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The Proto-Indoaryans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

It is now generally agreed by most authorities on the subject that the Aryan linguistic vestiges in the Near East are to be connected specifically with Indo-Aryan, and not with Iranian, and also that they do not represent a third, independent Aryan group, and are not to be ascribed to the hypothetically reconstructed Proto-Aryan. This conclusion is incorporated in the title of M. Mayrhofer's bibliography of the subject, Die Indo-Arier im alten Vorderasien (Wiesbaden, 1966), and it can now be taken as the commonly accepted view. It is based on the fact that where there is divergence between Iranian and Indo-Aryan, and where such elements appear in the Near Eastern record, the latter always agrees with Indo-Aryan. Such items are aika “one” and šuriyaš “sun”, and the colour names parita-nnu and pinkara-nnu which correspond to Sanskrit palita- “grey” and piṅgala- “reddish”. The evidence of vocabulary is supported by that of the four names of gods appearing in the Hittite-Mitanni treaty, where the Vedic gods Mitra and Varuṇa, Indra, and the Nāsatyas can be clearly recognized. This combined evidence is sufficient to establish the conclusions of Mayrhofer and others beyond reasonable doubt, and the arguments of A. Kammenhuber, who later attempted to resuscitate the theory that the Aryans of the Near East were Proto-Aryans, cannot be said to have been successful.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1973

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References

1 Kammenhuber, A., Die Arier im vorderen Orient, Heidelberg, 1968Google Scholar.

2 Thieme, P., “The ‘Aryan’ gods of the Mitanni treaties”, JAOS, 60, 1960, 301317Google Scholar.

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4 According to Renou, L. (Études védiques et pāṇinéennes, 9, Paris, 1961, 91)Google Scholarvasu- in the Ṛgveda is used as a neuter (sg. and pl.) in the sense of “wealth, riches” and in the masculine as the name of a class of gods, but not as an adjective meaning “good”.

5 Further examples in my The Sanskrit language, London, 1955, 33Google Scholar.

6 In view of this admitted ambiguity of the term Proto-Indoaryan an alternative would be to speak of Western Indo-Aryan but unless much more material turns up in the Near East there is no urgency to settle the terminology.

7 Diakonov, I. M., Istoriya Midii, Moscow, 1956, 124125Google Scholar.

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9 Darmesteter, J., Ormazd et Ahriman, Paris, 1877, 47Google Scholar; cf. also P. von Bradke, op. cit., 85.

10 Schlerath, B., “Altindisch asu-, Awestisch ahu- und ähnlich klingende Wörter”, in Pratidānam (Kuiper Festschrift), ed. Heesterman, J. C. et al. , The Hague, Paris, 1968, 142153Google Scholar. For the other (in my opinion untenable) view, cf. Güntert, H., Der arische Weltkönig und Heiland, Halle, 1923, 102Google Scholar, and Duchesne-Guillemin, J., TPS, 1946, 81Google Scholar.

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18 Nyberg, Die Religionen, 339, ascribed Indra, etc., to the Medes.

19 cf. Vasmer, M., Russisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, Heidelberg, 19501958, I, 98Google Scholar.

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21 H. S. Nyberg, op. cit., 340.

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27 Meillet, A., Trois conferences sur les Gāthās de l'Avesta, Paris. 1925Google Scholar; W. B, Henning, Zoroaster.

28 e.g. by Meyer, Edward, KZ, XLII, 1909, 12Google Scholar. Cf. also J. Duchesne-Guillemin, La religion, 136.

29 For arguments for an earlier date see F. B. J. Kuiper, IIJ, v, 1961, 43, and the authorities quoted there.

30 The interpretation of bawray- in Yt. 5.39 as “Babylon”, accepted by Bartholomae, should be abandoned in favour of Nyberg's opinion that the reference is to a “beaver-land”, the beaver being an animal sacred to Arədvī Sūrā Anāhitā. There is no conceivable reason why this legend, one of the most ancient of the Iranian legends, should be connected with Babylon, and it is unlikely that the Iranians had ever heard of Babylon at the time when it arose. A difficulty would occur if the Raγa mentioned in the Avesta were the Median Ragā mentioned by Darius, but Gershevitch has cogently argued (JNES, XXIII, 1964, 36–7) that Zarathuštrian Raγa of the Avesta is to be located in the East, and that Median Ragā was named after it. The process of transferring names from east to west is common, and illustrated by such examples as Harā Bərəz applied to the Alburz and Čaēčasta to lake Urmiya.

31 Possibly to be connected with Skt. Mūjavant- (Eilers). This would be a frontier region and it is interesting that Dāštāγni, who belonged to this country, appears to have an Indo-Aryan name. The word agni- is foreign to Iranian, and the first member, dāšta-, can be interpreted as a past participle passive from the Vedic root dāś- “to worship”.

32 cf. Christensen, A., Les Kayanides, Copenhagen, 1932, 2223Google Scholar.

33 op. cit., 34.

34 cf. Encyclopaedia of Islam 1, IV, 1032.

35 KZ, LV, 1927, 100.