Amphithéâtre Maurice Halbwachs, Site Marcelin Berthelot
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As part of the Lithuanian Season in France, Professor Luigi Rizzi has invited Professor Daniel Petit to give a talk on the Lithuanian language, taking stock of the study of this language in France and its prospects.

The event also provided an opportunity to highlight a partnership between the Collège de France and the Lithuanian Embassy in France. Following the classification of Professor Antoine Meillet's archives, a manuscript on Baltic languages, and more specifically on Lithuanian, was found. The Embassy financed the digitization of this document, which will be the subject of an in-depth study by Professor Daniel Petit. This conference is therefore also a form of introduction to this future work.

Abstract

Since the 19th century, the Lithuanian language, a member of the Baltic family of Indo-European languages, has attracted the attention of many linguists in Western Europe. Several ethnographic and linguistic collecting trips to Lithuania were undertaken by such famous linguists as August Schleicher (1821-1868), Karl Brugmann (1849-1919) and Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913). The recent discovery, at the Collège de France, of notes taken around 1920 by linguist Antoine Meillet (1866-1936) on the Lithuanian language shows that this interest extended beyond the 19th century; indeed, it continues to this day.

The aim of this paper is to give an overview of the Lithuanian language, its position in the language family and its main linguistic features, in order to explain why this language has attracted so much attention from linguists.

Three aspects that make Lithuanian so fascinating to linguists will be addressed in turn: firstly, its linguistic archaism, which makes it the most conservative language of the entire Indo-European family, on a par with the great ancient languages of Greek, Latin and Sanskrit; secondly, its areal position at the crossroads of the languages of the Eastern Baltic, whether Indo-European (Polish, Russian, German) or non-Indo-European (Fennic languages); and finally, its typological singularity, which makes it a particularly fertile object of study for General Linguistics.

Program

  • Opening by the Rector of Vilnius University, Rimvydas Petrauskas
  • Introduction to the conference by Professor Luigi Rizzi
  • Lecture by Daniel Petit, Professor at the École normale supérieure, Director of Studies at the École pratique des hautes études
  • Focus on the Antoine Meillet archive, by Ina Valintelyte and Valentin Noël

 

Logo Ambassade de Lituanie en France Logo La saison de la Lituanie en France 2024

Speaker(s)

Daniel Petit

Professor at the École normale supérieure. Director of Studies at the École Pratique des Hautes Études

Rimvydas Petrauskas

Rector of Vilnius University

Ina Valintelyte

Valentin Noël