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2010 | 19 | 41-51

Article title

Comparatisme voor comparatisme. De vergelijkende taalkunde in Duitsland en de Lage Landen in de 17e eeuw — het werk van Leibniz, Ludolf, Van Boxhorn en Schrieckius

Title variants

Languages of publication

NL

Abstracts

EN
The comparative linguistics is said to be the most important branch of the European linguistics in the 19th century (Grimm and the Grimm’s Law, Bopp, Schleicher and his Stammbaumtheorie). The wide studies of the correspondences and the relationships between two or more languages as well as the search for their common ancestor were stimulated by Sir William Jones who discovered that Sanskrit, Latin and the ancient Greek had the same origin. However, it would not be right to claim that the discovery of Sir William Jones initiated the studies on the genetic relationships between the modern languages and their common origin. Surprisingly, an important piece of work in the field of the comparative linguistics had already been done in the 17th century in Germany (Leibniz, Ludolf) and in the Netherlands (Schrieckius, Van Boxhorn). This paper discusses the ideas the first comparatists came up with — from the origin of the languages and the Ursprache to their possible genetic relationships. The ideas of Leibniz and Ludolf have been analyzed on the basis of the excerpts from their correspondence (1689–1714).

Year

Volume

19

Pages

41-51

Physical description

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-77efdb89-1a9a-4945-9d42-60579fb85ad5
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