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*Michael W. Ovenden, ''The Origin of the Constellations'' in''The Philosophical Journal 3'' (1966), p. 1-18 *Michael W. Ovenden, ''The Origin of the Constellations'' in''The Philosophical Journal 3'' (1966), p. 1-18
*Cornelis J. Ruijgh, in ''Les Civilisations égéennes'', René Treuil et all edit, (Paris 1989), p. 401-423. *Cornelis J. Ruijgh, in ''Les Civilisations égéennes'', René Treuil et all edit, (Paris 1989), p. 401-423.
*Cornelis J. Ruijgh, ''Sur la position dialectale du Mycénien'' in ''Atti e Memorie del Secondo Congresso Internazionale di Micenologia'' (Roma 1996) p. 115-124.
*A. Thumb, E. Kieckers, ''Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte'' (1932) *A. Thumb, E. Kieckers, ''Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte'' (1932)



Revision as of 15:55, 2 March 2006

The "Proto-Ionians" are a Early Bronze Age Hellenic people, whose existence has been postulated by Jean Faucounau. The arguments in favour of this existence are known as the Proto-IonianTheory, which is a slightly modified version of the old Paul Kretschmer's linguistical Three Waves model.

Mainstream Greek linguistics separates the Greek dialects into two large genetic groups, one including Doric Greek and the other including both Arcadocypriot and Ionic Greek. But alternative approaches proposing three groups are not uncommon. Thumb and Kieckers (1932) propose three groups, classifying Ionic as genetically just as separate from Arcadocypriot as from Doric.

Like a few other linguists (Vl. Georgiev, C. Rhuijgh, P.Léveque, etc.) , J.Faucounau considers as wrong the bipartite classification as "Risch-Chadwick theory", so called after two famous proponents of it, Ernst Risch and John Chadwick (see ). Faucounau favours the tripartite classification, and attributes the latter to three consecutive "waves" of Hellenic immigration into Greece. In Faucounau's view, then, the first Greek settlers in their historical territory were the (Pelasgic) "Proto-Ionians", which were separated around 3000 BC from both the proto-Dorians and the proto-Mycenaeans. Therefore, Faucounau traces this three-waves model to similar views forwarded by Paul Kretschmer in the 1890s and the 1900s (viz., before the decipherment of Linear B), the difference being that in Faucounau's view, the Proto-Ionians came by sea through the Dardanelles. The last two waves are the generally accepted arrival of the Mycenaean Greeks (the linguistic predecessors of the Arcadocypriot speakers) in around 1700 BC and the Dorian invasion around 1100 BC. Faucounau's arguments in favour of his theory set out in his 2001 book are a)-the existence of proto-ionisms in the Mycenaean tablets b)-ancient traditions concerning Pelasgic Ionians c)-some unexplained archaeological facts c)-arguments of archaeoastronomy, (developped in particular by M.W.Ovenden). He considers that those arguments are an indirect confirmation of his own decipherment claim of the Phaistos Disk as Proto-Ionic, although this attempt has not been endorsed in the academic mainstream.

Faucounau's "Proto-Ionic" has most properties of Homeric Greek, including loss of labiovelars and even of digamma (both are preserved intact in 14th century BC Mycenaean). Digamma in Faucounau's reading of the Phaistos Disk has in some instances passed to y, a sound shift not known from any other Greek dialect, but suspected in Ionic. (e.g. Ion. païs v/etym. paus)

For Faucounau, the Pelasgians, the Trojans, the Carians and the Philistines are all descended from the Proto-Ionians.

Literature

  • Jean Faucounau, Le déchiffrement du Disque de Phaistos, Paris 1999
  • Jean Faucounau, Les Proto-Ioniens : histoire d'un peuple oublié, Paris 2001.
    • review: Paul Faure, Revue des études grecques Vol. 15 (2002), p. 424f.
  • Jean Faucounau, Les Peuples de la Mer et leur Histoire, Paris 2003
  • Jean Faucounau, Les Origines Grecques à l'Age de Bronze, Paris 2005
  • Vladimir Georgiev, in Proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquiumon Mycenaean Studies, Cambridge 1966, p. 104-124
  • Vladimir Georgiev, Acta Mycenaea, Salamanca 1972, p.361-379
  • Paul Kretschmer, Einleitung in die Geschichte der griechischen Sprache (1896)
  • Pierre Lévêque, L'aventure grecque, p.16-29
  • Michael W. Ovenden, The Origin of the Constellations inThe Philosophical Journal 3 (1966), p. 1-18
  • Cornelis J. Ruijgh, in Les Civilisations égéennes, René Treuil et all edit, (Paris 1989), p. 401-423.
  • Cornelis J. Ruijgh, Sur la position dialectale du Mycénien in Atti e Memorie del Secondo Congresso Internazionale di Micenologia (Roma 1996) p. 115-124.
  • A. Thumb, E. Kieckers, Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte (1932)

See also

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