On the genetic relationship of the Caucasian Iberians and Basques

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Автор книги - . Произведение относится к жанру историческая литература. Оно опубликовано в 2025 году. Книге не присвоен международный стандартный книжный номер.

Аннотация

This article by Valeria Prusova discusses the long-standing debate about the genetic link between the Basques of Southwestern Europe and the Caucasian Iberians (Georgians). It synthesizes evidence from various fields, including linguistics, archaeology, anthropology, and ethnography, noting that the unique non-Indo-European nature of the Basque language has fueled this debate since the 19th century.

The paper highlights linguistic theories, such as N. Marr's "Japhetic theory," which proposed a single pre-Indo-European linguistic substratum. It also presents supporting evidence from other disciplines, including the similarity of ancient dolmens in both regions, and anthropological findings of shared blood group prevalence.

The author concludes that while the hypothesis is compelling, the immense time gap and insufficient comparative material make it difficult to prove or refute definitively, calling for continued

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From the mid-19th century to the present day, scholars have attempted to prove or disprove the reality of the relationship between the Basques and the Iberians, trying to determine the ethnic roots of these two peoples through archaeological, ethnographic, and anthropological data.

"The Basque-Iberian problem is now a problem of worldwide significance," wrote V.F. Shishmarev in 1948. "The problems arising over Basque and its other 'prehistoric' brethren are theoretically so valuable and important that their specter unwittingly troubles European linguistics, especially in the last two decades in connection with the political role of national minorities." /1/

The long-standing interest in the Basques in Western European science is due to the fact that they are the only people in Southwestern Europe whose language does not belong to the Indo-European language family. This interest grew when parallels with the languages of the ancient Eastern civilizations of Sumer and Akkad were found in the roots and structure of the Basque language. /2/

A hypothesis of the Mediterranean origin of the Basques arose, comparing them with the Caucasian peoples, whose origins scholars trace to the Near East and Mesopotamia (Georgians, Mingrelians…). /3/

From this time (19th century), a special interest in Caucasian languages and peoples emerged in European science (mainly in linguistics).

However, as G.A. Klimov writes, "Caucasian linguistics has long acquired an unenviable reputation as a sphere of many unfounded… genetic constructions." /4/

According to G.A. Klimov, N.Ya. Marr, and K.D. Dondua, this situation in Caucasian linguistics is because there are few specialists among European scholars studying the Caucasus who are genuinely proficient in Caucasian languages.

"Throughout the entire 19th century, it was hardly possible to count two or three linguists who fully mastered the Caucasian material." /5/

From the multitude o f early genetic constructions of this kind, one can mention the opinion of F. Bopp on the belonging of the Kartvelian language to the Indo-European languages /6/, F. Hommel's position on an "Alarodian" family comprising many ancient languages of the Near East, the Mediterranean, and the Caucasus; /7/ the development of ideas of a Caucasian-Etruscan kinship by V. Thomsen and a Caucasian-Elamite kinship by R. Winkler, the Caucasian-Urartian hypothesis of F. Lenormant and A.H. Sayce. /10/


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