The Nordwestblock hypothesis.
Posted: 17 Nov 2023, 11:47
Hello Friends, I want to show an idea that may greatly strengthen our understanding of the Fryas language.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordwestblock
The link above is to a wikipedia article on the Nordwestblock, which is a language which mainstream linguists suppose to have once existed in the region of Greater Frisia. The idea is that the languages in the Netherlands are too different from other "Indo-European" languages to have evolved directly from the imaginary "Proto-Indo-European" language. Rather, a language already existed that was neither "Celtic" nor "Germanic". And from this substrate, many words may have come into Dutch, German, English and Frisian. One thing this would also prove is that the "Belgi" after which Belgium is named, were never a "Celtic" nation. Rather the Belgi may have been something neither fully "Gallic" nor "Germanic".
Even though the hypothesis is based on the Indo-European theories, which seem to go against the OLB, the Nordwestblock may well be a good archeological and linguistic framework that one day could show how the Fryas are the natives of West-Central Europe. Most of the scholarship on this idea is in German, which I don't read that well, so I won't be reading the scientific papers myself right now. I hope some of you can look into this and tell me what you think.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordwestblock
The link above is to a wikipedia article on the Nordwestblock, which is a language which mainstream linguists suppose to have once existed in the region of Greater Frisia. The idea is that the languages in the Netherlands are too different from other "Indo-European" languages to have evolved directly from the imaginary "Proto-Indo-European" language. Rather, a language already existed that was neither "Celtic" nor "Germanic". And from this substrate, many words may have come into Dutch, German, English and Frisian. One thing this would also prove is that the "Belgi" after which Belgium is named, were never a "Celtic" nation. Rather the Belgi may have been something neither fully "Gallic" nor "Germanic".
Even though the hypothesis is based on the Indo-European theories, which seem to go against the OLB, the Nordwestblock may well be a good archeological and linguistic framework that one day could show how the Fryas are the natives of West-Central Europe. Most of the scholarship on this idea is in German, which I don't read that well, so I won't be reading the scientific papers myself right now. I hope some of you can look into this and tell me what you think.