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Buyeo languages

Buyeo
Puyo, Fuyu
Geographic
distribution:
Korea, Japan, Southern Manchuria
Linguistic classification: Koreanic?
  • Buyeo
Glottolog: (not evaluated)
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The Three Kingdoms of Korea, associated with the Goguryeo, Silla, Baekje, and Gaya (Kara) languages; Buyeo had been the northern portion of Goguryeo on this map.

Buyeo or Fuyu languages (부여 in Korean, Fúyú (扶餘) in Chinese) are a hypothetical language family that consists of ancient languages of the northern Korean Peninsula, southern Manchuria and possibly Japan. According to Chinese records, the languages of Buyeo, Goguryeo, Dongye, Okjeo, Baekje—and possibly Gojoseon—were similar. Ye-Maek may have been ancestral.

The relationships of the poorly attested Buyeo dialects are disputed.

The Korean state of Baekje (18 BCE — 660 CE) was founded by Goguryeo (37 BCE – 668 CE) princes, and considered itself descended from Buyeo (2nd century BC — 494 AD). Baekje subsequently had close relations with Yamato period Japan; Christopher Beckwith suggests that at that point the Japanese may have still recognized a relationship to Buyeo. Beckwith reconstructs about 140 Goguryeo words, mostly from ancient place names, including Gaya. Many include grammatical morphemes which appear to be cognate with morphemes of similar function in Japanese, such as genitive -no and attributive -si.

A number of linguists such as Kim Banghan, Vovin, and Unger classify Goguryeo as Old Korean. They note that the toponyms which resemble Japanese are mostly found in the central part of the Korean peninsula, and theorize that they do not reflect the Goguryeo language but rather the pre-Goguryeo population of the central and southern parts of the Korean peninsula. Since a number of Japanese-like toponyms found in the historical homeland of Silla were also distributed in the southern part of the Korean peninsula, these linguists propose that there was once a Japonic language spoken on the Korean peninsula, perhaps Gaya, which forms a substratum of the Silla language; Unger suggests that the ancestors of the Yayoi people would have settled in Japan from the central or southern part of Korea. None of the Japanese cognates have been found in the historical homeland of Buyeo and Goguryeo in the northern part of the Korean peninsula or south-western Manchuria. Koreanic toponyms, on the other hand, are distributed across the entire territory of the Three Kingdoms, from Manchuria to the southern Korean peninsula.


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