Submitted by Pluto_and_Charon t3_11ebfwo in dataisbeautiful
Comments
Urmambulant t1_jadd7r0 wrote
Kortland argues that slavic was the last one to sprung off indo-aryan tho. The Leiden guys seem to be pretty keen on indo-uralic as well, so I don't really know how to process it.
dml997 t1_jadfbc4 wrote
This is cool, but it might be easier to read if you rotated it 90 degrees?
Gmonkey_ t1_jadv6r1 wrote
So much cool work and you misspelled Portuguese. 😊
Habalaa t1_jadz7as wrote
I dont think Germanic and Celtic have a common ancestor rather than Germanic and Balto Slavic (if such thing existed)
VogJam t1_jaeqwzt wrote
They’re both Indo-European language branches, so they must have had a common ancestor at some point.
Norwester77 t1_jaf4fu9 wrote
The exact position of Germanic is controversial and really hard to pin down.
xpt42654 t1_jaek4sb wrote
nice, but a typo in "Ukranian" – should be "Ukrainian"
makingthematrix t1_jaetnz3 wrote
Shouldn't Greek be closer to the rest of European branches than the Indo-Aryan branch?
Pluto_and_Charon OP t1_jaf0xou wrote
that is not what this statistical analysis recovered
the paleo-balkan branch is thought to be one of the oldest and most archaic branches of indo-european
pastimedesign t1_jad8ab9 wrote
Cool graph, but do not see Gaelic. Isn't that an old language in Scotland?
Urmambulant t1_jadczpx wrote
Grouped within Irish. There's about 40 thousand languages and dialects not represented and that's just the extant ones. Relationship between Scottish and Irish is comparable to somewhat late-ish latin and arbitrary early Romance language. Distinction can, and has been made, but it isn't useful in every situation.
Pluto_and_Charon OP t1_jadts62 wrote
I cannot include every Indo-European language, there are 445
Unfortunately a language with 50,000 speakers is not going to make the cut.
[deleted] t1_jadh9et wrote
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[deleted] t1_jae7mfv wrote
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[deleted] t1_jae17xj wrote
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Pluto_and_Charon OP t1_jaczxo6 wrote
I primarily based this project on the most recent phylogenetic statistical analysis from Chang et al. 2015 (University of California, Berkeley) which charts the divergence of the Indo-European language family
Link to .pdf file of the paper (you can find their tree on Figure 2)
Link to the wikipedia article about the Indo-European language family
I expanded Chang et al.'s tree by including extinct languages, and by charting the geographic spread of languages (encoded in the colour of each branch). Many areas are simplified for the sake of making it readable. Uncertainty is indicated by dotted lines and question marks.
My entirely arbitrary rule of thumb for including a language or not was if it had ~2 million native speakers, or I sometimes included obscure/minor languages if they had an interesting history that caught my attention (e.g Ossettian). Pls don't @ me complaining about the lack of Faroese!
Languages that belong to different language families are obviously not included. These include: Hungarian, Finnish, Basque, the Dravidian language family of south India, and the Semitic language group of Africa and the Middle East
I am not a paleolinguist, so there are likely errors and oversights. I just wanted to learn about a fascinating topic and produce something along the way to inspire others to do their own research. You are free to download/print do whatever you want with this poster! If you want the raw .svg file, just DM me.