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Black Athena: The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization: The Linguistic Evidence, Vol. 3 PDF

848 Pages·2006·3.62 MB·English
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B A LACK THENA Previous volumes by Martin Bernal: Black Athena The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization Volume I The Fabrication of Ancient Greece 1785–1985 Black Athena The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization Volume II The Archaeological and Documentary Evidence Black Athena The Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization Volume III The Linguistic Evidence Martin Bernal Rutgers University Press New Brunswick, New Jersey First published in the United States of America by Rutgers University Press, 2006 First published in Great Britain by Free Association Books, 2006 Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Bernal, Martin Black Athena Includes bibliographies and indexes. Contents: v. 1. The fabrication of ancient Greece, 1785–1985 — v. 2. The archaeological and documentary evidence — v. 3. The linguistic evidence. 1. Greece—Civilization—Egyptian influences. 2. Greece—Civilization—Phoenician influences. 3. Greece—Civilization—To 146 B.C. I. Afroasiatic roots of classical civilization. II. Title. DF78.B398 1987 949.5 87–16408 ISBN-10: 0-8135-3655-1 ISBN-13: 978-0-8135-3655-2 Copyright © 2006 by Martin Bernal All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. Please contact Rutgers University Press, 100 Joyce Kilmer Avenue, Piscataway, NJ 08854 8099. The only exception to this prohibition is “fair use” as defined by U.S. copyright law. Manufactured in the United States of America To my mentor Edwin Pulleyblank who taught me to look thoroughly and think broadly and to my family for their love and support over the 30 years this project has taken. C ONTENTS Preface and Acknowledgments xv Transcriptions and Phonetics xvii Maps and Charts xxi INTRODUCTION 1 The previous volumes and their reception 1 “Classics has been misunderstood” 4 Anathema from a G.O.M. 6 Outline of Volume 3 10 Chapter 1 HISTORICAL LINGUISTICSANDTHE IMAGE OF ANCIENT GREEK 28 Nineteenth-century romantic linguistics: The tree and the family 28 Saussure and the twentieth-century epigones of nineteenth-century Indo-European studies 36 Ramification or interlacing 37 viii CONTENTS Chapter 2 THE “NOSTRATIC”AND “EUROASIATIC” HYPER- AND SUPER-FAMILIES 39 Nostratic and Eurasiatic 40 Archaeological evidence for the origin of Nostratic and Euroasiatic 48 Gordon Childe and Colin Renfrew 53 Language and genetics 56 Conclusion 57 Chapter 3 AFROASIATIC, EGYPTIANAND SEMITIC 58 The origins of African languages and the development of agriculture in Africa 58 The origins and spread of Afroasiatic 60 Conclusion 88 Chapter 4 THE ORIGINSOF INDO-HITTITEAND INDO- EUROPEANAND THEIR CONTACTSWITH OTHER LANGUAGES 90 The origins and diffusion of Indo-Hittite and Indo-European 90 Loans from other languages into PIH 98 Development of an Indo-European gender system based on sex 108 Conclusion 115 Chapter 5 THE GREEK LANGUAGEINTHE MEDITERRANEAN CONTEXT: PART1, PHONOLOGY 116 Greek: Result of a linguistic shift or of language contact? 116 The elements of the Greek linguistic amalgam 121 CONTENTS ix The phonologies of Indo-Hittite and Indo-European 122 Phonological developments from PIE to Greek 126 Conclusion 154 Chapter 6 THE GREEK LANGUAGEINTHE MEDITERRANEAN CONTEXT: PART2, MORPHOLOGICAL AND SYNTACTICAL DEVELOPMENTS 155 Morphology 155 Syntax 157 Summary on syntactical changes 163 Conclusion 164 Chapter 7 THE GREEK LANGUAGEINTHE MEDITERRANEAN CONTEXT: PART 3, LEXICON 165 Introduction 165 The study of lexical borrowings 165 Ancient Greeks’ sense of lexical borrowing 175 Loans from Afroasiatic into Greek and into Albanian or Armenian 178 Conclusion 185 Chapter 8 PHONETIC DEVELOPMENTSIN EGYPTIAN, WEST SEMITICAND GREEKOVERTHE LAST THREE MILLENNIA BCE,AS REFLECTEDIN LEXICAL BORROWINGS 187 Introduction 187 Semitic 189 Egyptian 192 Conclusion 207 x CONTENTS Chapter 9 GREEK BORROWINGSFROM EGYPTIAN PREFIXES, INCLUDINGTHE DEFINITE ARTICLES 209 Introduction 209 Greek Borrowings from Egyptian definite article prefixes 210 The Egyptian word pr“house, temple, palace” 231 R- “entry” or local prefix 240 (R)dˆt, “causal prefix” 241 Greek borrowings from Egyptian verbs beginning with dˆ(t)- 242 Conclusion 244 Chapter 10 MAJOR EGYPTIAN TERMSIN GREEK: PART 1 245 1. Ntr/KÅ 245 2. Œn∆ 258 3. M(w)dw, mu'qo" 262 4. SbÅ 262 5. Dr, R-dr, drw 267 6. ÷Mwr,MÅŒt, Moi'ra, Meivromai and MmÅŒt,Ma 269 7. Ôpr 271 Conclusion 275 Chapter 11 MAJOR EGYPTIAN TERMSIN GREEK: PART 2 276 nfr (w)/ms 276 nfr/ms 278 Conclusion 298

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Could Greek philosophy be rooted in Egyptian thought? Is it possible that the Pythagorean theory was conceived on the shores of the Nile and the Euphrates rather than in ancient Greece? Could it be that much of Western civilization was formed on the "Dark Continent"? For almost two centuries, Wester
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