Academia.eduAcademia.edu

Outline

From Koguryo to T'amna

FAQs

sparkles

AI

What new evidence suggests the linguistic substratum in Silla and Paekche?add

The article introduces novel linguistic comparisons from Silla placenames in the Samguk sagi, identifying Japonic influences alongside prior works documenting similarities with Paekche via the Liang shu.

How did the Koguryǒ language compare to its neighboring languages?add

The analysis reveals no Japonic influence in Koguryǒ's language, with lexical borrowings primarily from Old Korean, as evidenced by numerous loans from Manchu and Jurchen without Japonic counterparts.

What explains the lack of Japonic substratum evidence in Koguryǒ?add

The study finds that Koguryǒ placenames traditionally cited as Japonic are remnants of an older pre-Koguryǒ language, evident through the absence of Japonic loanwords in Koguryǒ inscriptions.

When did the transition from Japonic to Korean occur in Silla?add

By the sixth to seventh centuries AD, evidence indicates a marginalization of Japonic languages alongside the adoption of Korean, supported by Silla's Hyangka writings and changing vocabulary.

Why is the analysis of Koguryǒ placenames significant for linguistic studies?add

The paper critiques the dominant reliance on Samguk sagi placenames in Koguryǒ research, advocating for a wider scope of evidence to avoid misinterpretations of linguistic heritage.

About the author
EHESS-Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, Faculty Member

Alexander Vovin was born in Saint-Petersburg (Leningrad), Russia. MA (1983), PhD (1987). On faculty in Russia: Institute of Oriental manuscripts (formerly LO IVAN) 1983-1990. On faculty in the USA: University of Michigan 1990-1994, Miami University 1994-1995, University of Hawaii at Manoa 1995-2013, On faculty in France: since 2014 Directeur d'études, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, Centre de recherche linguistique sur l'Asie orientale. Visiting professor at the International Center for Japanese Studies, Kyoto (2001-2002, 2008), National Institute for the Japanese Language and Linguistics , Tachikawa (2012), Ruhr-Universität, Bochum (2008-2009). Member of Academia Europaea (2015), laureate of the 2015 prize by the National Institutes for the Humanities (Tokyo). Recipient of the ERC Advanced Grant for the compilation of the ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY OF THE JAPONIC LANGUAGES (2018). Major scholarly interests and directions of research: Japanese, Korean, Mongolian and North Eurasian historical linguistics and philology, Old Japanese literature.

Papers
157
Followers
4,019
View all papers from Alexander Vovinarrow_forward