Hesperic: Difference between revisions
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===The demise of the Hesperic family=== | ===The demise of the Hesperic family=== | ||
The Hesperic family reached its climax in the Early Bronze Age, when Hesperic languages were spoken in an area encompassing most of western and central Europe - about 2.5 million square kilometres inhabited by perhaps 5 million people (at that time a great number) - making Hesperic one of the great language families of Earth. Then, it was gradually obliterated by [[Indo-European languages]] which moved into central Europe from the east. By the year 500 BC, the whole formerly Hesperic-speaking area was occupied by Indo-European languages, though some isolated pockets of Hesperic languages may have survived longer, but eventually disappeared as well. | The Hesperic family reached its climax in the Early Bronze Age, when Hesperic languages were spoken in an area encompassing most of western and central Europe - about 2.5 million square kilometres inhabited by perhaps 5 million people (at that time a great number) - making Hesperic one of the great language families of Earth. Then, it was gradually obliterated by [[Indo-European languages]] which moved into central Europe from the east. By the year 500 BC, the whole formerly Hesperic-speaking area was occupied by Indo-European languages, though some isolated pockets of Hesperic languages may have survived longer, but eventually disappeared as well. Only traces of the Hesperic languages remained, such as loanwords in the Indo-European languages in central and western Europe, and a number of geographical names, especially [[Old European hydronymy|river names]]. | ||
==The Hesperic languages== | ==The Hesperic languages== |
Revision as of 13:36, 18 April 2011
Hesperic | |
Spoken in: | Europe |
Timeline/Universe: | League of Lost Languages |
Total speakers: | |
Genealogical classification: | Hesperic
|
Basic word order: | varies |
Morphological type: | varies |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | varies |
Created by: | |
Jörg Rhiemeier | 2000- |
Hesperic is a family of diachronic conlangs by Jörg Rhiemeier spoken in the world of the League of Lost Languages.
The idea behind Hesperic
The idea behind the Hesperic family is that the spread of agriculture in Neolithic central Europe was connected with the spread of a language family related to Indo-European. Most archaeologists assume that the spread of agriculture in Central Europe was demic, i. e. connected with substantial migrations of farming people into areas previously occupied by hunter-gatherer populations which were absorbed into the new society. This would also mean that new languages arrived in the area. The Proto-Hesperic language would have been the language of the Linear Pottery culture.
A Black Sea Flood?
A controversial matter among geologists and archaeologists is the 'Black Sea Flood', which according to Walter Pitman and William Ryan happened about 8,000 years ago when the rising ocean reached the level of the Bosporus strait and the Black Sea, formerly a freshwater lake, became connected to the Mediterranean Sea. If this flood happened, Proto-Europic, the common ancestor of Indo-European, Hesperic and Danubian, could have been spoken in some of the area inundated in this event.
The Starčevo culture
The Starčevo culture of the Balkan peninsula may have been the people who spoke Proto-Europic about 8,000 years ago. This was one of the first Neolithic cultures of Europe; from there, the Neolithic cultural package spread northwest into Central Europe and northeast into the Pontic steppe.
The Linear Pottery, Funnel Beaker and Bell Beaker cultures
The first Neolithic farmers of central Europe, the Linear Pottery culture, would have been the first speakers of Hesperic languages. They occupied an area which stretched from eastern France to western Ukraine. The Funnel Beaker and Bell Beaker cultures are Late Neolithic cultures which probably emerged from the Linear Pottery culture, spreading into southern Scandinavia and western Europe, respectively. The Bell Beaker culture would spread Hesperic languages to the western France, the British Isles, the Iberian peninsula and Italy. It is likely that the displacement of the Mesolithic languages was not complete but some of those languages survived. (At any rate, Basque and probably also Etruscan are not Hesperic.)
The demise of the Hesperic family
The Hesperic family reached its climax in the Early Bronze Age, when Hesperic languages were spoken in an area encompassing most of western and central Europe - about 2.5 million square kilometres inhabited by perhaps 5 million people (at that time a great number) - making Hesperic one of the great language families of Earth. Then, it was gradually obliterated by Indo-European languages which moved into central Europe from the east. By the year 500 BC, the whole formerly Hesperic-speaking area was occupied by Indo-European languages, though some isolated pockets of Hesperic languages may have survived longer, but eventually disappeared as well. Only traces of the Hesperic languages remained, such as loanwords in the Indo-European languages in central and western Europe, and a number of geographical names, especially river names.
The Hesperic languages
So far, the author is concentrating on one member of the Hesperic family, Old Albic. He has plans for about 20 further Hesperic languages. A brief vignette of one of them is Attidian, the language of a single (bilingual) inscription.