Water place names in the pre-Latin ligurian context. A study in prehistoric toponomastics and semantics

This paper outlines a new applied epistemological aspect of the so-called Convergence Theory that is aimed to develop a potentially "homogeneous" vision between the different approaches in the field of Indo-European linguistics. This work tries to reconstruct an Italian and European topony...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Perono Cacciafoco, Francesco
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107458
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25499
http://linguistlist.org/pubs/papers/browse-papers-action.cfm?PaperID=43988
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:This paper outlines a new applied epistemological aspect of the so-called Convergence Theory that is aimed to develop a potentially "homogeneous" vision between the different approaches in the field of Indo-European linguistics. This work tries to reconstruct an Italian and European toponymic area characterized by place names linked to the root *alb-, with a delineation of the "semantic steps" produced, over the centuries, by the same root, following a potential all-embracing approach. It seems that paleo-Ligurian place names of the type Alba, Old European river names Albis and the like, as well as their ablauting forms Olb- (> Orb- in Romance Ligurian), do not directly reflect the proto-Indo-European adjective *albho- 'white'; but rather they all seem to continue a pre-proto-Indo-European extended root *Hal-bh- 'water', cognate with the Sumerian ḫalbia (> Akkadian ḫalpium 'spring', 'well', 'water mass', 'water hole'). A further analysis of this *Hal-bh-, moreover, leads to a comparison with the proto-Indo-European root *Hal- 'nourish'. The proto-Indo-European suffixed form *HwaH-r- 'water', then, demonstrates a similar diffusion.