Entities

García Alonso (Juan Luis)

  • s. xx–xxi
  • (agents)
García Alonso, Juan Luis, “Seeing or believing in a realm of Celtic ghosts”, in: Juan Luis García Alonso (ed.), Continental Celtic word formation: the onomastic data, 197, Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca, 2013. 155–164.
García Alonso, Juan Luis (ed.), Continental Celtic word formation: the onomastic data, Aquilafuente, 197, Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca, 2013.
Luján, Eugenio R., and Juan Luis García Alonso (eds), A Greek man in the Iberian street: papers in linguistics and epigraphy in honour of Javier de Hoz, Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft, 140, Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen der Universität Innsbruck, 2011.
García Alonso, Juan Luis (ed.), Celtic and other languages in ancient Europe, Aquilafuente, 127, Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca, 2008.
García Alonso, Juan Luis, “The place names of ancient Hispania and its linguistic layers”, Studia Celtica 35 (2001): 213–244.
García Alonso, Juan Luis, “On the Celticity of the Duero Plateau: place-names in Ptolemy”, in: David N. Parsons, and Patrick Sims-Williams (eds), Ptolemy: towards a linguistic atlas of the earliest Celtic place-names of Europe, Aberystwyth: CMCS Publications, 2000. 29–52.
García Alonso, Juan Luis, “On the celticity of some Hispanic place names”, Études Celtiques 29 (1992): 191–201.  
abstract:
[FR] Sur le caractère celtique de certains noms de lieux hispaniques.
A l’aide d’un nombre limité de toponymes celtiques de la péninsule ibérique, l’auteur cherche à isoler et commenter les éléments celtiques, en utilisant les acquis les plus récents dans la connaissance des langues celtiques ou non-celtiques de la péninsule ibérique. Les régions occidentales présentent un problème spécial, puisqu’il est particulièrement difficile de décider dans ce cas si nous sommes en face de peuples de langue celtique ou de peuples parlant un autre dialecte indo-européen.

[EN] Amongst a limited number of place-names in the Iberian peninsula, this paper tries to find and comment upon the Celtic elements, taking avantage of the progress made during the last years in the knowledge of Celtic and non-Celtic Indo-European languages of the Iberian Peninsula. Western areas present a particular problem, it being particularly difficult to decide whether we are facing Celtic speaking peoples or peoples speaking a different branch of Indo-European.
Persée – Études Celtiques, vol. 29, 1992: <link>


Sources

No published sources recorded. Try related subjects (if any) instead.
The following does not refer to the present page, but to the data record for the currently selected query subject. It is not yet accessible on its own.
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
March 2018