On the "pre-history" of Romance linguistics: precursors of Friedrich Diez
Date
1991-09
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Calgary
Abstract
It is received opinion that Romance linguistics is a scientific discipline that begins with Friedrich Diez, who in his Grammatik der romanischen Sprachen (1836-43) first applied to Romance the principles and methods of IE comparative linguistics newly developed by Rask, Bopp, and Grimm. In fact, however, many of the innovations attributed to Diez (and his Indo-Europeanist contemporaries) were anticipated by now-forgotten predecessors like Pierre Nicholas Bonamy (1694-1770), Carlo Denina (1731-1813), and Carl Ludwig Fernow (1763-1808). It even seems probable that the concept of an Indo-European proto-language and the IE family tree was indirectly inspired by the generally recognized relationship between Latin ("Proto-Romance") and its "daughter languages", French, Italian, Spanish, etc., and that the beginnings of IE linguistics owe at least as much to Romance linguistics as Diez's Romance
linguistics owes to the Indo-Europeanists.
Description
Keywords
Linguistics, Historical linguistics, Romance languages, Diez, Friedrich, 1794-1876, Indo-European philology, Indo-European languages
Citation
Izzo, H. J. (1991). On the "pre-history" of Romance linguistics: precursors of Friedrich Diez. Calgary Papers in Linguistics, 14(Fall), 43-54.