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Polyglotta Africana

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Author
  
Sigismund Koelle

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The Languages of Africa, Outlines of a grammar of the Vei, African Native Literature, Grammar of the Bórnu Or

Polyglotta Africana is a study written by the German missionary Sigismund Wilhelm Koelle in 1854 in which he compared 156 African languages (or about 120 according to today's classification; several varieties considered distinct by Koelle were later shown to belong to the same language). As a comparative study it was a major breakthrough at the time.

Koelle based his material on first hand observations, mostly with freed slaves in Freetown, Sierra Leone. He transcribed the data using a uniform phonetic script devised by the Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius. Koelle's transcriptions were not always accurate; for example, he persistently confused [s] with [z] and [tʃ] with [dʒ]. His data were consistent enough, however, to enable groupings of languages based on vocabulary resemblances. Notably, the groups which he set up correspond in a number of cases to modern groups:

  • North-West Atlantic — Atlantic
  • North-Western High Sudan/Mandenga — Mande
  • North-Eastern High Sudan — Gur
  • References

    Polyglotta Africana Wikipedia