The South Caucasian or Kartvelian languages are spoken primarily in Georgia, with smaller groups of speakers in Turkey, Iran, and Russia.
With the exception of Georgian and Gruzinic, these languages are not mutually intelligible. However, they are clearly related, and Laz and Megrelian are officially considered a single language, called "Zan". The connection between all these languages was first reported in linguistic literature by J. Güldenstädt in the 18th century, and later proven by G. Rosen, M. Brosset, F. Bopp and others during the 1840's. They are believed to have split off from a single proto-Kartvelian language, possibly spoken in the region of present-day Georgia and Northern Turkey in the 3rd-2nd millenniums BC.
Based on the degree of change, some linguists (including A. Chikobava, G. Klimov, T. Gamkrelidze, and G. Machavariani) conjecture that the earliest split, which separated Svan from the other languages, occurred in the second millennium BC or earlier; while Megrelian and Laz were separated from Georgian roughly a thousand years later, and split from each other roughly 500 years ago.
Gruzinic is sometimes regarded as a variant of Georgian, modified by the inclusion of large numbers of Hebrew and Aramaic loanwords. Its divergence from Georgian is comparatively recent.
Certain grammatical similarities with Basque, especially in the case system, have often been pointed out. However, most linguists dismiss those resemblances as very limited and superficial, more likely to be random coincidences than inherited traits from a common ancestral language.
Any similarities to other linguistic phyla may well be due to areal influences. Heavy borowing in either directions (i.e. North Caucasian to South Caucasian and vice versa) has been observed, thus it is quite probable that certain grammatical features have been influenced as well. If the Dene-Caucasian hypothesis, which attempts to link Basque, Burushaski, North Caucasian and other phyla, is right, then the above mentioned similarities to Basque may also be due these influences, however indirect.
It is well known today that the Proto-Kartvelian vocabulary was also influenced by Indo-European languages to some extent, whence probably the earlier attempts to link these families to form a higher genealogical unit.
Mingrelian has been written (with the Georgian alphabet) since 1864, especially in the period from 1930 to 1938, when the Megrelians enjoyed some cultural autonomy, and after 1989.
The Laz language was written chiefly between 1927 and 1937, and now again in Turkey, with Latin alphabets. Laz however is disappearing as its speakers are integrating into mainstream Turkish society. Guruzinic was the language of the Gruzim, the ancient Jewish community of Georgia. It is often written using the Hebrew alphabet.
Yezhoù kartvelek | Kartvelsk | Südkaukasische Sprachen | ქართველური ენები | Zuid-Kaukasische talen | 南コーカサス語族 | Języki południowokaukaskie | Картвельские языки | Eteläkaukasialaiset kielet | Sydkaukasiska språk | Kartveli dilleri
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It uses material from the
"South Caucasian languages".
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