- Elamo-Dravidian languages
The Elamo-Dravidian languages are a hypothesised
language family which includes the livingDravidian languages ofIndia , andPakistan , in addition to the extinctElamite language of ancientElam , in what is now southwesternIran . Linguist David McAlpin has been a chief proponent of the Elamo-Dravidian Hypothesis. In addition to Elamite and the Dravidian languages, some speculate that the extinct language or languages of theIndus Valley Civilization , also known as the Harappan Civilization, may be part of the Elamo-Dravidian language family.Evidence
McAlpin (1975) identified several similarities between Elamite and Dravidian. According to McAlpin, 20% of Dravidian and Elamite vocabulary are
cognate s; a further 12% are probable cognates. Elamite and Dravidian possess similar second-personpronoun s and parallel case endings. They have identical derivatives, abstract nouns, and the same verb stem+tense marker+personal ending structure. Both have two positivetense s, a "past" and a "non-past". The Elamo-Dravidian Hypothesis is based on several other pieces of evidence. It appears that agriculture developed in the Near East and later spread to theIndus Valley region, suggesting that Elamo-Dravidian agriculturalists may have brought farming from the Near East to the Indus Valley. Later evidence of extensive trade between Elam and the Indus Valley Civilization suggests ongoing links between the two regions. Proponents of the hypothesis noted similarities between the earlyHarappan script , which has not been definitively deciphered, and early (Proto-)Elamite script that, however, is hardly understood so far. The disjunct distribution of living Dravidian languages, concentrated mostly in southern India but with isolated pockets in South Eastern Iran and Southern Afghanistan and Pakistan and northeast India, suggests a wider past distribution of the Dravidian languages, and that the Indo-European languages of modern India and Pakistan were later arrivals in theIndo-Gangetic plain , leaving isolated islands of the older Dravidian languages in the surrounding mountains. A variety of Dravidian loan words (i.e., "phalam-" ripe fruit, "khala-" threshing floor) in VedicSanskrit suggests that the two languages existed for a time in proximity.Retroflex consonant s, which exist in Vedic Sanskrit and Dravidian but do not exist in Iranian or European languages could suggest a Dravidiansubstratum oradstratum in Vedic Sanskrit.Some who claim to have deciphered the Harappan script, including
Asko Parpola and Walter A. Fairservis Jr., suggest that the Harappans spoke a Dravidian language, while others, for instanceShikaripura Ranganatha Rao , suggest that the Harappan script represents an Indo-European language, similar to Sanskrit.Criticism
The theory has been criticized on linguistic grounds. [ McAlpin, et al. Comment on David W. McAlpin's "Elamite and Dravidian: Further Evidence of Relationship." (This includes discussions by M.B. Emeneau, W.H. Jacobsen, F.B.J. Kuiper, H.H.Paper, E. Reiner, R. Stopa, F. Vallat, R.W. Wescott, and a reply by McAlpin). Current Anthropology 16, 1975, 105-115. Cf. also McAlpin, D. W. Proto-Elamian-Dravidian: the evidence and its implications. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 71, Philadelphia 1981 ]
In addition, the Dravidian
Brahui language of Baluchistan, per McAlpin the supposed link between Elamite and the Central Indian Dravidian languages (Harvtxt|Elst|1999), has been suggested by J.H. Elfenbein to be a late, c. 1000 year old immigrant from Central India. As such, it cannot reflect a remnant of a Dravidian language speaking Indus population. [ Elfenbein, J.H. A periplous of the Brahui problem. Studia Iranica 16, 1987, 215-233 ]Georgiy Starostin criticized McAlpin's proposed morphological correspondences between Elamite and Dravidian as no closer than correspondences with other nearby language families. Proto-Nostratic was already hypothesized to be an ancestor of Dravidian, andVáclav Blažek had proposed that Elamite was related to Afroasiatic, so Starostin performed alexicostatistical comparison using theSwadesh list between Elamite, Proto-Afroasiatic, Proto-Nostratic (a version of Nostratic not including Afroasiatic, similar toJoseph Greenberg 'sEurasiatic ), and Proto-Sino-Caucasian. He concluded that Elamite is related to Afroasiatic and Nostratic but not a member of either, with Sino-Caucasian being more distant from those three. [http://starling.rinet.ru/Texts/elam.pdf]References
Further reading
Elamo-Dravidian Hypothesis
*David McAlpin: "Toward Proto-Elamo-Dravidian", "Language", 1974
*David McAlpin: "Elamite and Dravidian, Further Evidence of Relationships", "Current Anthropology", 1975
*David McAlpin, "Proto-Elamo-Dravidian", Philadelphia 1981
*David McAlpin: "Linguistic prehistory: the Dravidian situation", in Madhav M. Deshpande and Peter Edwin Hook: "Aryan and Non-Aryan in India"On the language of the Harappan script
*Walter A. Fairservis Jr.: "The script of the Indus Valley Civilization", "Scientific American", 1985
*Asko Parpola: "Deciphering the Indus Script"
*Asko Parpola: "Interpreting the Indus Script", in A.H. Dani: "Indus Civilisation"
*S.R. Rao: "Dawn and Devolution of the Indus Civilisation", Aditya Prakashan, Delhi 1992External links
* [http://starling.rinet.ru/Texts/elam.pdf On The Genetic Affiliation Of The Elamite Language, by G.A.Starostin]
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