Difference between revisions of "Aryans"

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The '''Aryans''', Sanskrit ''Ārya'', were a group who invaded India from the north around 1500 BC as recorded in the ''Rigveda'', the earliest Indian literary work. In modern usage, the word most commonly refers to Nordic people, especially those with blond hair and blue-eyes. This usage is somewhat removed from the historical and linguistic meaning of the term and reflects the influence of Nazi ideology.
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The '''Aryans''', Sanskrit ''Ārya'', were a group who invaded India from the north around 1500 BC as recorded in the ''Rigveda'', the earliest Indian literary work. In modern usage, the word most commonly refers to Nordic people, especially those with blond hair and blue-eyes. This usage is somewhat removed from the historical and linguistic meaning of the term. It reflects the influence of Nazi ideology.
  
The Aryans are thought to have spoken a language of the Indo-European family. Due to the association with Nazi ideology, the word is now in disfavor. Specialists avoid the word by using "Indo-European" to refer to the overall language family and "Indo-Aryan" for the Indo-European languages spoken in Iran and India.  
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The Aryans are thought to have spoken a language of the Indo-European family. This language was ancestral to Sanskrit and therefore to modern Indian languages. Due to the association with Nazi ideology, the word Aryan has slipped into disfavor. Specialists now refer to the overall language family as "Indo-European." The Indo-European languages spoken in Iran and India are the "Indo-Aryan family."
  
In Sanskrit, ''Ārya'' means noble. The word derives from the Persian ''Arya'', which refers to the Indo-European speaking people of Persia.  As such, the name of the country [[Iran]] means "Land of the Aryans".<ref>[https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/1.5127018 How 'Iran' and 'Aryan' Are Connected]</ref>
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In Sanskrit, ''Ārya'' means noble. The Sanskrit word is derived from ''Ariya'', a native name for Iran.<ref>"[https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/1.5127018 How 'Iran' and 'Aryan' Are Related," ''Haartz''</ref>
  
The term Aryan has also been used by [[Adolf Hitler]] and numerous other [[racialism|racialists]] to refer to what they believe to be the superior race of white, Nordic Europeans. The originator of the ''Aryan master race'' theory was French author [[Joseph Arthur de Gobineau]].
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The term Aryan has also been used by [[Adolf Hitler]] and numerous other [[racialism|racialists]] to refer to what they believe to be the superior race of white, Nordic Europeans. The originator of the ''Aryan master race'' theory was French author [[Joseph Arthur de Gobineau]].
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 12:39, April 15, 2021

The Aryans, Sanskrit Ārya, were a group who invaded India from the north around 1500 BC as recorded in the Rigveda, the earliest Indian literary work. In modern usage, the word most commonly refers to Nordic people, especially those with blond hair and blue-eyes. This usage is somewhat removed from the historical and linguistic meaning of the term. It reflects the influence of Nazi ideology.

The Aryans are thought to have spoken a language of the Indo-European family. This language was ancestral to Sanskrit and therefore to modern Indian languages. Due to the association with Nazi ideology, the word Aryan has slipped into disfavor. Specialists now refer to the overall language family as "Indo-European." The Indo-European languages spoken in Iran and India are the "Indo-Aryan family."

In Sanskrit, Ārya means noble. The Sanskrit word is derived from Ariya, a native name for Iran.[1]

The term Aryan has also been used by Adolf Hitler and numerous other racialists to refer to what they believe to be the superior race of white, Nordic Europeans. The originator of the Aryan master race theory was French author Joseph Arthur de Gobineau.

References

  1. "[https://www.haaretz.com/jewish/1.5127018 How 'Iran' and 'Aryan' Are Related," Haartz