Yuki-Wappo languages

Yuki-Wappo languages

Infobox Language family
name=Yuki-Wappo
altname=Yukian
region=California
familycolor=American
family=Yuki-Wappo
child1="Yuki"
child2="Wappo"


map_caption=Pre-contact distribution of Yuki-Wappo languages

Yuki-Wappo (also Yukian, Wappo-Yuki) is a small extinct language family of western California consisting of only two languages.

Family division

The family consists of

: 1. Yuki: 2. Wappo

Yuki-Wappo is apparently a language isolate, unrelated to any other language, although there have been many attempts to place the language in a larger family (see below). Yuki proper consisted of three dialects: Yuki, Coast Yuki, and Huchnom. Wappo was spoken in four dialects in the Napa Valley, with a fifth dialect spoken in an enclave on Clear Lake.

Wappo and Yuki are quite divergent grammatically and lexically (Goddard 1996: 83), which has led to contested theories about their relationship. Additionally, the Wappo and Yuki people were quite distinct culturally and even in physical type (Goddard 1996: 83). Yuki-Wappo languages appear to belong to the very earliest strata of languages in California, even predating the Hokan (Goddard 1996: 84). Yuki is associated with the Mendocino Complex around Clear Lake (3000 BCE), while Wappo of the Napa Valley is associated with the St. Helena Aspect of the Augustine Pattern. Proto-Yukian peoples may be of the Post Pattern (9000 BCE).

Some evidence suggests the two languages separated around 2000-1000 BCE. Wappo speakers may have separated from Yuki due to migrations of Pomoan peoples. Alternatively, the Yuki and Wappo may have entered Northern California as distinct communities that settled in different areas, or Wappo speakers may have migrated south from the Yuki-Wappo heartland in the upper reaches of the Eel River.

The Wappo migration to Alexander Valley in the 19th century was due to a war with the Southern Pomo.

Genetic relations

The relationship between Yuki and Wappo is contested by Jesse Sawyer who believes that the similarities are due to linguistic borrowing and shared areal features, thus concluding that Yuki-Wappo is not a valid, demonstrated language family. However, William Elmendorf has presented some persuasive evidence in favor of the relationship. Campbell (1997) considers Elmendorf's evidence to be conclusive. Mithun (1999) reports that the relationship is open to question.

Yuki-Wappo has been linked to a number of hypothetical relationships:

* under Penutian including a connection to Yokutsan and also to a "California Penutian" sub-group
* under Hokan (including under Edward Sapir's "Hokan-Siouan")
* connected to Siouan
* in Morris Swadesh's "Hokogian" family with Hokan, Muskogean, and other Gulf languages, grouped together with Coahuiltecan and Chitimacha (and not with Hokan, pace Sapir)

To date, none of these proposals have been successfully demonstrated.

ee also

* Wappo language
* Yuki language
* Wappo
* Yuki

Bibliography

* Campbell, Lyle. (1997). "American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America". New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
* Goddard, Ives (Ed.). (1996). "Languages". Handbook of North American Indians (W. C. Sturtevant, General Ed.) (Vol. 17). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 0-16-048774-9.
* Heizer, Robert F. (Ed.). (1978). "California". Handbook of North American Indians (W. C. Sturtevant, General Ed.) (Vol. 8). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution.
* Mithun, Marianne. (1999). "The languages of Native North America". Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.


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