There’s been many attempts at connecting things like nuragic and Paleo Balkan to the tyrsenian language family (Etruscan,Lemnian,Rhaetian…etc) which would fill the geographical gap between it’s members
While Iberian and tartessian are seemingly closer to basque and aquinatnian in the vasconic language family
If true they would be the largest known Paleo European language families and pretty much dominated southern Europe
Which would likely mean they’re directly descended fom the languages spoken by the anatolian farmers who migrated to Europe before the spread of pie
[deleted] on
[deleted]
saschaleib on
Why is Sami here shown separate from the other Uralic languages?
BasarMilesTeg on
Paleo-irish in Ireland? Gaelic language are from area east France / south germany.
finalina78 on
Proto-germanic was Indo-European..
Edit: I like the map though!
grog23 on
I thought the Proto-Germanic substrate hypothesis has largely been abandoned by modern linguists
Different-Produce870 on
Are the Greek and Hati languages listed here meant to represent the pre-indo european languages in those areas?
crxyzen4114 on
Iberian is probably related with Basque and Aquitanian too. Compare the words.
Eris13x on
Last I read, the language on the island of Lemnos wasn’t *quite* that old? Admittedly we don’t know much about it during the Iron age, never mind before that, so who knows.
zenheadset on
WE love Basque
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There’s been many attempts at connecting things like nuragic and Paleo Balkan to the tyrsenian language family (Etruscan,Lemnian,Rhaetian…etc) which would fill the geographical gap between it’s members
While Iberian and tartessian are seemingly closer to basque and aquinatnian in the vasconic language family
If true they would be the largest known Paleo European language families and pretty much dominated southern Europe
Which would likely mean they’re directly descended fom the languages spoken by the anatolian farmers who migrated to Europe before the spread of pie
[deleted]
Why is Sami here shown separate from the other Uralic languages?
Paleo-irish in Ireland? Gaelic language are from area east France / south germany.
Proto-germanic was Indo-European..
Edit: I like the map though!
I thought the Proto-Germanic substrate hypothesis has largely been abandoned by modern linguists
Are the Greek and Hati languages listed here meant to represent the pre-indo european languages in those areas?
Iberian is probably related with Basque and Aquitanian too. Compare the words.
Last I read, the language on the island of Lemnos wasn’t *quite* that old? Admittedly we don’t know much about it during the Iron age, never mind before that, so who knows.
WE love Basque