- Kohistani language
Kohistani is a Dardic language spoken in Kohistan District,
North-West Frontier Province ,Pakistan . Dardic languages are a branch of the Indo-Iranian language group, which in turn is branch of the Indo-European language.Recording about the Torwals , a non Pathan tribe which with the Garhwis , occupied both lower and upper Swat prior to the invasion of Swat by the Yusufzai Pathans in the sixteenth century AD.
Kalam Kohistani
Kalam Kohistani (also called
Gawri ) is one of about thirty languages that are spoken in the mountain areas of northernPakistan . Kohistan is a Persian word that means ‘land of mountains’ and Kohistani can be translated as ‘mountain language’. As a matter of fact, there are several distinct languages in the area that are all popularly called Kohistani. The language under study in this paper is spoken in the upper parts of the valley of theSwat River , in theNorth-West Frontier Province ofPakistan . The name of the principal village of this area is Kalam, and hence the area is known as Kalam Kohistan. In the older linguistic literature, the language of Kalam Kohistan is referred to asBashkarik (Morgenstierne, 1940), or as Garwi orGawri (Grierson, 1919; Barth & Morgenstierne, 1958). These names are hardly, if at all, known to the speakers of the language themselves, who normally just call their language Kohistani. However, very recently a number of intellectuals belonging to a local cultural society have started to call their languageGawri , a name that has old historical roots.The same language is also spoken across the mountains to the West of Kalam Kohistan, in the upper reaches of the Panjkora river valley of
Upper Dir District . When added together, the two Kalam-Kohistani-speaking communities comprised over 200,000 people. According to its genealogical classification (Strand, 1973:302 and 2004), Kalam Kohistani belongs to the Kohistani subgroup of the north-western zone of Indo-Aryan languages, along with several closely related languages in its geographical vicinity: Torwali (in the Swat valley south of Kalam), Indus Kohistani, Bateri, Chilisso, and Gawro (the latter four east of Kalam in Indus Kohistan). Together with a range of other north-western Indo-Aryan mountain languages, these languages are sometimes collectively referred to as ‘Dardic’ languages [ [http://lotos.library.uu.nl/publish/articles/000102/bookpart.pdf Tone and song in Kalam Kohistani] ] .See also
*
Kalami language =References=
* [http://www.geocities.com/kcs_kalam/gawripaper.html The Gawri Language of Kalam and Dir Kohistan]
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