Year
1979
Publisher
University of Michigan Press
Language
English
Pages
11
ISBN
978-0-89148-045-7
Last Update
28-Nov-2025
Keywords
Sociology ; History
The term Aryan is not often heard nowadays except in the ancient Indian context, and after its misuse by Germanic demagogues in the 1930s this is not surprising. It may have philological relationships with words in non-Indian Indo-European languages, but I understand that modern comparative philologists have recently cast some doubt on several of these (e.g., Irish Eire, German Ehre, Latin arare). The only relative of this Indian word whose kinship is practically certain is the Old Persian Airiya (Modern Persian Īrān). We may thus safely assert that a powerful group of Indo-Iranians in the early second millennium B.C. called...
Related
See MoreASEAN Resistance to Sovereignty Violation, Interests; Balancing and the Role of the Vanguard State
Ancient Jewish Prayers and Emotions, Emotions associated with Jewish prayer in and around the Second Temple period
Bread and Circuses
Human and Planetary Health
CLARIN in the Low Countries
Gewalt in Teenagerbeziehungen