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HomeBooksBook Extract: Excerpted with permission from the publisher Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global,‎ Laura Spinney, published by ‎William Collins

Book Extract: Excerpted with permission from the publisher Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global,‎ Laura Spinney, published by ‎William Collins

Book Extract: Excerpted with permission from the publisher Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global,‎ Laura Spinney, published by ‎William Collins.

October 03, 2025 / 19:03 IST
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Book Extract: Excerpted with permission from the publisher Proto: How One Ancient Language Went Global,‎ Laura Spinney, published by ‎ William Collins.

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Bronze drove the economy and mining was a recognised profession. Huge volumes of tin, copper and finished bronze articles moved along the continent’s trade routes, both terrestrial and maritime. Other goods were trafficked too, including humans, and the elite brotherhoods of old found new purpose in defending the precious cargo. Their alliances, forged in teenage rites of passage and reinforced by guest-friendship, *ghostis, guaranteed them safe passage. From the Atlantic to the Caspian a new social model dominated: hierarchical, patriarchal, warlike. Europe had entered the Bronze Age, and scattered through it were sizeable groups of Indo-European-speakers. The daunting task before historical linguists is to bridge the gap between those preliterate peoples and their distant descendants who, many centuries later, scratched their names into stone. To do so they have to work backwards, from those first hesitant scrawls, to the birth of Italic, Celtic and Germanic – and beyond.

‘Hark! Hark! The lark at heaven’s gate sings.’