THE AUTOCHTHONOUS ARYAN THEORY §11. The ''Aryan Invasion'' and the "Out of India" theories The preceding sketch presupposes that groups speaking Old IA (Vedic) were an intrusive element in the North-West of the subcontinent. Since language is of crucial importance for this argument, it needs to be addressed here in great detail. However, the revisionists and autochthonists have almost completely overlooked this type of evidence, or they have outrightly denied it. Recently, some have begun to pay attention (see discussion by Bryant 1999, cf. also Elst 1999), however, still in an unprofessional manner (Talageri 1993, 2000).[N.70] Unfortunately, this was in large measure even true for the apparently lone Indo-European scholar in India, S.S. Misra[N.71] (1992). Any immigration scenario is strenuously denied by two groups of Indian scholars: first, the revisionists, who genuinely try to reconsider the writing of ancient Indian history which they believe was very much the creation of 19th century British political ideology, and second, the autochthonists who try to show (or who simply believe in) an indigenous origin of the 'Aryans' in the subcontinent. Of course, one can find various combinations of these two strands in any person's writing (see Bryant 1999).[N.72] The theories of advocates of an autochthonous origin of the Indo-Aryans (always called "Aryans") range from (1) a mild version, insisting on the origin of the Rgvedic Indo-Aryans in the Panjab, the ''autochthonous'' or indigenous school (Aurobindo, Waradpande 1993, S. Kak 1994a, etc., see Elst 1999: 119, Talageri 2000: 406 sqq, Lal 1997: 281 sqq.), (2) a more stringent but increasingly popular ''Out of India'' school (S.S. Misra, Talageri, Frawley, Elst, etc.) which views the Iranians and even all Indo-Europeans emigrating from the Panjab, to the (3) most intense version, which has all languages of the world derived from Sanskrit: the ''devabhASA school'', which is mostly -but not solely- restricted to traditional Pandits.[N.73] (For summaries see Hock 1999, Talageri 2000.) In these views,[N.74] though often for quite different reasons, any immigration or trickling in (nearly always called ''invasion'') of the (Indo-)Aryans into the subcontinent is suspect or simply denied: The Arya of the RV are supposed to be just another tribe or group of tribes that always have been resident in India, next to the Dravidians, Mundas, etc. The theory of an immigration of IA speaking Arya (''Aryan invasion'') is seen as a means of British policy to justify their own intrusion into India and their subsequent colonial rule: in both cases, a 'white race' was seen as subduing the local darker-colored population. The irony of this line of reasoning is that the British themselves have been subject to numerous IE immigrations and invasions (Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, Danish, and Normans -- and now Caribbeans and South Asians). Even more ironically, there is a strong non-Indo-European substratum in English which has left such common words as sheep.[N.75] The "Proto-Anglo-Saxons", and in fact all of Europe, have been subject to the same kind of Indo-European "invasions". Europeans and Indians alike could thus complain, for example with M. Gimbutas (1991, 1994), about the domination of a "peaceful matriarchal agricultural community" by half-barbaric, patriarchal, semi-nomadic and warlike invaders. However, this is not an issue in Europe (e.g., my own, predominantly Basque genes do not protest loudly against having been subjected to an IE language and culture several millennia ago), while religious and nationalistic attitudes in India have made such "invasions" the issue in recent years. European Indologists, and American or Japanese even less, do not have an axe to grind, here and now. Even less so, after the recent genetic discoveries that link all present humans to a fairly recent origin and all non-Africans to an even more recent emigration by some 10,000 people Out of Africa, 50,000 years ago: the problem of an "Aryan invasion" into India is as relevant or irrelevant to Indologists as a Bantu "invasion" of central, east and southern Africa, or an Austronesian immigration into the Pacific or a Na-Dene one into North America. § 11.1. Procedure Like all scientific theories, however, the theory of an immigration into South Asia by speakers of IA has to be constantly and thoroughly (re-)investigated, and it has to be established whether (all) aspects of it and/or the theory itself are correct or not. But this must be done on the basis of hard facts, not, due to a dislike of earlier historical writing, by a selective use of or by twisting of facts, or simply by sophistic argumentation (see below, on current use of long-refuted propositions). It also has to be done independently both from the present climate in India, and from the present western post-modern/deconstructionist fashion of seeing political motives behind all texts; both attitudes are not conducive in this kind of investigation. Scholars of the 19th/20 cent. obviously did not have the present discussion in mind when they wrote. The best ones among them may have come to certain conclusions quite independently of their 'ideological' background. At any rate, the better scholars of the 19th century were not colonialists or racists. They all were, however, limited to some extent by the general zeitgeist of the period, but so are present day scholars. We, too, must constantly strive to overcome this bias (Witzel 1999d), and we also must not to follow one current trend or momentary fashion after another. We can only approach a solution by patiently investigating the pros and contras of the various points that have been made -- or still are to be made. Scholarship is an ongoing dialectical process. One should avoid, therefore, to revert to long-refuted propositions. Natural scientists, other than historians, do not seriously discuss pre-Copernican or pre-Darwinian systems any longer. In the subsequent sections, all too frequently old and long given up positions are brought up and juxtaposed to recent ones in order to show 'contradictions' in what is called 'the western approach'. This is improper procedure. In the same way, one should also not confound the autochthonous theories of the past two centuries (Dayanand Sarasvati, etc.) with the present wave of indigenism, and one cannot, therefore, accuse the present autochthonous and 'Out of India' movement for contradictions with the older position of Tilak of an original Arctic home of the Aryans, (even though it has been repeated quite recently in Ganapati's SV-translation (1982) where the 'Aryans' are portrayed as having lived "on the Polar circle"). In the natural sciences and in scholarship at large, old conclusions are constantly reviewed on the basis of new evidence. But such new evidence has to fit in with the general framework established by the many, completely unrelated observations in the various branches of scholarship; otherwise a particular theory is revised or discarded. For example, when certain irregularities in the course of the planets were noticed, it did not mean that post-Renaissance astronomy was wrong but that this observation was due to the mass of another planet, Pluto, that was correctly predicted and, then, actually discovered in the early 20th century. But, the opposite procedure, deducing a "paradigm shift" based on isolated facts, is quite common in the contemporary effort to rewrite Indian (pre-)history. Unfortunately, thus, the subsequent discussion is studded with examples that explain away older theories and even hard scientific facts with the help of new, auxiliary, ad hoc assumptions. All of which are then used to insist that we are due for a "paradigm shift". Consequently, it will unfortunately take much more space even to merely describe and then to evaluate the arguments of the autochthonous school(s) than to describe the older, general consensus. All too frequently, we have to reinvent the wheel, so to speak, and have to restate, and sometimes even to prove, well-known and well-tested principles and facts: this includes those of comparative linguistics (summaries by Hock 1986, Anttila 1989, Szemere'nyi 1970, 1996, Beekes 1995), comparative epic studies (Parry 1930, 1971, Lord 1991), of S. Asian archaeology (Allchin 1995, Kenoyer 1998, Possehl 1999), Indus epigraphy (Possehl 1996), of zoology and botany (Meadow 1997,1998), or the evidence contained in the texts, as established by philology over the past two centuries (Witzel 1997). § 11.2. Evidence For the subsequent discussion, is also very important that each single item be scrutinized well before it is brought forward. At present, we can observe a cult of 'science' in India, --I have even seen 'scientific tax forms.' However, this is part of an inclusivistic belief system that encapsulates, in facile fashion, older mythical and religious ideas (Witzel 1986, 1992, 1998). Further, in spite of the stress on the 'hard sciences', all too frequently 'scientific facts' are quoted which, on closer observation, are not hard facts at all. For example, an unsuspecting reader may take for granted that "LANDSAT photos show the drying up of the sarasvatI river in 1900 BCE" (Kak 1994, cf. S.P. Gupta 1995). But LANDSAT or aerial photos cannot by themselves indicate historical dates. (For an update, with much more cautious claims by scientists, see now Radhakrishnan and Merh 1999). Or, some selected linguistic data, such as a supposed (but demonstrably wrong!) change from an older azva- 'horse' (as in Skt.) to Latin equu-s (S.S. Misra 1992), are used to indicate an Iranian and IE emigration from India. This does not only contradict standard (IE and non-IE) linguistic knowledge (see now Hock 1999). It also neglects a whole range of further contradictory evidence, e.g. the host of local, non-IA loan words in Vedic Skt. that are missing in the supposedly 'emigrating' languages such as Iranian, Slavic, etc. (Witzel 1999 a,b; for details, below § 13 sqq.) Other inconsistencies derive from the evidence of the texts. If the RV is to be located in the Panjab, and supposedly to be dated well before the supposed 1900 BCE drying up of the sarasvatI, at 4-5000 BCE (Kak 1994, Misra 1992), the text should not contain evidence of the domesticated horse (not found in the subcontinent before c. 1700 BCE, see Meadow 1997,1998, Anreiter 1998: 675 sqq.), of the horse drawn chariot (developed only about 2000 BCE in S. Russia, Anthony and Vinogradov 1995, or Mesopotamia), of well developed copper/bronze technology, etc. If the brAhmaNas are supposedly to be dated about 1900 BCE (Kak 1994), they should not contain evidence of the use of iron which makes it appearance in India only at the end of the millennium, about 1200 BCE at the earliest (Chakrabarti 1979, 1992, see now Possehl-Gullapalli 1999 for a much later date of c. 1000/900 BCE). The list could be prolonged, and some of these items will be discussed below (§ 11 sqq.) § 11.3. Proof In short, the facts adduced from the various sciences that have been operating independently from each other and independently from the present 'Aryan' question -- in most cases actually without any knowledge of the Aryan discussion, -- must match, before a certain theory can be accepted. If the linguistic, textual, archaeological, anthropological, geological, etc. facts contradict each other, the theory is in serious difficulty. All exceptions have to be explained, and well within plausible range; if they cannot, the theory does not hold. It never is proper working procedure that such inconsistencies are explained away by ad hoc assumptions and new theories, in other words, by special pleading. Occam's razor applies. We can no longer maintain, for example, that the earth is flat and then explain away the evidence of aerial or space photos by assuming, e.g., some effect of light refraction in the upper strata of the atmosphere, or worse, by using one conspiracy theory or the other. § 11.4. The term "invasion" To begin, in any discussion of the 'Aryan problem', one has to stress vehemently that the ''invasion model'' which was still prominent in the work of archaeologists such as Wheeler (1966: "Indra stands accused"), has been supplanted by much more sophisticated models[N.76] over the past few decades (see Kuiper 1955 sqq., Witzel 1995, Thapar 1968). It must also be underlined that this development has not occurred because Indologists were reacting, as is now frequently alleged, to current Indian criticism of the older theory.[N.77] Rather, philologists first, and archaeologists somewhat later, noticed certain inconsistencies in the older theory and tried to find new explanations, thereby discovering new facts and proposing a new version of the immigration theories. For some decades already, linguists and philologists such as Kuiper 1955, 1991, Emeneau 1956, Southworth 1979, archaeologists such as Allchin 1982, 1995, and historians such as R. Thapar 1968, have maintained that the Indo-Aryans and the older local inhabitants ('Dravidians', 'Mundas', etc.) have mutually interacted from early on, that many of them were in fact frequently bilingual, and that even the RV already bears witness to that. They also think, whether explicitly following Ehret's model (1988, cf. Diakonoff 1985) or not, of smaller infiltrating groups (Witzel 1989: 249, 1995, Allchin 1995), not of mass migrations or military invasions. However, linguists and philologists still maintain, and for good reasons, that some IA speaking groups actually entered from the outside, via some of the (north)western corridors of the subcontinent. The autochthonous theory, however, maintains that there has not been any influx at all, of Indo-Aryans or of other people from outside, conveniently forgetting that most humans have emigrated out of Africa only 50,000 years ago. On the contrary, some of its adherents simply reverse the 'colonial' invasion theory, with post-colonial one-up-manship, as an emigration from India (the 'Out of India Theory, OIT). Its advocates like to utilize some of the arguments of current archaeology, for example those of J. Shaffer (1984, 1995, 1999). He stresses indigenous cultural continuity from c. 7000 BCE well into the semi-historic times of the first millennium, as is evident according to the present state of archaeology. Consequently, he protests the ''linguistic tyranny'' of earlier models. This is a much too narrow, purely archaeological view that neglects many other aspects, such as all of spiritual and some of material culture, but it is grist on the mills of the autochthonists. To get, finally, to some concrete, be it necessarily often torturous, detail: opponents of the theory of an IA immigration or trickling in, whether revisionists, indigenists, or OIT adherents must especially explain the following linguistic, textual, archaeological, geographical, astronomical, and other scientific data (§12-31) to become credible. § 11.5. Linguistics As has been mentioned above, linguistic data have generally been neglected by advocates of the autochthonous theory. The only exception so far is a thin book by the Indian linguist S.S. Misra (1992) which bristles with inaccuracies and mistakes (see below) and some, though incomplete discussion by Elst (1999).[N.78] Others such as Rajaram (1995: 144, 217) or Waradpande (1993), though completely lacking linguistic expertise, simply reject linguistics as "pseudo-science" with "none of the checks and balances of a real science". They simply overlook the fact that a good theory predicts, as has occurred in IE linguistics several times (i.e., in predicting pre-Greek *kw or the IE laryngeals, see below §12.1). On the other hand one may still consult, with profit, the solid discussion of early Sanskrit by Bh. Ghosh (1937). The linguistic evidence, available since the earliest forms of Sanskrit (Rgvedic OIA), is crucial, as the materials transmitted by language obviously point to the culture of its speakers and also to their original and subsequent physical surroundings. Language has, just as history, its own 'archaeology'; the various subsequent historical 'layers' of a particular language can be uncovered when painstakingly using well-developed linguistic procedures. Language study, however, is not something that can be carried out by amateurs, even though a 'everyone can do' attitude is widespread. This is especially pervasive when it comes to etymology and the (often assumed) origin and the (frequently lacking) history of individual words. Here, total amateurism is the rule. "Oakish" etymologies, such as England from aGguli 'finger', or abAd from bath (Gupt@ 1990) have a long tradition both in occidental as well as in Indian culture. Plato's Kratylos propounds the same kind of unscientific explanations as yAska does in his nirukta. This has been tradition ever since the brAhmaNa texts (rudra from rud 'to cry', putra from the nonexistent word *put 'hell', bhairava from bhI+rav+vam, etc.) A look into any recent or contemporary book on Indian history or literature will bring to light many examples: Assyria from asura, Syria from sura, Phoenicians from paNi, Hittites (Khet) from kaTha, Mitanni from maitrAyaNIya, etc. (Bhagavad Datta repr. 1974, Surya Kanta 1943, Gupt@ 1990, etc.). In the South Asian context, cross-family comparison (Dravidian and IA, IA and Arabic, etc.) is especially widespread and usually completely wrong, as such comparisons are simply based on overt similarities between words. In comparative linguistics, however, it is not similarity that counts but the regularity of (albeit outwardly, non-intuitive) sound correspondences, for example Vedic zv in azva 'horse' : Avest. -sp- : O.Pers. -s- : Lith. -sw-, Latin -qu- [kw] : Gothic -hv- OHG -h-, O.Irish -ch-, Gaul. -p-, Toch. -k/kw- < IE *k'w, an equation repeated in many other words; or, to quote one of the most hackneyed, non-intuitive examples: the correct equation, sound by sound, of Skt. dvA(u), Latin duo = Armenian erku < IE *dwO(u). Since language and (the necessarily closely connected) spiritual culture are crucial for any theory of an influx of speakers of OIA into the subcontinent --whatever form this influx might have taken initially-- the linguistic evidence will be dealt with in detail in the following sections. Unfortunately, since the linguistic ideas and 'arguments' of the autochthonists are far off the accepted norms and procedures, a discussion of their proposals and beliefs does not only take up much space but must be convoluted and torturous; in addition, it must be, in its very nature, often very technical. (The non-linguistically inclined reader may therefore prefer to jump to the concluding sections of §18). §12. Vedic, Iranian and Indo-European It is undeniable and has indeed hardly been denied even by most stalwart advocates of the autochthonous theory, that Vedic Sanskrit is closely related to Old Iranian and the other IE languages.[N.79] However, this relationship is explained in a manner markedly differing from the standard IE theories, that is by an emigration westwards of the Iranians and the other Indo-Europeans from the Panjab (see below). Vedic Sanskrit is indeed so closely related to Old Iranian that both often look more like two dialects than two separate languages (e.g. tam mitram yajAmahe : t@m mithr@m yazamaide 'we worship Mitra'). Any Avestan speaker staying for a few weeks in the Panjab would have been able to speak Vedic well and --with some more difficulty - vice versa. However, that does not necessitate at all that the Old Iranian dialects were introduced to into Iran from the east, from India, as the autochthonist would have it. As will be seen below (§ 12 sqq.), there are a number of features of Old Iranian (such as lack of typical South Asian substrate words, § 13 sqq.) which actually exclude an Indian origin. Such data have not been discussed yet by the autochthonists. The comparison of the many common features found in Vedic Indo-Aryan and Old Iranian have led to the reconstruction of a common 'mother' tongue, Indo-Iranian, spoken (at least) around 2000 BCE, by a group of people that shared a common spiritual and material culture (see § 4-5). Beyond that, the comparison of Indo-Iranian and other IE languages has allowed similar reconstructions for all IE languages from Iceland and Ireland to Xinjiang (Tocharian) and from the Baltic Sea (Lithuanian etc.) to Turkey (Hittite) and the Panjab (Vedic IA). This theory was first developed in the early 19th century and has been tested extensively. If there were still need of proof, one may point to the many predictions the theory has made, especially after its more developed form had emerged, about 1870 CE, with the establishment of regular sound correspondences (Lautgesetze) by the Leipzig Junggrammatiker school. Such cases include the rather old prediction of early Greek/pre-Greek *kw which was discovered in writing when Mycenean Greek was deciphered in 1952, or the prediction by the young F. de Saussure more than a century ago (1879), of a set of unknown sounds. These were later called laryngeals (h1, h2, h3). They have disappeared in all known IE languages but have affected their surroundings in typical, to a large extent even then predictable ways. When Hittite finally was read in 1916, h2 was still found written (in words such as peHur = Gk. pUr = Engl. fire). Yet, some revisionists and indigenists even call into question the theories and well-tested methods of comparative linguistics. Some of them clearly do so because of a considerable lack of understanding of the principles at work (Waradpande 1989, Kak 1994a, Talageri 2000, etc.; discussion in Bryant 1999, cf. Elst 1999). In addition, they make use of the expected scholarly differences of opinion between linguists to show the whole "theory of (IE) linguistics" does not work or is an "unproved theory" (Rajaram 1995: 144, 217), thereby neglecting such well known facts as: (a) that any science progresses and that certain opinions of the 19th cent. cannot be juxtaposed to those of the 20th, and (b) that in any contemporary field of science[N.80] there is a certain range of generally agreed facts but also a certain range of difference of opinion, such as between traditionalists, radical skeptics,[N.81] and those proposing new solutions to old or recently noticed problems. In short, there always are conflicting interpretations of the materials at hand that are discussed in dialectical fashion. Some interpretations are merely possible, others probable, and still others have actually been proved and have subsequently been shown to be correct. In present day genetics, for example, some still hold that the recently developed theory of an origin of all humans from one or from a small group of African ancestors is not valid as it involves misinterpretation of statistical data and the wrong type of computer models. However, nobody has claimed that genetic investigation as such is invalid, as has been done with regard to comparative linguistics by autochthonists on and off, or who say that it remains an 'unproved theory at best'. Unfortunately for this view, historical linguistics, just like any good science, has made a number of predictions that later on, with the discovery of new materials, have been shown to be correct (see above). § 12.1. The Misra case Worse, the recent book of an Indian linguist, S.S. Misra (1992), is even a step back beyond what is demonstrable and, strangely for a linguist, often beyond the hard facts, i.e. his denial of PIE laryngeals as precursors of the actually written Hittite laryngeal sounds (Misra 1974, 1992). He simply rewrites, on an ad hoc basis, much of IE (and general) linguistics. The discussion and explanation of his examples (e.g., his supposed IE *z > k', *a > e, o, a etc.) would have to be quite technical and is not pursued here in detail. (It has now been discussed by Hock, 1999). It is however, obvious even to an uninitiated observer that forms such as Skt. cakAra (instead of *kakAra) must rely on the palatalizing effect of an e-like sound in ca-; cf. the Romance development from c [k] as seen in old loan-words, German Kaiser, Greek kaisar (whence Urdu kaisar), to Romance c [ts'], as seen in Ital. Cesare or even to [s] as in Engl. Cesar; cf. also the separate development Vulgar Latin caballus 'horse' > French cheval, etc., again before -e-. These changes are a feature known from many languages. Why should it only have been different for pre-Rgvedic (and pre-Old Iranian, in other worlds, for Indo-Iranian) as Misra maintains? A case of special pleading. The whole matter of Misra's IE reconstructions has been discussed adequately by H.H. Hock (1999) and there is no need to go into further details here. In sum, Misra's ad hoc rules do not make for a new system,[N.82] they are, in fact, a throwback, a regression to the early stages of IE comparative linguistics when strict rules of sound correspondences (Lautgesetze) had not yet been established by the Leipzig Junggrammnatiker School of c. 1870. His dating of the RV, based on this "new" reconstruction, simply rests on the similarity of his "early 19th cent." Proto-IE (looking altogether like Sanskrit) with reconstructed Proto-Finno-Ugric (Uralic) forms, for which he accepts the guess of Uralic linguists, a date of 5000 BCE. That guess is not any better than the various guesses for PIE, at 3000 or 4500 BCE. Misra's whole system rests on guesswork and on demonstrably faulty reconstructions. It simply is uncontested among linguists of any persuasion that the remarkable grammatically regular features of Proto-IE (underlying, e.g., the differences in the present tense formation of Sanskrit, German, French asti, ist, est :: santi, sind, sont, < IE *h1e's-ti :: *h1s-o'nti) are part and parcel of the parent language, the original PIE. This was at first confined to an unknown area in a temperate (not a tropical!) climate.[N.83] This scenario is in stark contrast to the certainty with which autochthonist place the homeland of IE inside South Asia or even inside certain parts of India (Misra 1992), even more precisely in the Gangetic basin (Talageri 1993, 2000), not exactly unexpectedly,[N.84] in their own home land, India. (For this familiar 'principle' used in deciding the Urheimat, see Witzel 2000, and below). On the other hand, the autochthonous school maintains that the very assumptions at the basis of the genealogical, family tree model of the Indo-European language family, deride it (cf. Elst 1999: 119, see discussion by Bryant 1999), or contest it just for the Indian linguistic area (see below). This is quite old news: various models have been proposed and tested for the development from Proto-Indo-European to the individual languages: the ''family tree'' model (A. Schleicher's Stammbaumtheorie, 1861-2), a theory of dialectal waves of innovation emanating from a certain center (Joh. Schmidt's Wellentheorie, 1872). Further, socio-linguistic theories include the development of Proto-Indo-European as a sort of camp language (another Urdu, so to speak), a new Pidgin, based on diverse original languages that eventually spread beyond its own rather limited boundaries, for example with the introduction of horse-based pastoralism (Anthony and Vinogradov 1995, Kuz'mina 1994, etc.). Some advocates of the autochthonous theory (Kak 1994, Talageri 1993, 2000, Elst 1999: 159) use rather simplistic linguistic models, such as the suggestion that population increase, trade, the emergence of agriculture,[N.85] and large-scale political integration led to the extinction of certain languages and to a transfer of other languages across ethnic groups. However, all such factors have been considered over the past two hundred years or so; none of them, in isolation, nor a combination of all of them, lead to the surprising spread of Indo-European languages inside and outside the subcontinent. In fact, most of the factors just mentioned were not present during the early Vedic period which saw the introduction and spread of IA all over the Greater Panjab. Autochthonists further neglect that language replacement, such as visible during the Vedic period, depends on a range of various socio-linguistic factors and not simply on the presence of nomads, increasing population density, etc. Rather, the situation differs from case to case, and the important factors for any particular replacement must be demonstrated. For example, Renfrew's (1987) model of a very gradual spread of IE from Anatolia, along with agriculture, has not generally been accepted. If this agriculturally induced spread had taken place, I would be writing this paper in a descendent language of the non-IE Hattic of Turkey, and not in IE English. In the case of early India, the change from the language(s) of the urbanized Indus civilization to that of the pastoralist Indo-Aryans must be explained. It certainly cannot be done (see below) by positioning the homeland of the 'non-tropical' IE language inside India (Talageri 1993, 2000, Elst 1999: 118 sqq.) and make its speakers emigrate, across the Indus area, towards Iran and Europe. §12.2 Language and 'Out of India' theories Theoretically, a scenario of IE emigration from the Panjab is of course possible, --- the direction of the spread of languages and linguistic innovations cannot easily be determined, unless we have written materials (preferably inscriptions). However, some linguistic observations such as the distribution of languages, dialect features, substrate languages, linguistic palaeontology, etc. allow to argue against the Out of India scenarios. The Out of India theorists such as Elst (1999:122, 124 etc.), Talageri (1993, 2000) envision an IE homeland in South Asia, to be more precise, in the Gangetic basin. Talageri simply assumes, without any linguistic (or archaeological, palaeontological) sources and proof, that in "prehistoric times the distribution of the languages in India may have been roughly the same as it is today: viz. the Dravidian languages being spoken in the south, Austric in the east, the Andamanese languages in the Andaman Islands, the Burushaski language in N. Kashmir, Sino-Tibetan languages in the Himalayan and far eastern border areas, and the Indo-European languages certainly in more or less their present habitat in most of northern India" (1993: 407). The rest follows logically: ..."a major part of the Indo-Europeans of southeastern Uttar Pradesh migrated to the west and settled down in the northwestern areas --- Punjab, Kashmir and the further north-west, where they differentiated into three groups: the pÒrus (in the Punjab), the anus (in Kashmir) and the druhyus (in northwestern and Afghanistan)", (cf. Talageri 1993: 196, 212, 334, 344-5, 2000: 328, 263).[N.86] Of course, all of this is based on data about peoples "clearly mentioned and described in the Puranas." Needless to say, this kind of writing prehistory smacks of early 19th cent. writing of early European and Near Eastern history according to the Bible and Herodotos, before the ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian texts could be read. It is based on a naive reliance on texts that were composed millennia after the facts, and that are the product of a lively Bardic tradition (L. Rocher 1986, Brockington 1998, Parry 1971, Lord 1991), influenced by Brahmanical redactors (Soehnen 1986, Horsch 1966). In spite of what Pargiter (1913) and even Morton Smith (1973) have tried to establish --obviously, without taking the later investigations into account-- we cannot write the history of archaic and ancient India based on the legendary and late Epic and Puranic accounts of the middle ages (Witzel 1990, 1995, 2001). Talageri (1993: 407) continues his Puranic tale as follows: "... major sections of anus ... developed into the various Iranian cultures. The druhyus spread out into Europe in two installments." He actually knows, somehow, which IE group moved first and which later, and by which route: "the speakers of the proto-Germanic dialect first migrated northwards and then westwards, and then later the speakers of the proto-Hellenic and proto-Italo-Celtic dialects moved into Europe by a different, more southern, route. It is possible that the speakers of proto-Baltic and proto-Slavonic (or proto-Balto-Slavonic) ... of proto-Illyrian and proto-Thraco-Phrygian ... were anus and not druhyus, the anus and druhyus thus being, respectively, the speakers of proto- Satem and proto-Kentum." (1993:407-8) Or slightly differently (2000: 263): "The two emigrations ... from an original homeland in India: ... The first series of migrations, of the druhyus, took place.... with major sections of druhyus migrating northwards from Afghanistan into Central Asia in different waves. From Central Asia many druhyu tribes, in the course of time, migrated westwards, reaching as far as western Europe. These migrations must have included the ancestors of the following branches... a. Hittite. b. Tocharian. c. Italic. d. Celtic. e. Germanic. f. Baltic. g. Slavonic. .... The second series of migrations of anus and druhyus, took place much later, in the Early Period of the Rigveda, with various tribes migrating westwards from the Punjab into Afghanistan, many later on migrating further westwards as far as West Asia and southwestern Europe. These migrations must have included the ancestors of the following branches (which are mentioned in the dAzrAjJa battle hymns): a. Iranian. b. Thraco-Phrygian (Armenian). c. Illyrian (Albanian). d. Hellenic." The strange or outdated terminology (Slavonic, etc. --his source may be Misra's diction, see below-- Italo-Celtic, Kentum) indicates the limited linguistic background of the author sufficiently enough. Nevertheless, we also can learn of the solution to the long-standing enigma of the Indus language (Parpola 1994, Witzel 1999 a,b): "The Indus Valley culture was a mixed culture of purus and anus" (1993: 408). Nothing less, perhaps, could be expected, as the book is self-described as: "This whole description is based on the most logical and in many respects the only possible, interpretation of the facts... Any further research, and any new material discovered on the subject, can only confirm this description... there is no possible way in which the location of the Original Homeland in the interior of northern India, so faithfully recorded in the Puranas and confirmed in the Rigveda, can ever be disproved" (1993: 408). Luckily for us, the author names his two main sources: the purANas and the Rgveda. The reliability of Puranic and Epic sources is discussed below (§19, Witzel 1990, 1995), and the RV does not support his theory either (it simply does not know of, or refer to central and eastern Northern India).[N.87] § 12.3. Emigration In order to achieve his new U.P. homeland, Talageri has not only to rely on the purANas, he also has to read them into his RV evidence, though pretending to use only the RV to interpret the RV (Talageri 2000) -- in fact one of the basic requirements of philology (Witzel 1995, 1997). In casu, the single two appearances of jahnAvI in the RV at 1.116.19 and 3.56.6 are made out to refer to the Ganges. However, both passages clearly refer to a jahnAvI which translators and commentators (including sAyaNa) have taken as a tribal designation (cf., indeed, such an 'ancestral goddess' next to hotrA, bhAratI, iDA and sarasvatI at RV 2.1.11, etc.). It is, thus, by no means clear that jahnAvI refers to a river, and certainly not to the Ganges in particular (Witzel 2001). That is an Epic/Puranic conceit. Instead, it can simply be derived from the jahnu clan. Yet, it is in this way that Talageri tries to strengthen his case for a Gangetic homeland: the Ganges is otherwise only mentioned twice in the RV, once in a late hymn directly (10.75.5), and once by a derived word, gAGgya (6.45.31, in a tRca that could be an even later addition to this additional hymn, which is too long to fit the order of the arrangement of the RV, see Oldenberg 1888). However, nothing in the RV points to knowledge of the Gangetic basin, or even of the lower Doab. The medieval and modern Doab rivers sarayu and gomatI[N.88] have sometimes been mentioned but the context of these RV rivers is one of the western hills and mountains, in Afghanistan.[N.89] Talageri's identification of jahnAvI with gaGgA is clearly based on post-Vedic identifications;[N.90] the RV passages only speak about an ancient clan (deity) which could have 'settled' anywhere.[N.91] The evidence set forth by Talageri is not conclusive even for the tribes of the RV, -- in fact the location of the yadu-turvaza, anu-druhyu and pUru is not very clear for most of the Rgvedic period (Macdonell & Keith 1912).[N.92] One hardly does have to mention the features that would not agree with a 'tropical' PIE language in the Gangetic Basin (see § 12.6). As a curiosity, it might be added, however, that we certainly would expect tribal names such as druhyu (or anu) in Europe, -- just as the Gypsies have carried their tribal/caste name Domba to Europe, where they still call themselves roma. However, we do not find any IE tribe or people in Europe derived from Ved. druh / IE *dhreugh: there are no tribes called, e.g., German Trug, Be-trueger, Engl. *Tray, Be-trayer -- we only find spirits: 'ghost' and 'apparition' (Pokorny 1959: 276). In passing, it should be mentioned that the Epic and Puranic accounts of the western neighbors of India are based on a view, already found in ZB and BZS 18.13: 357.6 sqq, 18.44:397.8 sqq, that regards all tribes and peoples outside the Center, the kuru(-paJcAla) realm, as 'outsiders' (bAhIka ZB 1.7.3.8, udantya, mleccha, asurya). They are characterized by their 'incorrect' speech and obnoxious behavior (ZB 9.3.1.24, Panjabis) and lack of proper zrauta ritual (ZB 13.5.4.19, kAzi). Consequently, both the Panjabis (bAhIka) as well as the Benares (kAzi) and S. Bihar (aGga) people are denigrated by middle Vedic texts.[N.93] This attitude mellowed somewhat with regard to eastern North India (AB 7.18 where the andhra, puNDra, zabara, pulinda, etc. are included as vizvAmitra's sons, Witzel 1997) but it continued with respect to the west which was under constant and continuing threat of immigration, incursion and actual invasion from the Afghan highlands (cf. Rau 1957: 14). In fact, the Panjabis have been regarded as outsiders since the AV and ZB and pataJjali's mahAbhASya has preserved the oldest "Sikh joke", gaur bAhIkaH 'the Panjabi is an ox'. There is nothing new under the Indian sun. There is, on the other hand, nothing particularly Indian about this attitude, it is reflected not only in manu's concept of madhyadeza (> mod. Nepali mades 'lowlands'), but also in ancient and modern China (chung kuo, 'the middle land'), and elsewhere. Ritual, world wide, often regards one's own location as the center of the universe (or its navel/eye, o mata o te henua, in Polynesian). The Epic and Puranic accounts simply build on such Vedic precedents: the Panjabis are regarded as 'fallen Arya', or in the words of BZS, the gandhAri have emigrated [from the center].[N.94] This is "the view from the center", kurukSetra, a view that was not yet present in Rgvedic times.[N.95] All of this is, incidentally, another indication of the (post-Rg)Vedic attitude against 'outsiders', the Other. To regard the alleged, actually mistranslated Puranic story (contra Witzel 2001, cf. n. 42, 86) about an emigration from India as statement of facts is as far-fetched and mythological as the Roman insistence of their descent from the heroes of Troy (Virgil's Aeneid, see above §9), or as the many tales about the lost tribes of Israel (note that the Pashtos, in spite of the E. Iranian language and pre-Muslim IIr culture, claimed to be one of them). It is completely anachronistic, and in fact unscientific, to use such legends, concocted long after the fact, as indications of actual historical events. (The Gypsies, who actually have emigrated from India, rather claim origins in S. Iraq or Egypt). §12.4. Linguistics and 'Emigration'. In addition, Talageri's new book merely restates, with the addition of Epic-Puranic legends, what S.S. Misra had written before him in 1992, just as so much of present autochthonous writing is nothing more than a cottage industry exploitation of a now popular trend. Misra's small book[N.96] of 110 pages, however, is a curious collection of linguistic data spanning the Eurasian continent, from Tamil to Uralic (Finno-Ugric), and from IE, Vedic and Mitanni Indo-Aryan to European Gypsy (Romani). All of this with an equally curious conclusion: "the original home of the Proto-Indo-European speech community... was searched in Pamir, Caspian Sea etc. in spite of the fact that the most original and orthodox Indo-European speech, Sanskrit, was spoken in India.... The following ground may be assumed for dropping India. This was a nice place to live. People would not like to go to places like Europe... On the other hand, there is definite evidence of spread of Aryans (or Indo-Europeans) in different parts of Europe... A brief sketch may be.... The Greeks were invaders and came to Greece from outside... there was a vast substratum of pre-Greek languages... the Celtic people came from outside to Europe... That the Italic peoples were invaders is well-known... before the Hittite invasion to the area [Turkey] it was peopled by another tribe called Hattic... the Hittite speakers might have gone there in very early days from an original home (which was perhaps India)... The Slavonic people ... were invaders... at the expense of Finno-Ugrian and Baltic languages... The Germanic speaking Indo-Europeans... coming from an outside world... the movement of Iranians from India to Iran... The Finno-Ugrian contact with Indo-Aryans speaks of the movement of Vedic Aryans from India to that area. Therefore it is likely that Pre-Vedic Aryans also might have gone out of India in several waves. The migrations from India to the outside world might have taken the following order: The Centum speakers... in several waves... Out of Sat@m speakers, Armenian first, the Albanian, next Baltic followed by Slavonic. The Iranian people were the last to leave... based on the linguistic analysis or relative affinity with Sanskrit. Similarly out of the Centum groups Greek might have left India last of all." (Misra 1992: 100 sqq.) A lot of invasions into and all over Europe -- quite politically incorrect now, it might be added, -- but no "invasion", not even an 'immigration" or a meager "trickling" into India. There is no need to belabor Misra's wording, such as 'orthodox' (which language is 'orthodox'?), strange from the pen of a linguist. However, Misra's main thesis, emigration from India, has already been refuted, on linguistic grounds, by Hock (1999, see below) and I can be relatively brief here; however, many ingredients and conclusions of Misra's book are faulty as well. Since he is now quoted by OIT advocates as the major linguistic authority who has provided proof for the OIT, these must be discussed and summed up. § 12.5 Finno-Ugric data Misra maintains (1992: 94) "the borrowed elements in the Uralic languages show borrowed Rgvedic forms in 5000 BC." Unfortunately, his discussion is based on two wrong premises: Harmatta's list of IA/Iranian loans in Uralic[N.97] and Misra's own 'unorthodox' but faulty reinterpretation of IIr and IA data. To begin with, the date given by Misra to the RV "must be beyond 5000 BC" (1992) is based on the guess of Finno-Ugric scholars for Proto-FU, a date just as good or bad as any given for PIE at 4500 or 3500 BCE. What is of greater importance here is the exact form of IIr. that the various loan words in PFU have preserved. In addition to Harmatta, some other scholars, not mentioned by Misra, have worked on this problem as well, most recently Joki 1973, Re'dei 1986, Katz (Habilschrift 1985). Unfortunately, Harmatta has chosen to divide his materials into eleven stages, ranging from 4500 - 1000 BCE, with an arbitrary length for each period of 300 years. Worse, some of them have been placed at various unlikely dates within that time frame, e.g., the development is > is', which is already E. IE (Slavic, IIr, etc.) has been placed at 2000 BCE (as iz!), that is 600 later than the related changes rs > rs', ks > ks', and the same development appears again as PIIr iz > is' at 1700 BCE. However, it is on this arrangement that Misra based his conclusions. Though he corrects some of Harmatta's mistakes (such as misclassifying IIr forms as PIran.), Misra makes things worse due to his clearly faulty, 19th cent. type reconstruction of IE (see Hock 1999): "most of the loan words ... are in fact to be traced to Indo-Aryan. Of special importance is the borrowing traced to the earliest period (5000 BCE), which is clearly Vedic Sanskrit" (1992: 24). This refers to words such as Harmatta's FU *aja 'to drive, to hunt', *porc'as, porzas 'piglet', *oc'tara 'whip', *c'aka 'goat', *erze 'male', *rezme 'strap', *meks'e 'honey bee', *mete 'honey' (from Harmatta's stages 1-7). Most of these are actually pre-IA as they retain c' > Ved. z, or s' instead of Ved. S, or the IE vowels e, o instead of Common IIr and Ved. a.[N.98] His use of Harmatta's list and that quoted from Burrow (1973: 23-27) and Abaev (1992: 27-32) suffer from the same methodological fault: forms that easily can be derived from IIr, such as Mordw. purtsos, purts (reflecting IIr *parc'as [partsas]) are declared by Misra as having come from the much later OIA (Vedic), in spite of their retaining the old pronunciation c' [ts]; this is, in fact, still found in Nuristani, e.g. du.c. [duts], < PIIr dac'a < PIE dek'm, but not in the linguistically already younger, but historically speaking c. 3000 years older forms Ved. daza, OIran. dasa! In short, this kind of combination produces a great, but confused and confusing scenario. Most of the acceptable evidence derived from Harmatta's data[N.99] fall right into the Proto-IIr period. The shibboleth is the development of PIE labiovelars to velars: *kw, kwh, gw, gwh > k, kh, g, gh, something that is clearly seen in PFU *werkas 'wolf' < PIIr *vRka-s < PIE *wlkwo-s (Misra, of course, takes this word as RV Sanskrit!). About the same time, the PIE *k', k'h, g', g'h developed to c', c'h, j', j'h. This development is clearly seen in the majority of the loans into PFU, as in for example in *porc'as 'piglet', *c'aka 'goat', *aja 'to drive'. (Misra derives these sounds from Skt. c, j, see Hock 1999). However, the PIIr affricates are represented in PFU in two forms, either as expected by c', or in the younger (= Vedic) form, by z[N.100] (late PIIr, not yet OIran. s, and z preserved in Vedic). Some confusion is raised by the various representations of PIIr *a by PFU e, ae, o, a. This could, again, point to the pre-PIIr period when the differences between e, o, a as inherited from PIE were still preserved. In fact, -o- in these loan-words seems to be limited to initial syllables, while other syllables have -a- or -e-. The problem will be treated at length elsewhere (Witzel, forthc. b)[N.101]. The important result is, quite differently from that of Misra's Sanskrit-like loans into PFU, the following: it was at the stage of PIIr (perhaps even at that of late PIE) but certainly not that of Rgvedic Sanskrit, that PFU has taken over a substantial number of loan words ranging from plants and animals to customs, religion and the economy.[N.102] § 12.6. Dating of RV The last section has, of course, serious consequences for Misra's new dating of the RV, at 5000 BCE, which is anyhow impossible due to internal contradictions (relating to the horse, chariot, etc., see below). As the PFU loan-words point to pre-Rgvedic, PIIr. and even some (pre-)PIIr. forms, the RV must be considerable later than the reconstructed PFU (at 5000 BCE). All of which fits in well with the 'traditional' date for this text, in the 2nd mill. BCE, roughly contemporary with Hittite, Mitanni IA, and early, Mycenean Greek texts inscribed on tablets. § 12.7. Mitanni data Misra's use of the Mitanni Indo-Aryan materials is clearly faulty as well. They seem to fit in well (at dates around 1400 BCE) with his theory of an early RV at 5000 BCE because he regards some of the Mitanni words as representing Post-Vedic, Middle Indo-Aryan developments. He assumes (repeated faithfully by Elst 1999:183) that there is MIA assimilation of clusters in Mit. satta < Ved. sapta 'seven' (see n. 148), or replacement of v- by b- as in biriya- < Ved. vIrya (rather, to be read as priya-, see EWA I 139). However, such forms are due to the exigencies of cuneiform writing and Hurrite pronunciation found in the Mitanni realm (for details, see below §18). In sum, Misra's data are based on his insufficient knowledge of near Eastern languages and their writing systems. However, it can even be shown that Mitanni IA words belong to a pre-Rgvedic stage of IA as they have retained -zdh- > RV edh and ai > RV e, and even IIr. j'h > Ved. h (see below §15, 18). Thus, Misra's early "Middle Indo-Aryan" at 1400 BCE simply evaporates, along with his early RV at 5000 BCE.[N.103] We are back to the 'traditional' dates. § 12.8. Gypsy language Though a detailed study of data from the Gypsy (Romany) language seems to be beyond the scope of the present discussion, some words are necessary as Misra has used the example of Gypsy as support for his theory of sound changes that affected the hypothetical IE emigrants from India when they entered the Near East and Europe. No matter that the two movements, thousands of years apart, would refer to one of PIE and the other to an MIA or ealry NIA language, and no matter that Romany is not as well studied as PIE. While it is clear that "the Gypsy languages are of Indo-Aryan origin is no more controversial..." it is not correct to say that "the Gypsy dialects present sufficient evidence which shows that Indo-Aryan a changed into a,e,o in European Gypsy..." (Misra 1992) First of all, the emigrant Gypsies, probably first attested as migrant musicians in records of the Sasanide kingdom of Iran (at 420 CE), have retained a fairly old form of IA which looks, often enough, like MIA, for example in the northwestern MIA retention of Cr (bhrAtA > phral 'brother'), or the present tense of 'to do' (kara'v, kara's, kara'l, etc.) Misra hinted at the reason why certain cases of MIA a have changed into Eur. Romani e,a,o : their distribution seems to be based on occurrence of -a- in an originally open syllable (in MIA, OIA) whence > e, or in a non-open syllable whence > a. However, this change is by no means universal even in European Romani. Its archaic Balkan version (of Bulgaria, etc., which I know from personal experience) has kar-, kara'v etc. 'to do' (from karomi, as quoted above). In short, Misra's data are again incomplete, faulty and misinterpreted. Second, his contention that "Thus in a way the linguistic change in Gypsy, suggests a clear picture of an assumption for a similar change in Proto-Indo-European stage, of Indo-European a (as shown by Sanskrit and as reconstructed by Bopp, Sleicher [sic!] etc.) into dialectical a, e, o (as shown by Gk. etc.). Uptil now no evidence to the contrary is available that Proto-Indo-European a, e, o (as reconstructed by Brugmann etc.) have merged in India" (Misra 1992: 81) can easily be refuted by any Indo-Europeanist (Hock 1999). In Greek, for example, we do not have a 'dialectal' change, whatever that may mean, of Misra's IE *a > e, a, o but a clearly regulated one, in the case of laryngeals 1-3 > e, a, o : IE *h1esti > Gr. esti, Lat. est, but Ved. asti; h2ner- > Greek anEr, Ved. nR-, *h2enti > Gr. anti, Lat. ante, Hitt. Hanti (with written laryngeal!) but Ved. anti, *h3onkos > Gr. onkos, Lat. uncus, but Ved. aGku-Sa (Rix 1976: 68 sqq.). Not to speak of the well-established correspondences of PIE *e, o, a in the various IE languages, which Misra simply denies on insufficient grounds (for details, see Hock 1999). In sum, Misra's contention that "Gypsy languages show a repetition of the linguistic change, which occurred in a remote history of Indo-European, when the original groups, speakers of various historical languages, left their original homeland (India) and travelled to Europe... (1992: 82), ... the borrowed elements in the Uralic languages show borrowed Rgvedic forms in 5000 BC... the date of RV must be beyond 5000 BC..." (1992: 94) is based on insufficient materials, faulty interpretations and idiosyncratic conclusions that are at odds with anyone else's in the field.[N.104] §12.9 Contra: IE dialect clusters Returning to the question of an IE homeland inside India, we can easily observe where IE innovations seem to cluster, right from the time of the common PIE language. For example, the famous Satem innovations all are limited to the IE languages in the east of the IE settlement area, with the exception of the (western-type) Centum language Tocharian, which actually is the easternmost IE language, in China (Xinjiang; to which add the Bangani substrate). Clearly, the older Centum block has been split by the Satem innovations (not withstanding that the speakers of Tocharians might have moved further east after the split). Such clustering indicates that Indo-Iranian is a southeastern extension of eastern (Satem) IE and that Vedic is the easternmost one of these. For a recent summary, see H.H. Hock (1986: 452, 1999). From this, as well as from a number of earlier studies, it is obvious that the 'dialectal features' in the arrangements of (P)IE languages indicate a general expansion of IE westwards and eastwards from an unknown center, somewhere close to the geographical center of the pre-colonial expansion of IE languages over Siberia, the Americas, etc. The actual spread of IE across Eurasia points in the same direction. It has been well observed in various parts of the world that a settlement close to each other of related languages indicates their original habitat while a (geographically) wide spread of one of a (sub)family points to recent expansion. One can observe this with Bantu which covers all of Central, East and South Africa while its parent group, Niger-Congo, has a very dense arrangement of diverse languages in West Africa.[N.105] Or, even more recently, the large array of English dialects in England, and the very few but large variants outside England (N. America, Australia, etc.) clearly point to England as the place of origin. In the case of IE, the application of this principle would indicate an original settlement of the ancestor language somewhere in (S)E. Europe; it must not be overlooked, however, that many early IE languages have disappeared since (Thracian, Dacian in the Balkans, Hittite, Luwian, etc. in Anatolia, and probably some languages in S. Russia/Ukraine as well, areas that were subsequently settled by Scythians and other (Turkic) steppe peoples, and finally by Slavs. The center may therefore have been situated somewhere between Greek, Hittite, Armenian in the South and Slavic, Iranian (Scythian, Saka, etc.) in the north, in other words, in the Greater Ukraine. This area is also at the fault line between the western Centum and eastern Satem languages and of certain syntactic features of IE (Hock 1999: 15). All such observations make an Indian homeland of PIE a priori unlikely. Hock (1999) has adduced further reasons why this cannot be the case: all dialectal differences in PIE would have been exported, at various periods, and would exactly have reconstituted themselves geographically, all over Europe and the Near East, in the same geographical relationship as originally found in the hypothetical Indian homeland. This certainly needs very special pleading, and simply falls prey to Occam's razor.[N.106] § 12.10 Other 'Out of India' theories: Sprachbund Another new and equally misleading linguistic scenario has recently been created by writers such as Aiyar (1975), Waradpande (1993) and scientists such as S. Kak (1994a), or always on the internet, S. Kalyanaraman (1999). They contend that two of the major language families of South Asia, Indo-Aryan (i.e. IE) and Dravidian are not (very) different from each other. Both would rather represent two forms of an old South Asian Proto-language, which they call, variously, a prAkRt or just the Indian 'Bronze Age language'. Again, the idea is not exactly new. A fore-runner is, quite unexpectedly and already at the beginning of the past century, Aurobindo[N.107] (cf. Talageri 2000). With the then usual conflation of outward appearance or 'race', ethnicity, and language (note: Hirt 1907), he found that his native people, the Bengalis, and the inhabitants of his new home, Ponchicherry (where he went into exile, evading the British), were not so different after all. More recently, some Indian scholars have expressed the (ultimately correct) feeling of an All-Indian cultural unity in terms of language as well (Aurobindo, etc., cf. Bryant 1999). Swaminatha Aiyar's analyses (1975, quoted, with approval by Misra 1992: 73-78, and adopted) of common features between Aryan and Dravidian are a case in point: "...from a linguistic point of view also, Dravidian is more comparable to Indo-Aryan than to any other language family in the world... But Dravidian may be the first to have been separated and went north. Next the centum people separated and left through the Himalayan passes to Caspian or Pamir and then to Europe etc. The satem speakers left after that, batch by batch. The last batch might have been the Iranians." The first part of the quote confuses descent (genetic relationship) of languages with secondary mutual influences of neighboring languages (S. Asian linguistic region, Sprachbund). The very idea of a "pan-Indian prAkRt" is, of course, a contradictio in se. As any beginner in linguistics should know, prAkRt always refers to an Indo-Aryan language, Middle Indo-Aryan to be precise. The designation 'common South Asian Proto-language' or, worse, "prAkRt", when used for Archaic Tamil, is imaginary and confusing, just as a Dravidian Proto-Vedic, P-Hindi, or a Mundic P-Bengali would be. The issue at hand is whether there ever was such a thing as a common S. Asian or Indian "Prakrit". Kalyanaraman, Kak (1994a), or Misra (1992) simply (or handily) confuse the relatively new concept of a South Asian linguistic area (Sprachbund) with the 'genetic' relationship of the languages involved. This idea was developed early in the 20th century when linguists where surprised that several disparate languages in the Balkans shared so many features. These include Rumanian, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Serbian, Greek and Albanian. Now, these are all Indo-European languages and thus have the same starting point, though Bulgarian has an old Turkish (Bulgar, different from modern Turkish) and an IE Thracian substrate. But they come from four quite different sub-families: Rumanian from the Western IE Vulgar Latin, Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian from the Eastern IE Southern Slavic, Greek from the Western IE Old Greek, and finally Albanian from the vague Illyrian/Dalmatian (etc.) subfamily. As such, they are much more different from each other than even modern Iranian and Indo-Aryan. However, they have stayed together for a long time, and have had intermingled settlements (Albanian near Athens, Rumanian-type Romance speech in Bulgaria, etc.) for 1500-2000 years. Consequently, bilingual speakers have influenced each other considerably, especially in syntax and by mutual loan words. Yet, there still is no "new Balkan language" or a "Balkan language family" in sight. The basic vocabulary of these 6 languages still is very different and most of their grammatical formantia as well. The same applies to S. Asia, where the idea of a linguistic area was pioneered by Emeneau (1956), Kuiper (1967). But here, the starting point is unlike that of the Balkans: S. Asia has at least 3 different large language families:[N.108] IE, Drav., Munda, which have nothing in common, neither in basic vocabulary nor in word structure nor in grammatical formantia. The situation is not unlike that in modern Europe, with Uralic (Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian, etc.), Basque, Altaic (mod. Turkish), and the rest (= IE). For details on the South Asian Sprachbund or linguistic area or convergence area, it is useful to consult Hock (1986: 491-512) though it is largely devoted to syntax. It is clear that, over the past few millennia, the three language families of S. Asia have converged to a large degree, including phonetics (retroflexes, see §15), word formation (Munda changed from a monosyllabic language with prefixes into a polysyllabic one working with suffixes) and syntax (spread of absolutives, see Tikkanen 1987, or sentence structure preferring SOV arrangements, see Hock 1986). The spread of such convergent items has been taken by some (Kak 1994) as a sign that the various S. Asian languages are underway to form a new language family. This is overstating the matter by not just a little margin. It has not happened in the Balkans. Or, English, with its large share of Romance (French) vocabulary and some grammatical features (calques such as more beautiful : plus beaux), has not joined the circle of Romance languages, nor have French and Anglo-Saxon, or the other converging (Western) European languages coalesced into a new "(Western) European" family. As has been mentioned above, the proponents of a 'common' South Asian Proto-language / 'prAkRt' and a "new S. Asian language family in statu nascendi" confuse the outcome of a long stay together and original "genetic descent". Tamil speakers do not use Hindi words in their basic vocabulary, nor do Bengali speakers use Santali words, nor Kashmiri speakers Burushaski words, nor Nepali speakers Tibetan words, and vice versa. And, the various grammars involved still are far apart from each other, in spite of all the converge features evoked above. To state things differently simply is bad linguistics and special pleading, as already seen several times in the case of the Out-of-India theorists. § 12.11. Emigration and linguistic features In order to approach and evaluate place and time of the hypothetical (OIT) Indo-European home in South Asia (or that of the even less likely common S. Asian Proto-language) and of the hypothetical emigration of the Iranian and other IE speakers from India, one has to look for terms that are old in PIE. For example, PIE *gwou- 'cow', *dyeu- 'heaven', and their archaic acc. forms *gwOm, *dyEm, with PIE dissimilation of -w-, should have existed already in a hypothetical IE Panjab. However, these PIE forms are reflected in the various old IE languages (with their subsequent individual phonetic innovations): Ved. gAm 'cow', Hom. Grk. boun/bOn,Ved. dyAm 'heaven', Grk. zEn; etc. (EWA I 479, 752). In any autochthonous theory, this archaic dissimilation would either be due to pre-split PIE dialects inside India (refuted by Hock 1999, above) or to a subsequent individual development of the same traits outside India, after the IE languages would have left the subcontinent. Such an a priori unlikely scenario, however, is rendered altogether impossible as the subsequent eastern (Satem) developments (gw- > g in 'cow') are restricted to a dialect continuum of eastern IE (where a dissimilation *gOum > *gOm was no longer possible). Other such unique Satem and IIr cases involve *kw > k, *k' > c', then, *ke > *cae > ca; the change *e > *ae is early in IIr. as it is seen in the cakAra, jagAma type palatalization, as well as that of *o > A in Brugmann cases (cf. Hock 1999); finally IIr. *ae > Ved./Avest. a. Clearly, several long term developments are involved. Just like the supposed (OIT) individual innovations in dyAm and gAm, such eastern IE developments (Hock 1986: 451 sq.) would have to be re-imports from their focus in E. Europe/Central Asia into India, -- all convoluted cases of very special pleading. The first traces of IE languages are attested with Hittite around 2000/1600 BCE in Anatolia, Mycenean Greek at c. 1400/1200 in Crete, Mitanni-IA. in N. Iraq at 1380 BCE. All PIE and IIr terms and forms must precede this date by a large margin as even archaic languages such as Vedic and Hittite are separated from each other by many innovative developments. The date of the dispersal of the earliest, W. IE languages (including Tocharian, eastwards) must be early in the 3rd mill. BCE or still earlier. But, in the autochthonous scenario of an emigration out of India, the Centum languages (Celtic, Germanic, Latin, Greek, etc.), then the Satem languages (Slavic, etc.), would have followed each other by a time span of at least a few hundred years, and Iranian would have been the last to emigrate from India as it is closest to Vedic; it should have left well before c. 1000 BCE, when W. Iranian is first found on the eastern borders of Mesopotamia.[N.109] These dates allow to set the claims of the autochthonous school (Talageri 1993, 2000) into a distinct relief, especially when such early dates as 5000 BCE (based on a loan word link with Finno-Ugrian) are claimed for the RV (S.S. Misra 1992). While this is impossible on text-internal, cultural grounds, their hypothetical old RV would have the comparatively modern form of Old Indo-Aryan that would, nevertheless, precede that of the very archaic Hittite by a margin of some 3000 years. We know, of course, that Vedic is not earlier than Hittite but clearly later, i.e. lower in the cladistic scheme that is popularly called the 'family tree': it is later than Eastern IE (Satem innovations, RUKI, cf. Hock 1986, 1999), later than Proto-Indo-Iranian (e, a > *, k' > c', o > A in open syllables, with o > a in all other syllables), and even later than Pre-Vedic (c' > z, or zd(h) and j' > Ved. h, which still preserved as s' [z' ] < j'h in Mitanni IA at 1400 BCE, see below §18). In short, all of the above indicates that neither time nor space would agree with a OIT scenario. Another major obstacle against the emigration theory is that even the closest relative of Vedic, the hypothetical emigrant Old Iranian language, misses all Indo-Aryan innovations (see below §13-17). Any argument militating against this must use the special pleading that all Vedic innovations happened only after the emigration of the Iranians out of India; this is, however, impossible in cases such as rAT/rAj-, SoDaza, voDhar-, sede and others such as the absolutive. In other words, Misra's scheme (and that of all others who assume such early dates for the RV and an IE emigration out of India, such as Talageri 1993, 2000, Elst 1999) are not only badly deliberated but are plainly impossible: PIE, while still in the Panjab, would not yet have developed all the traits found in non-OIA languages (Satem etc.), while their close neighbor, the 'old' RV, would already have gone through all Satem, IIr, Pre-Vedic and RV innovations 7000 years ago, -- an unlikely scenario, to say the least. And, as such,[N.110] Rgvedic OIA would have exercised early influences on the rather distant Uralic languages in S. Russia/Urals/W. Siberia, while the non-IA neighbors of Uralic (Iranian, Baltic, etc.) would not. All of this is obviously impossible on grounds of space and time. Misra et al. have not thought through their idiosyncratic and ad hoc scenarios.[N.111] To do so is not our job, but that of the proponent(s) of the new theory. They should have done their homework. §12.12. Emigration and culture The matter can still further be elucidated by observing some cultural features: according to the autochthonous theories the various IE peoples ("Anu, Druhyu" of Talageri 1993, 2000) and their languages hypothetically left India (around 5000/4000 BCE). If put to a test by archaeology and linguistics, these 'emigrations' would rather have to be set at the following latest possible dates.[N.112] 3000/2500 W.IE leave while possessing: ayas 'copper/bronze' > Lat. aes 'copper, bronze', etc.; but: no chariot yet: Lat. rota 'wheel', Grk. kuklo- 'wheel', Toch. kukael, kokale 'wagon', etc.; note Grk. new formation ha'rma(t)- 'chariot' (Pokorny 1959: 58); yet, all parts of the heavy, solid wheel wagon are IE: akSa, ara nAbha 'nave'; Germ. Rad/Lat. rota, drawn by oxen (ukSan); -- domesticated horse *h1ek'wo > Lat. equus, O.Ir. ech, Toch. yuk, yakwe, used for riding 2500/2000 E. IE leave have satem characteristics (*h1ek'wo, O.Lith. as'vô), but still no chariots: Lith. ratas 'wheel, circle' by 2000 IIr. unity new : ratha > 'chariot' from Volga/Ural/N.Caucasus area; and cakra 'wheel, chariot' -- but how and when did it (and the domesticated horse) enter India? Innovative Aditya gods with artificial formations (Arya-man = Avest. airiia-man, etc.) 1500/1000 Iran. move with chariot, Adityas, but keep old grammar, ntr. pl. + sg. verb, etc. c. 1000 W. Iranians are attested on the eastern borders of Mesopotamia According to this list, again, all Vedic linguistic innovations (with the RV set at 5000/4000 BCE), and some E. Indo-European ones such as the IIr. chariot, would have happened before the supposed emigration of the Iranians from India! This is archaeologically impossible, unless one uses the auxiliary, equally unlikely hypothesis that some IIr.s left India before 2000 BCE and reimported the chariot into India (Elst 1999). All such arguments need very special pleading. Occam's Razor applies. § 12.13. Emigration & nature While, theoretically again, a scenario of IE emigration from the Panjab is possible, this claim, too, contradicts all we know about IE material culture (e.g., horse, wagon, and the late chariot) and climate-based vocabulary (willow, birch, fir, oak, snow, wolf, beaver, salmon, etc.), all of which traditionally have been used to indicate a temperate IE homeland with cold winters, somewhere in E. Europe-C. Asia, (Geiger 1871: 133 sqq., Schrader 1890: 271, Hirt 1907: 622, Friedrich 1970, Mallory 1989: 114 sqq.), -- that is, an area that included at least some (riverine?) tree cover. Even if we take into account that the Panjab has cool winters with some frost and that the adjoining Afghani and Himalayan mountains have a long winter season, the IE evidence does not bear out a South Asian or Indian homeland. The only true IE tree found in S. Asia is the birch (bhUrja),[N.113] and some argument can be made for the willow ("willow" > Ved. vetasa 'cane, reed', see n.146), maybe the fir (pItu),[N.114] and the aspen (varaNa?).[N.115] But why are all the other IE trees those of a colder climate non-existent in Indian texts, even when even the neighboring Iranians have some of them, e.g. in the eastern Afghani mountains (fir,[N.116] oak,[N.117] willow,[N.118] poplar[N.119] )? Or rather, to follow the autochthonous line: how did the IE tree names belonging to a cooler climate ever get out of India where these trees do not exist? One would have to use the auxiliary assumption that such trees were only found in the colder climate of the Himalayas and Pamirs, thus were part of the local South Asian vocabulary, and that they would then have been taken along, in the westward movement of the emigrants. But, even this special pleading does not work: some of these temperate IE trees are not found in the S. Asian mountains. But, they still have good Iranian and IE names, all with proper IE word formation (see above). Interestingly, these words have not always been formed from the same stem, which reflects normal (P)IE linguistic variation and is not due to completely new, individual, local formation in one or the other IE language. Rather, the PIE variations in the name of the beech,[N.120] fir (and resin), and oak (see above) use the same roots and several of the available PIE suffixes. In other words, these cool climate, temperate trees and their names are already PIE. If the indigenous theory of an emigration out of India would apply, these tree names should have taken one or two typical "Indian" PIE (dialect) forms and spread westwards, such as is the case with the two loans from Chinese, chai or tea. The opposite is the case. The individual IE languages have the same PIE word, or they have slightly innovated within the usual PIE parameters of ablaut and suffixes. In short, whatever way one turns the evidence, all of the above points to some original IE tree names of the temperate zone exported southwards. Some of them therefore exhibit a change in meaning; others are an application of an old, temperate zone name to newly encountered plants, such as 'willow' > 'reed, cane'. Again, this change in meaning indicates the path of the migration, from the temperate zone into India. If we carry out the countercheck, and search for Indian plant names in the west, such as lotus, bamboo, Indian trees (azvattha, bilva, jambu, etc.), we come up with nothing. Such names are not to be found, also not in a new meaning, such as in a hypothetical case: *'fig tree' > *'large tree with hanging twigs', *'willow'.[N.121] The lack is significant as the opposite case, import into S. Asia, is indeed found. Again, this points to an introduction of the IA language into India, not an export 'Out of India'. The same kind of scenario is found with the typical PIE animals that belong to a temperate climate. While some of them such as the wolf or bear occur in South Asia as well, albeit in slightly different species (such as the S. Asian black bear), others are found, just as some of the tree names, only in new, adapted meanings. For example, the beaver is not found inside S. Asia. It occurs, however, even now in Central Asia, its bones have been found in areas as far south as N. Syria and in mummified form in Egypt, and it is attested in the Avesta (bawri < *babhri < IE *bhebhr-) when speaking of the dress ('made up of 30 beaver skins') of the Iranian counterpart of the river Goddess sarasvatI, ar@duuI sUrA anAhitA: Yt 5.129 "the female beaver is most beautiful, as it is most furry: the beaver is a water animal" (yat~ asti bawris' sraEs'ta yatha yat~ asti gaonO.t@ma, bawris' bauuaiti upApO).[N.122] Avestan bawri- is related to the descriptive term, IE *bhebhru "brown, beaver" which is widely attested: O.Engl. bebr, beofor, Lat. fiber, Lith. be~brus, Russ. bobr, bebr- (Pokorny 1959: 136). The respective word in Vedic, babhru(-ka), however, means 'brown, mongoose' (Nenninger 1993). While the mongoose is not a water animal, some Indian types of mongooses vaguely look like a beaver, and clearly, the IE/IIr term for 'beaver' has been used, inside South Asia, to designate the newly encountered animal, the mongoose. This occurs today in the subcontinent, but in Greater Iran only in its southeastern-most corner, in Baluchistan. Interestingly, N.Pers. bebr < Phl. bawrak, Avest. bawri 'beaver' is a cat-like, tail-less animal whose skins are used (Horn 1893: 42); the beaver, though previously attested as far south as Syria and Egypt, is no(t longer) found in Iran; note also N.Pers. bibar 'mouse'. The opposite direction of the spread of the word, 'out of India', is not likely as it is not Ved. babhru (or Avest. baËri) that spread westwards (following S.S. Misra 1992) but their original (and traditional) IE source, *bhebhru. Such a hypothetical export would again have to suppose subsequent individual sound changes that mysteriously result in the various attested IE forms that cannot occur if one starts from Ved. babhru. It is unlikely, thus, that the original word, *bhebhru signified the mongoose.[N.123] Other S. Asian animal names are not 'exported' either. Occam's razor applies: all things being equal, it is easier to assume import into S.Asia, along with the other animal names of the temperate zone. The case of the salmon may be added and briefly discussed in this context. It has often been used to define the original homeland of the Indo-Europeans, into the Fifties of the 20th century, by taking the present distribution of the salmon for granted (rivers flowing into the Baltic, Polar Sea, Thieme 1951).[N.124] However, another type of salmon is also found in the rivers flowing into the Caspian Sea. The word in question is attested in Osset. laesaeg 'salmon' (Salmo trutta caspius, perhaps a kind of trout), Russian lososu, Lith. las'is'a, la~s'is, Germ. Lachs, Toch. B. laks 'fish', Iran. *raxs'a 'dark colored' > N.Pers. raxs' 'red-white', Ved. lAkSA 'lacquer, red resin'. Again, the direction from 'salmon' > 'fish', > 'red-colored/lacquer' is more likely than the opposite one, (especially when we also include Thieme's suggestion that Ved. lakSa 'wager' (in the dicing game using 150 nuts) is derived from 'salmon swarm', note also Class. Skt. lakSa '100,000', see (EWA II 472, 477, EWA III, 83, 96-97, Pokorny 1959: 653). All such evidence is not favorable for an emigration scenario. Rather, Occam's razor applies, again: PIE has a number of temperate/cold climate plants and animals which never existed in South Asia but which can be reconstructed for all/most of PIE; their names follow IE rules of word formation (root structure, suffixes etc.) and exhibit the typical formational possibilities of IE (ablaut, exchange of various suffixes). A few of them that designate flora and fauna actually occurring inside S. Asia have been retained in Vedic (wolf, birch, etc.), others have gained new meanings suitable for the animals or plants of a tropical climate ('willow' > 'reed', 'beaver' > 'mongoose'). Interestingly, the autochthonous counter-argument[N.125] relating to tropical plants and animals does not work either. If we suppose a South Asian homeland of PIE, we should be able to indicate at least a few terms that have been exported (north)westwards. This is not the case. Designations for typical Indian plants and animals that should be found in Indo-European and especially in Iranian, do not even appear in Iran, not to speak of C. Asia or Europe. Words such as those for animals, plants, and trees just do not make it westwards.[N.126] Nor do we find retained names for newly encountered plants/animals, although at least some of them are actually still found in Iran: the lion (see Old Pers. sculptures at Behistun, Iran. s'er (Horn 1893: 178); the tiger, Iran. bebr (Horn 1983: 42) that is still found in the Elburz and Kopeh Dagh and as late as the Seventies around the Aral Lake; the lotus (again seen on Behistun sculptures), etc. Other words that have occasionally been used for the autochthonous argument, such as kapi 'monkey', siMha 'lion' or ibha 'elephant' are rather dubious cases.[N.127] Ved. ibha (RV) does not even seem to indicate 'elephant' but 'household of a chief' (details in EWA I 194); i-bha 'elephant' is attested only in Epic/Class. Skt. (EWA III 28), and the combination with Grk. ele'-pha(nt-), Lat. ebur, Gothic ulbandus 'camel' suffers from lack of proper sound correspondences. The word for monkey, Ved. kapi, is represented in Europe by another form which is not directly related by regular sound correspondences either: Grk. ke~bos, ke~pos, (cf. also Hebr. qOf, Akkad. uqUpu, iqUpu, aqUpu, Coptic sapi, O. Egypt. gfj) :: Germanic *apan-, aban > Engl. ape with an unexplained loss of initial k-. The change in initial consonant is typical for transmissions of loan words from an unknown source, and cannot be used as proof of an original PIE word *kAp/kap.[N.128] Similar relationships are seen in the word for 'apple': Celt. *abal-, O.Ir. ubul, Crimean Gothic apel, OHG apful, O.Norse apal-dr, Lith. o'buolas, etc., O.Ch.Slav. abluko, including Basque, Caucasus and Bur. relations (Berger 1959). Finally, it must be considered that, generally, the IE plants and animals are those of the temperate climate and include the otter, beaver, wolf, bear, lynx, elk, red deer, hare, hedgehog, mouse; birch, willow, elm, ash, oak, (by and large, also the beech[N.129]); juniper, poplar, apple, maple, alder, hazel, nut, linden, hornbeam, and cherry (Mallory 1989: 114-116). Some of them are found in South Asia, and their designations have been used for the local form of the animal or plant (such bear RkSa, wolf vRka, otter udra, birch bhUrja, etc.) But most of them are not found in India and their designations have either been adapted (as is the case with the beaver > mongoose babhru), or they have simply not been used any longer. According to the autochthonous theory, these non-Indian plant and animal names would have to be new words that were coined only when the various IE tribes had already emigrated out of India. However, all of them are proper IE names, with IE roots and suffixes and with proper IE word formation. It would require extra-ordinary special pleading to assume that they all were created independently by the emigrant IE tribes, at different times, on different paths, but always from the same IE roots and (often) with the same suffixes: how could these 'emigrants' know or remember exactly which roots/suffixes to choose on encountering a new plant or animal? Rather, as usual by now with all such arguments, Occam's razor applies, and the opposite assumption carries: IE words of the flora and fauna of the temperate zone were adapted to a tropical climate wherever possible. We see immigration into, instead of emigration 'out of India'. In the sequel, some of the individual linguistic proposals of the 'Out of India' theory, and the and sometimes rather technical arguments that speak for and against it will be discussed. (continues with sections c- g) ======================================================== Michael Witzel Department of Sanskrit & Indian Studies, Harvard University 2 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge MA 02138, USA ph. 1- 617-496 2990 (also messages) home page: http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~witzel/mwpage.htm Elect. Journ. of Vedic Studies: http://nautilus.shore.net/~india/ejvs/