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Introduction
Guanche Word List
Guanche Toponism and
Theonysm
Conclusion
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Introduction
OBSERVATION: In what follows, we provide linguistic evidence that the
Guanche language is very likely of Dravidian derivation, and not
indeed Hamito-Semitic, as usually stated. The present article is
intended to be read in connection with the one entitled:
The
Mysterious Origin of the Guanches, which also figures
in the present Homepage. It is an extract of a vastly larger study
of ours on this subject, which we are currently in the process of
publishing. We would be delighted to discuss the matter with
specialists or others who may be interested in it.
According to the Ethnologue Record, the Guanche language
is affiliated to the Afro-Asiatic family. The language is now
extinct, but several words and expressions are known and extant.
Some authorities affirm a connection with the Berber tongue, a
position questioned by many linguists.
Since the Guanches lived in almost perfect separation
from Europe and Africa from very early epochs, their tongue provides
a sort of "fossil" evidence for the very earliest form of the
language spoken by the immigrating races that settled in Western
Europe and northwestern Africa. Given the probable connection of the
Guanches with the Celts and the Berbers, as well as other Aryan
races, the problem of these Canarians assumes an enormous
importance for the elucidation of human prehistory. Blond,
blue-eyed natives are a rarity everywhere, so that the
Guanches — who were still living in the Stone Age — present
a fascinatingly unique field of study for anthropologists.
We have made the
remarkable discovery that the Guanche language
is closely related to the Dravidian family of
languages of south India, both in grammar and
in phonetics and etymology.
("click"
on photo) |
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This fact directly confirms our theory that the tall, blond, blue-eyed
Aryans who later formed local races such as the Guanches, the
Berbers, the Celts, and the Germans, indeed came in from the Indies,
the true site of Atlantis. If this tentative discovery of ours is
supported by further research and stands, a revolution will be on
order for archaeology as a whole, and for linguistic archaeology in
particular.
Ethnologists generally admit that languages afford the strongest
evidence of close affinity, not necessarily ethnic, between
different civilizations. The a priori probabilities of random
coincidences between several words in the two languages under
comparison are essentially nil, as we demonstrated elsewhere. Of
course, random coincidences can always occur, and the evidence has
to be corroborated by other independent proofs, as is the case with
our proposal. But the probability of detailed coincidences such as
those of the word lists we present below being purely random are
unthinkably small, and must be explained in some other way.
A nation can adopt the language and even the religion of their
conquerors. This was the case of the Guanches
themselves, whose only language nowadays is Spanish, and whose
official religion is Catholicism. But the coincidence proves that,
at least, a close contact occurred in the past, and this has to be
explained by viable theories. A mistake that that is often committed
by amateur linguists is comparing just a very few instances of words
between the two languages or, conversely, of making a more
substantial listing of words of several different, obviously
unrelated languages.
Random coincidences and borrowings can certainly occur, and the
comparison has to be rather exhaustive in order to prove affiliation
or former direct contact. Moreover, the respective etymologies must
agree rather perfectly, and so must the corresponding
pronunciations. Spelling is generally immaterial, particularly for
illiterate tongues or for different alphabets. But the phonetic
changes have to conform to certain fixed rules and to laws such as
the ones known to linguists and philologists.
Guanche Word List
In what follows, we compare the several extant Guanche words to
their Dravidian correspondents of identical etymology. The
list is extensive, but not exhaustive. However, it can be considered
representative, as it comprises all words that we could obtain in
this first draft. The Dravidian equivalents were obtained from the
excellent A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary of T. Burrow
and M. B. Emeneau (Oxford, 1984), the classical work on the
matter.
We also attempt the interpretation of some Canarian toponyms and
anthroponyms, a notoriously difficult task, given the obscurity of
the two languages in question. But our results are rather
encouraging and compelling, as can be seen by comparison. As we
already said, the reader should pay attention to the phonetic
correspondences only, disregarding the actual spelling, as a result
of the Dravidian alphabet being different from the Roman one adopted
for the Guanche language.
Guanche -
Dravidian Intercomparison (Word List)
|
Guanche
|
Guanche Meaning
|
Dravidian Etymology
|
Achaman
|
Heaven
|
ox-am-an ("the upper
expanse")
|
achanó
|
year
|
Ajja-no ("time
division")
|
achicaxna
|
plebs, people
|
Acchi-sagina ("lowly
crowd")
|
achimencey
|
king's relative"
(nobles)
|
acchi-menkay ("relatives
of the king")
|
Achit!
|
Long Live!; Hail!
|
Akchi, Agi-t- ("Hail")
|
Achimayek
|
Mother, Grandmother
|
Acchi-mayi-ek ("Great
Mother of God")
|
Achoron
|
Earth
|
achurun ("marshy land"),
ag-alam ("earth")
|
ahico
|
leather shirt
|
ayi-kov ("breast
cover") 1
|
ahof
|
milk
|
ay-ubi ("breast food" =
milk)
|
amulán
|
lard, fat
|
Am-ullu ("liquid fat")
|
ahoren
|
barley bread (gofio)
|
av-ari (av = "baked",
ari = "barley")
|
añepa
|
scepter, royal staff
|
anne-pal ("royal staff")
|
ara
|
goat
|
(k)ara , ar ("goat")
|
armenine
|
pastures, grasslands
|
aram-meyni ("grazing
field")
|
banot
|
spear, javelin
|
ihpa-not ("sharp
javelin")
|
beñasmen
|
crop, harvest feast
|
panna-as-men ("ripe
fruit cropping")
|
bucio
|
conch trumpet
|
bug- ("flute"), pucci
("spurt of sound")
|
cancha
|
dog
|
kunchi, kenchi ("red
dog")
|
ere
|
pool, pond
|
eri (pond)
|
ganigo
|
pot, jar
|
kann-iku ("water
vessel")
|
gofio
|
bread, flow
|
(g)uvi-u ("parched sweet
cake")
|
goro
|
corral
|
gor-o ("sheep pen");
kora ("corral")
|
guan
|
man
|
gand ("hero", "male")
|
guanamene
|
prophet, seer
|
kan-amani ("father
seer") 2
|
Guanar-teme
|
"King of the Nation"
|
Gan(d)-ak-tempe (idem)
|
Guañac
|
"Country", "Nation"
|
Gan(d)-ak ("Land of the
Heroes")
|
guanil
|
loose cattle
|
kan-iyal (idem)
|
guayca
|
leather legging
|
kay-ka ("leg
protection")
|
gujon
|
vessel, ship
|
kuccham ("mast")
|
hachichey
|
peas, beans
|
a-chik-kay ("edible
beans")
|
Haña
|
sheep (herd)
|
ana, kana
("flock", "herd") 3
|
Guayota
|
the Devil
|
Kay-ota ("the
Fiery Lord") 4
|
irichen
|
wheat, grain
|
arichi ("rice", "grain")
|
Magec
|
God (the Sun)
|
Mangeh ("Bull" =
Shiva) 5
|
mencey
|
king
|
menkay ("king")
|
mocan
|
a type of fruit
|
manka (= Skt. mankan =
"mango")
|
Quevehi
|
"Your Highness"
|
Cevvai ("Your Highness")
|
Sigoñe
|
"Captain", "Chief"
|
Cek-kon ("Head Leader")
|
tabone
|
knife (of obsidian)
|
tarpuni ("knife",
"blade")
|
Tagoror
|
Council, Senate
|
Takkor ("worthy
persons", "senators")
|
Tajaraste
|
Name of a dance
|
takcha-arasati ("royal
dance")
|
tamazanona
|
food (barley mixed with
ground meat)
|
tam-acchana-anna ("food
made of ground grain and chopped meat")
|
Tamaragua
|
"Good Morning"
|
Itam-eruka ("Auspicious
Morning")
|
tamarco
|
goatskin (dress)
|
atta-makar ("goat skin")
|
tano, taro
|
barley, grain
|
(t)aru ("grain", "food")
|
tenique
|
flexible mace
|
tanka, doni(k) (mace)
|
toya
|
fern (edible sprouts)
|
tai ("tender edible
sprouts")
|
teme
|
"king"(?)
|
tempe ("hero",
"chieftain")
|
Vacaguaré!
|
"I prefer to die!"
|
Vaka-k-ari! ("I
choose to die!") 6
|
xerco
|
sandals, shoes
|
cherpu ("sandals",
"shoes") 7
|
xaxo
|
mummy, corpse.
|
chacchu ("corpse")
|
|
Notes:
1) The Dravidian v is usually pronounced like a w
or a u.
BACK
2) Literally, a Brahman priest. The Sanskrit word
derives from the Dravidian radix par meaning "eye" or "seer", just
as does the radix kan. The radix par also implies the idea of
"guardian" or "shepherd" (Drav. para = Skt. pala), as well as that
of "father"(pappan) and, hence, of "priest".
BACK
3) This word corresponds to the Sanskrit gana
("flock", "herd"). It also exists in Dravida under the form an,
where both the final a and the initial k have been lost.
BACK
4) The Guanche Devil was an artificer of the sort of Hephaistos
or Vulcanus. The god was believed to live inside the Teyde volcano,
working at his infernal forges. This myth can be traced to
India, with Vishvakarman being the archetype
of all such smithing gods. Guayota is, as we comment in the main
text, the alias of Maya, the Great Artificer who built Lanka, the
archetype of sunken Paradises everywhere.
BACK
5) In the ancient world, the Supreme God was often equated to a
bull, as the inseminator of the herd (the nation). Such was the case
of Zeus, Dionysus, Poseidon, Baal, Osiris, and, in India, of Indra,
Varuna, Shiva and many others. They were also identified to the sun
and, more exactly, to the Fallen Sun.
BACK
6) The -k- is the usual Dravidian connective. Such is
also apparently the case of the Guanche gu that corresponds
to it here.
BACK
7) The change of p > c (or, rather, into k)
is rather unexpected. However, it is frequent in Dravida,
where the connective is indifferently either - pp - or -
kk- or - tt -.
BACK
Guanche Toponyms and Theonyms
(Tentative
Interpretation in Dravida)
Note:
The meaning of some of the below Guanche toponyms is unknown or uncertain. The
Dravidian etymologies proposed for them are tentative, and are offered as
evidence of the explanatory power of that language. The notes appended below
explain the more complex attributions.
|
Guanche
|
Etymology or Place
|
Dravidian Etymology
|
Acentejo
|
"Falling Waters"
|
A-cem-tiyu ("place where
waters fall")
|
Aguare
|
"Paradise"(a valley)
|
Akar-e ("Celestial
Heights")
|
Añaza
|
Name of a beach
|
Aniy-acha ("beautiful
beach")
|
Anaga
|
One of Tenerife's
Kingdoms
|
An-aka ("Supreme
Abode") 1
|
Arautapola (Orotava)
|
Capital of Taoro Kindom
|
Arayata-poly
("Royal City") 2
|
Atidamane
|
Name of a great queen
|
Atti-tamman ("Mother of
the People")
|
Benahoare
|
"My Land"
|
(M)ena-(kh)aré ("My
Country")
|
Bimbache
|
A people from Hierro
|
Vin-bach ("Land of the
Brave")
|
Canarias
|
"Island of the Dogs"
|
Cham-ari ("Island
of Cham") 3
|
Chenech (or Chinech or
Achinech)
|
Local name of Tenerife
|
Che-nek ("Pure
Land")
4
|
Echeyde (Teyde)
|
"The Luminous One"
|
Ecch-eyd or Chey-ide
("The White (or Fiery or Shiny) Mountain")
|
Gomera
|
One of the Canaries
|
Gomeda ("Fat
Cattle")
5
|
Guacimara
|
Name of a royal princess
|
Kaci-mara ("Golden
Beauty")
|
Guanche
|
(See
note 6)
|
Cham-che ("The
Golden Heroes") 6
|
Guan-Chenech
|
"Men of Chenek"
(Guanches)
|
Gan(d)-che-nek
(idem,
see note 4)
|
Hero
|
Hierro, Ferro
|
Hiera ("Holy");
Iru(m) ("Iron") 7
|
Magec
|
The Sun (as God)
|
Mach-ek ("Dark Sun" =
Vishnu)
|
Maxo
|
?
|
Macchu ("Golden")
|
Maxorata (or Majoreros)
|
Fuerte Ventura
|
Macchu-irata ("Golden
Abode")
|
Tacaronte
|
One of the ten Guanche
realms
|
Ita-koruntu ("Land
of Fat Cattle") 8
|
Tamaran
|
Gran Canaria
|
Ita-maram ("Land
of Braves") 9
|
Taoro
|
Main kingdom of Tenerife
|
Ita-oru ("Land of
Union") 10
|
Tenerife
|
"White Mountain"
|
Tin-eriv ("Shiny
Mountain") 11
|
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Notes on the
Tentative Etymologies of Guanches Toponyms
1) Anaga was the northernmost kingdom of the
island of Tenerife, and its shape roughly resembled a heart.
Accordingly, the Dravidian An-aka embodies the two
ideas. An means "supreme", "uppermost" and, by extension,
"northernmost". Aka (or akam) means "home", "abode", "heart',
"bosom", "innermost". In contrast to the other kingdoms, all
coastal, Anaga extended into, and encompassed the very heart of
Tenerife's interior.
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2) The capital of Taoro was named Arautava or Arautapola,
nowadays corrupted to Orotava. In Dravida, the radix
poly, polly, palli, etc. expresses the idea of "gathering" and,
hence, of "city". This corresponds to the Greek polis and the
Sanskrit
pura meaning the same. Such is also the idea expressed by the suffix
of Arautapola, the capital city of Taoro. The word "royal" (arayata)
has form such as arayan, aranta, arahaua and arachan. It is from
such forms that the Sanskrit raja ("king") and the Latin rex, regis
(idem) ultimately derive.
BACK
3) Pliny, in his Natural History, affirms that
the name of "Canaria" derives from the many dogs found on the island
(Canis, in Latin). This is an exoterism, and the name indeed derives
from that of Cham, the patriarch of the Chamites (or Ethiopians),
the fallen ones. In reality, the word Cham means precisely the same
as "Ethiopian" or "burnt-faces". The Dravidian etyms
of the word Cham are highly enlightening. The word means both
"artificer", "smith", "architect", as well as "fallen", destroyed",
"dead", "terminated". Both in Dravida and in the Biblical tradition,
the name of Cham is also interpreted as meaning "dog", "doggish".
The suffix ari- of "Canary" means "island", "cliff", "rock", in
Dravida, and implies the idea of a sunken land whose peaks remained
above the water. Hence, the Canaries are the Island of the
Artificers who engendered Creation; the Fallen Angels or Nephelim,
who "fell" (or died or were exterminated) at the end of their era,
becoming damned dogs. In other words, the Guanches are "the People
of Cham" (Guan-che or Cham-che), an etym (etymology)not unrelated to
that of "Dog" and to that of the Canaries. (See Note 6, below).
BACK
4) The name of "Pure Land" is the traditional designation of
places that, like the Canaries, have been equated to Paradise.
Indeed, Chenok or Cham-ok ("Abode of the Chams") means the same as
"Canaries", as seen in note 3) above. This name is a direct
translation from the Sanskrit Sukhavati (or
Shveta-dvipa, etc.), as we discuss elsewhere. The name of Chenech
closely evokes the one of Chenoch, the first of all cities, founded
by Cain (Gen. 4:17). The name of Chenoch (or Henoch or Enoch) is
sometimes rendered as "Initial". But this is essentially the same as
"Foundation", one of the many names of Paradise (Sutala) in India.
In Dravida, either ek or ok mean "abode", "city", "house".
BACK
5) Gomeda (or Gomeda-dvipa, the "Island of the
Fat Cattle") is the name of one of the seven dvipas (Paradisial
islands) of the Hindus. The name of Gomeda plays on that of Gomedha,
"the sacrifice of the bull". Gomeda is also the some as Gomata
("rich in cattle") and Govardhana (idem), two other paradisial
cities of the Hindus. As we explain elsewhere, Gomeda-dvipa, the
sunken "Island of the Fat Cattle", is a name of the Hindu Paradise
that served as a model for ours, as well as for Punt and for
Plato's Atlantis. The Dravidian d, when cerebral, often
changes into an r, as was the case here.
BACK
6) The precise etym of the word "Guanche" and its relationship
with the other Chamitic (or "Solar") races has been explained in
detail in our article on the Guanches in this Homepage. The word is
composed of the radices guan and che, which correspond
to the Dravida ones cham and che. Cham
means "golden", "coppery", " red", "solar", "fiery", "flaming", and
embodies the idea of "purified by fire", as in the name of the
Ethiopians. The expression "Purified by Fire" is a metaphor for
"gold" and for the Golden Races of Cham in India. It has also to do
with the Cathars (or "Pures") as we explain elsewhere.
As we said in note 3 above, the name of "Cham" also means "dog"
and, more exactly the wild red dog of the Indies, the Cuon alpinus.
Hence, the play on words of Pliny, deriving the name of the
Canaries (and, indirectly, of the Guanches) "from the multitude of
dogs that inhabit these islands". Likewise, the Dravidian suffix
che, related to words such as the Latin gens ("noble people") means
"nobles', "heroes", "kings", "majesties". It is the Dravidian
equivalent of the Sanskrit Rajaputras ("Sons of Kings"),
the very name given to the Kshatryas or "Reds", that is, the ruddy
races of Cham. The "Chams" or "Reds" are the decayed golden races of
Atlantis who eventually became vicious, as told by Plato.
BACK
7) Hiera ("Holy", in Greek) is the name of a famous mysterious
island in antiquity. Hiera is often identified with
Ireland (Eire = Hiera). But this is sheer exoterism. Several other
islands were also erroneously called Hiera in antiquity. One such is
Thermessa (or Vulcano) near Sicily and the Etna volcano. Thermessa
was reputed to be the abode of Vulcanus (Hephaistos), the infernal
volcanic god of the Greeks and Romans. Hiera is mentioned by
Avienus (Ora, 108), who places it next to Tartessos, another
legendary island of the Outer Ocean, the world-encircling ocean of
the ancients.
Every volcanic island tended to be confused with the Atlantean ones or
with their aliases, the Islands of the Blest. Such was the case of
the Canaries and, also, of Sicily and Thermessa, as well as of
England and Ireland. The English word "iron" has no sure etymology,
and very likely derives from the Dravida iru or
irum
meaning the dark metal. Apparently the Portuguese knew the true
etymology of the local name when they renamed it "Ferro" (later
Hierro, "Iron" in Spanish). It is curious that the Guanches would
have the word for "iron", a metal they did not have. The fact that
their word for it is Dravidian can only be explained by postulating
a contact between the two nations in prehistoric times. And these
times can only have been those of Atlantis. What others?
BACK
8) The name of Tacaronte, if interpreted in
Dravida as here, apparently corresponds to the one of Gomera (see
note 5 above).
BACK
9) Ita-maram (Tamaran), "the Land of the Brave"
corresponds to the name of Vin-bach (Bimbache) or Hierro. The
Guanches were fierce combatants, and resisted the Spanish conquest
down to the last man. Canarian wrestling is famous even today, and
was originally used to train the Guanche warriors for battle.
BACK
10) Taoro was the chief of the nine realms of
Tenerife. It occupied its best lands, in the most sheltered region
of the island. Oru implies the idea of "oneness" and, hence,
of "union", "harmony", "single-mindedness", "leadership". All such
etyms express the idea of Taoro as the leading realm of Tenerife,
the one which insured peace and harmony for all the ten regions of
the island.
BACK
11) The name of Tenerife, which we encounter in the two forms,
just as in Dravida, seems to be an allusion to the
Teyde volcano, the main feature of the island. This volcano
was, by the natives, equated to Mt. Atlas, as we discuss in our
accompanying text on the Guanches. In Dravida, the idea of "white"
is synonymous with "shiny", as instanced here.
The Teyde volcano is snow-capped, and the etym is often interpreted as
an allusion to this fact. But the main reason is the shiny lava that
illuminates its active volcanic peak. Compare the etymology of Teyde
in the above list (s. v. Echeyde). The Dravidian etyms can also be
interpreted as an allusion to the Fallen Mountain (Ecch-eytt), that
is, to Mt. Atlas which the mountain replicates.
BACK
Conclusion
Several phonetic laws, some akin to Grimms' Law, can be
observed from the above Word List when passing from the Dravida
to the Guanche languages. It is amazing that the two families of
tongues — separated by a huge gap in both time and space —
still resemble each other so closely. The explanation of this
remarkable fact certainly results from the circumstance that both
races were fairly well sheltered from alien contact and influence,
the Dravidas down to the present and the Guanches down to the
extinction of their culture, at the end of the 15th century.
Further research on the true affiliation of the Guanche tongue — now
that a new inroad has been discovered — is certainly required in the
matter. If our tentative discovery proves to be real indeed, it can
perhaps revolutionize human prehistory as a whole and, particularly,
that of Europe itself. The origin of the Aryan races
is perhaps the most puzzling of all ancient enigmas. It is one that
is far from solved, despite the statements to the contrary on the
part of certain anthropologists. The siting of their primeval
homeland in the Caucasus or in Central Asia are purely illusory, and
have been refuted by the most competent of anthropologists and
philologists.
According to our theory, the Aryans are the blond, blue-eyed, tall
races of Java and Sumatra, the Yavanas or Yonas. These are also the
same as the Seres (or Pious Ethiopians
or
Hyperboreans) of Pliny, Solinus, and other
ancient authorities. The ancients knew far better than us the
meaning of their old myths and traditions, for they had access to
many holy books now lost due to the fanatic book burnings that
attended the birth of Christianism. So, the Aryans are apparently
originary from the Indies and seem to have reached Europe, at least
in part, via the Indian and the Atlantic Oceans and the rounding of
Africa. Other Aryan nations came, in several waves along the
centuries, by land, across Asia, North Africa and the Levant, or
across the Indian Ocean and the pristine Suez Canal, before it was
permanently closed by the ancient Egyptians.
Interestingly enough, the present theory of ours tends to support the
early traditions concerning the immigrations to Europe via the ocean
and across straits that were later closed, led by heroes such as
Hercules and Aeneas. These traditions survive in sagas like those of
Virgil's Aenead and Orpheus' Argonautica, not to mention
Plato's Atlantis and the relations of the Celts and of Genesis. As
we see, the Bible is indeed right, but in a far different way than
thereto suspected. And the reason why the Bible and the ancient
traditions were written in the form of myths is easy to understand.
This was done in order to avoid the tampering and falsification of
the historical relations, as is so often the case. What is not
understood can hardly be adulterated in any coherent way.
Among the phonetic rules that transpire from the above Word List, we
note that, in passing from Dravida to Guanche, the terminal
consonants such as r, l and n are usually lost. This loss can be
observed in pairs such as añepa / annepal; ahico / ayikov; guan /
gand; ayi-ub / ahof, etc.. Another observable regular change is that
of Dravidian u into Guanche o, as in acemtiyu / acentejo; guviu /
gofio; etc.. Other changes seem to be k> gu; k>
h; a>
i; m> n; final e or i> ek or
ik; a
> e; b or v> f or h; p >
b or, sometimes, p> c.
All in all, these changes are rather minor, and are amply attested in
other languages, as well as within Dravida itself. Moreover, they
can be due to poor phonetic transcription or, even, be the result of
Spanish influence upon the residual Guanche population that remained
in the islands after the conquest. In brief, the coincidence
between Dravida and Guanche is far too
close to be dismissed casually. The honest, open-minded
anthropologist or linguist cannot simply ignore this find which is,
moreover, amply supported by all sorts of independent
anthropological evidence.
|