Published November 21, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

DID INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES STEM FROM A TRANS-EURASIAN ORIGINAL LANGUAGE? AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH

Creators

  • 1. University of Rouen Normandy, Department of Slavic languages (Alumnus), 1 Rue Thomas Becket, 76130 Mont-Saint-Aignan, France

Description

This interdisciplinary study allowed me to establish, on the basis of linguistic, genetic, archaeological, histor-ical and religious data, that linguistic concordances between Gaulish and Slavic were linked with Neolithic migrations from North-Western India and Pakistan to Iran, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, the Caucasus, the North of the Black Sea, Danubic and Balkan Europe, Gaul and Iberia, where Neolithic farmers contributed to the formation of the megalithic civilisation which developed in Gaul from 5.000 BC and brought an archaic lan-guage stemming from a Trans-Eurasian original language. This explains the linguistic concordances I estab-lished between Gaulish and Dravidian languages – 250 common words from the 500 words I studied (and 160 with Burushaski), as well as with Altaic, Uralic, Kartvelian, Anatolian and Middle-Eastern languages. This also explains similarities I have found in the organisation of the Society and religion, which lead certain re-searchers to suggest, on the basis of the spread of the very ancient haplogroup H2 P-96 from India to Western Europe, that first Europeans and proto-Dravidians had a very ancient common origin, as the macrohaplog-roup F and the haplogroup H could appear in India.

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