Abstract:
The common viewpoint in Kartvelology, which became the basis
for the “Deetersian scheme” of the differentiation of the Common
Kartvelian parent language, supporting the earlier separation of Svan
(M. Janashvili, G. Deeters), is mainly based on the analysis of different
morphological and lexical occurrences. The results of phonological
and, in general, complex historical-comparative research, which are
necessary for the reliable reconstruction of the ancient structural
model of kindred languages, are not taken into account. At the same
time, what is also important, the method of internal reconstruction
is not properly used, without which it becomes almost impossible to
determine the dynamics of diachronic changes of a separate language
(in this case – Svan).
The author believes that with the joint use of internal reconstruction
and historical-comparative methods, it is possible to explain the
peculiar linguistic occurrences in Svan, visibly different from Georgian
and Zan. In particular, the different linguistic facts existing in Svan at
the synchronic level do not in any way imply the same difference of
this material at the diachronic level as compared to the data of other
Kartvelian languages, since it seems that this difference is not the
result of the earlier separation of Svan from the Common Kartvelian
parent language, but – of the transformations carried out historically
in Svan itself. As it turns out, in Svan, unlike Georgian and Zan, the
phonetic changes (umlautization, affricatization, desaffricatization,
spirantization...) and hence the morphological and lexical changes were
so large-scale that Svan became a “specific language type”.
The author believes that the Common Kartvelian parent language
was initially divided into two linguistic units – Georgian and Zan-Svan
– since in Zan-Svan there are occurrences that are common to them,
but different from Georgian, especially – in phonology (for example,
the formation of back row consonants from front row ones as a result
of shifting the place of articulation...). At a later stage, Georgian still does not undergo structural changes that are very different from the
Common Kartvelian parent language, and in Zan-Svan a new stage of
such changes begins (vowel shifting to back in Zan, systemic phonetic
changes of consonants in Svan, as well as morphological and lexical
changes: simplification of auslaut in Svan, new ways of formation of
passive and participle forms in Svan...), as a result of which the Zan-Svan
linguistic unity breaks up into Zan (Megrelian-Laz) and Svan languages.
Taking into account both the above-mentioned and other
standpoints known in the Kartvelology, the author believes that the
differentiation scheme of the Common Kartvelian parent language can
be presented in the following form:
Common Kartvelian Parent Language:
Zan-Svan
Zan Svan Georgian