Chʼoltiʼ language explained

Chʼoltiʼ
Also Known As:Choltí, Cholti’, Cholti
Ethnicity:Maya peoples
States:Belize, Guatemala
Extinct:late 18th cent
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Mayan
Fam2:Core Mayan
Fam3:Western Mayan
Fam4:Chʼolan–Tseltalan
Fam5:Ch’olan
Fam6:Eastern Ch’olan
Script:Maya script
Iso3:none
Linglist:qjt
Lingname:Chʼoltiʼ
Glotto:chol1283
Glottoname:Cholti
Imagealt:Portion of a stucco wall depicting a Mayan hieroglyphic text in a grid of four by three glyphs, as displayed in the Museo del Sitio de Palenque in Palenque, Chiapas, Mexico, in 2004
Imagescale:1.6

Chʼoltiʼ is a dead language belonging to the Ch’olan branch of the Mayan family of languages. It was spoken in Belize and Guatemala prior to its extinction in the late eighteenth century. It and its sister language are now deemed likely (or likeliest) descendants of Classic Mayan, the language represented in Mayan hieroglyphic writing.

Classification

The inclusion of Ch’olti’ within the Eastern Ch’olan, Ch’olan, Ch’olan–Tseltalan, Western Mayan, and Core Mayan families is ‘the most widely accepted classification’ as of 2017.[1]

History

The common ancestor of all Ch’olan languages, thought to have been in use throughout the southern Maya Lowlands since at least circa 200 BC, is believed to have split into Eastern and Western Ch’olan at about AD 600, with Eastern Ch’olan finally diversifying into Ch’olti’ and Ch’orti’ possibly around AD 1500.[2] By the time of Spanish contact, Ch’olti’ was almost certainly spoken in the Manche Ch’ol Territory, and possibly also in some neighbouring polities.[3] [4] The later Spanish conquest of Peten would bring about the extinction of the language in the late eighteenth century, making Ch’olti’ one of only two Mayan languages not extant as of 2017.[5]

Study

The colonial variant of Ch’olti’ is known only from an ethnolinguistic manuscript by Francisco Morán, a Dominican friar who drafted the text during his Spanish; Castilian: entradas to the former Manche Ch’ol Territory between 1685 and 1695.[6] [7] Recently, Ch’olti’ has become of particular interest to the epigraphic study of Mayan hieroglyphs, since it seems certain that most of the glyphic texts are written in an ancestral form of one or more of the Ch’olan languages.[8] [9]

See also

Notes and references

Full citations

Notes and References

  1. Aissen, Englandn & Zavala Maldonado 2017, pp. 44-45.
  2. Aissen, Englandn & Zavala Maldonado 2017, pp. 54, 66–67, 73.
  3. Becquey 2012, para. 13.
  4. Becquey 2012, para. 13 notes that some Spanish colonial reports French: soulignent la proximité voire l’identité de la langue des Toquegua, des Chol Lacandon et des Acalá avec le cholti’|lit=highlight the proximity or even identity of the language of the Toquegua, Chol Lacandon and Acalá with the Cholti’ [Ch’olti’].|label=none
  5. Aissen, England & Zavala Maldonado 2017, pp. 44-45, 387.
  6. Becquey 2012, para. 13 fn. 9; Brinton 1869, pp. 222-225.
  7. The manuscript, entitled Spanish; Castilian: Arte y vocabulario de la lengua Cholti, 1695, contains a grammar and vocabulary, and was first brought to attention by Daniel Garrison Brinton. It was donated to the American Philosophical Society by the Guatemalan Academy of Sciences in 1836, and presently lies in the former's repository under call number Mss.497.4.M79.
  8. Kettunen & Helmke 2020, p. 13; Aissen, England & Zavala Maldonado 2017, pp. 44–45, 52–53, 73.
  9. Classic Mayan is now deemed the ancestor of one, two, or all of the Ch’olan languages. That is, it is now identified as either (i) proto–Ch’olan or Ch’olan, and so ancestor of all Ch’olan languages, (ii) proto–Eastern Ch’olan or Eastern Ch’olan, and so ancestor of Ch’orti’ and Ch’olti’, (iii) proto–Western Ch’olan or Western Ch’olan, and so ancestor of Ch’ol and Chontal, or (iv) the proto-language of exactly one of the Ch’olan languages, and so ancestor of one such. Kettunen & Helmke 2020, p. 13, Aissen, England & Zavala Maldonado 2017, pp. 123, 129-130, 170, Kettunen & Helmke 2005, p. 12, and Houston, Robertson & Stuart 2000, p. 321-322, 337-338 all favour option (ii).