Bibliography

Guus
Kroonen
s. xx–xxi

8 publications between 2017 and 2023 indexed
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Works edited

Kristiansen, Kristian, Guus Kroonen, and Eske Willerslev (eds), The Indo-European puzzle revisited integrating archaeology, genetics, and linguistics, Cambridge, Online: Cambridge University Press, 2023.
Beek, Lucien, Alwin Kloekhorst, Guus Kroonen, Michaël Peyrot, and Tijmen Pronk (eds), Farnah: Indo-Iranian and Indo-European studies in honor of Sasha Lubotsky, Ann Arbor, New York: Beech Stave Press, 2018.
Kroonen, Guus, James P. Mallory, and Bernard Comrie (eds), Talking Neolithic: proceedings of the workshop on Indo-European origins held at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, December 2–3, 2013, Journal of Indo-European Studies Monograph, 65, Washington, D.C.: Institute for the Study of Man, 2018.
Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen, Bjarne, Adam Hyllested, Anders Richardt Jørgensen, and Guus Kroonen (eds), Usque ad radices: Indo-European studies in honour of Birgit Anette Olsen, Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European, Denmark: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2017.  
abstract:
This volume contains 60 contributions covering a wide variety of topics within Indo-European studies. The contributions deal with all the major Indo-European branches—Armenian, Greek, Indo-Iranian, Italic, Celtic, Anatolian, Germanic, Balto-Slavic, Albanian and Tocharian—as well as archaeological and genetic questions concerning the disintegration and dispersion of the language family and its speakers.
abstract:
This volume contains 60 contributions covering a wide variety of topics within Indo-European studies. The contributions deal with all the major Indo-European branches—Armenian, Greek, Indo-Iranian, Italic, Celtic, Anatolian, Germanic, Balto-Slavic, Albanian and Tocharian—as well as archaeological and genetic questions concerning the disintegration and dispersion of the language family and its speakers.

Contributions to journals

Palmér, Axel I., Anthony Jakob, Rasmus Thorsø, Paulus van Sluis, Cid Swanenvleugel, and Guus Kroonen, “Proto-Indo-European ‘fox’ and the reconstruction of an athematic -stem”, Indo-European Linguistics 9:1 (2021): 234–263.  
abstract:

This paper presents a detailed etymological analysis of words for ‘fox’ in Indo-European (IE) languages. We argue that most IE ‘fox’-words go back to two distinct PIE stems: *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- ‘fox’ and *ulp-i- ‘wildcat, fox’. We provide a revised analysis of the etymology and relationship among the various Indo-Iranian ‘fox’-words, and we argue that Baltic preserves remnants of the -suffix found in Greek, Armenian, and Indo-Iranian. Additionally, we describe how *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- was borrowed from Indo-Iranian into Uralic and we outline the relationship among the reflexes of this word in various Uralic languages. Finally, we reconstruct the paradigm of *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- as a unique type of hysterodynamic stem, which nonetheless has close parallels in PIE. We observe that a similar ḱ-suffix is found in PIE adjectives and animal names.

abstract:

This paper presents a detailed etymological analysis of words for ‘fox’ in Indo-European (IE) languages. We argue that most IE ‘fox’-words go back to two distinct PIE stems: *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- ‘fox’ and *ulp-i- ‘wildcat, fox’. We provide a revised analysis of the etymology and relationship among the various Indo-Iranian ‘fox’-words, and we argue that Baltic preserves remnants of the -suffix found in Greek, Armenian, and Indo-Iranian. Additionally, we describe how *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- was borrowed from Indo-Iranian into Uralic and we outline the relationship among the reflexes of this word in various Uralic languages. Finally, we reconstruct the paradigm of *h₂lō̆p-eḱ- as a unique type of hysterodynamic stem, which nonetheless has close parallels in PIE. We observe that a similar ḱ-suffix is found in PIE adjectives and animal names.

Contributions to edited collections or authored works

Sluis, Paulus van, Anders Richardt Jørgensen, and Guus Kroonen, “European prehistory between Celtic and Germanic: the Celto-Germanic isoglosses revisited”, in: Kristian Kristiansen, Guus Kroonen, and Eske Willerslev (eds), The Indo-European puzzle revisited integrating archaeology, genetics, and linguistics, Cambridge, Online: Cambridge University Press, 2023. 193–244.  
abstract:

Recent advances in the field of palaeogenomics have revealed that at the onset of the Late Neolithic, Europe was characterized by a major cultural and genetic transformation triggered by multiple population movements from the Pontic–Caspian steppe. Corded Ware populations show a large-scale introduction of Yamnaya steppe ancestry across the entire archaeological horizon (Allentoft et al. 2015; Haak et al. 2015; Malmström 2019). The emergence of the Bell Beaker burial identity in the early third millennium BCE was similarly accompanied by a dramatic genetic turnover, at least in Northwestern Europe (Olalde et al. 2018). These population changes call for the integration of genetic evidence into existing models for the linguistic Indo-Europeanization of Europe (cf. Kristiansen et al. 2017).

abstract:

Recent advances in the field of palaeogenomics have revealed that at the onset of the Late Neolithic, Europe was characterized by a major cultural and genetic transformation triggered by multiple population movements from the Pontic–Caspian steppe. Corded Ware populations show a large-scale introduction of Yamnaya steppe ancestry across the entire archaeological horizon (Allentoft et al. 2015; Haak et al. 2015; Malmström 2019). The emergence of the Bell Beaker burial identity in the early third millennium BCE was similarly accompanied by a dramatic genetic turnover, at least in Northwestern Europe (Olalde et al. 2018). These population changes call for the integration of genetic evidence into existing models for the linguistic Indo-Europeanization of Europe (cf. Kristiansen et al. 2017).

Thorsø, Rasmus, Andrew Wigman, Anthony Jakob, Axel I. Palmér, Paulus van Sluis, and Guus Kroonen, “Word mining: metal names and the Indo-European dispersal”, in: Kristian Kristiansen, Guus Kroonen, and Eske Willerslev (eds), The Indo-European puzzle revisited integrating archaeology, genetics, and linguistics, Cambridge, Online: Cambridge University Press, 2023. 105–126.  
abstract:

The first use of metals in the production of objects among human societies was undoubtedly a defining event with a profound, irreversible impact on craftsmanship, agriculture, trade, warfare, and other cultural and political phenomena. The continuous refinement of metallurgical practice, including the introduction of new metals, has left behind some of the most conspicuous and important archaeological remains. Furthermore, the linguistic and archaeological evidence provided by metals can be combined to cast light on the relative placement of reconstructed languages in time and space through the use of linguistic palaeontology (cf. already Schrader 1883). For the study of the expansion of the Indo-European (IE) languages, examining the inventory of metallurgical vocabulary is thus highly relevant – not only for dating and locating the dissolution of each language, but also for determining the branching and spread of the successive daughter languages, and how they were influenced by foreign languages.

abstract:

The first use of metals in the production of objects among human societies was undoubtedly a defining event with a profound, irreversible impact on craftsmanship, agriculture, trade, warfare, and other cultural and political phenomena. The continuous refinement of metallurgical practice, including the introduction of new metals, has left behind some of the most conspicuous and important archaeological remains. Furthermore, the linguistic and archaeological evidence provided by metals can be combined to cast light on the relative placement of reconstructed languages in time and space through the use of linguistic palaeontology (cf. already Schrader 1883). For the study of the expansion of the Indo-European (IE) languages, examining the inventory of metallurgical vocabulary is thus highly relevant – not only for dating and locating the dissolution of each language, but also for determining the branching and spread of the successive daughter languages, and how they were influenced by foreign languages.

Kroonen, Guus, “Lachmann’s law, Thurneysen’s law, and a new explanation of the PIE no-participles”, in: Lucien Beek, Alwin Kloekhorst, Guus Kroonen, Michaël Peyrot, and Tijmen Pronk (eds), Farnah: Indo-Iranian and Indo-European studies in honor of Sasha Lubotsky, Ann Arbor, New York: Beech Stave Press, 2018. 143–152.