The Language of the Anglo-Saxons
Proto Indo-European Language
Like the majority of European languages Old Norse, the language of the Vikings, is descended from a common ancestor referred to by linguists as Proto Indo-European (PIE). The origins of PIE lie with the Yamnaya Culture (Russian Ямная культура – literally ‘Culture of Pits). The Yamnaya Culture (also known as Pit Grave culture or Ochre Grave culture) was a Late Copper Age to Early Bronze Age culture of the Pontic Steppe dating to c. 3300–2600 BC 1.
The Yamnaya culture is identified with the late Proto-Indo-Europeans making the Pontic-Caspian steppe the most likely origin for the origin of the Proto-Indo-European language.
Listen to The Sound of the Proto Indo European language
Migrations of the Yamnaya Culture
The early Yamnaya Culture spread quickly across the Pontic–Caspian steppes between c. 3400 and 3200 BC.
According to David Anthony: “The spread of the Yamnaya horizon was the material expression of the spread of late Proto-Indo-European across the Pontic–Caspian steppes.” 2
He goes on to write: “The spread of the Yamnaya horizon was the material expression of the spread of late Proto-Indo-European across the Pontic–Caspian steppes” 3.
The Centum – Satem Split
The Centum-Satem isogloss explains the evolution of the three dorsal rows reconstructed for PIE in the daughter languages. This is shown in the accompanying table.The Centum group includes Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Greek and possibly a number of minor and little known extinct groups (such as Ancient Macedonian, Venetic and probably the Illyrian languages).
The Satem group includes Indo-Iranian, Armenian, Balto-Slavic, Albanian, and perhaps also a number of barely documented extinct languages, such as Thracian and Dacian.
The following tables show the modern descendants of the Centum- Satem split.
The Germanic Languages
Proto Germanic
Proto-Germanic is one of the branches of languages that developed as Proto-Indo-European speakers moved westward into Europe. It probably originated in southern Scandinavia or on the mainland, somewhere around Denmark and the Elbe River. Presumably around 1000 BC there was a relatively small tribe of people who spoke Proto-Germanic.
Stress in Proto-Germanic tended to be on the first syllable of the word, like ‘enemy’ or ‘catapult’. That is not a stress that all languages make. Having stress on the first syllable leaves the endings particularly vulnerable because they are pronounced with so little stress. That means that you would expect that, in Proto-Germanic, endings are going to be delicate. In most Indo-European languages the cases are indicated with endings. The result was that cases began to fall away in Proto-Germanic, because they were so vulnerable. As a result, Proto-Germanic did not have as many case endings as some other Indo-European languages.
Proto Germanic divided into three branches: West German; East Germanic and North Germanic. East Germanic gave rise to Gothic and this branch is now extinct. West Germanic further divided into High and Low forms – High German gave rise to Modern High German and Yiddish – Low German gave rise to, among others, Old Dutch, Old Frisian, and Old English. North Germanic gave rise to Old West Norse (Norwegian and Icelandic) and Old West Norse (Danish and Swedish).
Footnotes:
1. Morgunova, Nina; Khokhlova, Olga (2013), “Chronology and Periodization of the Pit-Grave Culture in the Area Between the Volga and Ural Rivers Based on 14C Dating and Paleopedological Research”. Radiocarbon. 55 (2–3): pp 1286–1296. ↩
2. Anthony, David (2017). “Archaeology and Language: Why Archaeologists Care About the Indo-European Problem”. In Crabtree, P.J.; Bogucki, P. (eds.). European Archaeology as Anthropology: Essays in Memory of Bernard Wailes,p303. ↩
3. ibid pp 321-322. ↩