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Copyright © 2003, The National Academy of
Sciences Anthropology Toward a phylogenetic chronology of ancient Gaulish, Celtic, and
Indo-European *McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3ER, United Kingdom; †Junge Akademie, 10117 Berlin, Germany; and §Phonogrammarchiv der Universität Zürich, CH-8032 Zürich, Switzerland ‡
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
pf223/at/cam.ac.uk.
Edited by Henry C. Harpending, University of Utah, Salt Lake City,
UT Received February 27, 2003; Accepted May 6, 2003. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Indo-European is the largest and best-documented language family in the
world, yet the reconstruction of the Indo-European tree, first proposed in
1863, has remained controversial. Complications may include ascertainment bias
when choosing the linguistic data, and disregard for the wave model of 1872
when attempting to reconstruct the tree. Essentially analogous problems were
solved in evolutionary genetics by DNA sequencing and phylogenetic network
methods, respectively. We now adapt these tools to linguistics, and analyze
Indo-European language data, focusing on Celtic and in particular on the
ancient Celtic language of Gaul (modern France), by using bilingual
Gaulish–Latin inscriptions. Our phylogenetic network reveals an early
split of Celtic within Indo-European. Interestingly, the next branching event
separates Gaulish (Continental Celtic) from the British (Insular Celtic)
languages, with Insular Celtic subsequently splitting into Brythonic (Welsh,
Breton) and Goidelic (Irish and Scottish Gaelic). Taken together, the network
thus suggests that the Celtic language arrived in the British Isles as a
single wave (and then differentiated locally), rather than in the traditional
two-wave scenario (“P-Celtic” to Britain and
“Q-Celtic” to Ireland). The phylogenetic network furthermore
permits the estimation of time in analogy to genetics, and we obtain tentative
dates for Indo-European at 8100 BC ± 1,900 years, and for the arrival
of Celtic in Britain at 3200 BC ± 1,500 years. The phylogenetic method
is easily executed by hand and promises to be an informative approach for many
problems in historical linguistics. |
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