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Indo-European topics |
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Languages
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Philology |
Origins
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Archaeology
Pontic Steppe Caucasus East Asia Eastern Europe Northern Europe Pontic Steppe Northern/Eastern Steppe Europe
South Asia Steppe Europe Caucasus India |
Peoples and societies
Indo-Aryans Iranians East Asia Europe East Asia Europe Indo-Aryan Iranian |
Religion and mythology
Others
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Indo-European studies
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- For the language group see Indo-European languages; for other uses see Indo-European (disambiguation)
Indo-Europeans are speakers of Indo-European languages. The term may apply to
- The Proto-Indo-Europeans (speakers of the hypothetical Proto-Indo-European language)
- Bronze Age (3rd to 2nd millennia BC) speakers of Indo-European languages that had not yet split into the attested sub-families, viz. early Centum and Satem dialects (speakers of languages predating Proto-Indo-Iranian, Proto-Greek, Proto-Celtic, Proto-Italic, Proto-Germanic, Proto-Balto-Slavic etc.)
The term "Indo-Europeans" does not usually refer to speakers of various Indo-European languages in historical times: linguists usually refer to such people specifically as Anatolians, Tocharians, Indo-Aryans, Iranians, Greeks, Celts, Italic peoples, Germanic peoples, Veneti, Baltic peoples, Slavic peoples, Armenians, Albanians (or subdivisions of these terms).
Note that in any event the classification "Indo-European" addresses matters of language, which do not necessarily correlate with divisions of ethnicity or even of specific culture.
Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Indo-European people.If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Keep going down Austen etc. the info is down here!
Indo-European people migrated between 1700 and 1200 b.c. "An unexplained Migration No one knows why these people left their homelands in the steppes. Whatever the reason, Indo-European nomads began to migrate outward in all directions between those dates. These migrations, movements of people from one region to another, happened in waves over a long period of time." Quoted from World History; Patterns of Interaction McDougall Littel I hope all this info was useful
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