Wakashan languages explained

Wakashan
Region:British Columbia, Canada
Familycolor:American
Child1:Northern
Child2:Southern
Iso2:wak
Iso5:wak
Glotto:waka1280
Glottorefname:Wakashan
Map:Wakashan langs.png
Mapcaption:Pre-contact distribution of Wakashan languages

Wakashan is a family of languages spoken in British Columbia around and on Vancouver Island, and in the northwestern corner of the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state, on the south side of the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

As is typical of the Northwest Coast, Wakashan languages have large consonant inventories—the consonants often occurring in complex clusters.

Classification

Family division

The Wakashan language family consists of seven languages:[1]

Possible relations to external language families

As first proposed by Edward Sapir and Leo J. Frachtenberg, and later elaborated by Morris Swadesh, the Wakashan languages were grouped together with Salishan and Chimakuan languages in a "Mosan" macrofamily.[5] This proposed macrofamily is now generally rejected as a genealogical grouping.[6] [7] Structural similarities and shared vocabulary are best explained as the result of continuous intensive contact; the Mosan languages thus represent a sprachbund within the wider Pacific Northwest typological area.[8]

In the 1960s, Swadesh also suggested a connection of the Wakashan languages with the Eskimo–Aleut languages. This was picked up and expanded by Holst (2005).[9]

Sergei Nikolaev has argued in two papers for a systematic relationship between the Nivkh language of Sakhalin island and the Amur river basin and the Algic languages, and a secondary relationship between these two together and the Wakashan languages.[10] [11]

Name and contact

The name Wakesh or Waukash originates from the Nuu-chah-nulth word for 'good'. It was used by early explorers including Captain James Cook, who believed it to be the tribal appellation.[12]

Juan de Fuca was probably the first European to meet Wakashan-speaking peoples, and Juan Perez visited the Nuu-chah-nulth people in 1774. After 1786, English mariners frequently sailed to Nootka Sound; in 1803, the crew of the American ship Boston were almost all killed by the local natives.

In 1843 the Hudson's Bay Company established a trading post at Victoria. European-Canadians had regular contact with the First Nations after that time. There were dramatic population losses in the early 20th century due to smallpox epidemics (because the First Nations had no acquired immunity to the new disease), social disruption, and alcoholism. In 1903 the Aboriginals numbered about 5200, of whom 2600 were in the West Coast Agency, 1300 in the Kwakewith Agency, 900 in the North West Coast Agency, and 410 at Neah Bay Company, Cape Flattery. In 1909 they numbered 4584, including 2070 Kwakiutl and 2494 Nootka. Roman Catholic missionaries were active in the region.[13]

The name "Wakish Nation" is featured in Arrowsmith's Oregon Dispute-era map as the name for Vancouver Island.[14] [15]

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://depts.washington.edu/wll2/languages.html#languagenames "The Wakashan Languages"
  2. http://www.languagegeek.com/wakashan/nuuchahnulth.html "Nuučaan̓uł – Nuu-chah-nulth-Nootka language"
  3. http://maps.fphlcc.ca/ditidaht "Diitiidʔaatx̣ language"
  4. the Ts'uubaa-asatx - usually known as "Lake Cowichan" and called by the Ditidaht c̓uubaʕsaʔtx̣ - are therefore often confused with the neighboring Cowichan Tribes (Quw'utsun Mustimuhw / Quw'utsun Hwulmuhw) - "People of the Warm Land", who speak a "Hul'qumi'num (Island)" dialect of Halkomelem (part of the Coast Salish languages), but regarding treaty negotiations with the government, the Ts'uubaa-asatx are still part of the "Hul'qumi'num Treaty Group". Currently, they are trying to revive their original culture and language with the support of the Nuu-chah-nulth and Ditidaht peoples.
  5. Swadesh . Morris . 1953 . Mosan I: A Problem of Remote Common Origin . International Journal of American Linguistics . 19 . 1 . 26–4 . 10.1086/464188 . 1262937. 145409017 .
  6. Book: Campbell, Lyle . 1997 . American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America . Oxford University Press.
  7. Book: Mithun, Marianne . 1999 . The languages of Native North America . Cambridge University Press.
  8. Beck . David . 2000 . Grammatical Convergence and the Genesis of Diversity in the Northwest Coast Sprachbund . Anthropological Linguistics . 42 . 2 . 147–213 . 30028547.
  9. Jan Henrik Holst, Einführung in die eskimo-aleutischen Sprachen. Buske Verlag
  10. Web site: S.L. Nikolaev. 2015. Toward the reconstruction of Proto-Algonquian-Wakashan. Part 1: Proof of the Algonquian-Wakashan relationship. Sergei L. Nikolaev / Сергей Львович. Николаев. Mar 25, 2023. www.academia.edu.
  11. Web site: S.L.Nikolaev. 2016. Toward the reconstruction of Proto-Algonquian-Wakashan. Part 2: Algonquian-Wakashan sound correspondences. Sergei L. Nikolaev / Сергей Львович. Николаев. Mar 25, 2023. www.academia.edu.
  12. Boas and Powell, 205
  13. http://oce.catholic.com/index.php?title=Wakash_Indians "Wakash Indians"
  14. https://www.oldworldauctions.com/Auction083/OW-US.htm Auction No. 83 listings (Closed July 18, 1998), Old World Mail Auctions website
  15. Web site: Mapping the American West 1540–1857, A Preliminary Study. Carl I. Wheat. Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Association. 88.