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© Michaela Pointon / Culture Trip |
Language
evolution is like biological evolution—it happens minutely, generation
by generation, so there’s no distinct breaking point between one
language and the next language that develops from it. Therefore, it’s
impossible to say that one language is really older than any other one;
they’re all as old as humanity itself. That said, each of the languages
below has a little something special—something ancient—to differentiate
it from the masses.
Hebrew
Hebrew
is a funny case, since it essentially fell out of common usage around
400 CE and then remained preserved as a liturgical language for Jews
across the world. However, along with the rise of Zionism in the 19th
and 20th centuries, Hebrew went through a revival process to become the
official language of Israel.
While the modern version differs from the Biblical version, native
speakers of Hebrew can fully comprehend what is written in the Old
Testament and its connected texts. As the earliest speakers of Modern
Hebrew often had Yiddish as their native language, Modern Hebrew has in many ways been influenced by this other Jewish language.
© Michaela Pointon |
Basque
The Basque language is the ultimate linguistic mystery. It is spoken natively by some of the Basque people who live in Spain and France,
but it is completely unrelated to any Romance language (which French
and Spanish are) or indeed any other language in the world. Linguists
have postulated over the decades about what it could be related to, but
none of the theories have been able to hold water. The only thing that’s
clear is that it existed in that area before the arrival of the Romance
languages—that is, before the Romans got there with the Latin that
would eventually develop into French and Spanish.
Tamil
Tamil, a language spoken by about 78 million people and recognized as an official language in Sri Lanka and Singapore,
is the only classical language that has survived all the way through to
the modern world. Forming part of the Dravidian language family, which
includes a number of languages native mostly to southern and eastern India,
it is also the official language of the state of Tamil Nadu.
Researchers have found inscriptions in Tamil dating back to the 3rd
century BCE, and it has been in continuous use ever since. Unlike
Sanskrit, another ancient Indian language that fell out of common usage
around 600 BCE and became mostly a liturgical language, Tamil has continued to develop and is now the 20th most commonly-spoken language in the world.
© Michaela Pointon |
Lithuanian
The
language family that most European languages belong to is
Indo-European, but they started splitting apart from each other probably
around 3500 BCE. They developed into dozens of other languages like
German, Italian, and English, gradually losing the features that they
had all shared. One language, however, up in the Baltic language branch
of the Indo-European family, retained more of the feature of what
linguists call Proto-Indo-European (PIE), which is the language that
they postulate was spoken around 3500 BCE. For whatever reason,
Lithuanian has kept more of the sounds and grammar rules from PIE than
any of its linguistic cousins, and can therefore be called one of the
oldest languages in the world.
Farsi
In
case you haven’t heard of Farsi, it’s a language spoken in modern-day
Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan, among other places. You’ve probably
heard of Persian,
and it’s actually the same language, under a different name. Farsi is
the direct descendant of Old Persian, which was the language of the
Persian Empire. Modern Persian took form around 800 CE, and one of the
things that differentiates it from many modern languages is that it has
changed relatively little since then. Speakers of Persian today could
pick up a piece of writing from 900 CE and read it with considerably
less difficulty than an English speaker could read, say, Shakespeare.
© Michaela Pointon |
Icelandic
Icelandic
is another Indo-European language, this time from the North Germanic
branch (just for comparison, English is also a Germanic language, but
from the West Germanic branch). Many Germanic languages have streamlined
themselves and lost some of the features that other Indo-European
languages have (you’ve probably never heard of a case, for example,
unless you’ve studied Latin or a
Slavic language), but Icelandic has developed much more conservatively
and retained many of these features. Danish governance of the country
from the 14th to the 20th century also had very little effect on the Icelandic language,
so it has mostly gone unchanged since Norse settlers brought it there
when they came to the country, and Icelandic speakers can easily read
the sagas written centuries ago.
Macedonian
The
Slavic language family, which includes Russian, Polish, Czech, and
Croatian, among others, is relatively young as far as languages go. They
only started splitting off from their common ancestor, Common Slavic
(or Proto-Slavic), when Cyril and Methodius standardized the language,
creating what is now called Old Church Slavonic,
and created an alphabet for it. They then took the language north with
them in the 9th century as they went to convert the Slavs to
Christianity. They came from somewhere just north of Greece, probably in
what is now known as Macedonia (or the Republic of Macedonia or FYROM following Macedonian naming disputes), and Macedonian (together with its very close relative Bulgarian) is the language that is most closely related to Old Church Slavonic today.
Finnish
Finnish
may not have been written down until the 16th century, but as with any
language, it has a history that stretches back far earlier than that. It
is a member of the Finno-Ugric language family,
which also includes Estonian, Hungarian, and several smaller languages
spoken by minority groups across Siberia. Despite that, Finnish
includes many loan words, which were adopted into Finnish from other
language families over the centuries. In many cases, Finnish has
retained these loan words closer to their original form than the
language that they came from. The word for mother, aiti, for example, comes from Gothic—which, of course, is no longer spoken. The word for king, kuningas, comes from the old Germanic word *kuningaz—which no longer exists in any Germanic language.
Georgian
The Caucasus region is a real hotbed for linguists who seek out difficult world languages.
The main languages of the three south Caucasian countries, Armenia,
Azerbaijan, and Georgia, come from three entirely different language
families—respectively Indo-European, Turkic, and Kartvelian. Georgian is
the biggest Kartvelian language, and it is the only Caucasian language
with an ancient literary tradition. Its beautiful and unique alphabet
is also quite old—it is thought to have been adapted from Aramaic as far
back as the third century AD. While not a language island in the same
sense as Basque, there are only four Kartvelian languages, all spoken by
minorities within Georgia, and they are all unrelated to any other
languages in the world.
© Michaela Pointon |
Irish Gaelic
Although
Irish Gaelic is only spoken as a native language by a small majority of
Irish people nowadays, it has a long history behind it. It is a member
of the Celtic branch of Indo-European languages, and it existed on the
islands that are now Great Britain and Ireland
well before the Germanic influences arrived. Irish Gaelic was the
language from which Scottish Gaelic and Manx (which used to be spoken on
the Isle of Man) arose, but the fact that really lands it on this list
is that it has the oldest vernacular literature of any language in
Western Europe. While the rest of Europe was speaking their own
languages and writing in Latin, the Irish decided that they wanted to
write in their own language instead.
Source: theculturetrip.com
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