Empires of the word A language history of the world

Nicholas Ostler

Book - 2006

An offbeat natural history of language takes readers from the educational and cultural innovators of Sumeria, to the resilience of Chinese, to the global spread of English, in a volume that offers linguistic perspectives on numerous past and present civilizations.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Harper Perennial 2006.
Language
English
Main Author
Nicholas Ostler (-)
Edition
1st Harper Perennial ed
Item Description
Originally published as hbk.: New York : HarperCollins Publishers, ©2005. 1st American ed.
Physical Description
xxi, 615 pages : illustrations, maps ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 579-589) and index.
ISBN
9780060935726
  • Acknowledgments
  • List of Maps, Tables and Figures
  • Maps
  • Tables
  • Figures
  • Preface
  • Prologue: A Clash of Languages
  • Part I. The Nature of Language History
  • 1. Themistocles' Carpet
  • The language view of human history
  • The state of nature
  • Literacy and the beginning of language history
  • An inward history too
  • 2. What It Takes to Be a World Language; or, You Never Can Tell
  • Part II. Languages by Land
  • 3. The Desert Blooms: Language Innovation in the Middle East
  • Three sisters who span the history of 4500 years
  • The story in brief: Language leapfrog
  • Sumerian-the first classical language: Life after death
  • First Interlude: Whatever Happened to Elamite?
  • Akkadian-world-beating technology: A model of literacy
  • Phoenician-commerce without culture: Canaan, and points west
  • Aramaic-the desert song: Interlingua of western Asia
  • Second Interlude: The Shield of Faith
  • Arabic-eloquence and equality: The triumph of 'submission'
  • Third Interlude: Turkic and Persian, Outriders of Islam
  • A Middle Eastern inheritance: The glamour of the desert nomad
  • 4. Triumphs of Fertility: Egyptian and Chinese
  • Careers in parallel
  • Language along the Nile
  • A stately progress
  • Immigrants from Libya and Kush
  • Competition from Aramaic and Greek
  • Changes in writing
  • Final paradoxes
  • Language from Huang-he to Yangtze
  • Origins
  • First Unity
  • Retreat to the south
  • Northern influences
  • Beyond the southern sea
  • Dealing with foreign devils
  • Whys and wherefores
  • Holding fast to a system of writing
  • Foreign relations
  • China's disciples
  • Coping with invasions: Egyptian undercut
  • Coping with invasions: Chinese unsettled
  • 5. Charming Like a Creeper: The Cultured Career of Sanskrit
  • The story in brief
  • The character of Sanskrit
  • Intrinsic qualities
  • Sanskrit in Indian life
  • Outsiders' views
  • The spread of Sanskrit
  • Sanskrit in India
  • Sanskrit in South-East Asia
  • Sanskrit carried by Buddhism: Central and eastern Asia
  • Sanskrit supplanted
  • The charm of Sanskrit
  • The roots of Sanskrit's charm
  • Limiting weaknesses
  • Sanskrit no longer alone
  • 6. Three Thousand Years of Solipsism: The Adventures of Greek
  • Greek at its acme
  • Who is a Greek?
  • What kind of a language?
  • Homes from home: Greek spread through settlement
  • Kings of Asia: Greek spread through war
  • A Roman welcome: Greek spread through culture
  • Mid-life crisis: Attempt at a new beginning
  • Intimations of decline
  • Bactria, Persia, Mesopotamia
  • Syria, Palestine, Egypt
  • Greece
  • Anatolia
  • Consolations in age
  • Retrospect: The life cycle of a classic
  • 7. Contesting Europe: Celt, Roman, German and Slav
  • Reversals of fortune
  • The contenders: Greek and Roman views
  • The Celts
  • The Germans
  • The Romans
  • The Slavs
  • Run: The impulsive pre-eminence of the Celts
  • Traces of Celtic languages
  • How to recognise Celtic
  • Celtic literacy
  • How Gaulish spread
  • The Gauls' advances in the historic record
  • Consilium: The rationale of Roman imperium
  • Mos Maiorum-the Roman way
  • The desertion of Gaulish
  • Latin among the Basques and the Britons
  • Einfall: Germanic and Slavic advances
  • The Germanic invasions-irresistible and ineffectual
  • Slavonic dawn in the Balkans
  • Against the odds: The advent of English
  • 8. The First Death of Latin
  • Part III. Languages by Sea
  • 9. The Second Death of Latin
  • 10. Usurpers of Greatness: Spanish in the New World
  • Portrait of a conquistador
  • An unprecedented empire
  • First chinks in the language barrier: Interpreters, bilinguals, grammarians
  • Past struggles: How American languages had spread
  • The spread of Nahuatl
  • The spread of Quechua
  • The spreads of Chibcha, Guarani, Mapudungun
  • The Church's solution: The lenguas generales
  • The state's solution: Hispanizacion
  • Coda: Across the Pacific
  • 11. In the Train of Empire: Europe's Languages Abroad
  • Portuguese pioneers
  • An Asian empire
  • Portuguese in America
  • Dutch interlopers
  • La francophonie
  • French in Europe
  • The first empire
  • The second empire
  • The Third Rome, and all the Russias
  • The origins of Russian
  • Russian east then west
  • Russian north then south
  • The status of Russian
  • The Soviet experiment
  • Conclusions
  • Curiously ineffective-German ambitions
  • Imperial epilogue: Kominka
  • 12. Microcosm or Distorting Mirror? The Career of English
  • Endurance test: Seeing off Norman French
  • English overlaid
  • Spreading the Anglo-Norman package
  • The waning of Norman French
  • Stabilising the language
  • What sort of a language?
  • Westward Ho!
  • Pirates and planters
  • Someone else's land
  • Manifest destiny
  • Winning ways
  • Changing perspective-English in India
  • A merchant venture
  • Protestantism, profit and progress
  • Success, despite the best intentions
  • The world taken by storm
  • An empire completed
  • Wonder upon wonder
  • English among its peers
  • Part IV. Languages Today and Tomorrow
  • 13. The Current Top Twenty
  • 14. Looking Ahead
  • What is old
  • What is new
  • Way to go
  • Three threads: Freedom, prestige and learnability
  • Freedom
  • Prestige
  • What makes a language learnable
  • Vaster than empires
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Ostler (head of the Foundation for Endangered Languages, which is based in England) takes up an ambitious, unique project in this huge book. He shows why certain languages grow and thrive and others do not. He delves into both the patterns of history and the accidents of history that tell the story of about a dozen major language families. This dozen accounts for the 6,000 languages spoken by the vast majority of the world. The 14 chapters cover Chinese, Sanskrit, Spanish, Portuguese, English, and the languages of the Middle East (and the role of Islam), among others. Along the way Ostler reveals many fascinating twists and turns of language history--such as, for example, why Dutch colonists in Indonesia used Malay rather than trying to impose their language. One learns that language--not just military, commercial, or religious vitality--plays an important role in the growth and preservation of sustainable communities. Richly illustrated with fine maps and tables, and expertly typeset by linguist Peter Daniels, this book a must-read for any student of language, professional or amateur. ^BSumming Up: Essential. Readers at all levels. E. L. Battistella Southern Oregon University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

Caesar led his legions into battle for the glory of Rome--and the immortality of Greek. In the curious spread of Greek through Roman conquest, Ostler recounts one of the many fascinating episodes in the complex history of languages. The resources of the cultural historian complement those of the comparative linguist in this capacious work, which sets the parameters for a new field of scholarship: language dynamics. By peering over Ostler's shoulder into this new field, readers learn how languages ancient and modern (Sumerian and Egyptian; Spanish and English) spread and how they dwindle. The raw force of armies counts, of course, in determining language fortunes but for far less than the historically naive might suppose: military might failed to translate into lasting linguistic conquest for the Mongols, Turks, or Russians. Surprisingly, trade likewise proves weak in spreading a language--as the Phoenician and Dutch experiences both show. In contrast, immigration and fertility powerfully affect the fate of languages, as illustrated by the parallel histories of Egyptian and Chinese. Ostler explores the ways modern technologies of travel and communication shape language fortunes, but he also highlights the power of ancient faiths--Christian and Moslem, Buddhist and Hindu--to anchor language traditions against rapid change. Of particular interest will be Ostler's provocative conjectures about a future in which Mandarin or Arabic take the lead or in which English fractures into several tongues. Few books bring more intellectual excitement to the study of language. --Bryce Christensen Copyright 2005 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ostler's ambitious and accessible book is not a technical linguistic study-i.e., it's not concerned with language structure-but about the "growth, development and collapse of language communities" and their cultures. Chairman of the Foundation of Endangered Languages, Ostler's as fascinated by extinction as he is by survival. He thus traces the fortunes of Sumerian, Akkadian and Aramaic in the flux of ancient Middle Eastern military empires. Ancient Egyptian's three millennia of stability compares with the longevity of similarly pictographic Chinese-and provides a cautionary example: even a populous, well-defined linguistic community can vanish. In all cases, Ostler stresses the role of culture, commerce and conquest in the rise and fall of languages, whether Spanish, Portuguese and French in the Americas or Dutch in Asia and Africa. The rise of English to global status, Ostler argues, owes much to the economic prestige of the Industrial Revolution, but its future as a lingua franca may falter on demographic trends, such as booming birth rates in China. This stimulating book is a history of the world as seen through the spread and demise of languages. Maps. Agent, Natasha Fairweather at A.P. Watt Ltd. (July 8) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Ostler presents a masterly comparative analysis of empires' linguistic effects throughout history. An Oxford graduate and chair of the Foundation for Endangered Languages, Ostler writes in a concise yet engaging manner, displaying an impressive grasp of the history of languages, from Aramaic and Sanskrit to Chinese and Spanish. Language, he asserts, is a natural definer of communities and societies and therefore an integral part of history. Ostler analyzes the different ways in which certain languages have prevailed over others, chronologically and in relation to broader imperial pursuits. For example, Egyptian fell by the wayside during the successive rule of the Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic empires; in contrast, Chinese has remained strong despite the incursion of the Mongols, Manchus, and challenges from Western powers in the 19th century. Ostler's study ultimately shows that all languages are susceptible to downfall; even the current, unprecedented prevalence of English, aided by global communication and trade, is neither impervious nor eternal. This book is accessible to anyone with an interest in language, and its original ideas, generous notes, and extensive bibliography make it well suited to academic libraries as well.-Rebecca Bollen Manalac, Lane Cove Lib., Sydney, Australia (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A dense but enlightening account of how the world's written languages were born, how they spread and changed, how some weakened and died, how others thrived. This heavy, sturdy text rests on a foundation of scholarship and erudition so broad and deep that it will elicit gasps of admiration from professional linguists and assorted logophiles, though its very complexity and comprehensiveness may overwhelm general readers. Even the epigraphs--and there are myriads--are demanding, even daunting. British scholar Ostler (chair of the Foundation for Endangered Languages) notes that there are as many as 7,000 language communities in the world, but many have relatively few speakers, and many have no written form. He proceeds to relate a history of the world as a linguist would see it. Accordingly, although the encounter, say, between CortÉs and the Aztecs has interest for military and cultural historians, Ostler views it, as well, as a clash between languages, both of which had long traditions. He proceeds to look at languages in the Middle East (Sumerian, Akkadian, Aramaic, Phoenician, Arabic, Persian, etc.), then turns to consider Egyptian and Chinese and attributes their stability, in part, to high population density. He discusses Sanskrit (a "luxuriant" language with its "blending of sexual and mystical imagery"), then Greek, Celtic, Latin, Spanish, Portuguese and many, many others. His style is to raise questions and then answer them. Why didn't Dutch linger in Indonesia? How did French become a prestige language? Why haven't Russian and German and Japanese spread more than they have? How did English, with its multiple parents, spread so rapidly and pervasively? How did it standardize? What are the most dominant languages today? Why do people learn some languages more easily than others? What are the forces that might weaken the current hegemony of English around the world? Always challenging, always instructive--at times, even startling or revolutionary. The issues and concerns and discoveries here merit far wider attention than this sometimes turgid text will attract. (maps and charts throughout) Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Empires of the Word A Language History of the World Chapter One Themistocles' Carpet The language view of human history From the language point of view, the present population of the world is not six billion, but something over six thousand. There are between six and seven thousand communities in the world today identified by the first language that they speak. They are not of equal weight. They range in size from Mandarin Chinese with some 900 million speakers, alone accounting for one sixth of all the people in the world, followed by English and Spanish with approximately 300 million apiece, to a long tail of tiny communities: over half the languages in the world, for example, have fewer than five thousand speakers, and over a thousand languages have under a dozen. This is a parlous time for languages. In considering human history, the language community is a very natural unit. Languages, by their nature as means of communication, divide humanity into groups: only through a common language can a group of people act in concert, and therefore have a common history. Moreover the language that a group shares is precisely the medium in which memories of their joint history can be shared. Languages make possible both the living of a common history, and also the telling of it. And every language possesses another feature, which makes it the readiest medium for preserving a group's history. Every language is learnt by the young from the old, so that every living language is the embodiment of a tradition. That tradition is in principle immortal. Languages change, as they pass from the lips of one generation to the next, but there is nothing about this process of transmission which makes for decay or extinction. Like life itself, each new generation can receive the gift of its language afresh. And so it is that languages, unlike any of the people who speak them, need never grow infirm, or die. Every language has a chance of immortality, but this is not to say that it will survive for ever. Genes too, and the species they encode, are immortal; but extinctions are a commonplace of palaeontology. Likewise, the actual lifespans of language communities vary enormously. The annals of language history are full of languages that have died out, traditions that have come to an end, leaving no speakers at all. The language point of view on history can be contrasted with the genetic approach to human history, which is currently revolutionising our view of our distant past. Like membership in a biological species and a matrilineal lineage, membership in a language community is based on a clear relation. An individual is a member of a species if it can have offspring with other members of the species, and of a matrilineal lineage if its mother is in that lineage. Likewise, at the most basic level, you are a member of a language community if you can use its language. The advantage of this linguistically defined unit is that it necessarily defines a community that is important to us as human beings. The species unit is interesting, in defining our prehistoric relations with related groups such as Homo erectus and the Neanderthals, but after the rise of Homo sapiens its usefulness yields to the evident fact that, species-wise, we are all in this together. The lineage unit too has its points, clearly marked down the aeons as it is by mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomes, and can yield interesting evidence on the origin of populations if some lineage clearly present today in the population is missing in one of the candidate groups put forward as ancestors. So it has been inferred that Polynesians could not have come from South America, that most of the European population have parentage away from the Near Eastern sources of agriculture, and that the ancestry of most of the population of the English Midlands is from Friesland. But knowing that many people's mothers, or fathers, are unaccounted for does not put a bound on a group as a whole in the way that language does. Contrast a unit such as a race, whose boundaries are defined by nothing more than a chosen set of properties, whether as in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by superficial resemblances such as skin colour or cranial proportions, or more recently by blood and tissue groups and sequences of DNA. Likewise, there are insurmountable problems in defining its cultural analogue, the nation, which entail the further imponderables of a consciousness of shared history, and perhaps shared language too. Given that so many of the properties get shuffled on to different individuals in different generations, it remains moot as to what to make of any set of characteristics for a race or a nation.* But use of a given language is an undeniable functioning reality everywhere; above all, it is characteristic of every human group known, and persistent over generations. It provides a universal key for dividing human history into meaningful groups. Admittedly, a language community is a more diffuse unit than a species or a lineage: a language changes much faster than a DNA sequence, and one cannot even be sure that it will always be transmitted from one generation to the next. Some children grow up speaking a language other than their parents'. As we shall soon see, language communities are not always easy to count, or to distinguish reliably. But they are undeniably real features of the human condition. The task of this book is to chart some of the histories of the language traditions that have come to be most populous, ones that have spread themselves in the historic period over vast areas of the inhabited world. Our view will be restricted to language histories for which there is direct written evidence, and this means omitting some of the most ancient, such as the spread of Bantu across southern Africa, or of the Polynesian languages across the Pacific; but nevertheless the tale is almost always one that covers millennia ... Empires of the Word A Language History of the World . Copyright © by Nicholas Ostler. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Empires of the Word: A Language History of the World by Nicholas Ostler All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.