Roger Blench

Last updated

Roger Marsh Blench
Roger Blench at Blench Lane.jpg
Born (1953-08-01) August 1, 1953 (age 71)
United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
Alma mater Cambridge University (Ph.D.)[ self-published source? ]
Scientific career
Fields Historical linguistics, African languages, Southeast Asian languages, Anthropology
Website rogerblench.info

Roger Marsh Blench (born August 1, 1953) is a British linguist, ethnomusicologist and development anthropologist. He has an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and is based in Cambridge, England.[ self-published source? ] He researches, publishes, and works as a consultant. [1]

Contents

Career

Blench is known for his wide-ranging interests and has made important contributions to African linguistics, [2] Southeast Asian linguistics, anthropology, ethnomusicology, ethnobotany, and various other related fields. He has done significant research on the Niger–Congo, Nilo-Saharan, and Afroasiatic families, as well as the Arunachal languages. Additionally, Blench has published extensively on the relationship between linguistics and archaeology. Blench is currently engaged in a long-term project to document the languages of central Nigeria. He has also expressed concern about ranching in Nigeria. [3] [4]

Blench collaborated with the late Professor Kay Williamson, who died in January 2005, and is now a trustee of the Kay Williamson Educational Foundation, which exists both to publish the unpublished material left by Kay Williamson and to promote the study of Nigerian languages. [5] A series of publications supported by the trust is under way with Rüdiger Köppe Verlag in Cologne. [6]

Blench has also conducted research and evaluations of international development activities worldwide, as a consultant and research fellow of the Overseas Development Institute in London. [7]

Linguistic theories

Old North African languages

Old North African speakers, who have been misidentified as Paleoberbers and did not speak a language(s) that is linguistically related to existing Berber languages, were foragers of prehistoric North Africa that spoke a presently extinct set(s) of languages. [8] Roger Blench coined the term, "Old North African," to describe and distinguish earlier languages spoken in North Africa from later languages spoken by incoming Berber speakers, Punic speakers, and Arabic speakers. [8] [9]

History

From coastal North Africa to Iberia (e.g., Spain), ethnic groups spoke a set(s) of languages known as Old North African, which were not necessarily genetically related to one another. [8] [9] Ethnic groups of Iberia that spoke the Tartessian language may be considered Old North African speakers. [8] [9] [10] Ethnic groups and the archaeological cultures of North Africa that came before the Capsian culture, [8] [9] ethnic groups of the Capsian culture, [8] [9] [10] [11] and ethnic groups of the Neolithic Maghreb are considered to be Old North African speakers. [8] [9] As large animals migrated into and across the Green Sahara, Old North African speakers, who hunted them as game animals, also migrated into and across the Sahara. [12] The variety of cultures in the Maghreb described by Herodotus in 2500 BP may have been the cultural variety existing among Old North African speakers at that time. [8] [9]

In 300 BCE, Guanche speakers, who may have been Old North African speakers rather than Berber speakers, may have peopled the Canary Islands. [13] Though speculative, Guanche speakers may have spoken the Basque language, Tartessian language, and other similar languages of the Iberian Peninsula; supportive evidence for this view may be found in the few lexemes that have been related to the Basque language and an absence of Berber etymology found in some Guanche words. [13]

Due to the migration of incoming Arabic (e.g., Hassānīya), Berber (e.g., Tuareg), and Punic speakers, Old North African languages may have eventually ceased being spoken in North Africa. [8] [9]

Ancient Egyptian language

Remnants of extinct Old North African languages may have been preserved in the ancient Egyptian language. [14] For example, language contacts between Darfurian and Chadian proto-languages with the ancient Egyptian language. [14] Additionally, the Tehenu and Temehu, which may have been ethnic groups with cultures and languages distinct from one another, may have also had their languages preserved in the ancient Egyptian language. [14]

Libyco-Berber script

The Libyco-Berber script may be the result of a creolization process between the Berber and Old North African languages; this creolized language may reflect the linguistic connections between modern Berber speakers and Guanche speakers of the Canary Islands. [8] [9] Among many unknown elements found in rock engravings on the Canary Islands, some evidence (e.g., few basic lexicon, numbers) of the Punic language and Libyco-Berber script have been found. [15] While the general view of the Berber languages being linguistically connected to the Guanche language is based largely on numerical evidence, it is also as probable that the affinity found between the languages are due to late-added Berber loanwords and that Guanche speakers were Old North African speakers. [15] The Numidian language, which may have also been an Old North African language, constitutes the rock engravings in the Canary Islands. [16]

Berber languages

The internal diversity of the Berber languages are not able to be reconciled with how early the Neolithic (7000 BP, afterwards) and Capsian (12,000 BP - 8000 BP) periods occurred in North Africa; thus, these Neolithic and Capsian periods in North Africa are not able to be characterized as "Berber." [8] The foundational vocabulary of the Berber languages, if not due to how long the Berber languages have been diverged from other Afroasiatic languages, may reflect inheritance from Old North African languages. [8] [9]

Descendant languages

While possibly being Nilo-Saharan languages, the Nemadi and Dawada languages may also be descendant languages of the Old North African languages. [8] Genetics may further inform the academic discussion about the connections between Old North African speakers and Nilo-Saharan speakers to the south of the Maghreb. [17]

Selected publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Afroasiatic languages</span> Large language family of Africa and West Asia

The Afroasiatic languages, also known as Hamito-Semitic or Semito-Hamitic, are a language family of about 400 languages spoken predominantly in West Asia, North Africa, the Horn of Africa, and parts of the Sahara and Sahel. Over 500 million people are native speakers of an Afroasiatic language, constituting the fourth-largest language family after Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, and Niger–Congo. Most linguists divide the family into six branches: Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, Egyptian, Semitic, and Omotic. The vast majority of Afroasiatic languages are considered indigenous to the African continent, including all those not belonging to the Semitic branch.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Africa</span> Northernmost region of Africa

North Africa is a region encompassing the northern portion of the African continent. There is no singularly accepted scope for the region, and it is sometimes defined as stretching from the Atlantic shores of the Western Sahara in the west, to Egypt and Sudan's Red Sea coast in the east.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kra–Dai languages</span> Language family of mainland Southeast Asia

The Kra–Dai languages, are a language family in mainland Southeast Asia, southern China, and northeastern India. All languages in the family are tonal, including Thai and Lao, the national languages of Thailand and Laos, respectively. Around 93 million people speak Kra–Dai languages; 60% of those speak Thai. Ethnologue lists 95 languages in the family, with 62 of these being in the Tai branch.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guanches</span> Native inhabitants of the Canary Islands

The Guanche were the indigenous inhabitants of the Spanish Canary Islands, located in the Atlantic Ocean some 100 kilometres (60 mi) to the west of modern Morocco and the North African coast. The islanders spoke the Guanche language, which is believed to have been related to the Berber languages of mainland North Africa; the language became extinct in the 17th century, soon after the islands were colonized.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prehistoric North Africa</span> Prehistory of North African region

The prehistory of North Africa spans the period of earliest human presence in the region to gradual onset of historicity in the Maghreb during classical antiquity. Early anatomically modern humans are known to have been present at Jebel Irhoud, in what is now Morocco, approximately 300,000 years ago. The Nile Valley region, via ancient Egypt, contributed to the Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age periods of the Old World, along with the ancient Near East.

In historical linguistics, the homeland or Urheimat of a proto-language is the region in which it was spoken before splitting into different daughter languages. A proto-language is the reconstructed or historically-attested parent language of a group of languages that are genetically related.

Guanche is an extinct language or dialect continuum that was spoken by the Guanches of the Canary Islands until the 16th or 17th century. It died out after the conquest of the Canary Islands as the Guanche ethnic group was assimilated into the dominant Spanish culture. The Guanche language is known today through sentences and individual words that were recorded by early geographers, as well as through several place-names and some Guanche words that were retained in the Canary Islanders' Spanish.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Garamantes</span> Ancient North African population

The Garamantes were ancient peoples, who may have descended from Berber tribes, Toubou tribes, and Saharan pastoralists that settled in the Fezzan region by at least 1000 BC and established a civilization that flourished until its end in the late 7th century AD. The Garamantes first emerged as a major regional power in the mid-2nd century AD and established a kingdom that spanned roughly 180,000 km2 (70,000 sq mi) in the Fezzan region of southern Libya. Their growth and expansion was based on a complex and extensive qanat irrigation system, which supported a strong agricultural economy and a large population. They subsequently developed the first urban society in a major desert that was not centered on a river system; their largest town, Garama, had a population of around four thousand, with an additional six thousand living in surrounding suburban areas. At its pinnacle, the Garamantian kingdom established and maintained a "standard of living far superior to that of any other ancient Saharan society" and was composed of "brilliant farmers, resourceful engineers, and enterprising merchants who produced a remarkable civilization."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Capsian culture</span> Culture centered in the Maghreb that lasted from about 8,000 to 2,700 BC

The Capsian culture was a late Mesolithic and Neolithic culture centered in the Maghreb that lasted from about 8,000 to 2,700 BC. It was named after the town of Gafsa in Tunisia, which was known as Capsa in Roman times.

The Zaghawa people, also called Beri or Zakhawa, are an ethnic group primarily residing in southwestern Libya, northeastern Chad, and western Sudan, including Darfur.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Berberism</span> Berber political-cultural movement of North Africa

Berberism is a Berber ethnonationalist movement, that started mainly in Kabylia (Algeria) and Morocco during the French colonial era with the Kabyle myth and was largely driven by colonial capitalism and France's divide and conquer policy. The Berberist movement originally manifested itself as anti-Arab racism, Islamophobia, and Francophilia, that was sanctioned and sponsored by French colonial authorities. The movement later spread to other Berber communities in the Maghreb region of North Africa and was facilitated by colonial policies such as the Berber Dahir. The Berberist movement in Algeria and Morocco is in opposition to cultural Arabization, pan-Arabism and Islamism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Languages of Nigeria</span>

There are over 525 native languages spoken in Nigeria. The official language and most widely spoken lingua franca is English, which was the language of Colonial Nigeria. Nigerian Pidgin – an English-based creole – is spoken by over 60 million people.

The Kiffian culture is a prehistoric industry, or domain, that existed between approximately 8,000 BC and 6,000 BC in the Sahara Desert, during the African humid period referred to as the Neolithic Subpluvial. Human remains from this culture were found in 2000 AD at a site known as Gobero, located in Niger in the Ténéré Desert. The site is known as the largest and earliest burial place of Stone Age people in the Sahara desert.

Proto-Berber or Proto-Libyan is the reconstructed proto-language from which the modern Berber languages descend. Proto-Berber was an Afroasiatic language, and thus its descendant Berber languages are cousins to the Egyptian language, Cushitic languages, Semitic languages, Chadic languages, and the Omotic languages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proto-Afroasiatic homeland</span> Hypothetical linguistic homeland of the Proto-Afroasiatic language

The Proto-Afroasiatic homeland is the hypothetical place where speakers of the Proto-Afroasiatic language lived in a single linguistic community, or complex of communities, before this original language dispersed geographically and divided into separate distinct languages. Afroasiatic languages are today mostly distributed in parts of Africa, and Western Asia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mechta-Afalou</span> Prehistoric North African population

Mechta-Afalou, also known as Mechtoid or Paleo-Berber, are a population that inhabited parts of North Africa during the late Paleolithic and Mesolithic. They are associated with the Iberomaurusian archaeological culture.

Sino-Austronesian or Sino-Tibetan-Austronesian is a proposed language family suggested by Laurent Sagart in 1990. Using reconstructions of Old Chinese, Sagart argued that the Austronesian languages are related to the Sinitic languages phonologically, lexically and morphologically. Sagart later accepted the Sino-Tibetan languages as a valid group and extended his proposal to include the rest of Sino-Tibetan. He also placed the Tai–Kadai languages within the Austronesian family as a sister branch of Malayo-Polynesian. The proposal has been largely rejected by other linguists who argue that the similarities between Austronesian and Sino-Tibetan more likely arose from contact rather than being genetic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bantu peoples</span> Ethnolinguistic group in Africa

The Bantu peoples are an indigenous ethnolinguistic grouping of approximately 400 distinct native African ethnic groups who speak Bantu languages. The languages are native to countries spread over a vast area from West Africa, to Central Africa, Southeast Africa and into Southern Africa. Bantu people also inhabit southern areas of Northeast African states.

Proto-Niger–Congo is the hypothetical reconstructed proto-language of the proposed Niger–Congo language family.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Population history of West Africa</span> West African population history

The population history of West Africa is composed of West African populations that were considerably mobile and interacted with one another throughout the history of West Africa. Acheulean tool-using archaic humans may have dwelled throughout West Africa since at least between 780,000 BP and 126,000 BP. During the Pleistocene, Middle Stone Age peoples, who dwelled throughout West Africa between MIS 4 and MIS 2, were gradually replaced by incoming Late Stone Age peoples, who migrated into West Africa as an increase in humid conditions resulted in the subsequent expansion of the West African forest. West African hunter-gatherers occupied western Central Africa earlier than 32,000 BP, dwelled throughout coastal West Africa by 12,000 BP, and migrated northward between 12,000 BP and 8000 BP as far as Mali, Burkina Faso, and Mauritania.

References

  1. Professional CV, Roger Blench.
  2. Hewson, John (2007). Blench, Roger (ed.). "Archaeology, Language, and the African Past". Canadian Journal of African Studies. Review. 41 (3): 574–579. JSTOR   40380107.
  3. Rachael, Abujah (8 November 2018). "British anthropologist advises against ranching in Nigeria". EnviroNews Nigeria. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  4. "British anthropologist advises against ranching in Nigeria". Royal News. 9 November 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  5. Kay Williamson Educational Foundation
  6. KWEF: Publications supported
  7. Academic Curriculum Vitae, Roger Blench, January 2021.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Blench, Roger (14 February 2019). "The Linguistic Prehistory of the Sahara". Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. p. 455. doi:10.1017/9781108634311.014. ISBN   978-1-108-47408-5. S2CID   197854997.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Blench, Roger (2021). "Relating linguistic reconstructions of plant names in Berber to the archaeobotany of North Africa". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 38. University of Cambridge: 103009. Bibcode:2021JArSR..38j3009B. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103009. S2CID   236255444.
  10. 1 2 Blench, Roger (June 2018). "Berber plant names and the archaeobotany of the Maghreb". Academia.edu. University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria: 9.
  11. Fentress, Elizabeth (14 February 2019). "The Archaeological and Genetic Correlates of Amazigh Linguistics". Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. p. 498. doi:10.1017/9781108634311.016. ISBN   9781108474085. S2CID   197849476.
  12. Gatto, M. C.; Mattingly, D. J.; Ray, N.; Sterry, M. (21 June 2019). "Part VI - Linguistic Aspects of Migration and Identity". Burials, Migration and Identity in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. pp. 429–548. doi:10.1017/9781108634311. ISBN   9781108634311. S2CID   242202654.
  13. 1 2 Blench, Roger (2021). "The peopling of the Canaries by the Berbers: new data and new hypotheses". Études et Documents Berbères. 1–2 (45–46): 149–173. doi:10.3917/edb.045.0151. S2CID   248869039.
  14. 1 2 3 Panaite, Elena (2021). "Tjehenou, Tjemeh et les libyens : à la recherche d'une langue libyque dans les premières sources écrites de l'Ancienne Égypte". Études et Documents Berbères. 1–2 (45–46): 315–328. doi:10.3917/edb.045.0317. S2CID   248870231.
  15. 1 2 Blench, Roger (3 October 2017). "African Language Isolates". In Campbell, Lyle (ed.). Language Isolates. London and New York: Routledge. p. 183. doi:10.4324/9781315750026. ISBN   9781317610915. S2CID   90057407.
  16. Blench, Roger (21 October 2017). "Africa over the last 12000 years: how we can interpret the interface of archaeology, linguistics and genetics". Academia.edu. University of Cambridge: 20.
  17. Broodbank, Cyprian; Lucarini, Giulio (January 2019). "The Dynamics of Mediterranean Africa, ca. 9600-1000 bc: An Interpretative Synthesis of Knowns and Unknowns". Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. 32 (2): 195. doi:10.1558/jma.40581. S2CID   212900990.