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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Part One - Language and Archaeology
Chapter One - The Promise and Politics of the Mother Tongue
Ancestors
Linguists and Chauvinists
The Lure of the Mother Tongue
A New Solution for an Old Problem
Language Extinction and Thought
Chapter Two - How to Reconstruct a Dead Language
Language Change and Time
Phonology: How to Reconstruct a Dead Sound
The Lexicon: How to Reconstruct Dead Meanings
Syntax and Morphology: The Shape of a Dead Language
Conclusion: Raising a Language from the Dead
Chapter Three - Language and Time 1 The Last Speakers of Proto-Indo-European
The Size of the Chronological Window: How Long Do Languages Last?
The Terminal Date for Proto-Indo-European: The Mother Becomes Her Daughters
The Oldest and Strangest Daughter (or Cousin?): Anatolian
The Next Oldest Inscriptions: Greek and Old Indic
Counting the Relatives: How Many in 1500 BCE?
Chapter Four - Language and Time 2 Wool, Wheels, and Proto-Indo-European
The Wool Vocabulary
The Wheel Vocabulary
When Was the Wheel Invented
The Significance of the Wheel
Wagons and the Anatolian Homeland Hypothesis
The Birth and Death of Proto-Indo-European
Chapter Five - Language and Place The Location of the Proto-Indo-European Homeland
Problems with the Concept of “the Homeland”
Finding the Homeland: Ecology and Environment
Finding the Homeland: The Economic and Social Setting
Finding the Homeland: Uralic and Caucasian Connections
The Location of the Proto-Indo-European Homeland
Chapter Six - The Archaeology of Language
Persistent Frontiers
Migration as a Cause of Persistent Material-Culture Frontiers
Ecological Frontiers: Different Ways of Making a Living
Small-scale Migrations, Elite Recruitment, and Language Shift
Part Two - The Opening of the Eurasian Steppes
Chapter Seven - How to Reconstruct a Dead Culture
The Three Ages in the Pontic-Caspian Steppes
Dating and the Radiocarbon Revolution
What Did They Eat?
Archaeological Cultures and Living Cultures
The Big Questions Ahead
Chapter Eight - First Farmers and Herders The Pontic-Caspian Neolithic
The First Farmer-Forager Frontier in the Pontic-Caspian Region
Farmer Meets Forager: The Bug-Dniester Culture
Beyond the Frontier: Pontic-Caspian Foragers before Cattle Arrived
The Gods Give Cattle
Chapter Nine - Cows, Copper, and Chiefs
The Early Copper Age in Old Europe
The Cucuteni-Tripolye Culture
The Dnieper-Donets II Culture
The Khvalynsk Culture on the Volga
Nalchik and North Caucasian Cultures
The Lower Don and North Caspian Steppes
The Forest Frontier: The Samara Culture
Cows, Social Power, and the Emergence of Tribes
Chapter Ten - The Domestication of the Horse and the Origins of Ridin The Tale of the Teeth
Where Were Horses First Domesticated?
Why Were Horses Domesticated?
What Is a Domesticated Horse?
Bit Wear and Horseback Riding
Indo-European Migrations and Bit Wear at Dereivka
Botai and Eneolithic Horseback Riding
The Origin of Horseback Riding
The Economic and Military Effects of Horseback Riding
Chapter Eleven - The End of Old Europe and the Rise of the Steppe
Warfare and Alliance: The Cucuteni-Tripolye Culture and the Steppes
The Sredni Stog Culture: Horses and Rituals from the East
Migrations into the Danube Valley: The Suvorovo-Novodanilovka Complex
Warfare, Climate Change, and Language Shift in the Lower Danube Valley
After the Collapse
Chapter Twelve - Seeds of Change on the Steppe Borders: Maikop Chiefs and Tripolye Towns
The Five Cultures of the Final Eneolithic in the Steppes
Crisis and Change on the Tripolye Frontier: Towns Bigger Than Cities
The First Cities and Their Connection to the Steppes
The North Caucasus Piedmont: Eneolithic Farmers before Maikop
The Maikop Culture
Maikop-Novosvobodnaya in the Steppes: Contacts with the North
Proto-Indo-European as a Regional Language in a Changing World
Chapter Thirteen - Wagon Dwellers of the Steppe: The Speakers of Proto-Indo-European
Why Not a Kurgan Culture?
Beyond the Eastern Frontier: The Afanasievo Migration to the Altai
Wagon Graves in the Steppes
Where Did the Yamnaya Horizon Begin?
When Did the Yamnaya Horizon Begin?
Were the Yamnaya People Nomads?
Yamnaya Social Organization
The Stone Stelae of the North Pontic Steppes
Chapter Fourteen: The Western Indo–European Languages: “A wild river full of possibilities flowed from my new tongue.”—Andrew Lam,Learning a Language, Incventing a Future2006
The End of the Cucuteni-Tripolye Culture and the Roots of the Western Branches
Steppe Overlords and Tripolye Clients: The Usatovo Culture
The Yamnaya Migration up the Danube Valley
Yamnaya Contacts with the Corded Ware Horizon
The Origins of Greek
Conclusion: The Early Western Indo-European Languages Disperse
Chapter Fifteen - Chariot Warriors of the Northern Steppes
The End of the Forest Frontier: Corded Ware Herders in the Forest
Pre-Sintashta Cultures of the Eastern Steppes
The Origin of the Sintashta Culture
Warfare in the Sintashta Culture: Fortifications and Weapons
Tournaments of Value
Sintashta and the Origins of the Aryans
Chapter Sixteen - The Opening of the Eurasian Steppes
Bronze Age Empires and the Horse Trade
The Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
The Opening of the Eurasian Steppes
The Srubnaya Culture: Herding and Gathering in the Western Steppes
East of the Urals, Phase I: The Petrovka Culture
The Seima-Turbino Horizon in the Forest-Steppe Zone
East of the Urals, Phase II: The Andronovo Horizon
Proto-Vedic Cultures in the Central Asian Contact Zone
The Steppes Become a Bridge across Eurasia
Chapter Seventeen - Words and Deeds
The Horse and the Wheel
Archaeology and Language
Appendix - Author’s Note on Radiocarbon Dates
Notes
References
Index
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