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The Hebrew Origin Of The Indo-Aryan Languages
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published: 28 Mar 2013
author: midnighthood
The Hebrew Origin Of The Indo-Aryan Languages
The Hebrew Origin Of The Indo-Aryan Languages
- published: 28 Mar 2013
- views: 153
- author: midnighthood
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The Indo-European Language Family
Indo-European peoples and languages. Indo-European languages is the most widely spoken fam...
published: 27 Jan 2012
author: Prasanna Patange
The Indo-European Language Family
The Indo-European Language Family
Indo-European peoples and languages. Indo-European languages is the most widely spoken family of languages in the world. Its members include the Indo-Aryan &...- published: 27 Jan 2012
- views: 6704
- author: Prasanna Patange
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How to Pronounce Indo-Aryan
Learn how to say Indo-Aryan correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutori...
published: 17 Mar 2014
How to Pronounce Indo-Aryan
How to Pronounce Indo-Aryan
Learn how to say Indo-Aryan correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of Indo-Aryan (oxford dictionary): adjective another word for Indic (sense 1) noun another name for Indic (sense 2) a native speaker of an Indo-Aryan language http://www.emmasaying.com/ Take a look at my comparison tutorials here: https://www.youtube.com/user/EmmaSaying/videos?view=1 Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/user/EmmaSaying- published: 17 Mar 2014
- views: 5
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Indo European, Celtic & Indo Iranian/Aryan languages
Discussing more indo-euopean languages such as celtic languages, northen indian languages ...
published: 21 Jun 2011
author: paholainen100
Indo European, Celtic & Indo Iranian/Aryan languages
Indo European, Celtic & Indo Iranian/Aryan languages
Discussing more indo-euopean languages such as celtic languages, northen indian languages and farsi/persian.- published: 21 Jun 2011
- views: 1975
- author: paholainen100
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How to Pronounce Indo-Aryans
Learn how to say Indo-Aryans correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutor...
published: 17 Mar 2014
How to Pronounce Indo-Aryans
How to Pronounce Indo-Aryans
Learn how to say Indo-Aryans correctly with EmmaSaying's "how do you pronounce" free tutorials. Definition of Indo-Aryan (oxford dictionary): adjective another word for Indic (sense 1) noun another name for Indic (sense 2) a native speaker of an Indo-Aryan language http://www.emmasaying.com/ Take a look at my comparison tutorials here: https://www.youtube.com/user/EmmaSaying/videos?view=1 Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/user/EmmaSaying- published: 17 Mar 2014
- views: 7
5:35
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Latin and Its Indo-European Language Family
Latin is dead? No way! Latin is just the ancient form of Spanish, French, and Italian. And...
published: 13 Mar 2011
author: latintutorial
Latin and Its Indo-European Language Family
Latin and Its Indo-European Language Family
Latin is dead? No way! Latin is just the ancient form of Spanish, French, and Italian. And what's more, Latin wasn't what it once was, since it is also deriv...- published: 13 Mar 2011
- views: 32019
- author: latintutorial
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THE ARYANS Ⓒ
The term Aryan originates with the Indo-Iranian self-designation arya, attested in the anc...
published: 03 Sep 2009
author: CroPETROforever
THE ARYANS Ⓒ
THE ARYANS Ⓒ
The term Aryan originates with the Indo-Iranian self-designation arya, attested in the ancient texts of Hinduism and Zoroastrianism, the Rigveda and the Aves...- published: 03 Sep 2009
- views: 39669
- author: CroPETROforever
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Indo-European origins: "Aryan Invasion", "Out of India" or "Paleolithic Continuity" ?
The Paleolithic Continuity Theory (or PCT, Italian La teoria della continuità), since 2010...
published: 23 Dec 2013
Indo-European origins: "Aryan Invasion", "Out of India" or "Paleolithic Continuity" ?
Indo-European origins: "Aryan Invasion", "Out of India" or "Paleolithic Continuity" ?
The Paleolithic Continuity Theory (or PCT, Italian La teoria della continuità), since 2010 relabelled as the Paleolithic Continuity Paradigm (or PCP), is a hypothesis suggesting that the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) can be traced back to the Upper Paleolithic, several millennia earlier than the Chalcolithic or at the most Neolithic estimates in other scenarios of Proto-Indo-European origins. Its main proponent are Marcel Otte, Alexander Häusler, Mario Alinei. Alinei advanced the theory in his Origini delle Lingue d'Europa (Origins of the Languages of Europe), published in two volumes in 1996 and 2000. The PCT posits that the advent of Indo-European languages should be linked to the arrival of Homo sapiens in Europe and Asia from Africa in the Upper Paleolithic. Employing "lexical periodization", Alinei arrives at a timeline deeper than even that of Colin Renfrew's Anatolian hypothesis. Since 2004, an informal workgroup of scholars who support the Paleolithic Continuity Theory has been held online. Apart from Alinei himself, its leading members (referred to as "Scientific Committee" in the website) are linguists Xaviero Ballester (University of Valencia) and Francesco Benozzo (University of Bologna). Also included are prehistorian Marcel Otte (Université de Liège) and anthropologist Henry Harpending (University of Utah). It is not listed by Mallory among the proposals for the origins of the Indo-European languages that are widely discussed and considered credible within academia. GENERAL LINES -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The framework of PCT is laid out by Alinei in four main assumptions: * Continuity is the basic pattern of European prehistory and the basic working hypothesis on the origins of IE languages. * Stability and antiquity are general features of languages. * The lexicon of natural languages, due to its antiquity, may be "periodized" along the entire course of human evolution. * Archaeological frontiers coincide with linguistic frontiers. The continuity theory draws on a Continuity Model (CM), positing the presence of IE and non-IE peoples and languages in Europe from Paleolithic times and allowing for minor invasions and infiltrations of local scope, mainly during the last three millennia. Arguing that continuity is "the archeologist's easiest pursuit," Alinei deems this "the easiest working hypothesis," putting the burden of proof on competing hypotheses as long as none provide irrefutable counter-evidence. Alinei also claims linguistic coherence, rigor and productivity in the pursuit of this approach. HISTORICAL RECONSTRUCTION -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Paleolithic Continuity hypothesis reverses the Kurgan hypothesis and largely identifies the Indo-Europeans with Gimbutas's "Old Europe." PCT reassigns the Kurgan culture (traditionally considered early Indo-European) to a people of predominantly mixed Uralic and Turkic stock. This hypothesis is supported by the tentative linguistic identification of Etruscans as a Uralic, proto-Hungarian people that had already undergone strong proto-Turkic influence in the third millennium BC, when Pontic invasions would have brought this people to the Carpathian Basin. A subsequent migration of Urnfield culture signature around 1250 BC caused this ethnic group to expand south in a general movement of people, attested by the upheaval of the Sea Peoples and the overthrow of an earlier Italic substrate at the onset of the "Etruscan" Villanovan culture. KURGAN HYPOTHESIS -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Those scholars who follow Gimbutas identify a "Kurgan culture" as reflecting an early Indo-European ethnicity which existed in the steppes and southeastern Europe from the 5th to 3rd millennia BC. Marija Gimbutas' Kurgan hypothesis is opposed by Paleolithic Continuity Theory, which associates Pit Grave and Sredny Stog Kurgan cultures with Turkic peoples, and the Anatolian hypothesis, and is also opposed by the Black Sea deluge theory. (Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic_Continuity_Theory) (Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurgan#Kurgan_hypothesis) The PCP Workgroup: http://www.continuitas.org/workgroup.html The Settlement of the Indo-European, Turkic, and Finno-Ugric tribes in Eastern Europe: http://www.v-stetsyuk.name/en/Alterling/SettlEastEur.html Ethnicity of the Neolithic and Eneolithic cultures of Eastern Europe. The Seredniy Stiğ and Yamna (Pit) Cultures: http://www.v-stetsyuk.name/en/Alterling/Archaelog.html http://alterling2.narod.ru/English/Maps/EneolitEn.PNG _________________ See also: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botai_culture https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_worship https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Turkic_language https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urheimat#Indo-European_homelands https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urheimat#Turkic_homeland- published: 23 Dec 2013
- views: 3
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INDO-EUROPEAN ORIGIN Ⓒ [HD]
The Proto-Indo-Europeans were the speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), an u...
published: 24 Aug 2012
author: CroPETROforever
INDO-EUROPEAN ORIGIN Ⓒ [HD]
INDO-EUROPEAN ORIGIN Ⓒ [HD]
The Proto-Indo-Europeans were the speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), an unattested but now reconstructed prehistoric language. Knowledge of ...- published: 24 Aug 2012
- views: 15057
- author: CroPETROforever
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Researcher Suzanne Olsson Interview about The Indo-Aryan Israelites of Kashmir
Researcher Suzanne Olsson Interview about The Indo-Aryan Israelites of Kashmir. The life, ...
published: 03 Aug 2011
author: WhiteMinar
Researcher Suzanne Olsson Interview about The Indo-Aryan Israelites of Kashmir
Researcher Suzanne Olsson Interview about The Indo-Aryan Israelites of Kashmir
Researcher Suzanne Olsson Interview about The Indo-Aryan Israelites of Kashmir. The life, Death and Tomb of Jesus are proofs that Jesus was only a Humble Pro...- published: 03 Aug 2011
- views: 2070
- author: WhiteMinar
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The non-Aryan origin of "Iranian" peoples - Genetic evidence R1a (BBC Report)
Portsmouth University
An Iranian scientist has done a study on the historical Aryan emigr...
published: 19 Dec 2013
The non-Aryan origin of "Iranian" peoples - Genetic evidence R1a (BBC Report)
The non-Aryan origin of "Iranian" peoples - Genetic evidence R1a (BBC Report)
Portsmouth University An Iranian scientist has done a study on the historical Aryan emigration to Iran. The theory says that about 4000 years ago the Aryan tribes emigrated to Iran from central Asia and the Caucasus. By this theory the Iranian peoples should genetically be ralated to the Aryan peoples. But a research on over 2600 Iranian DNA-sequences (y-dna & mt-dna) shows something else. Dr. Bonab Ashrafian says: "There are many different languages, religions and tribes inside Iran. We have done studies on 26 different Iranian groups. Although we speak an Indo-European language we are not genetically very close to Indo-European peoples. The Aryan genetic markers that exist in central Asia and the Caucasus are found very few in the Iranian Plateau. This shows that if there is any Aryan genetic markers in the Iranian DNA, it probably came from the Aryan tribes that entered Iran." Dr. Ashrafian has also studied on the Ancient Iranian bones. The study on the ancient bones found in Jiroft and Masjid Kabood shows they are the ancestors of todays Iranians. If these studies show Iranians are not Aryans, then where did they come from? Has the Arabian invasion of Iran (1400 years ago) effected the Iranian DNA? Dr. Ashrafian continues as follows: "Our research shows that all Iranian tribes are genetically related to the people who lived in south-west of Iran 10.000 years ago. The Arabian invasion has effected south-west of Iran and Bushehr but in very very few amounts." This research shows also that all Iranian tribes are genetically relatives and related to each other, though they have different languages but we can't divide them into several races. ________________________________ Based on the data of the DNA genealogy, until the middle of the 1st millennium BC, two linguistic fields - the Türkic (Proto-Türkic) and Indo-European, the languages of the haplogroups R1b and R1a respectively, dominated in turns the whole Eurasia reaching the Atlantic Ocean. The two major Eurasian haplogroups, R1a and R1b, diverged (or rather, formed and diverged) 20-16 thousand years ago, evolved linguistically from the common Nostratic languages, respectively into the Pra-Aryan (later called "Proto-Indo-European") and the Proto-Türkic, and then into Türkic. And here the nature has played a cunning joke with the linguists. It seems that the two Caucasoid brotherly lines, R1a1 and R1b1, that came about 50-40 thousand years ago to the Eastern European Plain as a single branch of R (or, rather, as its upstream haplogroup P, or even NOP), and then went to the Southern Siberia at least 35,000 years ago and dispersed over time and over territories. One of them was a flexive Aryan language (language of the R1a1 tribe), which later became to be called Proto-Indo-European, and the other was an agglutinative Proto-Türkic language (language of the R1b1 tribe). Both tribes gestated in the Southern Siberia. The modern Uigurs, Kazakhs, Bashkirs, and some other peoples of Siberia, Central Asia, and the Urals, descend in part from the ancient R1b1 branch, and by now retain the same haplogroup for 16,000 years. These are the peoples of Siberia, Volga, Kama, Central Asia, the ancient Pit Grave or "Kurgan" archaeological cultures, and some Caucasian peoples that partially retained the haplogroup R1b1, which by the time of 6,000 years ago has become a haplogroup R1b1b2 (mutation M269 and L23 or L49), and the peoples of the Turkey and Middle East, whose population retained in their DNA many of the same haplogroup R1b1, see the table below (Abu-Amero et al, 2009). http://sphotos-g.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-frc1/580327_775096889170802_793067070_n.jpg Approximately 3,600 years ago that haplogroup is noted in the British Isles. This is the movement of Beaker culture - from the Iberian Peninsula in the British Isles and on the European continent. On the overall, the peopling of the Europe by the carriers of the haplogroup R1b1b2, who were speaking the ancient Türkic languages, occurred between 4,500 and 3,600 years ago. They are the ancestors of the Proto-Celtics and Proto-Italics, and, probably, Proto-Picts and other "Proto"-R1b1b2 peoples in Europe. Source: Journal of Russian Academy of DNA Genealogy http://s155239215.onlinehome.us/turkic/60_Genetics/Klyosov2010DNK-GenealogyEn.htm ________________________________ Anatole Klyosov's genetic research has shown that the R1a basehaplotype 13 25 15 10 12 12 10 13 11 31 -- 15 14 20 12 16 11 23 (with a common ancestor of 3400+/-505 ybp, the likely times for the Aryans coming to India) is reasonably close to the Bashkir Turkic and Kyrgyz Turkic base haplotypes (both R1a-L342.2). A common ancestor of all the reported Indian (Tamil) haplotypes and Bashkir and Kyrgyz haplotypes lived around 5000 ybp, which fits the timespan to R1a-L342.2 common ancestor. Source: GENEALOGY-DNA-L Archives http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GENEALOGY-DNA/2012-12/1356088114 _______________________________- published: 19 Dec 2013
- views: 18
Youtube results:
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History of Sanskrit | Mocomi Kids
http://www.mocomi.com presents: The History of Sanskrit Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Arya...
published: 30 Oct 2012
author: Mocomi Ani
History of Sanskrit | Mocomi Kids
History of Sanskrit | Mocomi Kids
http://www.mocomi.com presents: The History of Sanskrit Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Aryan language and holds an important place alongside other founding la...- published: 30 Oct 2012
- views: 24211
- author: Mocomi Ani
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Persian, Bactrian (Indo-Aryan) summarized history till the Samanids
Persian, Bactrian (Indo-Aryan) summarized history till the Samanids. There were no empires...
published: 17 Nov 2013
Persian, Bactrian (Indo-Aryan) summarized history till the Samanids
Persian, Bactrian (Indo-Aryan) summarized history till the Samanids
Persian, Bactrian (Indo-Aryan) summarized history till the Samanids. There were no empires such as the Turks and Arabs. Indo-Aryans have a rich history of thousands of years. This video shows you a summarized history from the beginning of the Aryan migrations till the Samanid empire.- published: 17 Nov 2013
- views: 13
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Ancient Kirtan - Shakhi Loke Bale Kalo
Bengali Language Status Spoken in: Bangladesh, India and some other countries Region: East...
published: 15 Dec 2009
author: basuuddin
Ancient Kirtan - Shakhi Loke Bale Kalo
Ancient Kirtan - Shakhi Loke Bale Kalo
Bengali Language Status Spoken in: Bangladesh, India and some other countries Region: Eastern South Asia Total speakers: 230 million (2006) Ranking: 4-7 (nat...- published: 15 Dec 2009
- views: 26675
- author: basuuddin