In
linguistics
and
ethnology,
Semitic (from the
Biblical
"
Shem",
Hebrew:
שם,
translated as "name",
Arabic:
ساميّ) was
first used to refer to a
language
family of largely
Middle Eastern
origin, now called the
Semitic
languages. This family includes the
ancient and modern forms of
Ahlamu,
Akkadian
(
Assyrian-
Babylonian),
Amharic,
Amorite,
Arabic,
Aramaic/
Syriac,
Canaanite/
Phoenician/
Carthaginian,
Chaldean,
Eblaite,
Edomite,
Ge'ez,
Hebrew,
Maltese,
Mandaic,
Moabite,
Sutean,
Tigre
and
Tigrinya,
and
Ugaritic,
among others.
As language studies are interwoven with
cultural
studies, the term also came to describe
the extended
cultures
and
ethnicities,
as well as the history of these varied peoples
as associated by close geographic and linguistic
distribution.
[citation
needed]
Origin
The term
Semite means a member of any
of various ancient and modern Semitic-speaking
peoples originating in the
Near
East, including;
Akkadians
(
Assyrians
and
Babylonians),
Eblaites,
Ugarites,
Canaanites,
Phoenicians
(including
Carthaginians),
Hebrews
(
Israelites,
Judeans
and
Samaritans),
Ahlamu,
Arameans,
Chaldeans,
Amorites,
Moabites,
Edomites,
Hyksos,
Ishmaelites,
Nabateans,
Maganites,
Shebans,
Sutu,
Ubarites,
Dilmunites,
Bahranis,
Maltese,
Mandaeans,
Sabians,
Syriacs,
Mhallami,
Amalekites,
Arabs,
Sabians,
Syriacs,
Palmyrans
and
Qedarites.
It was proposed at first to refer to the
languages related to Hebrew by
Ludwig
Schlözer, in
Eichhorn's
"Repertorium", vol. VIII (Leipzig, 1781),
p. 161. Through Eichhorn the name then came
into general usage (cf. his "Einleitung in das
Alte Testament" (Leipzig, 1787), I, p. 45).
In his "Geschichte der neuen Sprachenkunde", pt.
I (Göttingen, 1807) it had already become a
fixed technical term.
[1]
The word "Semitic" is an adjective derived
from
Shem,
one of the three
sons
of Noah in the
Bible
(
Genesis
5.32, 6.10, 10.21), or more precisely from the
Greek
derivative of that name, namely
Σημ (Sēm); the
noun form referring to a person is
Semite.
Map showing the distribution of Semitic
languages
The concept of "Semitic" peoples is derived
from Biblical accounts of the origins of the
cultures known to the ancient
Hebrews.
Those closest to them in culture and language
were generally deemed to be descended from their
forefather Shem. Enemies were often said to be
descendants of his cursed nephew,
Canaan.
In Genesis 10:21-31, Shem is described as the
father of
Aram,
Ashur,
and
Arpachshad:
the Biblical ancestors of the
Ishmaelites,
Aramaeans,
Assyrians,
Babylonians,
Chaldeans,
Sabaeans,
Hebrews
and
Qedarites,
etc., all of whose languages are closely
related; the
language
family containing them was therefore named
"Semitic" by linguists. However, the
Canaanites,
Eblaites,
Ugarites
and
Amorites
also spoke languages belonging to this family,
and are therefore also termed Semitic in
linguistics, despite being described in Genesis
as sons of Ham (See
Sons of Noah).
Shem is also described in Genesis as the father
of
Elam
and
Lud,
however the
Elamites
spoke a
language
isolate and
Lydians
spoke an
Indo-European
language. Ham is also attributed as the father
of the
Hittites,
who in actuality were
Indo-European.
The reconstructed
Proto-Semitic
language, ancestral to historical Semitic
languages in the Middle East, is thought to have
been originally from either the
Arabian
Peninsula (particularly around
Yemen),
the
Levant,
Mesopotamia
or even the
Ethiopian
Highlands. But its region of origin is
still much debated and uncertain with, for
example, a recent
Bayesian
analysis identifying an origin for Semitic
languages in the
Levant
around 5,750
BP
with a later single introduction from what is
now southern Arabia into north
Africa
around 2,800 BP.
[2]
The Semitic language family is also considered a
component of the larger
Afroasiatic
macro-family of languages. Identification of the
hypothetical proto-Semitic region of origin is
therefore dependent on the larger geographic
distributions of the other language families
within
Afroasiatic.
Semitic-speaking peoples
Approximate distribution of Semitic
languages around the 1st century AD
The following is a list of ancient and modern
Semitic speaking peoples.
Languages
The modern
linguistic
meaning of "Semitic" is derived from
(though not identical to) Biblical usage. In a
linguistic context the
Semitic
languages are a subgroup of the larger
Afroasiatic
language family (according to
Joseph
Greenberg's widely accepted
classification) and include, among others:
Akkadian,
the ancient language of Babylon and Assyria;
Amorite,
Amharic,
the official language of Ethiopia;
Tigrinya,
a language spoken in Eritrea and in northern
Ethiopia;
Arabic;
Aramaic,
still spoken in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Turkey and
Armenia by
Assyrian-
Chaldean
Christians and
Mandaeans;
Canaanite;
Ge'ez,
the ancient language of the
Eritrean
and
Ethiopian
Orthodox scriptures which originated in
Yemen;
Hebrew;
Maltese;
Phoenician
or
Punic;
Syriac
(a form of Aramaic); and
South
Arabian, the ancient language of
Sheba/Saba,
which today includes
Mehri,
spoken by only tiny minorities on the southern
part of the Arabian Peninsula.
Wildly successful as second languages far
beyond their numbers of contemporary
first-language speakers, a few Semitic languages
today are the base of the sacred literature of
some of the world's great religions, including
Islam
(Arabic),
Judaism
(Hebrew and Aramaic), and
Syriac
and
Ethiopian
Christianity
(
Aramaic/
Syriac
and Ge'ez). Millions learn these as a second
language (or an archaic version of their modern
tongues): many
Muslims
learn to read and recite
Classical
Arabic, the language of the
Qur'an,
and many
Jews
all over the world outside of
Israel
with other first languages speak and study
Hebrew, the language of the
Torah,
Midrash,
and other Jewish scriptures. Ethnic
Assyrian
followers of
The
Assyrian Church of the East,
Chaldean
Catholic Church,
Ancient
Church of the East and some
Syriac
Orthodox Christians,
both speak
Mesopotamian
eastern
Aramaic
and use it also as a liturgical tongue. The
language is also used liturgically by the
primarily Arabic speaking followers of the
Maronite,
Syriac
Catholic Church and some
Melkite
Christians.
Mandaic
another dialect of
Aramaic
is both spoken and used as a liturgical language
by followers of the
Mandaean
faith.
Geography
Semitic peoples and their languages, in both
modern and ancient historic times, have covered
a broad area bridging North Africa,
[citation
needed] Western
Asia, Asia Minor and the Arabian Peninsula. The
earliest historic (written) evidences of them
are found in the
Fertile
Crescent (
Mesopotamia),
an area encompassing the
Akkadian,
Babylonian
and
Assyrian
civilizations along the
Tigris
and
Euphrates
rivers (modern
Iraq),
extending northwest into southern
Asia
Minor (modern
Turkey)
and the
Levant
(modern
Syria
and
Lebanon)
along the eastern Mediterranean. Early traces of
Semitic speakers are found, too, in South
Arabian inscriptions in
Yemen,
Eritrea,
Northern
Ethiopia,
and after this in
Carthage
(modern
Tunisia)
and later still, in Roman times, in
Nabataean
inscriptions from
Petra
(modern
Jordan)
south into Arabia.
Later historical Semitic languages also
spread into
North
Africa in two widely separated periods.
The first expansion occurred with the ancient
Phoenicians
from around the 9th century BC, along the
southern Mediterranean Sea all the way to the
Atlantic
Ocean (Phoenician colonies which included
ancient Rome's nemesis
Carthage).
The second, a millennium later, was the
expansion of the Muslim armies and Arabic in the
7th and 8th centuries AD, which, at their
height, controlled the
Iberian
Peninsula (until 1492) and
Sicily.
Arab Muslim expansion is also responsible for
modern Arabic's presence from
Mauritania,
on the Atlantic coast of
West Africa, to the
Red
Sea in the northeastern corner of Africa,
and its reach south along the
Nile
River as far as the northern half of
Sudan,
where, as the national language, non-Arab
Sudanese even farther south must learn it.
Modern
Hebrew was reintroduced in the 20th
century, and together with Arabic, is a national
language in Israel.
Western
Aramaic dialects remain spoken in Malula
near Damascus. Eastern
Mesopotamian
Neo-Aramaic is spoken along the northern border
of
Syria
and throughout
Iraq,
Southeast-
Turkey
(
Turabdin),
in far northwestern
Iran
and in
Armenia,
Georgia
and southern
Russia.
These speakers are predominantly ethnic
Assyrians
(also known as
Chaldo-Assyrians).
Mandaean
Aramaic is still spoken in parts of southern and
northern
Iraq.
Semitic languages and are also found in the Horn
of Africa, especially
Eritrea
and
Ethiopia.
Tigrinya, a North Ethiopic dialect, has around
six million speakers in Eritrea and
Tigray.
In Eritrea,
Tigre
is the language of around 800,000 Muslims.
Amharic
is the national language of
Ethiopia
and is spoken by at least 10 million Ethiopian
Orthodox
Christians.
Semitic languages today are also spoken in
Malta
(where an Italian-influenced language derived
from
Siculo-Arabic
is spoken) and on the island of
Socotra
in the
Indian
Ocean between
Yemen
and
Somalia,
where a dying vestige of South Arabian is spoken
in the form of
Soqotri.
The
Maltese
language is the only officially recognized
Semitic language of the
European
Union.
Ethnicity and race
A stylised
T
and O map, depicting Asia as the home
of the descendants of Shem (Sem). Africa is
ascribed to
Ham
and Europe to
Japheth
In contrast, some recent genetic studies
found that analysis of the DNA of
Semitic-speaking peoples suggests that they have
some common ancestry. Though no significant
common
mitochondrial
results have been yielded,
Y-chromosomal
links between Semitic-speaking
Near-Eastern
peoples like
Arabs,
Hebrews
and
Assyrians
have proved fruitful, despite differences
contributed from other groups (
see Y-chromosomal
Aaron).
Sayyid,
who are
Shia
Muslims, are of Semitic origin, and many
of them live in Iraq, Iran and as far east as
the
Indian
Subcontinent. In North India, researchers
have done DNA testing on Sayyid and have linked
them closely to Arabs and Jews, more than to
their geographic neighbours, due to migration to
India a few hundred years ago from the
Middle
East.
[7]
The studies attribute this correlation to a
common
Near
Eastern origin, since Semitic-speaking
Near Easterners from the
Fertile
Crescent (including Jews) were found to be
more closely related to non-Semitic speaking
Near Easterners (such as
Iranians,
Anatolians,
and
Caucasians)
than to other Semitic-speakers (such as Gulf
Arabs,
Ethiopian
Semites, and
North
African Arabs).
[8][9]
Anti-Semitism and
Semiticisation
Main
article:
Antisemitism
The word "Semite" and most uses of the word
"Semitic" relate to any people whose native
tongue is, or was historically, a member of the
associated
language
family.
[10][11]
The term "anti-Semite", however, came by a
circuitous route to refer most commonly to one
hostile or discriminatory towards
Jews
in particular.
[12]
Anthropologists
of the 19th century such as
Ernst
Renan readily aligned linguistic groupings
with
ethnicity
and culture, appealing to anecdote, science and
folklore in their efforts to define racial
character.
Moritz
Steinschneider, in his periodical of
Jewish letters
Hamaskir (3 (Berlin
1860), 16), discusses an article by
Heymann
Steinthal[13]
criticising Renan's article "New Considerations
on the General Character of the Semitic Peoples,
In Particular Their Tendency to Monotheism".
[14]
Renan had acknowledged the importance of the
ancient civilisations of Mesopotamia, Israel
etc. but called the Semitic races inferior to
the Aryan for their
monotheism,
which he held to arise from their supposed
lustful, violent, unscrupulous and selfish
racial instincts. Steinthal summed up these
predispositions as "Semitism", and so
Steinschneider characterised Renan's ideas as
"anti-Semitic prejudice".
[15]
In 1879 the German journalist
Wilhelm
Marr, in a pamphlet called
Der Weg zum
Siege des Germanenthums über das Judenthum
("The Way to Victory of Germanicism over
Judaism") began the politicisation of the term
by speaking of a struggle between Jews and
Germans. He accused them of being liberals, a
people without roots who had Judaized Germans
beyond salvation. In 1879 Marr's adherents
founded the "League for Anti-Semitism"
[16]
which concerned itself entirely with anti-Jewish
political action.