Kalasha (,
locally: ) is an
Indo-Aryan language spoken by the
Kalash people, in the
Chitral District
Chitral District (; ) was a district in the Malakand Division of the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, from 14 August 1947 to 2018. It was the largest district in the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, covering an area of 14,850 km2, before spl ...
of
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (; ; , ; abbr. KP or KPK), formerly known as the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), is a Administrative units of Pakistan, province of Pakistan. Located in the Northern Pakistan, northwestern region of the country, Khyber ...
province of
Pakistan
Pakistan, officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by population, fifth-most populous country, with a population of over 241.5 million, having the Islam by country# ...
. There are an estimated 7,466 speakers of Kalasha according to the
2023 Census of Pakistan. It is an
endangered language
An endangered language or moribund language is a language that is at risk of disappearing as its speakers die out or shift to speaking other languages. Language loss occurs when the language has no more native speakers and becomes a " dead langua ...
and there is an ongoing
language shift
Language shift, also known as language transfer, language replacement or language assimilation, is the process whereby a speech community shifts to a different language, usually over an extended period of time. Often, languages that are perceived ...
to
Khowar
Khowar (, ''Khōwār'', ), also known by its common exonym Chitrali, is an Indo-Aryan language of the Dardic group, primarily spoken by the Kho (Chitrali) people, native to the Chitral region and surrounding areas of Pakistan.
Khowar is th ...
.
Kalasha should not be confused with the nearby
Nuristani Kalasha (known as "Kalasha-ala" or "Waigali"), which is a
Nuristani language. According to Badshah Munir Bukhari, a researcher on the Kalash, "Kalasha" is also the ethnic name for the
Nuristani inhabitants of a region southwest of the Kalasha Valleys, in the
Waygal and middle
Pech Valleys of Afghanistan's
Nuristan Province
Nuristan, also spelled as Nurestan or Nooristan (Pashto: ; Katë: ), is one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, located in the eastern part of the country. It is divided into seven districts and is Afghanistan's least populous province, with a ...
. The name "Kalasha" seems to have been adopted for the Kalash people by the Kalasha speakers of Chitral from the Nuristanis of Waygal, who for a time expanded up to southern Chitral several centuries ago. However, there is no close connection between the Indo-Aryan language Kalasha-mun (Kalasha) and the Nuristani language Kalasha-ala (Waigali), which descend from different branches of the
Indo-Iranian languages
The Indo-Iranian languages (also known as Indo-Iranic languages or collectively the Aryan languages) constitute the largest branch of the Indo-European language family. They include over 300 languages, spoken by around 1.7 billion speakers ...
.
Kalasha, alongside
Khowar
Khowar (, ''Khōwār'', ), also known by its common exonym Chitrali, is an Indo-Aryan language of the Dardic group, primarily spoken by the Kho (Chitrali) people, native to the Chitral region and surrounding areas of Pakistan.
Khowar is th ...
, are the most archaic of the Indo-Aryan languages, retaining archaic Vedic Sanskrit vocabulary, sibilants, and several types of consonant clusters long lost in others.
History
Early scholars to have done work on Kalasha include the 19th-century orientalist
Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner
Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner (14 October 1840 – 22 March 1899), also known as Gottlieb William Leitner, was a British orientalist.
Early life and education
Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner was born in Pest, Hungary, on 14 October 1840 to a Jewish fam ...
and the 20th-century linguist
Georg Morgenstierne
Georg Valentin von Munthe af Morgenstierne (2 January 1892 – 3 March 1978) was a Norwegian professor of linguistics with the University of Oslo (UiO). He specialized in Indo-Iranian languages.
Studies
During the years 1923 to 1971, Morgenst ...
. More recently, studies have been undertaken by
Elena Bashir
Elena Bashir is an American linguist and senior lecturer in the Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations of the Humanities Division of the University of Chicago. She studies languages of Pakistan and the broader northwestern part of S ...
and several others. The development of practical literacy materials has been associated with the Kalasha linguist
Taj Khan Kalash
Tach Sharakat Kalash (born Taj Kalas) belongs to an endangered Indigenous culture and language community Kalasha (an Indigenous people group) living in the wilderness of Hindu Kush Mountains in the Chitral district of Pakistan. Kalasha are the l ...
. The Southern Kalash or Urtsun Kalash shifted to a Khowar-influenced dialect of Kalasha-mun in the 20th century called
Urtsuniwar.
Classification
Of all the languages in
Pakistan
Pakistan, officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by population, fifth-most populous country, with a population of over 241.5 million, having the Islam by country# ...
, Kalasha is likely the most conservative, along with the nearby language
Khowar
Khowar (, ''Khōwār'', ), also known by its common exonym Chitrali, is an Indo-Aryan language of the Dardic group, primarily spoken by the Kho (Chitrali) people, native to the Chitral region and surrounding areas of Pakistan.
Khowar is th ...
. In a few cases, Kalasha is even more conservative than Khowar, e.g. in retaining voiced aspirate consonants, which have disappeared from most other Dardic languages.
Some of the typical retentions of sounds and clusters (and meanings) are seen in the following list. However, note some common New Indo-Aryan and Dardic features as well.
Phonology
The Kalasha language is phonologically atypical because it contrasts plain,
long
Long may refer to:
Measurement
* Long, characteristic of something of great duration
* Long, characteristic of something of great length
* Longitude (abbreviation: long.), a geographic coordinate
* Longa (music), note value in early music mens ...
,
nasal
Nasal is an adjective referring to the nose, part of human or animal anatomy. It may also be shorthand for the following uses in combination:
* With reference to the human nose:
** Nasal administration, a method of pharmaceutical drug delivery
* ...
and
retroflex
A retroflex () or cacuminal () consonant is a coronal consonant where the tongue has a flat, concave, or even curled shape, and is articulated between the alveolar ridge and the hard palate. They are sometimes referred to as cerebral consona ...
vowels as well as combinations of these (Heegård & Mørch 2004). Set out below is the phonology of Kalasha:
Vowels
Consonants
As with other Dardic languages, the phonemic status of the breathy voiced series is debatable. Some analyses are unsure of whether they are phonemic or allophonic—i.e., the regular pronunciations of clusters of voiced consonants with /h/.
The phonemes /x ɣ q/ are found in loanwords.
Vocabulary comparison
The following table compares Kalash words to their cognates in other Indo-Aryan languages.
Conservative traits
Examples of conservative features in Kalasha and Khowar are (note, NIA =
New Indo-Aryan, MIA =
Middle Indo-Aryan
The Middle Indo-Aryan languages (or Middle Indic languages, sometimes conflated with the Prakrits, which are a stage of Middle Indic) are a historical group of languages of the Indo-Aryan family. They are the descendants of Old Indo-Aryan (OIA; ...
, OIA =
Old Indo-Aryan
The Indo-Aryan languages, or sometimes Indic languages, are a branch of the Indo-Iranian languages in the Indo-European language family. As of 2024, there are more than 1.5 billion speakers, primarily concentrated east of the Indus river in Ba ...
):
* Preservation of intervocalic /m/ (reduced to a nasalized /w/ or /v/ in late MIA elsewhere), e.g. Kal. ''grom'', Kho. ''gram'' "village" < OIA ''grāma''
* Non-deletion of intervocalic /t/, preserved as /l/ or /w/ in Kalasha, /r/ in Khowar (deleted in middle MIA elsewhere), e.g. Kho. ''brār'' "brother" < OIA ''bhrātṛ''; Kal. ''ʃau'' < ''*ʃal'', Kho. ''ʃor'' "hundred" < OIA ''śata''
* Preservation of the distinction between all three OIA sibilants (dental /s/, palatal /ś/, retroflex /ṣ/); in most of the subcontinent, these three had already merged before 200 BC (early MIA)
* Preservation of sibilant + consonant, stop + /r/ clusters (lost by early MIA in most other places):
** Kal. ''aṣṭ'', Kho. ''oṣṭ'' "eight" < OIA ''aṣṭā''; Kal. ''hast'', Kho. ''host'' "hand" < OIA ''hasta''; Kal. ''istam'' "bunch" < OIA ''stamba''; Kho. ''istōr'' "pack horse" < OIA ''sthōra''; Kho. ''isnār'' "bathed" < OIA ''snāta''; Kal. Kho. ''iskow'' "peg" < OIA ''*'' (< ''skambha''); Kho. ''iśper'' "white" < OIA ''śvēta''; Kal. ''isprɛs'', Kho. ''iśpreṣi'' "mother-in-law" < OIA ''śvaśru''; Kal. ''piṣṭ'' "back" < OIA ''pṛṣṭha''; Kho. ''aśrū'' "tear" < OIA ''aśru''.
** Kho. ''kren-'' "buy" < OIA ''krīṇ-''; Kal. ''grom'', Kho. ''grom'' "village" < OIA ''grāma''; Kal. ''gŕä'' "neck" < OIA ''grīva''; Kho. ''griṣp'' "summer" < OIA ''grīṣma''
* Preservation of /ts/ in Kalasha (reinterpreted as a single phoneme)
* Direct preservation of many OIA case endings as so-called "layer 1" case endings (as opposed to newer "layer 2" case endings, typically tacked onto a layer-1 oblique case):
** Nominative
** Oblique (Animate): Pl. Kal. ''-an'', Kho. ''-an'' < OIA ''-ān''
** Genitive: Kal. ''-as'' (sg.), ''-an'' (pl.); Kho. ''-o'' (sg.), ''-an, -ān'' (pl.) < OIA ''-asya'' (sg.), ''āṇām'' (pl.)
** Dative: Kal. ''-a'', Kho. ''-a'' < OIA dative ''-āya'', elsewhere lost already in late OIA
** Instrumental: Kal. ''-an'', Kho. ''-en'' < OIA ''-ēna''
** Ablative: Kal. ''-au'', Kho. ''-ār'' < OIA ''-āt''
** Locative: Kal. ''-ai'', Kho. ''-i'' < OIA ''-ai''
* Preservation of more than one verbal conjugation (e.g. Kho. ''mār-īm'' "I kill" vs. ''bri-um'' "I die")
* Preservation of OIA distinction between "primary" (non-past) and "secondary" (past) endings and of a past-tense "augment" in a-, both lost entirely elsewhere: Kal. ''pim'' "I drink", ''apis'' "I drank"; ''kārim'' "I do", ''akāris'' "I did"
* Preservation of a verbal preterite tense (see examples above), with normal nominative/accusative marking and normal verbal agreement, as opposed to the
ergative-type past tenses with nominal-type agreement elsewhere in NIA (originally based on a participial passive construction)
References
Bibliography
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* Maps showing distribution of words among people of Kafiristan.
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Further reading
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External links
Richard Strand's Nuristan SiteReiko and Jun's Japanese Kalasha PageHindi/Urdu-English-Kalasha-Khowar-Nuristani-Pashtu Comparative Word ListThe Kalasha Dictionary
Kalasha dictionary
{{Dardic languages
Dardic languages
Kalash people
Languages of Lower Chitral District