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Nilo-Saharan languages

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a proposed family of around 210 African languages[1] spoken by somewhere around 70 million speakers,[1] mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers, including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of the Nile meet. The languages extend through 17 nations in the northern half of Africa: from Algeria to Benin in the west; from Libya to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the centre; and from Egypt to Tanzania in the east.

Nilo-Saharan

Central Africa, north-central Africa and East Africa

ca. 70 million for all branches listed below.[1]

Proposed language family

None

As indicated by its hyphenated name, Nilo-Saharan is a family of the African interior, including the greater Nile Basin and the Central Sahara Desert. Eight of its proposed constituent divisions (excluding Kunama, Kuliak, and Songhay) are found in the modern countries of Sudan and South Sudan, through which the Nile River flows.


In his book The Languages of Africa (1963), Joseph Greenberg named the group and argued it was a genetic family. It contained all the languages that were not included in the Niger–Congo, Afroasiatic or Khoisan families. Although some linguists have referred to the phylum as "Greenberg's wastebasket", into which he placed all the otherwise unaffiliated non-click languages of Africa,[2][3] other specialists in the field have accepted it as a working hypothesis since Greenberg's classification.[4] Linguists accept that it is a challenging proposal to demonstrate but contend that it looks more promising the more work is done.[5][6][7]


Some of the constituent groups of Nilo-Saharan are estimated to predate the African neolithic. For example, the unity of Eastern Sudanic is estimated to date to at least the 5th millennium BC.[8] Nilo-Saharan genetic unity would thus be much older still and date to the late Upper Paleolithic. The earliest written language associated with the Nilo-Saharan family is Old Nubian, one of the oldest written African languages, attested in writing from the 8th to the 15th century AD.


This larger classification system is not accepted by all linguists, however. Glottolog (2013), for example, a publication of the Max Planck Institute in Germany, does not recognise the unity of the Nilo-Saharan family or even of the Eastern Sudanic branch; Georgiy Starostin (2016) likewise does not accept a relationship between the branches of Nilo-Saharan, though he leaves open the possibility that some of them may prove to be related to each other once the necessary reconstructive work is done. According to Güldemann (2018), "the current state of research is not sufficient to prove the Nilo-Saharan hypothesis."[9]

Characteristics[edit]

The constituent families of Nilo-Saharan are quite diverse. One characteristic feature is a tripartite singulative–collective–plurative number system, which Blench (2010) believes is a result of a noun-classifier system in the protolanguage. The distribution of the families may reflect ancient watercourses in a green Sahara during the African humid period before the 4.2-kiloyear event, when the desert was more habitable than it is today.[10]

(Dholuo, 4.4 million). Dholuo language of the Luo people of Kenya and Tanzania, Kenya's third largest ethnicity after the Bantu-speaking Agĩkũyũ and Luhya). (The term "Luo" is also used for a wider group of languages which includes Dholuo.)

Luo

(4.0 million, all dialects; 4.7 million if Kanembu is included). The major ethnicity around Lake Chad.

Kanuri

(6 million). Spread along the Niger River in Niger and into Nigeria, in the southern region of the historic Songhai Empire.

Zarma

(1.9 million). Related to Karamojong, Turkana, Toposa and Nyangatom

Teso

(1.7 million, all dialects). The language of Nubia, extending today from southern Egypt into northern Sudan. Many Nubians have also migrated northwards to Cairo since the building of the Aswan Dam.

Nubian

(1.7 million, 2.2 if Aringa (Low Lugbara) is included). The major Central Sudanic language; Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Lugbara

(Kalenjin, 1.6 million). Kenyan Rift Valley, Kapchorua Uganda.

Nandi–Markweta languages

(1.5 million). A Luo language, one of the major languages of Uganda.

Lango

(1.4 million). The major ethnicity of South Sudan.

Dinka

(1.2 million). Another Luo language of Uganda.

Acholi

(1.1 million in 2011, significantly more today). The language of the Nuer, another numerous people from South Sudan and Ethiopia.

Nuer

(1.0 million). Spoken by the Maasai people of Kenya and Tanzania, one of the most well-known African peoples internationally.[11]

Maasai

(1.0 million with Laka). Central Sudanic, the principal language of southern Chad.

Ngambay

Within the Nilo-Saharan languages are a number of languages with at least a million speakers (most data from SIL's Ethnologue 16 (2009)). In descending order:


Some other important Nilo-Saharan languages under 1 million speakers:


The total for all speakers of Nilo-Saharan languages according to Ethnologue 16 is 38–39 million people. However, the data spans a range from ca. 1980 to 2005, with a weighted median at ca. 1990. Given population growth rates, the figure in 2010 might be half again higher, or about 60 million.

History of the proposal[edit]

The Saharan family (which includes Kanuri, Kanembu, the Tebu languages, and Zaghawa) was recognized by Heinrich Barth in 1853, the Nilotic languages by Karl Richard Lepsius in 1880, the various constituent branches of Central Sudanic (but not the connection between them) by Friedrich Müller in 1889, and the Maban family by Maurice Gaudefroy-Demombynes in 1907. The first inklings of a wider family came in 1912, when Diedrich Westermann included three of the (still independent) Central Sudanic families within Nilotic in a proposal he called Niloto-Sudanic;[12] this expanded Nilotic was in turn linked to Nubian, Kunama, and possibly Berta, essentially Greenberg's Macro-Sudanic (Chari–Nile) proposal of 1954.


In 1920 G. W. Murray fleshed out the Eastern Sudanic languages when he grouped Nilotic, Nubian, Nera, Gaam, and Kunama. Carlo Conti Rossini made similar proposals in 1926, and in 1935 Westermann added Murle. In 1940 A. N. Tucker published evidence linking five of the six branches of Central Sudanic alongside his more explicit proposal for East Sudanic. In 1950 Greenberg retained Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic as separate families, but accepted Westermann's conclusions of four decades earlier in 1954 when he linked them together as Macro-Sudanic (later Chari–Nile, from the Chari and Nile Watersheds).


Greenberg's later contribution came in 1963, when he tied Chari–Nile to Songhai, Saharan, Maban, Fur, and Koman-Gumuz and coined the current name Nilo-Saharan for the resulting family. Lionel Bender noted that Chari–Nile was an artifact of the order of European contact with members of the family and did not reflect an exclusive relationship between these languages, and the group has been abandoned, with its constituents becoming primary branches of Nilo-Saharan—or, equivalently, Chari–Nile and Nilo-Saharan have merged, with the name Nilo-Saharan retained. When it was realized that the Kadu languages were not Niger–Congo, they were commonly assumed to therefore be Nilo-Saharan, but this remains somewhat controversial.


Progress has been made since Greenberg established the plausibility of the family. Koman and Gumuz remain poorly attested and are difficult to work with, while arguments continue over the inclusion of Songhai. Blench (2010) believes that the distribution of Nilo-Saharan reflects the waterways of the wet Sahara 12,000 years ago, and that the protolanguage had noun classifiers, which today are reflected in a diverse range of prefixes, suffixes, and number marking.

Phonology: ATR vowel harmony and the labial-velars /kp/ and /gb/

Noun-class affixes: e.g., ma- affix for mass nouns in Nilo-Saharan

Verbal extensions and plural verbs

External relations[edit]

Proposals for the external relationships of Nilo-Saharan typically center on Niger–Congo: Gregersen (1972) grouped the two together as Kongo–Saharan. However, Blench (2011) proposed that the similarities between Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan (specifically Atlantic–Congo and Central Sudanic) are due to contact, with the noun-class system of Niger–Congo developed from, or elaborated on the model of, the noun classifiers of Central Sudanic.

prefix: *ɪ- or *i-

Causative

Deverbal noun (abstract / / agent) prefix: *a-

participial

suffixes: *-i, *-in, *-k

Number

marker: *rʊ

Reflexive

: first person singular *qa, second person singular *yi

Personal pronouns

: *(y)ɛ

Logophoric pronoun

markers: singular *n, plural *k

Deictic

: possessive *ne, locative *ta

Postpositions

: *kɪ

Preposition

Negative verb: *kʊ

Dimmendaal (2016)[23] cites the following morphological elements as stable across Nilo-Saharan:

Population history[edit]

In the Sahel and East Africa Nilo-Saharan speakers are associated with the ruling class of powerful empires and sultanates that have dominated the region such as the Gao Empire, being the largest contiguous Songhai Empire that dominated the Sahel, West Africa, the Sahara/Maghreb and Central Africa, the Kanem-Bornu Empire in Central Africa, the Sultanate of Damagaram, the Wadai Empire, the Sultanate of Baguirmi, the Sultanate of Darfur, the Sultanate of Sennar, the Zabarma Emirate, and the Shilluk Kingdom.


The pastoralist Tutsi and the Rutara people of the great lakes are also of Nilotic ancestry and have led the powerful kingdom of Rwanda, the Kingdom of Burundi, the Kingdom of Bunyoro, the Kitara Empire, the Kingdom of Toro, the Kingdom of Buganda, the Kingdom of Karagwe, and the Kingdom of Rwenzururu. Whilst these are established on the Bantu peoples from which they adopted the language, they have preserved the bovine pastoralism of the Nilotic peoples.[60][61][62][63]

Languages of Sudan

(Wiktionary)

Nilo-Saharan word lists

(2006). Archaeology, language, and the African past. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press. ISBN 0-7591-0465-4. OCLC 62281704.

Blench, Roger

Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (2008-09-01). "Language Ecology and Linguistic Diversity on the African Continent". Language and Linguistics Compass. 2 (5): 840–858. :10.1111/j.1749-818x.2008.00085.x. ISSN 1749-818X.

doi

(2001). A historical-comparative reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan. Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika. SUGIA Supplements. Vol. 12. Köln: R. Köppe Verlag. ISBN 3-89645-098-0. OCLC 48027016.

Ehret, Christopher

(1970). "The languages of Africa". International Journal of American Linguistics. 29 (1). Bloomington: Indiana University. ISBN 0-87750-115-7. OCLC 795772769.

Greenberg, Joseph

Mikkola, Pertti (1999). "Nilo-Saharan revisited: some observations concerning the best etymologies". Nordic Journal of African Studies. 8 (2): 108–138.

Roger Blench: Nilo-Saharan

Nilo-Saharan list

Archived 2013-02-24 at the Wayback Machine

Map of Nilo-Saharan

Archived 2022-09-03 at the Wayback Machine

Popular Overview of Nilo-Saharan