Indo-Aryan languages: References & Edit History

Additional Reading

General works

The broadest historical treatment of Indo-Aryan is the masterly survey Jules Bloch, Indo-Aryan from the Vedas to Modern Times (1965; originally published in French, 1934). A good survey that emphasizes modern languages and typological relations (while also including a chapter on the historical background and development of Indo-Aryan) is Colin P. Masica, The Indo-Aryan Languages (1991).

A good overview of the linguistic diversity that characterizes South Asia, with chapters on the classification of South Asian languages and South Asia as a linguistic area, is Michael C. Shapiro and Harold F. Schiffman, Language and Society in South Asia (1981). Two linguistic atlases are especially valuable: Roland J.L. Breton, Atlas of the Languages and Ethnic Communities of South Asia (1997); and Gérard Fussman, Atlas linguistique des parlers dardes et kafirs, 2 vol. (1972).

A general introduction to major issues and descriptive articles on various languages, including Hindi, Urdu, Bangla, Asamīya, Oriya, Maithili, Magahi, Bhojpuri, Nepali, Punjabi, Sindhi, Gujarati, Marathi, Konkani, Sinhala, Dardic, and Kashmiri, are in George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages (2003). Two general surveys of Indo-Iranian are George Cardona, “Indo-Aryan Languages,” in Bernard Comrie (ed.), The Major Languages of South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa (1990), pp. 21–30; and Manfred Mayrhofer, “L’Indo-iranien,” in Françoise Bader (ed.), Langues indo-européennes (1994), pp. 101–120. The latter includes a discussion of Nūristānī, as does chapter 1, George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages (2003), “General Introduction,” pp. 1–51.

Important articles on Indo-Aryan dialectology and historical linguistics are included in R.L. Turner, Indo-Aryan Linguistics: Collected Papers, 1912–1973 (1985); and Colette Caillat (ed.), Dialectes dans les littératures indo-aryennes (1989). A good summary of the early linguistic situation, with discussion of proposed theories and references, is M.B. Emeneau, “The Dialects of Old Indo-Aryan,” in Henrik Birnbaum and Jaan Puhvel (eds.), Ancient Indo-European Dialects (1966), pp. 123–138.

An indispensable source in which Sanskrit word headings are given Middle Indo-Aryan forms and New Indo-Aryan cognates is R.L. Turner, A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages (1966). The most important reference work for the historical lexicography of Indo-Aryan is the multivolume work by R.L. Turner and Dorothy Rivers Turner, A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, 4 vols. (1966–85).

A good survey of the inscriptional evidence is Richard Salomon, Indian Epigraphy: A Guide to the Study of Inscriptions in Sanskrit, Prakrit, and the Other Indo-Aryan Languages (1998), which includes rich bibliographic information and a section on the languages of Indic inscriptions.

Controversies: Indo-Aryan origins and migrations

A good summary of the issues and evidence regarding Indo-Aryans in the Middle East is Paul Thieme, “The ‘Aryan’ Gods of the Mitanni Treaties,” Journal of the American Oriental Society, 80(4):301–317 (October–December 1960). A more detailed discussion, accompanied by a thorough analytic bibliography, is Manfred Mayrhofer, Die Indo-Arier im alten Vorderasien: mit einer analytischen Bibliographie (1966). Mayrhofer accepts that the documents in question represent Indo-Aryan. Other important contributions by Mayrhofer are “Die vorderasiatischen Arier,” Asiatische Studien, 23:139–54 (1969, reprinted in Ausgewählte Kleine Schriften, 1979, pp. 29–44); and Die Arier im Vorderen Orient—ein Mythos? Mit einem bibliographischen Supplement (1974, reprinted in part and without bibliography in Ausgewählte Kleine Schriften, 1979, pp. 48–71). An alternative perspective, from a scholar who considers that the documents stem from an Indo-Iranian group, is Annelies Kammenhuber, Die Arier im Vorderen Orient (1968).

Arguments concerning possible prehistoric contact between Indo-Aryan and Dravidian are considered in Hans Henrich Hock, “Pre-R̥gvedic Convergence Between Indo-Aryan and Dravidian? A Survey of Issues and Controversies,” chapter 2 in Jan E.M. Houben (ed.), Ideology and Status of Sanskrit: Contributions to the History of the Sanskrit Language (1996), pp. 17–58.

A good survey of the issues and evidence surrounding the Indo-Aryan immigration controversy, with an extensive bibliography, is Edwin Bryant, The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate (2001). Major works in which the thesis is maintained that the Indo-Aryans were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent include Shrikant G. Talageri, The Aryan Invasion Theory: A Reappraisal (1993); Navaratna S. Rajaram, The Politics of History: Aryan Invasion Theory and the Subversion of Scholarship (1995); and Navaratna S. Rajaram and David Frawley, Vedic Aryans and the Origins of Civilization: A Literary and Scientific Perspective, 3rd ed. (2001). In addition, most of the contributors to S.B. Deo and Suryanath Kamath (eds.), The Aryan Problem (1993), also defend this theory, although two exceptions therein are M.A. Mehendale, “The Indo-Aryans, the Indo-Iranians, and the Indo-Europeans,” pp. 43–50; and B.N. Mukerjee, “The Indo-European Question in Central Asia,” pp. 58–69.

Koenraad Elst, Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate (1999), not only presents a fair summary of arguments adherents of the immigration view maintain but also is willing to accept that the Proto-Indo-Europeans originated in the subcontinent, whence they emigrated.

Satya Swarup Misra, The Aryan Problem: A Linguistic Approach (1992), agrees that the Indo-Aryans were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent but argues against the usual position of Indo-Europeanists by maintaining that Vedic represents the linguistic system of Proto-Indo-European. Misra’s arguments are countered by Hans Henrich Hock, “Out of India? The Linguistic Evidence,” in Johannes Bronkhorst and Madhav M. Deshpande (eds.), Aryan and Non-Aryan in South Asia: Evidence, Interpretation, and Ideology (1999), pp. 1–18. Hock also argues against the possible thesis that Proto-Indo-European as usually reconstructed originated in the subcontinent. In the same volume, however, Edwin F. Bryant, “Linguistic Substrata and the Indigenous Aryan Debate,” pp. 59–84, ends on a note of indecision.

Old Indo-Aryan

The standard reference grammar of Sanskrit in English continues to be William Dwight Whitney, Sanskrit Grammar, Including Both the Classical Language, and the Older Dialects, of Veda and Brahmana, 3rd ed. (1896, reprinted 2003), although the author’s prejudices against Indian grammarians’ approach to the language are apparent. Also still useful is Thomas Burrow, The Sanskrit Language, new and rev. ed. (1973), a summary of the prehistory and history of Sanskrit, with references to Middle Indo-Aryan, which contains somewhat personal views but is valuable for its discussion of non-Aryan influences on Sanskrit.

The most insightful summary of the grammar, vocabulary, and style of different stages of Sanskrit, with text selections and translations, is Louis Renou, Histoire de la langue sanskrite (1956). Other good treatments of Sanskrit are George Cardona, “Sanskrit,” in Bernard Comrie (ed.), The Major Languages of South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa (1990), pp. 31–52, and chapter 4 in George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages (2003), “Sanskrit,” pp. 104–160, where the Pāṇinian view of Sanskrit is granted more consideration. Against the usual Western opinions, George Cardona, “The Bhāṣika Accentuation System,” Studien zur Indologie und Iranistik, 18:1–40 (1993), argues that the bhāṣika accentuation system represents a real historical development within Indo-Aryan and proposes an explanation for the changes that led to this system from the earlier tone system.

Michael Witzel, “Tracing the Vedic Dialects,” in Colette Caillat (ed.), Dialectes dans les littératures indo-aryennes (1989), pp. 97–265, and “Notes on Vedic Dialects,” Zinbun, 67:31–70 (1991), are texts that take up features that characterize different dialect areas of Vedic, with proposals concerning historical developments.

Franklin Edgerton, Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Grammar and Dictionary, 2 vol. (1953, reprinted 2004), remains the standard work on what he termed Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit, though his principal theory is no longer accepted. Still valuable as a complement to Edgerton’s work is Sukumar Sen, An Outline Syntax of Buddhistic Sanskrit (1928), reprinted in his Syntactic Studies of Indo-Aryan Languages (1995), pp. 183–253.

Of several Sanskrit dictionaries available, two are especially noteworthy. The first is A.M. Ghatage (ed.), An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Sanskrit on Historical Principles (1976– ), a massive dictionary covering many more texts than any earlier lexicon of the language. The second, Manfred Mayrhofer, Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Altindoarischen, 3 vol. (1986–2001), contains sober etymologies, full references, and a discussions of loanwords and words supposed to have been borrowed from Dravidian and other non-Indo-Aryan groups.

Middle Indo-Aryan

The most encyclopaedic grammar of all the Prākrits other than Pāli remains Richard Pischel, Comparative Grammar of the Prākrit Languages, 2nd ed. (1965; originally published in German, 1900).

A good treatment of Aśokan and Pāli phonology and morphology, with extensive bibliography, appears in Oskar von Hinüber, Das ältere Mittelindisch im Überblick, 2nd ed., enlarged (2001). This is complemented by two other works by Hinüber, Die Sprachgeschichte des Pāli im Spiegel der südostasiatischen Handschriftenüberlieferung: Untersuchungen zur Sprachgeschichte und Handschriftenkunde des Pāli I (1988), and Untersuchungen zur Mündlichkeit früher mittelindischer Texte der Buddhisten (1994).

Though it is an early work, Wilhelm Geiger, Pāli Literature and Language (1943, reissued 1996), remains a standard reference grammar, rich in textual references. Overall coverage of Pāli phonology and morphology appears in a work that brings Geiger’s book up to date, Thomas Oberlies, Pāli: A Grammar of the Language of the Theravāda Tipiṭaka (2001).

More recent coverage of Pāli and Aśokan is Thomas Oberlies, “Aśokan Prakrit and Pāli,” chapter 5 in George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages (2003), pp. 179–224. In addition, Achim Fahs, Grammatik des Pali, 2nd corrected ed. (1989), is valuable for its extensive tables of forms. Some features of Pāli are treated in K.R. Norman, “Dialect Forms in Pāli,” in Colette Caillat (ed.), Dialectes dans les littératures indo-aryennes (1989), pp. 369–392.

Also valuable for the study of early Middle Indo-Aryan dialectology are John Brough (ed.), The Gāndhārī Dharmapada (1962, reissued 2001), which includes a discussion of the paleography, phonology, and morphology of the literary northwestern Prakrit of the text; T. Burrow, The Language of the Kharoṣṭhi Documents from Chinese Turkestan (1937), and A Translation of the Kharoṣṭhi Documents from Chinese Turkestan (1940), a study and translation that deal with the major northwestern Prakrit of the Niya documents; and Gérard Fussman, “Gāndhārī écrite, Gāndhārī parlée,” in Colette Caillat (ed.), Dialectes dans les littératures indo-aryennes (1989), pp. 433–501, a detailed study of inscriptional materials the author views as reflecting a living spoken Gāndhārī. The most thorough treatment of inscriptional Prākrits remains M.A. Mehendale, Historical Grammar of Inscriptional Prakrits (1948).

A good descriptive treatment of Ardhamāgadhī is to be found in A.M. Ghatage, Introduction to Ardha-Māgadhī (1941, reprinted 1993). A concise survey of the phonology and grammar, including syntax, of Prakrits and Apabhraṃśa is supplied in Vit Bubenik, “Prākrits and Apabhraṃśa,” chapter 6 in George Cardona and Dhanesh Jain (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages (2003), pp. 225–275. Ghanesh Vasudev Tagare, Historical Grammar of Apabhraṃśa (1948), remains a useful overall treatment of Apabhraṃśa, although many of the author’s explanations have been challenged. A very summary coverage is found in H.C. Bhayani, Apabhraṃśa Language and Literature: A Short Introduction (1989). Ludwig Alsdorf, Apabhraṃśa-Studien (1937, reprinted 1966), pp. 5–17 and 20–37, contains important discussions of noun and verb inflection.

Tsuyoshi Nara, Avahaṭṭha and Comparative Vocabulary of New Indo-Āryan Languages (1979), is a study of the phonology and morphology of the variety of late Middle Indo-Aryan called Avahaṭṭha and distinguished by some scholars from Apabhraṃśa.

Still valuable for the study of Middle Indo-Aryan syntax is Sukumar Sen, “Historical Syntax of Middle Indo-Aryan,” Indian Linguistics, 13:355–473 (1953, reprinted in Syntactic Study of Indo-Aryan Languages, 1995, pp. 255–402).

Among dictionaries of Middle Indo-Aryan languages, two merit special note: V. Trenckner et al., A Critical Pāli Dictionary (1924– ), the standard reference dictionary of Pali; and A.M. Ghatage (ed.), A Comprehensive and Critical Dictionary of the Prakrit Languages, with Special Reference to Jain Literature (1993– ), an equally standard dictionary of other Prakrits, with emphasis on Jaina works.

Modern Indo-Aryan

No single full comparative and historical treatment of Modern Indo-Aryan has been produced recently. Still useful, though in need of updating, are John Beames, A Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages: To Wit, Hindi, Panjabi, Sindhi, Gujarati, Marathi, Oṛiya, and Bangali, 3 vol. (1872–79, reprinted 1966); and A.F.R. Hoernle, A Comparative Grammar of the Gaudian Languages with Special Reference to the Eastern Hindi (1880, reprinted 1975).

George Cardona

Article Contributors

Primary Contributors

Other Encyclopedia Britannica Contributors

Article History

Type Description Contributor Date
Add new Web site: University of Washington - Department of Asian Languages and Literature - The dialectology of Indic (PDF). Dec 20, 2024
Add new Web site: Massachusetts Institute of Technology - The Indo-Aryan Languages: a tour. Jul 18, 2024
Add new Web site: Louisiana State University - Division of Electrical and Computer Engineering - On The Classification Of Indic Languages. May 23, 2024
Corrected display issue. Aug 01, 2022
Changed "Braj Bhasa" to "Braj Bhasha." Mar 28, 2017
Translation of Veda names adjusted. Jan 20, 2014
Literal translations of four titles added. Aug 27, 2009
Bibliography thoroughly revised. Aug 26, 2009
Article thoroughly revised. Aug 26, 2009
Article revised. Sep 29, 1999
Article added to new online database. Oct 19, 1998
View Changes:
Article History
Revised:
By: