About the Sumerian language

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JuLingo

JuLingo

Жыл бұрын

Sumerian is probably the most mysterious language out there. It's the language of the people who created the first civilization and the first writing system. Or is it? This language was no longer spoken 4 thousand years ago, so we reconstruct it by the small fragments of the past that we find buried under the sands. I'm not solving the mystery of Sumerian here, but I hope I can present to you at least a small amount of what we know about this language for now.
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Music used:
Ala Shawiti Digle by Ali Sabah
Dabke by Feras Charestan
Min Wahi El-Lami by Ali Sabah
#mesopotamia #middleeast #ancientlanguage

Пікірлер: 4 100
@timdoty566
@timdoty566 Жыл бұрын
I have a PhD in Near Eastern Languages, including Sumerian, and when this video popped up I watched it with skepticism. But I was very pleasantly surprised. Julie knows her stuff. In a short video she covers the issues of who were the Sumerians, the writing system, and the structure of the language. Very well done!
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment! I’m pleased to hear that you found it well-made
@jfrv2244
@jfrv2244 Жыл бұрын
what was your thesis for getting your phd?
@vipulabataduwaarachchi7833
@vipulabataduwaarachchi7833 Жыл бұрын
Magadi is the oldest. we can not translate that language to another by doing a simple word-to-word translation. It needs meaning capturing. For example, if the book says Malaya Raja was born by a blue lotus that means a woman with dark skin.
@vipulabataduwaarachchi7833
@vipulabataduwaarachchi7833 Жыл бұрын
Its Sumari Asura. They came from the current island of Sri Lanka and they were able to fly using simple mechanism and using large birds. Even Syrian, Asirian means sura - asura. There had been waves of migrations because of a volcano eruption.
@billparr
@billparr Жыл бұрын
Can some people check and see if Basque(Bask), Korean, Egyptian hyiroglyph, and Sumerian use almost identical grammar or not? I checked Korean Basque and Egyptian and they have almost identical grammar. I lined Translated Bask with English and translated that English into Korean lined them all 3 up word by word and Bask and Korean have identical words arrangement, which means these 2 have identical grammar. Unless that Bask was translated wrong, I lined Bask with Eqyptian hieroglyph translation done by some youtubers the order of the words arranged to form sentence are almost identical. I would like some brave people who has professional knwledge in language to help check off Sumerian please. According to Korean linguists Sumerian have identical grammar with Korean language. If this is true from what I've checked these 4 languages have almost identical grammar system. I need someone to crosscheck this please.
@SomasAcademy
@SomasAcademy Жыл бұрын
Skin tone definitely isn't my first thought when I hear "black headed," hair color is. Like, most of you hair is on your head, so if you have Black hair, you're black headed - not saying that's the actual origin, it just seems more intuitive to me than skin tone lol
@JustSpectre
@JustSpectre Жыл бұрын
That's right. It's even clearly visible on one of the statues.
@listenup2882
@listenup2882 Жыл бұрын
How would that have distinguished them from the people around them?
@SomasAcademy
@SomasAcademy Жыл бұрын
@@listenup2882 It wouldn't necessarily, as I said, it's just the first thing that would come to my mind, not necessarily a probable origin.
@noahtylerpritchett2682
@noahtylerpritchett2682 Жыл бұрын
I imagine it as maybe the color of paint they wore. But it doesn't really matter.
@Iknowknow112
@Iknowknow112 Жыл бұрын
This is the southern part of mesopotamia and even today blondes, brunettes and redheads are in extremely short supply so black hair wouldn't be exceptional enough to use as an identifier. To be honest neither would very dark skin!!
@timematrixtraveler
@timematrixtraveler 9 ай бұрын
I hold a degree in Linguistics and Languages and I have never seen as beautifully articulated and eloquently stated review❤❤. Outstanding clip! Please make more!!
@archipelago_crypto
@archipelago_crypto 9 ай бұрын
Hi Julie - I absolutely love your videos! Although professionally I work as a data scientist, my first love is history. Over the last few years, my primary research interests outside of work have focused on cultures in ancient Mesopotamia and Meso-America. It’s wonderful to gain a better understanding of Sumerian and to hear that language brought to life. Thanks so much for what you do, it’s incredibly valuable. ❤
@saturn724
@saturn724 Жыл бұрын
Imagine a civilization so old, the locals didn't even know about it for thousands of years
@Maya-lk6yo
@Maya-lk6yo Жыл бұрын
Imagine they found out the civilasation bevore was their „Makers“and thats why they all have dark hair and Blue or green eyes?
@94Kamani
@94Kamani Жыл бұрын
Thank you the locals didn't know coz then item where planted there by colonial master after they stole it from Nigeria and other African country. Ur is still in southern Nigeria and the people still live there
@yeetman4953
@yeetman4953 Жыл бұрын
@@94Kamani WE WUZ KANGZZZ
@GokuMan3000
@GokuMan3000 Жыл бұрын
𒅋𒋫𒄠𒋢𒌝𒊏𒊏𒋗𒌒𒋾𒂊𒆷𒋾𒅎
@bmb3333
@bmb3333 Жыл бұрын
Sumerian has a close relationship with Kurdish, for political reasons. It is said that it has nothing to do with the region, which is incorrect
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
Sir Leonard Woolley, an archaeology professor, who spent his entire researcher’s life (close to 60 years) with Mesopotamian excavations, said: "Since 1939 I keep requesting and urging the Hungarian Academy of Sciences to send me a Hungarian linguist. The Sumerian language - despite its 7,000 years of history - shows amazing similarities with the modern Hungarian language. Based on my researches, I know for a fact that - for example, 56 of the specialty of the Sumerian grammar shows 53 stunning parity with the contemporary Hungarian language. The Turkish language is the second closest language to the Sumerian, and there are 34 similarities found with the foregoing. While the Turkish stands on "nephew" degree in terms of similarity with the Sumerian, we can say that the Hungarian is the SIMILAR and the direct descendant of the Sumerian language. More than 6,000 basic Sumerian root words matching up with Hungarian words. " Mind you, Professor Sir Leonard Woolley later came to Budapest, where he learned the Hungarian language privately, because the Hungarian Academy of Sciences never supported and appreciated his efforts. As a matter of fact, the Institute denounced him, saying, " We will never confirm that the Hungarian language have anything to do with the Sumerian.”
@Eyes-of-Horus
@Eyes-of-Horus 10 ай бұрын
My father grew up in an area of Western PA where everyone in the area spoke a mixture of Slavic languages. He spoke Ukrainian, Russian, Slavic, etc. He always said that one of the hardest to learn was Hungarian. So, he wasn't very verbal in Hungarian.
@KenJackson_US
@KenJackson_US 10 ай бұрын
*Beny:* _"..., the Institute denounced him, saying, " We will never confirm ...'"_ How _awful!_ How arrogant and short sighted to have no interest in their roots.
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 10 ай бұрын
@@KenJackson_US The official Hungarian bodies have denied it for 150 years. The Japanese have not understood the Hungarian mentality for at least 100 years, the Romanians and the Indo-Europeans rub their hands in joy, archaeogenetics and archeology tell the truth...
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 10 ай бұрын
@@KenJackson_US "Grover S. Krantz: Magyarság (Hungarians), the founding people of Europe's culture Grover S. Krantz (1931-2002), a world-renowned American anthropologist and professor at Washington State University, recognizes in his work "The Geographical Development of European Languages" that Hungarians, who have been treated as Europe's stepchildren until now, are the founders of Europe's culture. According to him, the u.n. "Indo-European languages" developed very late in Europe. That is why 30% of their vocabulary is not of "Indo-European" origin, and there are no "Indo-European" river names on the early maps of Europe. We are more interested in the following sentence: "...so the Greek language was formed in its current location in 6500 BC, and the Celtic language in Ireland in 3500 BC. The antiquity of the Hungarian language in the Carpathian Basin is similarly surprising; I find that its origins lead to the Mesolithic, preceding the Stone Age." Furthermore: "At least on one important point, the theory of people's migration is the opposite of the previous theorem. It is generally believed that the Hungarians of the Urals lived in the 9th century. century, they moved into the Carpathian basin from an eastern area. I find that all groups speaking the Uralic language spread from Hungary, in a much earlier age, in the opposite direction." Grover S. Krantz, The Geographical Formation of European Languages. (Ősi Örökségünk Alapítvány, Budapest, 2000) Original title and publisher of the work: Geographical Development of European Languages ​​Peter Lang Publishing Inc. New York 1988. Translated by: Imre Kálmán" This book has not been refuted by anyone since 1988, rather everyone has remained silent. In recent years, archaeogenetics has confirmed that Krantz's theory is correct! kzbin.info/www/bejne/oIjMYqmdfJ1gqas kzbin.info/www/bejne/nX_CY4KhZsyhgtE
@KenJackson_US
@KenJackson_US 10 ай бұрын
@@benyovszkyistvan408: _"...so the Greek language was formed in its current location in 6500 BC, ..."_ The _"current location"_ (Greece?) didn't exist in 6500 BC. And Greek certainly didn't exist before at least Sumer in the early third millennium BC.
@mariemelansongundy-vx4ox
@mariemelansongundy-vx4ox 10 ай бұрын
I have been a student of this region, people's, and archeological sites for decades. Thank you for opening another door into these very ancient times.
@michaelyoung7974
@michaelyoung7974 9 ай бұрын
This is surely one of the most thorough discussions of Sumerian for the layperson/amateur linguist. It was easy for me to pause and go over the representations. Thank you.
@brunomoura7719
@brunomoura7719 10 ай бұрын
I just found your channel. A good surprise, indeed. I love to study languages since I was a kid.The way you contextualize all these ancient languages is amazing. A "cultural and sociological background " makes the study much more empiric and intense. Thanks for sharing this knowledge with us. From now on I will start to watch the earlier videos. Best regards from Brazil.
@NullNV
@NullNV Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love this video and this channel!!! Thanks for the fascinating and important work that you are doing via this platform 😊- cheers!
@y2klucker
@y2klucker 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this and your other similar videos. I love learning about our history, language, religions, structures and more. We have lost so much through the years. What would our collective memory look like had we not erased or lost so much over the millenium. Thank you for studying these most important details and bringing them back to life. I love your love for history. 😊
@BergoBadures
@BergoBadures Ай бұрын
Thank you a lot for this amazing video! I know it is been a long time since you posted this video, but here I am appreciating it. I was looking for good content at Google Chrome about the Sumerian civilization and then I searched up about it in KZbin, too. Gladly I found your channel and your amazing video. I'm amazed, really!
@Pakanahymni
@Pakanahymni Жыл бұрын
Actually going from a sound to a sound is really common especially through an intermediary and has happened in Swedish, French, and countless other languages.
@fanaticofmetal
@fanaticofmetal Жыл бұрын
For example (Latin>French) Caballus -> Cheval /k/ /ʃ/
@Lashovadjs
@Lashovadjs Жыл бұрын
I’d say almost every language I know of or heard of. K,g followed by vowels like i and e easily palatalizes. E.g. Peking -> Beijing, and the famous Caesar
@mavera-5777
@mavera-5777 Жыл бұрын
Palatalization 🤷🏻‍♀️
@kadircanyldran1849
@kadircanyldran1849 Жыл бұрын
sumers was not usin your indo-eu languages and we found similarities with only 1 language in the world kengir is a clan and plant name in turkish
@str.77
@str.77 Жыл бұрын
comparisons between Latin (and its cognates) and Sumerian are not very apt. Nor is there actually a reason to think up a process by which Kingir became S(h)umer. They are names in very different languages and such can be very different, compare French Allemagne, English Germany, German Deutschland.
@IchijoTorukojin
@IchijoTorukojin 10 ай бұрын
Good job Julie. I enjoyed with the video. I want to give you 2 names about Kiengir people aka Sumerian and their mythology which is directly connected to todays's religions and myths. 1- Muazzez İlmiye Çığ(She was a part of researches and translations of Sumerian language as a Sumerolog and archivist.) She never puts a comment and manipulates but gives direct trustful info. 2- Prof. Gönül Tekin (University of California, Turkologist and Turkish Literature Lecturer) When you start to listen her you will get amazed cause she is a walking library. Enjoy!
@carrawayd
@carrawayd 9 ай бұрын
Thanks Julie. This is very well done and fascinating.
@nickush7512
@nickush7512 10 ай бұрын
Well, thank you you tube for throwing this before my eyes !! What an enjoyable video. Great presentation and very interesting content. Subscribed, and thanks :)
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
1932 - EDGAR CLEMENT, German linguist, was so impressed by the musicality of the language that he learned Hungarian. According to him, the Hungarian language had a magical strength, which reflected a deep spirituality and only the highest ranking languages, especially the old classical languages could match up to it. 1939 - GÉZA BÁRCZY, member of the Hungarian Academy of Science, discovered the 5000 year-old Sumerian suffixes and proved that they were identical to the Hungarian suffixes. 1940 - Sir LEONARD WOOLLEY, English archeologist and linguist, excavated the Sumerian city, Ur of the Chaldees. He found 400,000 clay tablets, which were covered with linguistic material. He made a glossary and deciphered a large number of texts for the Institutum Biblicum in Rome, among them a six volume Sumerisches Lexicon, in which he deciphered 4,000 words.
@gaborszegedy1673
@gaborszegedy1673 7 ай бұрын
National Geographic published a book in the eighties called "Splendors of the Past". In there was a reference to Sumer language as "it is similar to Turkish and Hungarian but otherwise unrelated." Hm.
@MalaysianPerspective
@MalaysianPerspective 7 ай бұрын
11:22 5+x numbering system like khemer, base 10 & base 60 coexist
@HassanCodA-Xod8hm
@HassanCodA-Xod8hm 5 ай бұрын
Magyar did maketh me come here today. 🪷
@almeu433
@almeu433 3 ай бұрын
The TurkoMongols mongrels are not Summerians
@tuviadavidmorrison4215
@tuviadavidmorrison4215 Жыл бұрын
I've watched many of your language videos! You are amazing in how you are able to be so knowledgeable about so many languages! It's a joy to watch and learn from you! All best in your future language endeavors!
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@deborahswart1718
@deborahswart1718 10 ай бұрын
@@JuLingo On a practical level; how do you learn and remember all those ancient languages?
@bureaffari3694
@bureaffari3694 9 ай бұрын
​@@deborahswart1718she's probably pretty smart and has a natural interest in this subject and probably has been doing for a very long time.
@OldSilkRoad
@OldSilkRoad 6 ай бұрын
I have been a longtime student of Near Eastern history and culture, and I was quite blown away by the fact that you were able to pack so much factual information in such a short video. Often, videos by KZbin creators leave me disappointed and sometimes angry at their miscomprehension and sometimes misrepresentation of history. You did none of that! I am impressed, and you have a new subscriber!
@williamstone1536
@williamstone1536 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic and informative! Thank you so much!
@markhoffman9714
@markhoffman9714 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see you do more on Sumerian. Wonderfully done! Thank you!
@NachtmahrNebenan
@NachtmahrNebenan Жыл бұрын
Very insightful, Juli! And Basque again, of course 😅 Thank you, can't wait for the next one! _(a very stylish floor lamp)_
@dinawarda384
@dinawarda384 10 ай бұрын
I am Assyrian from (Iraq- Mesopotamia) I am very proud of coming from this part of the world that rich of history of first writing, school, libraries, wheels, frist people who divided the time, the year, very good in math, astronomy and agriculture and so on. We have a statement that say: " the first letter start here" its mean in Iraq- Mesopotamia. I hope my country's history appears and been knowing by every human being. Thank you for this short video beautiful lady, thanks for your time of reading and researching. ❤❤
@BlueBlue-mm7kn
@BlueBlue-mm7kn 10 ай бұрын
The history ur talking about is very much the IndoEuropean history of Mesopotamia and not the Assyrian.
@dinawarda384
@dinawarda384 10 ай бұрын
I said this part of the world, I didn't say Assyrian did all of that, "by the way I don't know why the world scared of Assyrian name to come forward"?!!!!!.
@canbegb.1223
@canbegb.1223 4 ай бұрын
You mean "Kurdistan"
@diyarfatahi2043
@diyarfatahi2043 3 ай бұрын
Sumerian and Assyrian are different ,the Sumerians were Kurd.
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy 3 ай бұрын
​@diyarfatah The Sumerians did not belong to anyone except the Arabs and Kurds. They stopped stealing i2043
@g54b95
@g54b95 10 ай бұрын
I watched this not knowing what to expect. I thoroughly enjoyed this presentation and your expertise. Your Bengal at the end was why I subscribed. I had a Bengal years ago that I raised from a kitten. His name was Genghis Khat (Genghis for short). He was 20% Asian spotted leopard and he was my best friend. I have never shared my life with a more intelligent, graceful, athletic or amazing animal in my life. He had a penchant for language, too, and I had to be careful what I said around him (for instance, he focused on the 'k' sound in the word 'milk', but he would also hear the word 'fuck' as 'milk', which made for some confusing and memorable moments). He lived to be 18 years old and remains as one of the finest souls I have ever known.
@taterkaze9428
@taterkaze9428 Жыл бұрын
It's great to see that Juli has discovered the Iron Law of KZbin, which is known to apply throughout the galaxy. This law is even more powerful than the "You Will Recieve a Copyright Strike for any Conceivable Reason" law. It states: "any video, from any creator, on any topic, at any time is automatically improved with the addition of a cat." The effect is further enhanced if said cat is beautiful, as in this case. Kitty should be a guest star imo.
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
He has a very busy schedule but I’ll try to get him to participate more!
@secondexodus9105
@secondexodus9105 Жыл бұрын
The Obadiah Alliance Sephardic Jewish Rabbinical Court issued an Official court ruling that the Igbo people are descendants of the ancient Israelites.
@piked261
@piked261 Жыл бұрын
@@secondexodus9105 so what 🤣
@secondexodus9105
@secondexodus9105 Жыл бұрын
@@piked261 so ... If they are Israelites, anyone with Igbo ancestry genetically will also be Israelites. African Americans have significant Igbo ancestry
@fieldagentryan
@fieldagentryan Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/fHrVindtmc95fpo
@jeandeboishault6380
@jeandeboishault6380 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for this one ! It's always a pleasure to learn new things about something we already (but partially) know.
@ebenum
@ebenum 9 ай бұрын
Hi Juli! It's the first time I've watched one of your videos, and first of all, I feel compelled to say that you are undeniably beautiful. 🙂 Secondly, as a non-native English speaker and a native Spanish speaker from Argentina (although I prefer using neutral Spanish), I wanted to express my gratitude for your accent. Thanks to your accent, I was able to understand almost 97% of what you said without needing to pause the video or look up the meanings of words to understand what you're saying... It's truly impressive! I loved that because I usually don't understand English-speaking KZbinrs well, but with you, I had no problem at all. Maybe for you, understanding English is not surprising, but for me, being able to comprehend without relying on translators is a great achievement... Usually, when I watch videos in English, I struggle to understand or follow the conversation. Thank you once again for making it so accessible and enjoyable! I wish you all the best and continued success with your channel.
@lajos-berenyi
@lajos-berenyi 9 ай бұрын
There are some theories, that the Sumarian language has connection with the Hungarian language. I wouldn’t like to go into the details of pros and cons of the argument, but two interesting things I would like to mention: The names of many Sumarian towns has meaning in Hungarian and even there are some towns or villages or places in Hungary today with the same (or very similar) names. The Sumarians only we call Sumarians, but they called themself Maghars. And the Hungarian call themself Magyars.
@bar540
@bar540 4 ай бұрын
They do not call themselves Maghars. Who said this ? They call themselves Kengers or Kangars. About Hungarian language, I agree that there is a relationship in ural-altay based language and sumerians.
@PalmyraSchwarz
@PalmyraSchwarz Жыл бұрын
I've only just discovered your channel and I'm thrilled because you focus on lesser-known or "smaller" languages. As far as your language skills are concerned, you are the complete opposite of me. I've been trying to learn English with varying degrees of intensity for 45 years and I still can't do it properly.
@mintonmiller
@mintonmiller 10 ай бұрын
As I read the comments, I can see I am not the target here. I am not particularly bright so am not an academic. I watch these types of videos knowing that many of the finer points are going to be over my head and will probably remain so. I watch these types of videos because I am fascinated by language in general and in other cultures. These videos give me a "big picture" understanding that I am not sure I can put into words, but yet somehow meaningful to me. I said all that just to say thank you.
@abelardo9528
@abelardo9528 6 ай бұрын
I finally became a patron. Wanted to do it since long...really not much at all, the minimun basically since I am not working. But needed to support your exceptionally enlightening and interesting dedication to such a subject so connected subtly to Human evolution, Anthropology, psychology and things like that. Plus, I just love how evidently cultured and sophisticated you are, aside from being exceptionally attractive or beautiful also, and that with all my owed respect.
@lansingday1453
@lansingday1453 8 ай бұрын
Excellent! I found myself drawn to your mention of the Ubaid Culture and went to Wiki to explore; which led me to the life and work of Thorkild Jacobsen "7 June 1904 - 2 May 1993) was a renowned Danish historian specializing in Assyriology and Sumerian literature. He was one of the foremost scholars on the ancient Near East." wiki. I was happy to feel pulled toward and to land on his work "The Harps That Once...: Sumerian Poetry in Translation". Have ordered that book and look forward to receiving soon What a fun learning adventure! Thank you! 🙏🏼
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
1977 - KÁLMÁN GOSZTONYI, professor at the St. Michael’s College in Paris, with the financial support of the French government, published his book: Összehasonlító szumir nyelvtan, (Comparative Sumerian Grammar) and stated that from 53 Sumerian grammatical characteristics, 51 are identical to the Hungarian, for example: a) The adjective is singular, the noun is plural e.g. jó emberek b) The interrogative pronouns and numerals can have a possessive suffix. E.g. Mi-d van? Az én tíz-em. c) Nouns may be in singular or plural. E.g. kéz, kezek. Juh, juhok. d) The same word can indicate both genders. E.g. ember, gyermek, testvér e) An independent verb can create a sentence by itself. E.g. Fáj. Besides the grammar, he presented, from the collection of cuneiform signs of Labat, Árpád Orbán’s new methods of dating and, with this, he examined 93 Sumerian words. 1980 - BÉLA OLÁH, an independent researcher, in his book: Édes magyar nyelvünk szumir eredete, (The Sumerian Origin of our Sweet Hungarian Language) states the following identities: 1. The Hungarian vowels and consonants are completely identical to the Sumerian. 2. Vowel harmony is present in both languages. 3. Words may not begin with two consonants. 4. Both languages are agglutinative. 5. They do not distinguish gender. 6. The Hungarian verbal suffixes are more developed than the Sumerian.
@csababanhegyesy8638
@csababanhegyesy8638 10 ай бұрын
Helyes!
@tundevirag6372
@tundevirag6372 10 ай бұрын
a magyarok eredetet mindig elfelejtik megemliteni
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 10 ай бұрын
@@tundevirag6372 Mert a hivatalos magyar álláspont mindig is tagadta az igazságot. Legalább 150 éve ezt teszi. Ameddig ez így lesz és ez alapján készítenek műsort vagy írnak könyveket addig ez nem nagyon fog változni. Pedig egyértelmű a kapcsolat. Ezt már bebizonyította a nyelvészet, régészet és legújabban az archeogenetika is.
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
1963 - VIKTOR PADÁNYI, historian, in his book entitled Dentumagyaria, examined the Sumerian-Hungarian vocabulary and, on the basis of phonetics and meaning, stated: “The spirit of the Sumerian and Hungarian languages, their structure and grammar are almost identical and, by this same measure, they differ from other languages.” 1966 - JÁNOS HARMATTA, historian and academician, stated that, in 1961, N. Vlassa, an archeologist from Kolozsvár, discovered in Tatarlaka one round and one rectangular clay tablet, on which the signs could be easily deciphered with the help of Sumerian pictograms which they resembled. 1968 - ANDRÁS ZAKAR, linguist and researcher in cultural history, demonstrated the language development on the basis of dating methods, and showed that in the Hungarian language, after 5000 years, out of one hundred words, 63 words were Sumerian and 12 Akkadian. This shows not only relationship but also direct descent. The newest scientific methods prove that the Sumerian-Hungarian linguistic analyses are based on certain historical and archeological evidence. 1970 - IDA BOBULA, philosopher and historian, a researcher who spoke seven languages fluently, in her books Sumir rokonság (Sumerian Relationship) and A magyar nemzet eredete (The origin of the Hungarian People), and also in A 2000 magyar név sumir eredete (The Sumerian Origin of 2000 Hungarian Names) demonstrated that a majority of Hungarian names can be understood with the help of the Sumerian dictionary. In her analyses, she states that the returning Magyars brought with them a Scythian language, developed in Sumer.
@canerguener8664
@canerguener8664 10 ай бұрын
Their must be a link betweem Hungarian, Sumer and Turkish
@Bavvo69
@Bavvo69 10 ай бұрын
Beautiful summary, so fascinating. Thank you.
@aspoonfulofknowledge
@aspoonfulofknowledge 10 ай бұрын
I learned Sanskrit for several years and now, I am taking on the challenge teaching myself Sumerian. Keep up the good work. You are doing a wonderful job!
@gilnopvariko
@gilnopvariko 10 ай бұрын
How do you study sumerian?
@M.C.G.
@M.C.G. 10 ай бұрын
consider this (from the perspective of the bible...im not a christian or jew what so ever) the fall of the tower of babylon....god gave speak confusion...not many diferent new languiges. whit other words we still speak the same one and only languige broken down true time whit new meanings other forms of speaking out the same words (expecially by sound!!!) the old netherlands (dutch) version is the closed to the sumerian languige....i used it to decifer the languige all over the world and possible even beyond this world (either alien or more of the spirits/angels what ever you want to call them) it is not the letters it is the sound the frequentie....and to qoute jezus from the bible in this case....speaking is silver silence is gold ;)
@christophrs6930
@christophrs6930 10 ай бұрын
@@gilnopvariko a-dam can't do it
@SpiderF27
@SpiderF27 10 ай бұрын
Keep doing. When Anunaki return to our world you'll be my translator 😃
@deborahswart1718
@deborahswart1718 10 ай бұрын
@@christophrs6930 oh yes they can as the first human couple; one male & one female birthed from the dust/aphar as clay aka adamah in Hebrew and shaped by YHWH by His own "hands" and brought to life through His "breath"/ ru'akh.
@nomanmcshmoo8640
@nomanmcshmoo8640 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this introduction to Sumerian. I am a huge fan of the Gilgamesh Epic and have long been interested in this fascinating people from which many of our cultures may have sprung and, in many cases, absolutely DID.
@geoglyphproject
@geoglyphproject Жыл бұрын
I am a big fan of the Epic it's the oldest known text yet so modern. If you are interested in learning more about ancient languages check this kzbin.info/aero/PLaINFseE0hFoBeXjYaWWM3uCXjTGl_G3E
@xerxen100
@xerxen100 Жыл бұрын
Not just the cultures, but many peoples also partially comes from them. They didnt die out.Their latest apperance is under the name of Hunnic empire and Attila.
@inimene3796
@inimene3796 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see a fellow Gilgamesh enjoyer
@mehmetdenek5830
@mehmetdenek5830 Жыл бұрын
Hungarians are also Turkish. Hun Turks.
@irfanmauludin398
@irfanmauludin398 Жыл бұрын
Do you know the meaning Anu in Sumerian language?
@eurostar0711
@eurostar0711 Жыл бұрын
I am Assyrian and we speak Aramaic but some of us still know how to read, write and speak Sumerian. Our flag has the Star of Shamash on it, its Sumerian deity exactly as shown on 1:00 in the middle of the tablet, but we use white, blue and red colors because thats what Sumerians painted interior of their palaces.
@aramokurdo
@aramokurdo Жыл бұрын
no as Turks claim sumerians are turk :)))))))
@eurostar0711
@eurostar0711 Жыл бұрын
@@aramokurdo They can claim all they want but its not true. Thats why they attempted the genocide in 1915 to steal indigenous people land and to claim the culture as their own. You talking to an Assyrian not a westerner who doesnt know history of middle east. We know everything they did, and everything you Kurds did too.
@sonofmercury
@sonofmercury 10 ай бұрын
​@@aramokurdouh oh. No response?
@Sariel555
@Sariel555 10 ай бұрын
@@eurostar0711 You are Arab Semites and not Sumerians who look like Dravidians and speak an agglutinative language. First among the Sumerians there were other ethnic groups that did not belong to their group.
@jeanj-michelhermans468
@jeanj-michelhermans468 10 ай бұрын
@@Sariel555 Chaldean people from irak spek aramean, language of Jesus!
@michaelbrown7785
@michaelbrown7785 10 ай бұрын
Your very most important subscriber has just subscribed!!
@rachellea7923
@rachellea7923 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing Jule, some text you shared is my ancient lingua franca in Southeast Asia, our ancestor came from ancient middle east thousand years back. Interesting sharing ! keep it up
@deprecor1
@deprecor1 Жыл бұрын
We need a part 2 on the sumerian language! I was craving for more examples and the sounds from full phrases!
@HardCore_Islamist
@HardCore_Islamist Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised she didn't mention another hypothesis of summerian origins, which is that they came from the Arabian Peninsula, and I believe its true because the Arabian Peninsula was not as it is now, and there are evidence for that based on drawings on rocks showing elephants and other animals that lived there when it was green. When it started to dry people migrated to north arabia to the Levant and mesopotamia to create one of the oldest and greatest arab civilizations. But because most scholars of aincent mesopotamia are western orientalist, they like to ignore this hypothesis.
@greguir
@greguir Жыл бұрын
@@HardCore_Islamist most likely the sumerians came from the now drowned persian gulf
@1970coconut
@1970coconut Жыл бұрын
@@greguir They might came from multiple places as they had wandered to everywhere as they were disappeared.
@geoglyphproject
@geoglyphproject Жыл бұрын
I agree would love to see a video 2. If you are interested in learning more about ancient languages check this kzbin.info/aero/PLaINFseE0hFoBeXjYaWWM3uCXjTGl_G3E
@dersimkurdistani3137
@dersimkurdistani3137 Жыл бұрын
Learn kurdish .To understand sumerian..
@tarkgundogdu8940
@tarkgundogdu8940 10 ай бұрын
The grammar of the Sumerian language is very similar to Altaic languages like Basq, Turkish, Korean, Japan, Hungarian, Finnish and Mongolic languages.
@peterfireflylund
@peterfireflylund 9 ай бұрын
Basque is not Altaic. The others have been suggested to be part of the same family but most of them clearly aren’t. Macro-Altaic is clearly false. Micro-Altaic might be true but there is no clear proof.
@tarkgundogdu8940
@tarkgundogdu8940 9 ай бұрын
@@peterfireflylund Basq people are the continuation of the Etruscan civilization which came before the Roman Empire. It is an Altaic language by grammar.
@reinhartreuschel5499
@reinhartreuschel5499 10 ай бұрын
I'm very glad that I've found your channel just now and will have a look at all these various bunch of almost unknown languages. Congratulations, and affectionate regards to your cat;-))
@rescue270
@rescue270 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. I am a simple lay person with a fascination for languages. I really speak nothing but American English, but your presentation and understanding of such an ancient language held me transfixed throughout your entire production. I could sit and listen to you for hours every day.
@Mikedeela
@Mikedeela Жыл бұрын
I have been interested in Sumerian for many years. I appreciate your contribution to my knowledge on the subject.
@MohammedMohammed-bl9dh
@MohammedMohammed-bl9dh Жыл бұрын
انا سومري 🇮🇶
@skymanblank6243
@skymanblank6243 Жыл бұрын
. Tower of Babel dispersion results. Chinese had both same word for God "Di" as in "Shang Di" -"Most High God" and sacrificial system (Emperor sanctifies himself then sanctifies blameless sheep which is slaughtered for sins of the people. The sons of Noah spread out N and NW Japheph. West and SW Ham. Shem some went north. They carried their faith in the one true God with them. Shem-Semitic S=SH ex ashur probably Syria. As they fled north look ar age geography Feghana valley leads to Turin Valley leads to Altai mountains. Lots of people groups in China and Thailand/ Myanmar say they originated at the Altai mountains. Altai means golden in Mongolian. This leads to the Heixi corridor and one of the most fertile places on earth-which they all fought over. The losers went south Hmong, Mon, Lisu, Tai etc.By the way all these speak tonal languages. Altaic languages are agglutinative SOV languages like modern day Turk languages. I don't believe the video is more than 70 % correct nevertheless they are right about the differentiation of Tonal and Agglutinative language origin. The Dene-Yenisarian soup that crossed the ice bridge was both Tonal and Agglutinative. A tribe of them the "New Pearse" had stories of the Creator and the flood and questioned Lewis and Clark for the "Book of God"
@HardCore_Islamist
@HardCore_Islamist Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised she didn't mention another hypothesis of summerian origins, which is that they came from the Arabian Peninsula, and I believe its true because the Arabian Peninsula was not as it is now, and there are evidence for that based on drawings on rocks showing elephants and other animals that lived there when it was green. When it started to dry people migrated to north arabia to the Levant and mesopotamia to create one of the oldest and greatest arab civilizations. But because most scholars of aincent mesopotamia are western orientalist, they like to ignore this hypothesis.
@cristobalvalladares973
@cristobalvalladares973 Жыл бұрын
Love it. Languages are my obsession. Currently studying an Arawakan language called Garifuna. Keep it going.
@valeriobenedetti7791
@valeriobenedetti7791 Жыл бұрын
any suggestion on how to find material to study the lesser known languages?
@cristobalvalladares973
@cristobalvalladares973 Жыл бұрын
@@valeriobenedetti7791 community groups. In my area there is a group studying ladino. A Sephardi group. Ask anyone about their language and you can't get them shut up. Failing that, KZbin videos. That is how I learned Portuguese and Yoruba. Some of the software language programs are incorporating the more obscure languages. I maybe wrong but Rosetta stone may have added Haitian creole. Ancient languages? There are Assyrian and Kurdish community groups. Oh add Mayan and Aztec to the mix. Be careful with Aztec. It has now become the language of the cartels. Hope that helps.
@lyssanch3096
@lyssanch3096 Жыл бұрын
I thought garifuna was african infused language made up of various african languages brought by the slave trade to central america?
@cristobalvalladares973
@cristobalvalladares973 Жыл бұрын
@@lyssanch3096 almost no African words in Garifuna. The escaped slaves mixed with the local carib Indians. The Africans were mostly male. The mothers were Carib or kalinago. Children learn language from the mother. Subsequent generations spoke Carib. The only African word in Garifuna is baba. For father. Another theory is that the Africans spoke many different languages. So the kids used Carib as a common language. If you listen to Garifuna you will hear how the Caribbean sounded before the arrival of Columbus. There are parts of central America where you will hear Garifuna, Maya and misquito spoken alongside each other.
@valeriobenedetti7791
@valeriobenedetti7791 Жыл бұрын
@@cristobalvalladares973 thanks a lot! I hope to find some of those community groups in my areas too then
@gerardmichaelburnsjr.
@gerardmichaelburnsjr. 7 ай бұрын
This was really a masterful presentation, and while I am an amateur in the relevant fields,, is plain that Julie does her homework. I can't blame her for not knowing what nobody knows, and I'm left with a hunger to get involved in archaeology in that area. Solving the question of where the Sumerians came from would be a magnificent accomplishment, and finding earlier clues about their language would be just as much of an accomplishment.
@theun4giv3n
@theun4giv3n 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for that video. Very fascinating.
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
1873 - LENORMAND formulated the first Sumerian Grammar and also made a thorough comparative study of the grammar and vocabulary of the Ural-Altaic languages. By so doing, he proved the relationship between the Ural-Altaic languages and Sumerian. 1873 - EDOUARD SAYOUS, a French historian proved the linguistic comparisons of Lenormand. In 1869 and 1896, he was in Hungary and he learned Hungarian. In acknowledgement of his work, he was made a member of the Hungarian Kisfaludy Literary Guild. 1875 - FRANÇOIS C. LENORMAND strongly advocated that the language that discovered writing was most closely related to Hungarian. Therefore he traveled again to Hungary to learn the language more thoroughly. In his book “The Ancient Language of the Chaldeans and the Turanian Languages” from phonetics to the noun suffixes, almost entirely relying on the logic and pronunciation of the Hungarian language, he continued his research into the comparison between the Sumerian and the Turanian languages. He found that the Sumerian phonetic rules were based on the Hungarian. 1875 - HEINRICH GELZER, a Swiss linguist, in an article entitled: Das Ausland, stated that the Sumerian noun and verb suffixes were identical to those of the Turanian languages.
@seydadogan2259
@seydadogan2259 10 ай бұрын
Specificially Turkish because when we talk about Turanian it is so vast. There are al lot of languages like chinese but it is specificially Turkish...
@stevenschilizzi4104
@stevenschilizzi4104 6 ай бұрын
Brilliant! Well done.
@ozhalljr
@ozhalljr Жыл бұрын
I loved this "episode". So interesting! Thank you.
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@schallattila3374
@schallattila3374 2 ай бұрын
@@JuLingo The key for sumerian is the hungarian.Learn hungarian and You will be happy 😉
@hili72
@hili72 10 ай бұрын
Great video, a lot of in-depth information.
@Shamanthebarbarian
@Shamanthebarbarian 10 ай бұрын
You are the first youtuber talking about languages to whom I have listened to all the videos. Why do you have such a passion for this topic?
@alialgubri4731
@alialgubri4731 Жыл бұрын
My country 🇮🇶 iraq 🇮🇶..thank you my friend
@benyovszkyistvan408
@benyovszkyistvan408 Жыл бұрын
Sir Leonard Woolley, an archaeology professor, who spent his entire researcher’s life (close to 60 years) with Mesopotamian excavations, said: "Since 1939 I keep requesting and urging the Hungarian Academy of Sciences to send me a Hungarian linguist. The Sumerian language - despite its 7,000 years of history - shows amazing similarities with the modern Hungarian language. Based on my researches, I know for a fact that - for example, 56 of the specialty of the Sumerian grammar shows 53 stunning parity with the contemporary Hungarian language. The Turkish language is the second closest language to the Sumerian, and there are 34 similarities found with the foregoing. While the Turkish stands on "nephew" degree in terms of similarity with the Sumerian, we can say that the Hungarian is the SIMILAR and the direct descendant of the Sumerian language. More than 6,000 basic Sumerian root words matching up with Hungarian words. " Mind you, Professor Sir Leonard Woolley later came to Budapest, where he learned the Hungarian language privately, because the Hungarian Academy of Sciences never supported and appreciated his efforts. As a matter of fact, the Institute denounced him, saying, " We will never confirm that the Hungarian language have anything to do with the Sumerian.”
@regularbahamian
@regularbahamian Жыл бұрын
Look what arab colonialism did to beautiful cultures every where innthe middle east
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy 3 ай бұрын
الثقافات العربية من اجمل الثقافات بالعالم ومن دمر الشرق الأوسط وتسبب في الحروب هم الاوربيين والأمريكيين نحن ليس لدينا علاقة بكل حرب حصلت في السنين السابقة ​@@regularbahamian
@muskyoxes
@muskyoxes Жыл бұрын
I recently read a hypothesis that only largely monosyllabic languages could get the idea of writing off the ground because the rebus principle is easier for such languages, and that principle is essential to get enough "difficult" words depicted to get started with sufficiently full speech transcription
@bustavonnutz
@bustavonnutz Жыл бұрын
Egyptian & Mesoamerican languages kinda throws a wrench into that hypothesis though. There are enough major exceptions that I'm not sure I completely buy that.
@muskyoxes
@muskyoxes Жыл бұрын
@@bustavonnutz The hypothesizer said Mayan was largely monosyllabic. And even though hieroglyphs and cuneiform are visually dissimilar, the hypothesizer (and me) finds it incredulous that the _idea_ of writing itself would spring up independently in such close proximity among people who interacted all the time. ("The hypothesizer" is Peter T Daniels)
@bustavonnutz
@bustavonnutz Жыл бұрын
@@muskyoxes Writing was originally symbolic & not necessarily any real reflection phonemically of what was being visually presented to the reader. Logographic systems seem to be among the oldest forms of writing we find; however, syllabic writing systems only emerge once sound associations are made to specific & widely recognizable characters. The idea that representing sheep with a crude but passable sketch of a sheep is somehow correlated with monosyllabism smells kinda funny to me.
@muskyoxes
@muskyoxes Жыл бұрын
@@bustavonnutz It's the next step that's crucial. Using the sheep symbol for concepts related to sheep but pronounced differently, and using the sheep symbol for words pronounced the same but meaning something entirely different. It's the latter that is argued to be aided by monosyllabic language
@dr.fattemah-A.7_bb
@dr.fattemah-A.7_bb Жыл бұрын
Sincere thanks and praise for your beautiful presentation of the history of the Summians and the theories that have been presented regarding their origin. I am writing an opinion as a professor of the cuneiform writings at the Faculty of Archeology of the University of Kufa. I have worked for more than twenty years in the field of archaeological work in the Iraqi General Authority for Antiquities and Heritage. I died during my studies and my knowledge of the results of excavations. Scientific archeology I can confirm that the Sumerians were the ones who started civilization in northern Iraq. They painted and expressed their fear of animals on the walls of caves. They discovered agriculture. They domesticated animals and trimmed stones. Because of the climatic conditions and their changes, they arrived in southern Iraq, bringing with them the slave civilization that was invented. In the north of Iraq, especially since the pottery of slaves was discovered in all regions of Iraq from north to south, this is first and second, the movement of the sons of Iraq from north to south due to the deterioration of living conditions, and the current situation confirms this.. Greetings to fantastic what was presented through this wonderful video .. Prof. Dr. Fatima Abbas Salman
@jgkitarel
@jgkitarel 10 ай бұрын
On top of the dictionaries the Akkadians used to teach their scribes Sumerian, there are a fair number of loan words from Sumerian in the language, which helped with piecing the language together considering we have been replicating it from being only able to use second hand sources. Languages affect each other, and I wouldn't be surprised if a fair number of words from Sumerian show signs of having to be fit into the language's etymology from other ones. I do find it interesting that you bring up the theory that the Sumerians may not have been the first culture to develop writing, merely the first one to leave an extensive written record. Which, actually wouldn't be surprising. There are a number of proto-writing systems that predate them, after all. The Ubaid people, who are considered to be the ones first there, probably got it started, but the Sumerians refined it. Again, nothing that actually contradicts history, the Sumerians are liable to retain the credit simply because writing figured so heavily among them.
@switchfoot19802000
@switchfoot19802000 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Jules, this is fun. :) Also thats quite the cool cat, you have there.
@2scoop831
@2scoop831 Жыл бұрын
Great insight. I was hoping the episode was longer. Any how thank you for this video my birthplace is 19 Miles East of Uruk and History ! is in my blood. going to check out the other episode's keep up the good work !!
@GohanHachan
@GohanHachan Жыл бұрын
Great video as usual ! Nonetheless, I'm surprised to hear you explaining that the diachronic mutation "from k to sh" is very unusual. On the contrary, I love diachronic linguistic and it turn out that evolution from velar to post-alveolar (or retroflex and palatal) consonants is pretty common. This relationship can been seen even in well-known Indo-European languages such as French or Spanish. Thus, the Latin voiceless velar stop consonant ["k"] led to a voiceless post-alveolar fricative ["sh"] in French, even before the back vowel "a" (ex : château < castellum, cheval < cabellus, etc). Symmetrically, Spanish saw what was its voiced post-alveolar fricative ["zh"] to be understood more easily by English speaking people) became a voiceless velar fricative ["ch" as in LoCH Ness], hence the current pronunciation of the spanish letter "j" ("la jota").
@Mieszkoy
@Mieszkoy Жыл бұрын
Perhaps she means - in the indoeuropean linguistics, as we know the dychotomic division into "kentum, and "satem" languages?
@mehdi7586
@mehdi7586 Жыл бұрын
also, in Gulf Arabic dialects (especially the dialect of the UAE) they pronounce the letter kaf (K) as sh when it's at the end of words
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
You are right, to be honest I don’t know how I didn’t think about it… I’ll do a bit of investigation and maybe add some corrections in the description. Thanks for pointing out!
@domyandersongarcia3248
@domyandersongarcia3248 Жыл бұрын
Hioroglifes 7 mil ans avant Jésus fictif in nubie and plus récente recently nubie peuple in Mésopotamie ( hiéroglyphes nubiens = animaux, faune and flore et cunéiformes the same and stylé)
@tymanung768
@tymanung768 Жыл бұрын
In 1970s? 80s?, in California, US at college I spoke, to an Iranian student, who knew of, or personally knew, people who claimed to be. from Sumer royal family, who lived in Iran (during Shah's period). Does, that family, still exist ? The probably know everything about Sumer!!! Let us hope that they are still.alive somewhere and see willing to talk and write (and produce own youtube channel ? Even in Farsi it would certainly attract attention, in English it would be a phenomenon, as Mid E and W historians, UFOlogists (Anunaki connection) etc. all would want to ask so many questions !!!
@swim2kill
@swim2kill 10 ай бұрын
Cool video! I'm obsessed with all aspects of ancient mesopotamia!
@calvingrondahl1011
@calvingrondahl1011 9 ай бұрын
Thank you JuLingo😊
@anahernez1
@anahernez1 Жыл бұрын
An entire Sumerian literature about the supreme Goddess Inanna, including 3 poems by Enheduanna (priestess, daughter of Sargon the Great, and earliest named author) exists. Flood story, Eden, and Her decent to the underworld werein she is stripped, beaten, killed, hung on a peg to rot, miraculously revived, and returned to earth transformed.
@anahernez1
@anahernez1 Жыл бұрын
edit: quoted Betty De Shong Meador
@fuffoon
@fuffoon Жыл бұрын
A real day brightening kind of story.
@Iknowknow112
@Iknowknow112 Жыл бұрын
Gee, something about that story sounds so familiar especially that part about someone dying and reviving but for christsakes I can't remember the name 🤔
@BigMikey1776
@BigMikey1776 Жыл бұрын
@@Iknowknow112 Hey Zeus?
@str.77
@str.77 Жыл бұрын
Inanna is not the supreme goddess of Sumerian religion and she doesn't appear in any flood story - she appears in the Gilgamesh epic but in a different section. Eden might be related to a Sumerian word for steppe but it doesn't appear in the sense of paradise.
@robelkton7800
@robelkton7800 Жыл бұрын
Hi, I just wanted to say how much I love all your videos, and even my sister, who is not as generally interested in linguistics as I am, also really enjoys your videos too! I was also interested in what you had to say about the origins of the Sumerian language, in that it seemed so different to its neighbours. The Persian/Arabian Gulf was below sea level until only a few thousand years before the arrival of the Ubaid culture and then Sumeria. Because, at that time, much of the Sahara and Middle East would have been somewhat cooler, the Gulf region would have also been very fertile and may have supported a large population - when this region flooded, a lot of its inhabitants would have fled north into what became Mesopotamia.
@michealzaea1595
@michealzaea1595 Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rofJZp6QdpV7qrM
@michealzaea1595
@michealzaea1595 Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rofJZp6QdpV7qrM
@light9205
@light9205 Жыл бұрын
It's called the Arabian gulf
@michealzaea1595
@michealzaea1595 Жыл бұрын
@@zeldanah9579 lol 😂 you saying it your self “clay tablet” Ashurbanipal library 📚
@9thebear
@9thebear Жыл бұрын
@@light9205 since when?
@YattiginYerdenEdebiyat
@YattiginYerdenEdebiyat 10 ай бұрын
I am watching the video second time. Very very informative for me. Thank you.
@buddacafe
@buddacafe 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this important ancient knowledge.
@redurmaye2502
@redurmaye2502 Жыл бұрын
I've researched for a very long time the Sumerian and other ancient languages of the Mesopotamian region and can confidently say you did one of the most balanced and informative videos on Sumerians I've ever seen. This video is definitely the best introduction available for those that want to get dive into that topic. I have on big tip: You said that Tamil wasn't seen as similar to Sumerian, but in my experience most linguistic researches on those ancient tongues do not really disclose or try at all discovering the "remnants" of ancient languages in modern ones. I have no idea about Tamil, but am 99% sure that many Sumerian words, or specifically Elamite words, still exist in it till today. Elamites were known to have been ruled at some point by a seafaring dark skinned people that attacked the Sumerian cities. I know from my own researches that Sumerian words and special grammatical features still exist in different Kurdish dialects. Even though the grammar and words are so different, sometimes one can make out full phrases that exist exactly the same in Kurdish. Such as "murani gir" for "He did a heroic deed". Kurdish linguists also created dictionaries proving that at least a thousand words still are used, but aren't famous. So anybody that wants to be a Sumerologist or expert in ancient languages, then my tip is to speak with the local natives and listen to their knowledge.
@Leptospirosi
@Leptospirosi Жыл бұрын
Well, I guess Sumerians had a BIG influence on every civilization they were in contact with, and those who came later, as Sumerian was the language used by clergy and kings, like Latin. Kurd is very close to Median, which was an active civilization in the later stages of the New Babylonians. About Dravidic, of which Tamili is a branch, it is still today present in eastern Afghanistan form where most precious stones and copper was coming. There are also serious hints that Harrappa and other Indus river civilization were a Dravidian culture, which explain how many words were borrowed from there due to commerces across the Iran coast.
@xerxen100
@xerxen100 Жыл бұрын
Even in Finnish and Scottish peoples use many sumerian words. It was a great civilization with huge effect.
@user-gz7qe8ls9j
@user-gz7qe8ls9j 11 ай бұрын
There is over 400 words and very similar grammatic as in ural-ugriche languages. Finnish, Komi, Mary, Modvians, Hungary and so on....
@mountianfolks
@mountianfolks 10 ай бұрын
Simple question. Is Zecharia Sitchin's translations correct or not? Plain and simple.
@TheOzTube
@TheOzTube 10 ай бұрын
Altaic is the origin of Indo European languages, Sumerians are "Turks", Australian Aboriginals, Native American Indians, Dukha (Turks), EskiMongol, Korean Japanese share an Altay Ancestor. Altay is the origin of the human species to have come out of Africa. There won't be many local natives left in the middle east, most people there don't even have the Asian epicanthic fold anymore and very Indo European now.. Even people think Scythians are Iranic people because they mixed in syria, Iraq and Iran..
@shereeglasson22
@shereeglasson22 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I am fascinated by Sumerian culture and have been reading and reflecting on their stories of Innana and Erishkegal. Following you now!
@SLDM1962
@SLDM1962 9 ай бұрын
Really well done, thank you.
@ilfarodiipazia
@ilfarodiipazia 10 ай бұрын
July, I am no linguist so I am totally unqualified to comment this but was totally fascinated, your capacity for synthesis is great and I love the fact you dress differentyl for each video according to the language you are introducing, so creative I love interactive history! Now I am asking you a question i which may be very dumb or not but I won't know until I have done sufficient research on it. I am studying the Tarim mummies and those nomadic confederations in the territory of today Xinjang, that’s just above Tibet. I was watching this video as I wondered if they could provide a missing link between such wide distances, I also thought the same, how curious are some words similarties (Sky, Tien) it could not be a coincidence. The “Caucasian” looking mummies, whose oldest samples were ANE, did travel southwards in several directions, including Bactria and Mesopotamia. There are several cultural and symbolic features in their mysteric and secret cult-related traditions which find parallel in several eastern (e.g. Hinduism) and middle eastern’s, including the spiral dances, their solar and lunar and celestial worship too. Could there be a link between these peoples? I am not far enough in my research to say but would be curious to know what you think.
@smokerings9588
@smokerings9588 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I have always. Been intrigued by the Sumerians because they are so early in human history.
@stevedrane2364
@stevedrane2364 4 ай бұрын
Fantastic, I am starting my journey to explore our ancient ancestors. . Your video was fascinating, thank you 👍👍
@jgarcia2739
@jgarcia2739 10 ай бұрын
Thanks by this explanations. It was my first time on your channel. I liked it a Lot. Greetings from Jalisco, México.🤠
@Pingthescribe
@Pingthescribe Жыл бұрын
My day always becomes a little better when I see one of your new videos. Keep up the good work. :)
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your support!
@jamalsaleh6551
@jamalsaleh6551 Жыл бұрын
Hi Julie, Your question at 1:38 as to how a 'K' becomes an 'Sh' (or 'Ch') is easy to answer. A very typical and widely practiced pronunciation in many countries in this region (most prominent in Iraq, Jordan, Palestine, and parts of Syria) is to pronounce a 'K' or 'C' as an 'Sh' or 'Ch'. Thus, Canada is pronounced Chanada or Shanada (Tshanada) and Kuwait is pronounced Chuwait or Shuwait (Tshuwait), although it is usually closer to the hard sound of 'Ch' rather than a flat soft 'Sh'. Keefak (which means How are You?) is pronounced Cheefak. More accurately, it is pronounced like a hard 'Ch', as Tcheefak. The Tch here comes out somewhat like an 'Sh'. I speak many of these languages, and accents. I hope this helps.
@tigermunky
@tigermunky Жыл бұрын
Hi Jamal. You've explained that it is common, but you haven't actually answered WHY there was a shift in pronunciation. As she said, it's very unusual. So, do you have any idea as to WHY these pronunciations changed?
@jamalsaleh6551
@jamalsaleh6551 Жыл бұрын
@@tigermunky Hi Li, I only have a guess, as I am not an expert. I speak those accents, but haven’t studied them. And, I sincerely believe that Julie, and probably yourself, are more skilled to come up with a more scientific answer. My guess is that there was a change in demographics which lead to the prevalence of a population that used Sh/Tch/Ch instead of a C/K. It would be similar to the story of the word Ebriq (kettle), which ends with a Q in Arabic. Q is one of the hardest phonetics and most difficult to master for non-Arabic natives. Therefore, when the Turks ruled the region and took the word Ebriq, they changed the pronunciation of that Q to a K, as they found it difficult to pronounce the word with the original Q. The Turkish alphabets contain no Q, and you can see that it goes from LMNOP straight to RST. In our example, my guess is that it was initially practiced as a C/K by some tribe/s which used the C/K pronunciation, but another population/tribe that used the Sh/Tch/Ch pronunciation came into the limelight and influenced all pronunciation. We have seen this occurring in history many times over and over again. This is just a wild guess, based on no science or history that I can refer to. By the way, I once read that this very same Ebrik (Brik) word is what was later taken by Europe and ultimately became barracks in English. I don’t know how correct this barracks claim is, though it is somewhat interesting to delve into. The roots of languages, and their so many accents, are indeed perplexing. I follow the subject as a mere interest, surely not as a specialty.
@tigermunky
@tigermunky Жыл бұрын
@@jamalsaleh6551 I love your answer. ❤ It certainly sounds logical enough. I mean, I have no idea either (which is why I asked if you could explain), but I think shifting populations makes sense. Thanks for taking the time to reply.
@jamalsaleh6551
@jamalsaleh6551 Жыл бұрын
@@tigermunky 🙏
@meme-zv3pg
@meme-zv3pg Жыл бұрын
Hi Jamal. Just like in Romanian Ce faci?, - How are you, what are you doing? Pronounced ch instead of c. Latin loanword or vice versa?
@valitolkyn6467
@valitolkyn6467 2 ай бұрын
Thanks from Kazakhstan,very interesting to watch!
@elzenirkohler8552
@elzenirkohler8552 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thanks! And an awesome way to explain the ergative case. For any nominative language user this makes it easier to grasp it.
@mitchellhayward6492
@mitchellhayward6492 Жыл бұрын
I remember when I first became interested in the Mesopotamian languages. I was maybe 10 and saw this Akkadian or Babylonian writing in the background scenery of a video game I was playing and I remember thinking "that language looks pretty metal". Since then I've been interested in languages and history. Thanks for the vid.
@marcossealey8612
@marcossealey8612 Жыл бұрын
Africa first CIVILIZATION
@mitchellhayward6492
@mitchellhayward6492 Жыл бұрын
@@marcossealey8612 No, that wasn't the video game. Never played Civilisation. Any good?
@marcossealey8612
@marcossealey8612 Жыл бұрын
@@mitchellhayward6492 Ur CONFUSED about Ur history.. Mesopotamia was An African COLONY..Ur History CRO MAGNON Starts in the NORTHERN HEMISPHERE 😳 Ural Mountains fringes of SIBERIA. Remember when Africans came into Europe 😏 There was Nobody there.The QUESTION then Becomes..Where Do white people come from😳
@robertoponce8077
@robertoponce8077 10 ай бұрын
Very good explanation, thanks a lot!
@stevenchandler3694
@stevenchandler3694 10 ай бұрын
Thanks very much for posting this video very informative
@exoplanet11
@exoplanet11 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. It could also be pointed out that the word "sar" is still with us in astronomy. The "Saros Cycle" for measuring eclipses derives from the word, albeit via a mistaken understanding of the words original meaning.
@PatrickPasmans
@PatrickPasmans Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video! I learned a lot that I didn't knew before. 🙏🙏🙏
@sighoa4489
@sighoa4489 10 ай бұрын
hello: just plain and simple, you are amazing!!!! thanks for sharing!!
@elmucho2121
@elmucho2121 10 ай бұрын
I enjoyed the Vid great. Work👍
@beatryzxayara
@beatryzxayara Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this great video. Is the "eme gir" related to the Magiar?
@IgorGelman
@IgorGelman Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Very interesting! 💥💥💥
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you my friend ☺️
@markberman6708
@markberman6708 10 ай бұрын
Fascinating and informative. Lovely presenter as well.
@SirRommy
@SirRommy 10 ай бұрын
Amazing job just explaining all that!
@zachchen9564
@zachchen9564 Жыл бұрын
Im interested in Sino-Tibetan language Family. Despite it is the second biggest language family and has been studied for many years, it still has many myths. 1. How does each Sino-Tibetan language related ? 2. Where is the urheimat, or where did it come from? 3. Classification problem 4. When did Proto ST split into Proto Sinitic and Proto Tibeto Burman?
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Жыл бұрын
aryans dear large vasta area sino tibetans scityians iranic south est asia ,middle east
@venomvenom9926
@venomvenom9926 Жыл бұрын
sanskrit is iranic arya avestan aramaic dialect paleo siriac cirus comkered assiria siria aramaic paleo siriac they tongue assiro iranic avestan
@scintillam_dei
@scintillam_dei Жыл бұрын
See my giant realistic map of the Far East for Age of Empires 2. The other day, I used Spain to help them against the Turksih invasion. The Turks got as far as Xian. From Luzón, I was allowed into China to build an army and take Tibet and Afghanistan from the enemy. Meanwhile, the Chinese genocided Korea and Mongolia. Fun times.
@ytn00b3
@ytn00b3 Жыл бұрын
You know that Sino-Tibetan is bullshit right?
@jaybird74
@jaybird74 Жыл бұрын
I have an eager interest in all things Sumerian. You provided an excellent video as an intro - not only to the language, but a brief glimpse into the culture. Thanks much for the education! 😎👍🏻
@rayarthur586
@rayarthur586 10 ай бұрын
This was very interesting thank you
@CoryKristjanson-ww4oo
@CoryKristjanson-ww4oo 2 ай бұрын
Julie is the best. I love here language videos very informative. Tankz Julie 😀
@gaufrid1956
@gaufrid1956 Жыл бұрын
Julija I love your channel! I have to admit that my knowledge of Sumerian language is limited to "LUGAL" ("King") and "NINDA" ("Bread"), and this is all because of my interest in Nesili, the language of the Hittites. Have you done a video on Nesili yet?
@marcossealey8612
@marcossealey8612 Жыл бұрын
Lies
@gaufrid1956
@gaufrid1956 Жыл бұрын
@@marcossealey8612 WTF!
@marcossealey8612
@marcossealey8612 Жыл бұрын
@@gaufrid1956 FACTS over Feelings 💯
@cesphia
@cesphia Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: you can dissect "LUGAL" even further and add two new words to your vocabulary: LU (man) and GAL (great). It's written with those signs, so literally it means great man :)
@senecavermeulen8110
@senecavermeulen8110 11 ай бұрын
a third word really stuck with me when i was leafing through a sumerian dictionary: zišurru, a ritual salt circle
@dlperk5035
@dlperk5035 Жыл бұрын
I am a scholar of ancient Near Eastern (Middle Eastern) history and languages. I like your video and your presentation style. Not being pedantic by nature, I don't like to correct others. However, there is one (and only one) glaring error in your lecture. When you say that the latest specimen of Sumerian dates to 100 B.C.E...it was actually last used in the region ca. 100 A.D or C.E (NOT 100 B.C.E.). BUT ONCE AGAIN, the remainder of your presentation is spot on...Kudos!
@HardCore_Islamist
@HardCore_Islamist Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised she didn't mention another hypothesis of summerian origins, which is that they came from the Arabian Peninsula, and I believe its true because the Arabian Peninsula was not as it is now, and there are evidence for that based on drawings on rocks showing elephants and other animals that lived there when it was green. When it started to dry people migrated to north arabia to the Levant and mesopotamia to create one of the oldest and greatest arab civilizations. But because most scholars of aincent mesopotamia are western orientalist, they like to ignore this hypothesis.
@xerxen100
@xerxen100 Жыл бұрын
@@HardCore_Islamist Arabs even didnt exist at the time... Moreover, Arabian ancestor nation was the Egyptian, not the Sumerian, they didnt like each other.
@HardCore_Islamist
@HardCore_Islamist Жыл бұрын
@@xerxen100 arabs existed in the Arabian Peninsula for thought of years
@xerxen100
@xerxen100 Жыл бұрын
@@HardCore_Islamist But they are not arabs 😅 those are the ancestors of the arabs
@HardCore_Islamist
@HardCore_Islamist Жыл бұрын
@@xerxen100 what makes them arab or not?
@michaeljaneschitz-kriegl9598
@michaeljaneschitz-kriegl9598 10 ай бұрын
Interesting and most pleasantly presented!
@Natalia-fx8lb
@Natalia-fx8lb 5 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot. It's very interesting!
@ricardoDLMMDF
@ricardoDLMMDF Жыл бұрын
Gratidão por compartilhar seu conhecimento!!
@jaysonscott187
@jaysonscott187 10 ай бұрын
I really admire your level of knowledge on language and history. Awesome job!
@MoeiraqiBlogspot
@MoeiraqiBlogspot 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful channel
@Asgairsson
@Asgairsson 9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for this video. I am glad I came here watching. Most interesting of course: the ancient beer recipe.
@ItsMe-jb4ch
@ItsMe-jb4ch 10 ай бұрын
Best Sumerian video out there 🫡 One tip: Check better the language of the Kurds too. I've got many Kurdish friends who talked a lot about the link between Kurdish ancestors and a couple of others next to Sumerians. They didn't say that Kurds were Sumerians, but that Kurdish ancestors had some big part in Sumer. As far as I know, it i's also engraved in Sumerian mythology that their first members were Hurrian. Anyways, we don't here a lot about this because they are oppressed.
@Luffy-jw4pu
@Luffy-jw4pu 9 ай бұрын
The reason for this is that they all lived on Iraqi soil. 🇮🇶Kurds and Sumerians as well as even Assyrians
@peterfireflylund
@peterfireflylund 9 ай бұрын
Kurdish is Indo-European - and Sumerian is absolutely not Indo-European.
@ItsMe-jb4ch
@ItsMe-jb4ch 9 ай бұрын
@@peterfireflylund Scholars say that, but they still did not research Sumerian by comparing it with local languages. I found another source, a Kurdish scholar called Soran Hamarash who has a book in English that shows the Indo-European link of Sumerian to European languages. (I shared this comment before with a link, but I think links are not allowed and that's why it vanished. So just Google his name and you'll see his video where he speaks in English and lists sentences)
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy
@ZahraaAli-fi5xy 3 ай бұрын
My brother, do not believe the Kurds, they attribute everything to them, even the land they stole from the Assyrians
@laftahaliraqi9871
@laftahaliraqi9871 2 ай бұрын
you are right amazing ​@@peterfireflylund
@TreforTreforgan
@TreforTreforgan Жыл бұрын
Julie, I would love to encounter someone like you at a dinner party and talk to them all night. I’m a first language Welsh speaker and am passionate about it. However, it’s important for all of us to consider the intertextual nature of our languages, such as your hard work and passion for your subject reminds us. We tend to de-compartmentalise from others; invest in our own mythologies that make us think we are somehow more special. Your work is crucial in reminding us we are all related and ultimately are branches on the same mighty tree. Please continue with this very noble passion for languages and the cultures that begat them. Caraid mawr.
@JuLingo
@JuLingo Жыл бұрын
Thank you! The more I study different languages the more I see how interconnected we all are
@tectzas
@tectzas Жыл бұрын
I literally just purchased "The Mabinogi" after binging on the history of the Welsh on KZbin yesterday. I am very excited to delve deeper into the folklore of a fascinating peoples history.
@andrewwhelan7311
@andrewwhelan7311 Жыл бұрын
@@tectzas Heddwch/ PEACE in the ancient British tongue.
@aaronbazan702
@aaronbazan702 Жыл бұрын
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