zompist wrote: ↑Wed Feb 14, 2024 3:18 pm
jal wrote: ↑Wed Feb 14, 2024 8:43 am
zompist wrote: ↑Mon Feb 12, 2024 4:08 amBut we do-- we can
see the Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, and other families taking over huge territories over recorded history, and what we know of those areas from say 5000 years ago is that there were more families there. Where Europe is now almost entirely IE, and the Middle East is almost entirely Semitic, there were multiple language families or isolates.
As far as I know, Indo-European had taken over its current areas in Europe and India quite some time
before recorded history (a pleonasm?).
No; as I said, it was
during the period of recorded history. Around 3000 BCE IE had not yet taken over Spain, Italy, Greece, Anatolia, Iran, or India.
I think jal meant "before recorded history began
in the relevant regions". Sure, recorded history began about 3000 BC in Egypt and Mesopotamia - but not in Europe or India.
zompist wrote:
And I really wonder how we actually know "there were more families here", as the only non-IE language we have in Europe is Basque.
You're forgetting Etruscan, Iberian, and Tartessian, which are well attested. Pelasgian and Eteocretan are known from place names (and Greek testimony). There are still questions about Pictish and Rhaetic.
There was a huge drive in the 1980s/90s to reduce the number of language families, possibly even down to one. A lot of this work was sloppy and there's been a backlash— note the recent discussion here casting doubt on Afroasiatic. So the "everything non-IE in Europe is Basque" idea has not held up well.
Indeed not! Neolithicization of Europe, was, as
Haak et al. have shown in 2010, by immigration of farmers from the Near East, which would have involved the spread of a small number of language families (maybe just one, but the Mediterranean and Danubian expansion routes may easily have involved different families), but some hunter-gatherer languages may have survived, perhaps in the mountain ranges, for quite a while.
It is controversial whether Iberian was related to Basque or not. There are some tantalizing similarities, but so far Basque hasn't really been helpful in understanding Iberian. If both descend from the language of the Neolithic farmers who came to Spain about 5000 BC or so, Roman-Era Basque and Iberian would be related about as closely as two modern IE languages of different branches (e.g. German and French): some resemblances would be noticeable, but one language wouldn't help much in understanding the other - which is
exactly what we can observe. Southwest Hispanic ("Tartessian") has been claimed by J. T. Koch to be a Celtic language, but most relevant scholars doubt that. It may be another Neolithic farmers' language related to Basque and Iberian, or a surviving hunter-gatherer language.
Of Etruscan, we don't know whether it is native to Italy or came later. There is a hypothesis that it came from northwestern Anatolia about 1200 BC, which has been supported by
Beekes and
Kloekhorst, and the myth that Rome was founded by descendants of refugees from Troy may reflect this.
Greek is indeed full of loanwords from unknown languages (may have been more than one), and AFAIK nobody has convincingly shown them to be cognates of words in some other known language.
zompist wrote:
And I have still doubts about whether there's a causal connection between agriculture and language diversity, especially a universal one.
It's the only mechanism we see in actual history for a language family taking over a large area. And there's a nice natural experiment: the Americas, where empires were limited in extent, and there's an enormous number of language families and isolates.
Languages of course can spread by elite takeover - Latin/Romance is a case in point, and Turkic appears to be yet another. Perhaps also Celtic and Italic, which IMHO date from the Urnfield expansion. (While the Bell Beaker people have been
shown to be of steppe origin and therefore probably spoke an IE language, that language, which may underlie the Old European Hydronymy, doesn't seem to be the ancestor of Italic and Celtic because it apparently merged PIE *o with *a, which happened neither in Italic nor in Celtic.)