[MR] Farmers Spread Celtic Tongue
Terelyn Marks
jilamay at hotmail.com
Wed Jul 2 14:04:14 PDT 2003
It's an interesting article --
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A new method of analyzing language supports the idea
that farmers carried Celtic into the British Isles, Ireland and France in a
single wave 6,000 years ago, according to researchers.
This runs counter to some linguistic theories that Celtic, one of the
Indo-European languages, arrived in two separate events.
Geneticist Peter Forster of the University of Cambridge in Britain used
techniques usually reserved for DNA analysis for his study, published this
week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"It is a major debate among geneticists whether Europeans are descended
mainly from Indo-European speakers who came in possibly with farming, or
whether most of our genes have been here much longer -- with the early
hunter-gatherers who arrived 30,000 to 40,000 years ago," Forster said
Monday.
Experts have dated the migration of peoples and even the origin of humans
using a technique called mutational analysis. The idea is there is a
"genetic clock" -- that random mutations or changes in DNA average out to a
steady rate.
This technique has, for instance, dated human origins to a theoretical
single African female who would have lived 180,000 years ago.
Forster applied this technique to language -- specifically to the Celtic
languages, spoken widely before the Roman empire imposed Latin 2,000 years
ago. Celtic languages survive in parts of Ireland, Britain, France and
Wales.
"We look at it like we do at DNA -- as a string of information," Forster
said. "Like, Americans say 'fall' instead of 'autumn'. I am not interested
in why it came about. It is like a mutation in DNA."
Forster and colleague Alfred Toth of the Junge Akademie in Berlin looked at
several rare and "dead" languages, including Gaulish, once spoken in France.
It is clear how the Romans imposed their Latin language on Europe. But how
did the Celts do it millennia earlier?
"To impose a language on the majority, one would have to have some kind of
elite knowledge," Forster said. One leading theory is that this elite
knowledge was agriculture, while an opposing theory suggests it was the
ability to tame and ride horses.
Other evidence suggests farming arrived in Britain around 4000 B.C. so
Forster believes his findings support the farming theory.
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