Karto-Zan languages

Last updated
Karto-Zan
Georgian-Zan
Geographic
distribution
South Caucasus, Anatolia, Israel
Linguistic classification Kartvelian
  • Karto-Zan
Proto-language Proto-Georgian-Zan
Subdivisions
Glottolog geor1252

The Karto-Zan languages, also known as Georgian-Zan, are a branch of the Kartvelian language family that contains the Georgian and Zan languages. The Svan language forms the other branch of the Kartvelian family, showing characteristic differences from the Karto-Zan group. [1] It has been hypothesized that the divergence between Svan and Proto-Kartvelian goes back as far as the 19th century BCE. Georgian and Zan on the other hand diversified from Proto-Georgian-Zan during the 7th century BCE. [2] Both languages share common archaic words related to metallurgy and agriculture absent in Svan.

Classification

Proto-Kartvelian
KartoZan

Georgian

Zan

Mingrelian

Laz

Svan

Family tree of the Kartvelian languages

The Karto-Zan languages constitute a branch of the Kartvelian language family. Glottolog internally divides the Karto-Zan group into the Georgic languages, which contain Georgian and its dialects, and Old Georgian, and the Zan languages, which contain the Mingrelian and Laz languages. [3]

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The Zan languages, or Zanuri or Colchidian, are a branch of the Kartvelian languages constituted by the Mingrelian and Laz languages. The grouping is disputed as some Georgian linguists consider the two to form a dialect continuum of one Zan language. This is often challenged on the most commonly applied criteria of mutual intelligibility when determining borders between languages, as Mingrelian and Laz are only partially mutually intelligible, though speakers of one language can recognize a sizable amount of vocabulary of the other, primarily due to semantic loans, lexical loans and other areal features resulting from geographical proximity and historical close contact common for dialect continuums.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sanigs</span> Ancient tribe in Abkhazia

The Sanigs were a tribe inhabiting Western Georgian/Abkhazia during antiquity. Their ethnic identity is obscure and is the subject of a controversy. They are first attested in the works of Pliny, Arrian and Memnon of Heraclea. Some scholars consider them to be Zans, while others maintain that they were proto-Svans. There is also a consideration that they may have been somewhat similar to the Zygii tribe. According to Arrian, they inhabited the area around Sebastopolis. In favour of the Sanigs' Kartvelian origin, it is important to mention some modern Georgian surnames such as: Sanikidze, Sanikiani, Sanigiani, Sanaia.

The Zans or Chans are a subethnic group of Kartvelian people, speaking the Zan languages.

Proto-Georgian-Zan is a reconstructed language which is the common ancestor of Karto-Zan languages. It is hypothesized to have diverged from Proto-Kartvelian during the 19th century BC and to have split into the ancestor of the Zan languages and the Georgic languages around the 8th century BC or 7th century BC.

References

  1. Linguistics. Mouton. 1999.
  2. Soviet Anthropology and Archaeology: ISAP Translations from Original Soviet Sources. International Arts and Sciences Press. 1965.
  3. "Glottolog 4.1 – Georgian-Zan". glottolog.org. Retrieved 2020-01-08.