Asko Parpola Proto-Dravidian (the ancestor of all known Dravidian languages) was probly spoken by … A: I think any direct relationship between the Indus Valley and the deep Dravidian south is unlikely because of the vast gap in space and time. Yesterday, Tamil Nadu had this year's bull festivals where young men in the villages chase bulls and get hurt in the process. Historians and archaeologists have so far overwhelmingly backed up the idea that the language underlying the Harappan script was Proto-Dravidian, but the inability to … The Harappan language (also Indus language) is the unknown language of the Bronze Age (3rd millennium BC) Harappan civilization (Indus Valley Civilization). The language being unattested in any readable contemporary source, hypotheses regarding its nature are reduced to purported loanwords and substratum influence, notably the substratum in Vedic Sanskrit and a few terms recorded in Sumerian cuneiform (such as Meluhha), in conjunction with analyses of the undeciphered Indus script. The proto-Dravidian language was placed at the scene of the Harappan culture. people using cognate scripts2–5, three from the Manding-Vai script to interpret The decipherment of the Harappan assumptions could be made leading Harappan signs. Therefore while it is legitimate to look for survivals, those survivals are as likely to be found in the RgVeda as in Purananuru, a Tamil work, as likely to be found in Punjab and Sindh as in India and Sri Lanka. However, in spite of efforts spanning more than 30 years by now, relatively little of This paper presented at SI3 Conference in IIT Chennai on Dec 23, 2017 highlights the defective assumption of Aryan Invasion Theory and the faulty methodology of using Tamil words for decipherment of Indus script by Iravatham Mahadevan in his numerous We are both the product of a very long period of intermarriage, there have been migrations. Q: How do you conceive of the relationship between the Indus culture that existed five thousand years ago and contemporary Dravidian culture here in South India? 2. The Harappan language is the unknown language or languages of the Bronze Age (2nd millennium BC) Harappan civilization (Indus Valley Civilization, or IVC). The study also indicates that … It is there is Gujarat, it is there in Malabar, but not in the area where Dravidian is spoken today. Jane R. McIntosh suggests one such possibility: Para-Munda was originally the main language of the civilization, especially in the Punjab region. Something like 2,000 years and 2,000 miles. It was assumed that the Dravidian language … Michael Witzel, Substrate Languages in Old Indo-Aryan. … (PDF) Dravidian is the language of the Indus writing | Clyde Winters - Academia.edu The Indus Valley writing is not a multilingual system of writing. language and the languages spoken by people using cognate scripts2–5, three assumptions could be made leading to the decipherment of the Harappan writ-ing. Sumerian Meluhha may be derived from a native term for the Indus Valley Civilization, also reflected in Sanskrit mleccha meaning foreigner and Witzel (2000) further suggests that Sumerian GIŠšimmar (a type of tree) may be cognate to Rigvedic śimbala and śalmali (also names of trees).[1]. Dravidians are an ethno-linguistic people group predominantly found in southern India, Sri Lanka, but also Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and the Maldives. [9], An Indus loanword of "para-Munda" nature in Mesopotamian has been identified by Michael Witzel, A first link between the Rgvedic Panjab and Mesopotamia: śimbala/śalmali, and. This is very likely to be one of the traits which connect the Dravidian south with the Indus Valley. A: One of the cultural traits in the Indus Valley is that they had the bull fight. Some of the myths may survive but may become unrecognizable. The Dravidian peoples, or Dravidians, are a linguistic group originating in South Asia who predominantly speak any of the Dravidian languages. There are a number of hypotheses as to the nature of this unknown language: there are good grounds to believe For the purpose of the present paper, it will be as sumed that the Harappan language was a form of Drav~dian and that the Indus Script ioncJ'"
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