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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | The Chancellor Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Sep 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Aug 31, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,460 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101021183 |
Mesopotamia is the home of remarkably diverse ethnoreligious and linguistic microcommunities with historical roots in the ancient Near East.
Jewish and Christian minorities with their own unique Ara-maic traditions have co-existed alongside mainly Iranian speech communities for millennia.
Today the origin and development of this rich cultural-linguistic mosaic remains elusive due to superimposed nationalisms and paucity of historical records.
ALHOME aims to reconstruct the complex, socioreligious past of the disappearing indigenous communities who were once more widespread across West Asian from the first millennium BC well into the Islamic period.
Studying their genetic and social interrelations through their linguistic traditions will radically change our ideas about their origins.
Using linguistic evidence hitherto untapped for this aim, we can untangle the intertwined his-tories of Jewish, Christian and Kurdish (i.e., Iranian) communities.
This evidence comes from the recently richly enhanced database of spoken Neo-Aramaic languages which stretch back 3,000-years.
This promises to mark a sea change in linguistic studies which have focused on the documentation of endangered languages as well as in sociological studies that have focused on the historical context giving rise to nationalisms.
For the first time an interdisciplinary team of both Aramaic and Iranian specialists and computational linguists will study the interactions between two speech communities.
We will apply groundbreaking quantitative, phylogenetic models to unearth relations between speech communities over millennia.
Studying this period of multiculturalism and multilingualism of virtually unparalleled duration promises to challenge existing models of contact.
Aramaic-Iranian exchanges fit into models based neither purely on linguistic-cultural prestige nor on agentivity of a single language. Thus ALHOME will have major implications for our understanding of areal convergence and contact.
The Chancellor Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge
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