Abstract:
The genetic relationship of the Iberian-Caucasian languages and
the reality of the genealogical classification of these languages is
confirmed according to the principle (methods) of researching their
kinship relationships. However, proving that ICE comes from a common
ancestor language is a very difficult task. The situation is getting
complicated due to a number of objective reasons. These are: a) mainly
monosyllabic composition of morphemes, which is valid for all Iberian-
Caucasian groups; b) special brevity of comparable lexical units in verbs,
which reduces the quality of verification; c) the mountainous landscape
of the Caucasus is attached to this, which dis not contribute to the
unification of peoples in one or another location while contributed
the acceleration of the processes of differentiation between languages as well as the conception and development of convergent events
in a synchronous mode. This is accompanied by another linguistic
contradiction that the Caucasian languages do not necessarily develop
independently of each other even after their separation. Thus, if
they continue to operate in contiguous areas, under conditions that
allow contact and interaction to be stable, then the differences in
their vocabulary will be less than expected, and the estimated time
for divergence will turn out to be shorter than it really is. Hence the
conclusion: the basic tenets of glottochronology are not true for all
possible cases. The simplicity of the phonemic composition of the root
and its subsequent transformations, together with the shortness of the
root, led to the blurring of the historically existing real picture in the
Iberian-Caucasian languages, which is not at all an insurmountable
contradiction.
If we consider the three main theories of the ethnogenesis of the
peoples of the Caucasus – migratory, autochthonous and migratory-autochthonous
– we share the second theory, which does not ignore
the possibility of using the theory of migration in relation to individual
peoples. For example, the assumption that the ancestors of the
Abkhazians and Georgians lived in the territory of modern Western
Georgia (Abkhazia) in prehistoric times has quite solid arguments. The
preservation of onomastic names that can be explained in the endemic
languages in Abkhazia should indicate the long-term coexistence of
the ancestors of the Abkhazians [= Apsuas] and Georgians in this area,
from ancient times to the present day. The same can be said about
the relationship between Dagestanian languages and peoples, which,
at the same time, in both considered cases, based on the theory of
prehistoric great migration of peoples, does not exclude the possibility
that the modern Caucasian peoples, before finding themselves in the
current residential areas, went through a long way of settlement.
In the paper, the problem of the kinship of the Iberian-Caucasian
languages according to the famous list of Yakhontov will be discussed
in more detail.