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When did Native Anatolian languages go extinct?

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Anatolian languages.jpg
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When did Native Anatolian languages go extinct?
>>
They weren't native since they were Indo-European.
>>
>>563449
ok
let's talk about Hatti language then
was it related to semitic or caucasian languages?
>>
>>563460

Caucasian, probably. Lemnian language spoken on Lemnos might have been a true native language of the region though. It's thought to be related to Etruscan.
>>
>>563416
There are reportedly some loanwords in modern Turkish, so I guess they could've lingered well into middle ages in rural areas.
>>
>>563416

Turks.
>>
>>563449
Indo-European languages are from Anatolia though
>>
>>563416
was overtaken by Greek- which in turn was replaced by Turko-Persian dialects.

Kurdish, while an Iranian language, I wouldn't be surprised if it has some roots in the region.
>>
>>566918
Kurdish is a recent arrival in Asia Minor. Armenian would be a better bet.
>>
>>563929
Any examples?
>>
>>566836
languages were extinct long before the turks came.
>>
Assimilation to Greek. The region had been dominated by Greeks in near-totality since at least Alexander, and the language only lost its complete cultural dominance with the Turkish invasion, long after there was any hope of Anatolian languages surviving.

>>566990

Armenian is a later arrival, after the Anatolian languages proper had already arrived and had centuries of their own local history. Armenians were, however, just basically a later wave of the same thing - Indo-Europeans coming out of the Balkans into Anatolia, and setting up their own kingdom(s) on the model of those that came before them.
>>
File: Galatia_Map.png (34KB, 435x310px) Image search: [Google]
Galatia_Map.png
34KB, 435x310px
>>563416
Also Galatian (that was Celtic) replaced some older stuff. Galatian was still spoken around 400 AD, at least according Jeremy, and maybe later too.
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>>566870

Fucking Anatoliatards. Kurgan hypothesis for the win.
>>
>>566870
this is a completely discredited idea. modern genetic research has confirmed the steppe hypothesis beyond serious doubt.
Thread posts: 15
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