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The horse the wheel and language by david w anthony
The horse the wheel and language by david w anthony













Abdi, Dartmouth College, for CHOICE "David Anthony's book is a masterpiece. The combination of the two provides a remarkable work that should appeal to everyone with an interest not just in Indo-Europeans, but in the history of humanity in general."-K. But a strength of the book is its rich historical linguistic approach. The bulk of the book contains the factual evidence, mainly archaeological, to support this argument. then shifts his focus to the interrelation of the three essential elements of horse, chariot, and language and how the first and second provided the means for the spread of Indo-European languages from India to Ireland. This idea is revisited in a major new study by David Anthony."-Times Higher Education "Starting with a history of research on Proto-Indo-Europeans and exploring how this field for obvious reasons assumed an ethno-political dimension early on, leading PIE scholar Anthony moves on to established facts. "-John Noble Wilford, New York Times "A thorough look at the cutting edge of anthropology, Anthony's book is a fascinating look into the origins of modern man."-Publishers Weekly (Online Reviews Annex) "In the age of Borat it may come as a surprise to learn that the grasslands between Ukraine and Kazakhstan were once regarded as an early crucible of civilisation. lays out in intricate detail the complicated genealogy of history's most successful language."-Christine Kenneally, The New York Times Book Review "uthoritative. The Horse, the Wheel, and Language brings together the work of historical linguists and archaeologists, researchers who have traditionally been suspicious of each other's methods.

the horse the wheel and language by david w anthony

Anthony is not the first scholar to make the case that Proto-Indo-European came from this region, but given the immense array of evidence he presents, he may be the last one who has to. Anthony argues that we speak English not just because our parents taught it to us but because wild horses used to roam the steppes of central Eurasia, because steppedwellers invented the spoked wheel and because poetry once had real power. Winner of the 2010 Book Award, Society for American Archaeology "David W.















The horse the wheel and language by david w anthony