shared innovations, which the Satem languages definitely have, but the only thing that the "Centum Languages" have in common is staying put.)
Suggested superfamilies
Some linguists propose that Indo-European languages form part of a hypothetical
Nostratic language superfamily, and attempt to relate Indo-European to other language families, such as
South Caucasian languages,
Altaic languages,
Uralic languages,
Dravidian languages, and
Afro-Asiatic languages. This theory remains controversial, like the similar
Eurasiatic theory of
Joseph Greenberg, and the Proto-Pontic postulation of John Colarusso. There are no possible theoretical objections to the existence of such superfamilies; the difficulty comes in finding concrete evidence that transcends chance resemblance and wishful thinking. The main problem for all of them is that in historical linguistics the noise-to-signal ratio steadily worsens over time, and at great enough time-depths it becomes open to reasonable doubt that it can even be possible to tell what is signal and what is noise.
History of the idea of Indo-European
Suggestions of similarities between Indian and European languages began to be made by European visitors to India in the sixteenth century. In 1583 Thomas Stephens, an English
Jesuit missionary in
Goa, noted similarities between Indian languages, specifically
Konkani, and Greek and Latin. These observations were included in a letter to his brother which was not published until the twentieth century.
[4]
The first account to mention Sankrit came from
Filippo Sassetti (born in Florence, Italy in 1540 AD), a Florentine merchant who travelled to the Indian subcontinent and was among the first European observers to study the ancient Indian language, Sanskrit. Writing in 1585, he noted some word similarities between Sanskrit and Italian (e.g. deva/dio 'God', sarpa/serpe 'snake', sapta/sette 'seven', ashta/otto 'eight', nava/nove 'nine').
[4] Unfortunately neither Stephens' nor Sasetti's observations led to any further scholarly inquiry.
[4]
In 1647
Dutch linguist and scholar
Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn noted the similarity among
Indo-European languages, and supposed the existence of a primitive common language which he called "
Scythian". He included in his hypothesis
Dutch,
Greek,
Latin,
Persian, and
German, later adding
Slavic,
Celtic and
Baltic languages. However, the suggestions of van Boxhorn did not become widely known and did not stimulate further research.
The hypothesis re-appeared in 1786 when
Sir William Jones first lectured on similarities between four of the oldest languages known in his time:
Latin,
Greek,
Sanskrit, and
Persian. Systematic comparison of these and other old languages conducted by
Franz Bopp supported this theory, and Bopp's
Comparative Grammar, appearing between
1833 and
1852 counts as the starting-point of
Indo-European studies as an academic discipline.
Historical evolution
Sound changes
As the Proto-Indo-European language broke up, its sound system diverged as well, changing according to various
sound laws evidenced in the daughter-languages. Notable cases of such sound laws include
Grimm's law in
Proto-Germanic, loss of prevocalic
*p- in
Proto-Celtic, loss of prevocalic
*s- in Proto-Greek,
Brugmann's law in Proto-Indo-Iranian, as well as
satemization (discussed above).
Grassmann's law and
Bartholomae's law may or may not have operated at the common Indo-European stage.
Indo-European expansion
The earliest attestations of Indo-European languages date to the early 2nd millennium BC. At that time, the languages were already diversified and widely distributed, so that "loss of contact" between the individual dialects is accepted to have taken place before 2500 BC.
[5] Newer theories oppose this timeframe
[6]. Competing scenarios for the early history of Indo-European are thus largely compatible for times after 2500 BC, even if they are incommensurable for the 4th millennium BC and earlier. The following timeline inserts the scenario suggested by the mainstream
Kurgan hypothesis for the mid 5th to mid 3rd millennia (see below for competing hypotheses).
Timeline constructed on 'Kurgan Hypothesis'
- 4500–4000: Early PIE. Sredny Stog, Dnieper-Donets and Samara cultures, domestication of the horse. (The early presence of the horse at Sredny Stog has been discredited as decisive—genetic evidence does not supply a single origin for the domesticated horse.)
- 4000–3500: The Yamna culture (prototypical kurgan-building) emerges in the steppe, and the Maykop culture in the northern Caucasus. Indo-Hittite models postulate the separation of Proto-Anatolian before this time.
- 3500–3000: Middle PIE. The Yamna culture reaches its peak: it represents the classical reconstructed Proto-Indo-European society, with stone idols, early two-wheeled proto-chariots, predominantly practising animal husbandry, but also with permanent settlements and hillforts, subsisting on agriculture and fishing, along rivers. Contact of the Yamna culture with late Neolithic Europe cultures results in the "kurganized" Globular Amphora and Baden cultures. The Maykop culture shows the earliest evidence of the early Bronze Age, and bronze weapons and artifacts enter Yamna territory. Probable early Satemization.
- 3000–2500: Late PIE. The Yamna culture extends over the entire Pontic steppe. The Corded Ware culture extends from the Rhine to the Volga, corresponding to the latest phase of Indo-European unity, the vast "kurganized" area disintegrating into various independent languages and cultures, but still in loose contact and thus enabling the spread of technology and early loans between the groups (except for the Anatolian and Tocharian branches, already isolated from these processes). The Centum-Satem division has probably run its course, but the phonetic trends of Satemization remain active.
- 2500–2000: The breakup into the proto-languages of the attested dialects has done its work. Speakers of Proto-Greek live in the Balkans, speakers of Proto-Indo-Iranian north of the Caspian in the Sintashta-Petrovka culture. The Bronze Age reaches Central Europe with the Beaker culture, whose people probably use various Centum dialects. Proto-Balto-Slavic speakers (or alternatively, Proto-Slavic and Proto-Baltic communities in close contact) emerge in north-eastern Europe. The Tarim mummies possibly correspond to proto-Tocharians.
Proto-Indo-European
Location hypotheses
Scholars have dubbed the common ancestral (reconstructed) language
Proto-Indo-European (PIE). They disagree as to the original
geographic location (the so-called "
Urheimat" or "original homeland") from where it originated.
The
Corded Ware culture has always occupied a prominent place in locating the Indo-European origins. Preponderance of what generally are considered Indo-European traits have lead many to assume this culture in Northern Europe to provide the homeland culture of the Proto-Indo-Europeans, especially among German archeologists of the early twentieth century. However, despite strenuous attempts this culture could not be linked to the Indo-Europeans of the Balkans, Greece or Anatolia, and neither to the Indo-Europeans in Asia. Ever since, establishing the correct relationship between the Corded Ware and Pontic-Caspian regions is essential to solving the entire homeland problem.
[7] The discovery since the 70s of
Bell Beaker culture being genetically a Late Neolithic extension to Corded Ware, and recent Bell Beaker related discoveries as far as Romania and Early Helladic Greece
[8], did not change the doubt since the rapid expanse of the Bell Beakers has traditionally been viewed upon as a rather cultural phenomenon.
Mainstream opinion locates PIE in the
Pontic-Caspian steppe in the
Chalcolithic (from ca. 4000 BC; see
Kurgan hypothesis). The main competitor of this is the
Anatolian hypothesis advanced by
Colin Renfrew, dating PIE to several millennia earlier, associating the spread of Indo-European languages with the
Neolithic spread of farming (see
Indo-Hittite). Neither of both hypotheses survived the initial proposals as archeological and linguistic evicence forced their revision on some fundamental details, varying from serious general criticism on the kurganization of Anatolia through the Caucasian route (Mallory 1989, p233) forwarded in the original Kurgan hypothesis, to linguistic criticism on the unrealistic timedepth implied by the Anatolian hypothesis. Efforts to make the two hypotheses compatible include the rapid divergence of the Romance, Celtic and Balto-Slavic languages around 6,500 years ago
[9] makes the two hypotheses compatible.
[10]
It should be noted that theories of the origin of Indo-European languages are not based on purely linguistic concepts. These theories are highly dependent on extra-linguistic factors, particularly interpretations of archaeological findings and the unattested meaning of words dating back as much as 3500 years or more before writing. The reference above to "mainstream" opinion concerning origins in the Pontic-Caspian steppes relies on some of such extra-linguistic conclusions, leaving some other key issues concerning timedepth explicitly unresolved (Mallory 1989, p137). Since there is no direct way of knowing what language was spoken by a particular archaeological culture or how the meaning of words changed over thousands of years, theories about the location of the origin of Indo-European languages remain largely conjectural.
| Early studies of Indo-European languages focused on those most familiar to the original European researchers: the Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Baltic and Slavic families. Affinities between these and the "Aryan" languages spoken in faraway India were noticed by European travelers as early as the 16th century. That they might all share a common ancestor was first proposed in 1786 by Sir William Jones, an English jurist and student of Eastern cultures. He thus launched what came to be known as the Indo-European hypothesis, which served as the principal stimulus to the founders of historical linguistics in the 19th century. [11] | |
Paleolithic Continuity Theory
A recent version of the hypothesis of European origin of PIE is the "
Paleolithic Continuity Theory" proposed by group of Western European theorists, which derives Indo-European languages from the
Proto-Indo-European Paleolithic cultures, arguing for linguistic continuity from genetic continuity by incorporation of genetic data like
R1b or
R1a1 not available at the time of construction of Anatolian hypothesis and Kurgan hypothesis. Genetic data are experimentally verifiable.
Anatolian hypothesis
Colin Renfrew in
1987 suggested
[12] an association between the spread of Indo-European and the
Neolithic revolution, spreading peacefully into Europe from
Asia Minor (Anatolia) from around
7000 BC with the advance of farming (
wave of advance). Accordingly, all the inhabitants of
Neolithic Europe would have spoken Indo-European tongues, and the Kurgan migrations would at best have replaced Indo-European dialects with other Indo-European dialects.
According to Renfrew
[13], the spread of Indo-European proceeded from "Pre-Proto-Indo-European" in 6500 to Archaic PIE in 5000 BC, with the historical Indo-European families developing from 3000 BC from "Balkan PIE".
The main strength of the farming hypothesis lies in its linking of the spread of Indo-European languages with an archeologically known event that likely involved major population shifts: the spread of farming (though the validity of basing a linguistics theory on archeological evidence remains disputed).
While the Anatolian theory enjoyed brief support when first proposed, the linguistic community in general now rejects it. While the spread of farming undisputedly constituted an important event, most see no case to connect it with Indo-Europeans in particular, since terms for animal husbandry tend to have much better reconstructions than terms related to agriculture.
The time frame of the Anatolian hypothesis moved 2000 years closer to postulated by PCT time frame, by a 2003 computer analysis in
glottochronology[14] The rate of change calculated is 9,800-8,000 years BP, for
Indo-Hittite division at 6700 BCE, and a Graeco-Aryan division at 5300 BCE, about few millennia earlier for a Kurgan time frame and one or two earlier than suggested originally by Colin Renfrew as 7000 BC.
Kurgan hypothesis
The Kurgan hypothesis was introduced by
Marija Gimbutas in
1956 in order to combine
archaeology with
linguistics in locating the origins of the
Proto-Indo-European (PIE) speaking peoples. She tentatively named the set of cultures in question "
Kurgan" after the Russian term for their distinctive
burial mounds and traced their diffusion into
Europe.
This hypothesis has had a significant impact on
Indo-European research. Those scholars who follow Gimbutas identify a
Kurgan or
Pit Grave culture as reflecting an early
Proto-Indo-European ethnicity which existed in the
Pontic steppe and
southeastern Europe from the
fifth to
third millennia BC.
While Gimbutas pointed primarily at the kurgan-ridden Pit Grave- or
Yamna culture to be at the origin of all Indo-European migrations and Indo-Europeanization, recently there exists a tendency to push the date of origin further back in time. In a revised Kurgan hypothesis rather the kurgan-less
Sredny Stog culture has been proposed to be ancestral to all Indo-European languages instead, and the subsequently evolving Yamna culture to be related to the later satemization process
[15].
Other hypotheses
The
Armenian hypothesis of
Tamaz Gamq'relidze and
Vyacheslav V. Ivanov in
1984 placed the Indo-European homeland on
Lake Urmia [16], suggesting that
Armenian stayed in the Indo-European cradle while other Indo-European languages left the homeland and migrated on a route that led them along the eastern coast of the
Caspian Sea to the steppe north of the Black Sea. Gamkrelidze and Ivanov also originated the
Glottalic theory.
An
Out of India theory is sometimes advanced, mostly by Indian authors, who see the
Indus Valley Civilization as the location of either Proto-Indo-European or of Proto-Indo-Iranian.
Various nationalistic European groups in the 19th and early 20th centuries espoused other theories, typically locating Proto-Indo-European in the respective authors' own countries. For example, a suggested location of the proto-language in Northern Europe became involved in justifying the view of the German people as "
Aryan".
Some people have pointed to the
Black Sea deluge theory, dating the genesis of the
Sea of Azov to ca.
5600 BC, as a direct cause of Indo-European expansion.
[17] This event occurred in still clearly Neolithic times and happened rather too early to fit with Kurgan archaeology. One can still imagine it as an event in the remote past of the
Sredny Stog culture, with the people living on the land now beneath the Sea of Azov as possible pre-Proto-Indo-Europeans.
A recent version of the hypothesis of European origin of PIE is the "
Paleolithic Continuity Theory" proposed by Italian theorists, which derives Indo-European languages from the
Proto-Indo-European Paleolithic cultures, arguing for linguistic continuity from genetic continuity.
Recent linguistic studies present strong evidence that the Indo-European language group originates in
Anatolia.
[18]
References
Bibliography
- Mallory, J. P. (1989). In Search of the Indo-Europeans. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-27616-1.
- August Schleicher, A Compendium of the Comparative Grammar of the Indo-European Languages (1861/62).
- Watkins, Calvert (2000). The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-618-08250-6.
Notes
1.
^ 449 according to the 2005
SIL estimate, about half (219) belonging to the
Indo-Aryan sub-branch.
2.
^ the
Sino-Tibetan family of tongues has the second-largest number of speakers.
3.
^ 308 languages according to SIL; more than one billion speakers (see
List of languages by number of native speakers). Historically, also in terms of geographical spread (stretching from the
Caucasus to
South Asia; c.f.
Scythia)
4.
^ Auroux, Sylvain (2000). History of the Language Sciences. Berlin, New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1156. ISBN 3110167352.
5.
^ Oswald Szemerényi,
Comparative Linguistics. Current Trends of Linguistics, Den Haag (1972)
6.
^ Chapter 11 (L’influenza del ‘catastrofismo’ sulla linguistica storica) of Le origini delle lingue d’Europa. Vol. I. La teoria della continuità.
Mario Alinei , En translation
URL
7.
^ In Search of the Indo-Europeans - J.P.Mallory, Thames and Hudson 1989, p245,ISBN 0-500-27616-1
8.
^ When the West meets the East: The Eastern Periphery of the Bell Beaker Phenomenon and its Relation with the Aegean Early Bronze Age. In: I. Galanaki, I. Galanakis, H. Tomas & R. Laffineur (eds.), Between the Aegean and Baltic Seas: Prehistory across Borders. Proceedings of the International Conference ‘Bronze and Early Iron Age Interconnections and Contemporary Developments between the Aegean and the Region of the Balkan Peninsula, Central and Northern Europe’. University of Zagreb, 10-14 April 2005. Aegaeum 27 (Liège: Université, 2007), pp. 91-107- Volkert Heyd, 2005
9.
^ Gray and Atkinson (2003)
Nature vol 426, pp436-438
10.
^ Balter (2004)
Science 303, pp1323-1326.
11.
^ Scientific American, March 1990, P.110
12.
^ Renfrew, Colin (1987). Archeology and Language. Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-521-38675-6.
13.
^ Renfrew, Colin (2003). "Time Depth, Convergence Theory, and Innovation in Proto-Indo-European", Languages in Prehistoric Europe. ISBN 3-8253-1449-9.
14.
^ Gray, R. D. and Atkinson, Q. D. (2003) Language-tree divergence times support the Anatolian theory of Indo-European origin. Nature, 426(6965), 435-439. Quote:
Languages, like genes, provide vital clues about human history, URL:
[1]
15.
^ Frederik Kortlandt-The spread of the Indo-Europeans, 2002,
[2]
16.
^ Gamkrelidze, Tamaz V.; Vjacheslav V. Ivanov (1995). Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans. Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-014728-9.
17.
^ Ryan and Pitman 1998:208-213
18.
^ A History of Armenia by Vahan M. Kurkjian
See also
External links
Databases
Lexicon
Indo-European refers to the following semantic items:
A family of languages:
- Indo-European languages
- Indo-European people - peoples speaking an Indo-European language
- Indo-European studies, an academic field.
..... Click the link for more information. Albanian (gjuha shqipe IPA /ˈɟuˌha ˈʃciˌpɛ/
..... Click the link for more information.
Anatolian languages are a group of extinct Indo-European languages, which were spoken in Asia Minor, the best attested of them being the Hittite language.
List
- Hittite (nesili), attested from ca.
..... Click the link for more information.
Armenian}}}
Writing system: Armenian alphabet
Official status
Official language of: Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh
Regulated by: National Academy of Sciences of Armenia
Language codes
ISO 639-1: hy
ISO 639-2: arm (B)
..... Click the link for more information.
Baltic languages are a group of related languages belonging to the Indo-European language family and spoken mainly in areas extending east and southeast of the Baltic Sea in Northern Europe.
..... Click the link for more information.
Celtic languages are the languages descended from Proto-Celtic, or "Common Celtic", a branch of the greater Indo-European language family. During the 1st millennium BC, they were spoken across Europe, from the Bay of Biscay and the North Sea, up the Rhine and down the Danube to the
..... Click the link for more information.
Dacian}}}
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: ine
ISO 639-3: xdc
Indo-European topics
Indo-European languages
Albanian Anatolian Armenian
Baltic Celtic Dacian Germanic
Greek Indo-Iranian Italic Phrygian
..... Click the link for more information.
Germanic languages are a group of related languages constituting a branch of the Indo-European (IE) language family. The common ancestor of all languages comprising this branch is Proto-Germanic, spoken in approximately the latter mid-1st millennium BC in Iron Age Northern Europe.
..... Click the link for more information.
Greek}}}
Writing system: Greek alphabet
Official status
Official language of: Greece
Cyprus
European Union
recognised as minority language in parts of:
European Union
Italy
Turkey
Regulated by:
..... Click the link for more information.
Indo-Iranian language group constitutes the easternmost extant branch of the Indo-European family of languages. It consists of four language groups: the Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Nuristani, and Dardic.
..... Click the link for more information.
Italic subfamily is a member of the Centum branch of the Indo-European language family. It includes the Romance languages (including Italian, Catalan, Occitan, French, Corsican, Portuguese, Romanian and Spanish), and a number of extinct languages.
..... Click the link for more information.
Phrygian language was the Indo-European language of the Phrygians, a people of the central Asia Minor.
Inscriptions
Phrygian is attested by two corpora, one from around 800 BC and later (Paleo-Phrygian), and then after a period of several centuries from around the
..... Click the link for more information. Slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages), a group of closely related languages of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo-European languages, have speakers in most of Eastern Europe, in much of the Balkans, in parts of Central Europe, and in the northern part of
..... Click the link for more information.
Thracian}}}
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: ine
ISO 639-3: txh
Indo-European topics
Indo-European languages
Albanian Anatolian Armenian
Baltic Celtic Dacian Germanic
Greek Indo-Iranian Italic Phrygian
..... Click the link for more information.
Tocharian languages}}}
Writing system: Tocharian script
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: ine
ISO 639-3: either:
xto —
txb — Tocharian or Tokharian
..... Click the link for more information.
Indo-European people are the speakers of the Indo-European languages, a major language family of Eurasia. In the context of linguistics, the term usually refers to Bronze Age (third to second millennia BC) speakers of Indo-European languages that had not yet split into the attested
..... Click the link for more information.
- For demographic information, see Demographics of Albania.
Albanians
ShqiptarëTotal population Approximately 8 million
Regions with significant populations
Albania
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8 to 10 million[1]
Regions with significant populations
Armenia
Russia
United States
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Balts or Baltic peoples (Latvian: balti; Lithuanian: baltai; Latgalian: bolti
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Celts, normally pronounced /kɛlts/ (see article on pronunciation), is widely used to refer to the members of any of the peoples in Europe using the Celtic languages or descended from those who did.
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Germanic peoples are a historical group of Indo-European-speaking peoples, originating in Northern Europe and identified by their use of the Germanic languages which diversified out of Common Germanic in the course of the Pre-Roman Iron Age.
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17,000,000
Regions with significant populations
Greece [1]
United States
Cyprus
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Indo-Aryans are a wide collection of peoples united by their common status as speakers of the Indo-Aryan (Indic/Indian) branch of the family of Indo-European and Indo-Iranian languages.
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Indo-Iranian peoples consist of the Indo-Aryan, Iranian, Dardic and Nuristani peoples, that is, speakers of Indo-Iranian languages. An archaic term for these peoples is Aryan.
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The Iranian peoples (See[1] for local names) are a collection of ethnic groups defined by their usage of Iranian languages and their descent from ancient Iranian peoples.
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Ancient Italic peoples are all those peoples that lived in Italy before the Roman domination. Not all of these various peoples are linguistically or ethnically closely related.
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Slavic peoples are a branch of Indo-European peoples, living mainly in Europe, where they constitute roughly a third of the population. Since emerging from their original homeland (most commonly thought to be in Eastern Europe) in the early 6th century, they have inhabited most of
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Thracians were a group of ancient Indo-European tribes who spoke the Thracian language - a scarcely attested branch of the Indo-European language family. Those peoples inhabited the Eastern, Central and Southern part of the Balkan peninsula, as well as the adjacent parts of Eastern
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Tocharians were the Tocharian-speaking inhabitants of the Tarim basin, making them the easternmost speakers of an Indo-European language in antiquity.
Archaeology
The Tarim mummies suggest that precursors of these easternmost speakers of an Indo-European language may have
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