The origin of the Proto-Armenian language is subject to scholarly debate. The
Armenian hypothesis would postulate the Armenian language as an
in situ development of a 3rd millennium BC
Proto-Indo-European language, while the
Kurgan hypothesis suggests it arrived in the Armenian Highlands either from the
Balkans or through the
Caucasus. The arrival of such a population who spoke Proto-Armenian in the
Armenian Highlands is assumed to have occurred sometime during the
Bronze Age or at the latest, during the Bronze Age Collapse around 1200 BC, according to this theory. One of the theories about the emergence of Armenian in the region is that
Paleo-Balkan-speaking settlers related to
Phrygians (the
Mushki or the retroactively named
Armeno-Phrygians), who had already settled in the western parts of the region before the
Kingdom of Van was established in Urartu, had become the ruling elite under the
Median Empire, followed by the
Achaemenid Empire. The
existence of Urartian words in the Armenian language and Armenian loanwords into Urartian suggests
early contact between the two languages and long periods of
bilingualism. The connection between the Mushki and Armenians is unclear as nothing is known of the Mushki language. Most modern scholars have rejected a direct linguistic relationship with Proto-Armenian if the Mushki were
Thracians or Phrygians. Additionally, recent findings in genetic research does not support significant admixture into the Armenian nation after 1200 BC, making the Mushki, if they indeed migrated from a Balkan or western Anatolian homeland during or after the Bronze Age Collapse, unlikely candidates for the Proto-Armenians. However, as others have placed (at least the Eastern) Mushki homeland in the Armenian Highlands and
South Caucasus region, it is possible that at least some of the Mushki were Armenian-speakers or speakers of a closely related language. Some modern studies show that Armenian is as close to
Indo-Iranian as it is to Greek and Phrygian. While the Urartian language was used by the royal elite, the population they ruled was likely multi-lingual, and some of these peoples would have spoken Armenian. This can be reconciled with the Phrygian/Mushki theory if those groups originally came from the Caucasus region or Armenian Highlands. They can perhaps be linked to the
Trialeti–Vanadzor culture. This new research has also suggested that Armenian, along with Greek and Albanian, are connected to the
Yamnaya culture of the
Pontic–Caspian steppe and
Caucasus, whereas all other existent branches of Indo-European were mediated through the
Corded Ware culture. ==See also==