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| COMPARISON
  OF THE DRAVIDIAN *   AND
  GUANCHE LANGUAGES [Contacts]     ----Please CLICK on underlined categories for detail [to search for Subject Matter, depress
  Ctrl/F ]: Introduction    
  Guanche Toponyms & Theonyms     Nyland's Comments                 In his
  book, Linguistic Archaeology, Edo Nyland compared the Dravidian
  language with that of Guanche.   He
  stated that, “Guanche is the name of the language
  which was spoken by the native population of the Canary Islands until the
  Spaniards came and massacred a large number of the inhabitants around 1,500
  A.D. Mr. Arysio Nunes dos Santos discovered a relationship between Guanche
  and Dravidian, similar to what the eminent linguist Dr. N. Lahovary had
  described between Basque and Dravidian in his book: “Dravidian Origins and
  the West. What we are likely dealing with in these languages is remnants of
  the original language spoken in the Neolithic Sahara. This happened at the
  time of the disastrous desertification of that part of the world (see Climate), which had scattered the population to almost all ocean shores
  of the earth. That original language is not the same, of course, as the
  Basque spoken today, but a much earlier form of it, without the invented,
  formulaically enhanced VCV vocabulary added in. “             Nyland
  also noted that a few linguists have identified a large number of languages
  which also belong to this group: Numidian, Tuareg, Western Berber (Zenaga),
  Northern Berber (Tamahac), Southern Berber (Tamazheq), Eastern Berber (Siwa,
  Awjila-Sokna, Ghadames), Atlas (Shilha, Tamazight), Kabyle, Zenati (19
  dialects) several of them still spoken. To this Neolithic group must also be
  added the large group of Dravidian languages spoken in India by some 160
  million people, the Ainu language of Northern Japan with 17,000 speakers and
  Ancient Egyptian (extinct), including Coptic, which is still spoken as a
  liturgical language. Even the Polynesian languages seem to fit in this group.
               Nyland
  found that Arysio Nunes collected as many Guanche words as possible and then
  compared them with Dravidian. Dravidian equivalents were obtained from “A
  Dravidian Etymological Dictionary” by T. Burrows and M.B. Emeneau (Oxford
  1984). Arysio added that one should pay attention to the phonetic
  correspondences only, disregarding the actual spelling, because of the
  Dravidian alphabet being different from the Roman one adopted for the Guanche
  language. It must be assumed that he did his work well, because Nyland was
  unable to verify it.  The condition
  for using Arysio’s material is that the following address be cited:      
            
     Guanche
  Toponyms and Theonyms (Interpretation in Dravidian)   “The Dravidian etymologies for these names are tentative and are
  offered as evidence of the explanatory power of that language.”   
             Nyland continued that “A similar
  Guanche-Basque list could easily be made, e.g. achimencey (king’s relative)
  relates to atxikidura (family relation), achaman (heaven) comes close
  to akabu (death, supreme), ara (goat) and Basque aragi (meat),
  kara (goat) and Basque kara (in heat), Arautapola (capital of the
  Taoro kingdom) and Basque arautu (to legislate) etc. It looks to me
  like Guanche is derived from the original, unmanipulated Saharan language,
  just like Basque, Berber, Tuareg and Ainu.”   EDO NYLAND’S
  ADDITIONAL COMMENTS             “Arysio Nunes dos Santos, the
  author of the above word comparisons, expresses amazement at the fact that
  Guanche and Dravidian, separated by such a huge gap in both time and space,
  still resemble each other so closely. He attributes this to the fact that
  both races were fairly well sheltered from alien contact and influence, the
  Dravidians down to the present, the Guanches down to the extinction of their
  culture at the end of the 15th century. He goes on to speak about
  the relationship to the Aryan languages, which is where he and I part ways.
  He is convinced that the Guanches were blond, blue-eyed people, just like the
  Aryans and that they came from Java or Sumatra in Indonesia. Having been in
  both these places, I can assure the reader that there are no blond, blue-eyed
  and tall tribes in Indonesia that even remotely resemble the blond people of
  Europe. “            “ I find it very hard to believe
  that any of the original Guanches was blond and blue eyed. Virtually all
  blond people are Rh-positive. The Berbers from Morocco are Rh-negative and
  they have been sailing this part of the ocean for well over 12,000 years. The
  nearest blond people were the Shardana from Cyrenaica (Kirru-unai-ika) in
  eastern Libya and they concentrated their activities in the Black Sea, not
  the Atlantic ocean. There is no evidence of these two very different races
  mixing in the Canaries until the blond Spaniards arrived. It will take some
  convincing to believe that the original Guanches were blond. Until then it
  would be best to consider that they were dark-featured Berbers.”     | 
==========================================
For further detail, please
refer to:
 
          Nyland, Edo.  2001.  Linguistic Archaeology: AnIntroduction. Trafford Publ., Victoria, B.C., Canada.
               ISBN 1-55212-668-4. 541 p. [
see abstract & summary]
 
          Nyland, Edo.  2002. 
Odysseus and the Sea Peoples: A 
               Bronze Age History of Scotland  Trafford Publ., Victoria, 
B.C., Canada. 307 p. [see abstract & summary].
 
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