1st Edition

The Mongolic Languages

Edited By Juha Janhunen Copyright 2003
    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Mongolic Languages represents the first comprehensive treatment of the Mongolic language family in English.

    The Mongolic languages form a linguistically well defined but geographically widely dispersed family of more than a dozen separate languages, distributed from East and North Asia (Mongolia, Manchuria and Southern Siberia) to Central and West Asia (Northern Tibet, Gansu, Sinkiang, Northern Afghanistan and the Caspian Region).

    Written by a team of international specialists, this in-depth volume is divided into twenty chapters. The first three chapters focus on reconstructed and historical forms of Mongolic. These are followed by fourteen chapters each containing synchronic and diachronic descriptions of a modern Mongolic language or dialect group, including Khalkha, Buryat, Dagur, Ordos, Kalmuck and Moghol. The final three chapters deal with areal and taxonomic issues.

    This unique resource is the ideal companion for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students of linguistics. It will also be of interest to researchers or anyone with an interest in Mongolian Studies or Central Eurasian history and cultural studies.

    1. Juha Janhunen Proto-Mongolic2. Juha Janhunen Written Mongol3. Volker Rybatzki Middle Mongol4. Juha Janhunen Khamnigan Mongol5. Elena Skribnik Buryat6. Toshiro Tsumagari Dagur7. Jan-Olof Svantesson Khalkha8. Juha Janhunen Mongol Dialects9. Stefan Georg Ordos10. Ágnes Birtalan Oirat11. Uwe Bläsing Kalmuck12. Michael Weiers Moghol13. Hans Nugteren Shira Yughur14. Stefan Georg Mongghul15. Keith Slater Mangghuer16. Wu Hugjiltu Bonan17. Stephen S. Kim Santa18. Volker Rybatzki Intra-Mongolic Taxonomy19. Juha Janhunen Para-Mongolic20. Claus Schönig Turko-Mongolic Relations

    Biography

    Juha Janhunen is Professor and Chair of East Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Helsinki. His publications include Manchuria: An Ethnic History (1996), Material on Manchurian Khamnigan Evenki (1991) and Material on Manchurian Khamnigan Mongol (1990). His research interests include, in particular, the Samoyedic, Tungusic and Mongolic languages, though he has also worked on Japanese, Korean, Tibertan and Palaeo-Siberian.

    'The book is a useful handbook for all who are interested in Mongolic languages and a long-awaited fundamental work for researchers of Mongolistics.' - Acta Orientalia

    '...Remarkably useful and carefully edited... it is a volume that will surely serve its field well for years to come, and also one that, even in these days of astonishingly high prices, is well worth what it costs.' - International Journal of Uralic and Altaic Studies