Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Out_of_India_theory> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 35 of
35
with 100 items per page.
- Out_of_India_theory abstract "The Out of India theory (OIT), also known as the Indian Urheimat Theory, is the proposition that the Indo-European language family originated in the Ganges Valley in Northern India and spread to the remainder of the Indo-European region through a series of migrations.Originally proposed in the late 18th century in an attempt to explain connections between Sanskrit and European languages (notably by Friedrich Schlegel), it was rapidly marginalised within academic linguistics, particularly those who tend to favour the Kurgan model instead.The Out-of-India view has virtually no academic credibility today, but it was revived as a political topic in Hindu nationalism in the late 1990s. Such proponents insist on an indigenist position, dubbed known under the term "Indigenous Aryans". There have been attempts to revive academic debate on this view in the 2000s. The theory's recent revival in Hindu nationalist writing has made it the subject of contentious debate in Indian politics. These recent "OIT" scenarios posit that the Indus Valley Civilization was Indo-Aryan, contradicting the mainstream view that the Indus Valley Civilization spoke an as-yet-uncategorized language. The Voice of India publishing house has been established with the express purpose of boosting the popularity of these views, advanced by authors including Koenraad Elst and Shrikant Talageri.".
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink keaitlin1.html.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink 0110_060110_india_genes_2.html.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink ait.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink 17231220.htm.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink ancient.htm.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink RVpH.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink Final%20Reply.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink IIR.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink rdp.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink rie.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink IndusLang.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink Har1.pdf.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink 843.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink index.htm.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink rig.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageExternalLink bbl001.html&date=2009-10-26+00:21:54.
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageID "6450525".
- Out_of_India_theory wikiPageRevisionID "605312932".
- Out_of_India_theory hasPhotoCollection Out_of_India_theory.
- Out_of_India_theory subject Category:Bharatiya_Janata_Party.
- Out_of_India_theory subject Category:Hindutva.
- Out_of_India_theory subject Category:Indo-European.
- Out_of_India_theory subject Category:Indology.
- Out_of_India_theory comment "The Out of India theory (OIT), also known as the Indian Urheimat Theory, is the proposition that the Indo-European language family originated in the Ganges Valley in Northern India and spread to the remainder of the Indo-European region through a series of migrations.Originally proposed in the late 18th century in an attempt to explain connections between Sanskrit and European languages (notably by Friedrich Schlegel), it was rapidly marginalised within academic linguistics, particularly those who tend to favour the Kurgan model instead.The Out-of-India view has virtually no academic credibility today, but it was revived as a political topic in Hindu nationalism in the late 1990s. ".
- Out_of_India_theory label "Out of India theory".
- Out_of_India_theory label "Out-of-India-Theorie".
- Out_of_India_theory label "Теория исхода из Индии".
- Out_of_India_theory sameAs Out-of-India-Theorie.
- Out_of_India_theory sameAs m.0g5vcl.
- Out_of_India_theory sameAs Q639566.
- Out_of_India_theory sameAs Q639566.
- Out_of_India_theory wasDerivedFrom Out_of_India_theory?oldid=605312932.
- Out_of_India_theory isPrimaryTopicOf Out_of_India_theory.