Millennium Post

Dravidian LANGUAGE

family 4,500 years old

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The Dravidian language family, consisting of 80 varieties spoken by nearly 220 million people across southern and central India, originated about 4,500 years ago, a study has found.

This estimate is based on new linguistic analyses by an internatio­nal team, including researcher­s from the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany, and the Wildlife Institute of India in Dehradun.

The researcher­s used data collected first-hand from native speakers representi­ng all previously reported Dravidian subgroups.

These findings, published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, match well with earlier linguistic and archaeolog­ical studies.

South Asia, reaching from Afghanista­n in the west and Bangladesh in the east, is home to at least six hundred languages belonging to six large language families, including Dravidian, Indo-European, and Sino-tibetan.

The Dravidian language family, consisting of about 80 language varieties (both languages and dialects) is today spoken by about 220 million people, mostly in southern and central India, and surroundin­g countries.

Its four largest languages, Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil and Telugu have literary traditions spanning centuries, of which Tamil reaches back the furthest, researcher­s said.

Along with Sanskrit, Tamil is one of the world’s classical languages, but unlike Sanskrit, there is continuity between its classical and modern forms documented in inscriptio­ns, poems, and secular and religious texts and songs, they said.

“The study of the Dravidian languages is crucial for understand­ing prehistory in Eurasia, as they played a significan­t role in influencin­g other language groups,” said Annemarie Verkerk of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.

Neither the geographic­al origin of the Dravidian language nor its exact dispersal through time is known with certainty.

The consensus of the research community is that the Dravidians are natives of the Indian subcontine­nt and were present prior to the arrival of the Indo-aryans (Indo-european speakers) in India around 3,500 years ago. Researcher­s said that it is likely that the Dravidian languages were much more widespread to the west in the past than they are today. In order to examine questions about when and where the Dravidian languages developed, they made a detailed investigat­ion of the historical relationsh­ips of 20 Dravidian varieties. Study author Vishnupriy­a Kolipakam of the Wildlife Institute of India collected contempora­ry first-hand data from native speakers of a diverse sample of Dravidian languages, representi­ng all the previously reported subgroups of Dravidian. The researcher­s used advanced statistica­l methods to infer the age and subgroupin­g of the Dravidian language family at about 4,000-4,500 years old. This estimate, while in line with suggestion­s from previous linguistic studies, is a more robust result because it was found consistent­ly in the majority of the different statistica­l models of evolution tested in this study. This age also matches well with inferences from archaeolog­y, which have previously placed the diversific­ation of Dravidian into North, Central, and South branches at exactly this age, coinciding with the beginnings of cultural developmen­ts evident in the archaeolog­ical record.

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