Genetic relatedness and Baltic language in general, middle of 14th c The Baltic languages are of particular interest to linguists because they retain many archaic features, which are thought to have been present in the early stages of the
Proto-Indo-European language. Several of the extinct Baltic languages have a limited or nonexistent written record, their existence being known only from the records of ancient historians and personal or place names. All of the languages in the Baltic group (including the living ones) were first written down relatively late in their probable existence as distinct languages. These two factors combined with others have obscured the history of the Baltic languages, leading to a number of theories regarding their position in the Indo-European family. The Baltic languages show a close relationship with the Slavic languages, and are grouped with them in a
Balto-Slavic family by most scholars. This family is considered to have developed from a common ancestor,
Proto-Balto-Slavic. Later on, several lexical, phonological and morphological dialectisms developed, separating the various Balto-Slavic languages from each other. Although it is generally agreed that the Slavic languages developed from a single more-or-less unified dialect (
Proto-Slavic) that split off from common Balto-Slavic, there is more disagreement about the relationship between the Baltic languages. The traditional view is that the Balto-Slavic languages split into two branches, Baltic and Slavic, with each branch developing as a single common language (Proto-Baltic and Proto-Slavic) for some time afterwards. Proto-Baltic is then thought to have split into East Baltic and West Baltic branches. However, more recent scholarship has suggested that there was no unified Proto-Baltic stage, but that Proto-Balto-Slavic split directly into three groups: Slavic, East Baltic and West Baltic. Under this view, the Baltic family is
paraphyletic, and consists of all Balto-Slavic languages that are not Slavic. In the 1960s
Vladimir Toporov and
Vyacheslav Ivanov made the following conclusions about the relationship between the Baltic and Slavic languages: • the Proto-Slavic language formed out of peripheral-type Baltic dialects; • the Slavic linguistic type formed later from the structural model of the Baltic languages; • the Slavic structural model is a result of the transformation from the Baltic languages structural model. These scholars' theses do not contradict the close relationship between Baltic and Slavic languages and, from a historical perspective, specify the Baltic-Slavic languages' evolution – the terms 'Baltic' and 'Slavic' are relevant only from the point of view of the present time, meaning
diachronic changes, and the oldest stage of the language development could be called both Baltic and Slavic; Finally, a minority of scholars argue that Baltic descended directly from Proto-Indo-European, without an intermediate common Balto-Slavic stage. They argue that the many similarities and shared innovations between Baltic and Slavic are caused by several millennia of contact between the groups, rather than a shared heritage.
Thracian hypothesis The Baltic-speaking peoples likely encompassed an area in eastern Europe much larger than their modern range. As in the case of the
Celtic languages of Western Europe, they were reduced by invasion, extermination and assimilation. Studies in
comparative linguistics point to
genetic relationship between the languages of the Baltic family and the following extinct languages: •
Dacian •
Thracian The Baltic classification of Dacian and Thracian has been proposed by the Lithuanian scientist
Jonas Basanavičius, who insisted this is the most important work of his life and listed 600 identical words of Balts and
Thracians. His theory included
Phrygian in the related group, but this did not find support and was disapproved among other authors, such as
Ivan Duridanov, whose own analysis found Phrygian completely lacking parallels in either Thracian or Baltic languages. The Bulgarian linguist Ivan Duridanov, who improved the most extensive list of toponyms, in his first publication claimed that Thracian is genetically linked to the Baltic languages and in the next one he made the following classification: Of about 200 reconstructed Thracian words by Duridanov most cognates (138) appear in the Baltic languages, mostly in Lithuanian, followed by Germanic (61), Indo-Aryan (41), Greek (36), Bulgarian (23), Latin (10) and Albanian (8). The cognates of the
reconstructed Dacian words in his publication are found mostly in the Baltic languages, followed by Albanian. Parallels have enabled linguists, using the techniques of
comparative linguistics, to decipher the meanings of several Dacian and Thracian placenames with, they claim, a high degree of probability. Of 74
Dacian placenames attested in primary sources and considered by Duridanov, a total of 62 have Baltic cognates, most of which were rated "certain" by Duridanov. For a big number of 300
Thracian geographic names most parallels were found between Thracian and Baltic geographic names in the study of Duridanov. According to him the most important impression make the geographic cognates of Baltic and Thracian "the similarity of these parallels stretching frequently on the main element and the suffix simultaneously, which makes a strong impression". Romanian linguist
Sorin Paliga, analysing and criticizing Harvey Mayer's study, did admit "great likeness" between Thracian, the
substrate of Romanian, and "some Baltic forms". ==See also==