Corrádi: Difference between revisions

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==Introduction==
==Introduction==


It has long been assumed that Minhay had been settled during nomadic tribes during the Ice Ages, part of the general migrations that eventually peopled Siberia, the Americas, and Ainushir.  Traditional accounts claim that three ethnic groups, the Golahats, the Peshpegs, and the Minhast came to Minhay at around the same time, but eventually the Minhast eventually dominated the island.  During the mid 1950's, foreign archaeologists from the West were finally allowed to enter Minhay, and their preliminary excavations came up with puzzling results.  The closest relatives of the Minhast are believed to be the Ainu of neighboring Kar-put-ya-Moshir (Sakhalin), Hokkay and Honesh-Pet (formerly known as Honshu before the partition of the Japanese Empire by the Kingdom of Koguryeo and the Ainu Federation).  But the Ainu, or their putative ancestors, the Jōmon, are known to have occupied the region as early 14,500 BCE.  The earliest artifacts found in Minhay that could be definitively attributed to the Minhast were flint arrows and iron swords as recent as 300 CE.  Golahat and Peshpeg artifacts were far rarer, but the earliest of those artifacts dated circa 130 CE.  This indicated that the Minhast, Golahats, and Peshpegs came much later, several millenia after the great Paleosiberian migrations that led to the peopling of northeast Siberia and the Americas.


So it was a groundbreaking discovery, and shock to many, when in the late 70's the Kūtan excavations in south-central Minhay uncovered artifacts from an unknown civilization that dated around 1500 BCE.  These artifacts included bronze tools and weapons, glazed pottery, lifelike statues and figurines, and the remnants of large stone buildings suggestive of palaces or temples.  Moreover, the remnants of several parchment scrolls written in an unknown script and language were found.  Less than a decade later, in March 12, 1985, several scrolls, in the same script as the ones found in Kūtan, were discovered in an inconspicuous cave in Mt. Irraħma.  Unlike the scrolls discovered in Kūtan, the ones found in Mt. Irraħma were dated as late as the 1700's.  These scrolls were written in the same language as Kūtan , but also included transcripts in the Minhast script, along with a dictionary and grammar, providing the Rosetta Stone to the Corrádi language.


A big shock came from another area though: the Mt. Irrahma excavations. More bilingual texts had been unearthed, with the same handwriting as the author of the previous texts. A dictionary and grammar of the Corrádi language, which accompanied the Minhast text in the bilingual scripts, had been uncovered. Skeptics of the accounts of the author suggested that this was the work of a sophisticated, albeit narcissistic and schizophrenic, conlanger from the modern era. After all, why would a bona fide scribe bother to create a lexicon and descriptive grammar with the deliberate intent for others to find them and make it even easier to decipher the non-Minhast text?
The texts mentioned a city called Vórina which lay 50km south of the capital, Aškuan. In fact, the author had written precise directions where to find the lost city. Archaeologists went to where the purported Vórina was located, in an extensive hardwood forest that reached the edge of Minhay's southern coast. A few days before the archaeologists arrived, lidar imagery was taken of the area and revealed several large mounds underneath the canopy. Excavations began, and soon a treasure trove of artifacts were unearthed. Pillars and the remnants of buildings were found bearing a script very similar to the Irraħma scrolls engraved into the stone. Another surprise: in the lower strata were sedimentary deposits clearly indicating the city at one time was on the coastline. It was in this same strata that there were indications that a major earthquake had struck the area, and a thin layer of what could only be marine sediment - which could have been deposited there by a tsunami. And one more disturbing discovery. Flint arrowheads and signs of fire damage abound in this layer. The flint arrowheads were the hattīya, bearing the same design used by the Horse Speakers of the Central Plateau.
The texts mentioned a city called Vórina which lay 50km south of the National Capital Region. In fact, the author had written precise directions where to find the lost city. Archaeologists went to where the purported Vórina was located, in an extensive hardwood forest that reached the edge of Minhay's southern coast. A few days before the archaeologists arrived, lidar imagery was taken of the area and revealed several large mounds underneath the canopy. Excavations began, and soon a treasure trove of artifacts were unearthed. Pillars and the remnants of buildings were found bearing a script very similar to the Irrahma scrolls engraved into the stone. Another surprise: in the lower strata were sedimentary deposits clearly indicating the city at one time was on the coastline. It was in this same strata that there were indications that a major earthquake had struck the area, and a thin layer of what could only be marine sediment - which could have been deposited there by a tsunami.
And one more disturbing discovery. Flint arrowheads and signs of fire damage abound in this layer. The flint arrowheads were the hattīya, the type of arrowheads that Horse Speakers use when metal for weapon making is scarce.


The scrolls reveal that the Corrádi language is unrelated to any northeastern Asian language.  Possible relationships with Austronesian and other southeast Asian languages have been conclusively ruled out.  Other hypotheses have been presented, but none have succeeded in establishing a relationship with other language families.  Therefore, Corrádi has been classified as a language isolate.


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==Phonology==
==Phonology==
===Orthography===
===Orthography===