The Timucua Language ? A Text?Based Reference Grammar - Broadwell, George Aaron; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

The Timucua Language ? A Text?Based Reference Grammar: A Text-Based Reference Grammar
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781496237781
ISBN10:1496237781
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:470 pages
Size:254x178x15 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 3 illustrations, 49 tables, index
700
Category:

The Timucua Language ? A Text?Based Reference Grammar

A Text-Based Reference Grammar
 
Publisher: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Cloth Over Boards
 
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Short description:

By utilizing all available resources, George Aaron Broadwell has constructed the first fully developed reference grammar of the Timucua language, shedding crucial light on distinctive grammar properties important to reading and interpreting Timucua texts.
 

Long description:
The Timucua Language is a comprehensive reference grammar of Timucua, the Native language of much of northern Florida during the Spanish colonial period. Though the Timucua language is no longer spoken, written Timucua was extensively used as a medium of Franciscan evangelism in the seventeenth century; indeed, the Timucua catechisms from 1612 are the earliest written records in any Native language of the land that is now the United States. Two secular letters in the language also survive from that period. As a whole, the Timucua written corpus gives us incomparable insight into the Indigenous culture and history of early Florida.

This grammar is based on a thorough study of the extant printed and handwritten documents and on careful philological and comparative analysis of the corpus. Because the content of printed Timucua material often varies considerably from the Spanish text printed in parallel with it, careful study of Timucua grammar enables linguists, anthropologists, and historians to begin to read these critical texts in Florida and southeastern U.S. history.
 

“This grammar of Timucua is exhaustive, and it is impressive how George Aaron Broadwell has derived the grammar from imperfectly bilingual sources. His extensive database of Timucua texts has helped him greatly in explaining the grammar of this long-extinct language isolate. He does not shy away from the difficulties inherent in working with seventeenth-century material but discusses them in detail.”—Geoffrey D. Kimball, author of Koasati Grammar