The Qin Empire Speak Khmer ✧ | FULL |
There is an ethnic group in southern China and Southeast Asia called the (or Dong people), who speak a Tai-Kadai language, not Khmer. Some amateur linguists have mistakenly linked "Qin" to "Kam" and then to "Khmer" because all three sound vaguely similar to Western ears. In reality, the Khmer call themselves Khmaer , which has no historical connection to Qin. Part 3: Could There Be Any Contact or Borrowing? While the Qin did not speak Khmer, did the Qin empire influence Khmer? And vice versa?
Some fringe historians have suggested that the Qin were not ethnically Han but were themselves a "mixed" group who absorbed a southern substrate language. They point to the fact that the Qin homeland was closer to the non-Sinitic Qiang and Di tribes. This is speculative at best. In the mid-20th century, linguist Paul K. Benedict proposed an Austro-Tai macro-family that later included Miao-Yao and, controversially, linked Sino-Tibetan with Austroasiatic into a superphylum called Sino-Austronesian or Sino-Austroasiatic . the qin empire speak khmer
The Qin Empire (221–206 BCE) holds a mythical status in Chinese history. It was the dynasty that ended the Warring States period, standardized writing, currency, and measurement, and gave China its name. When we think of the Qin, we envision the terracotta warriors, the autocratic rule of Qin Shi Huang, and the early stages of the Great Wall. There is an ethnic group in southern China
During the Qin dynasty, their southern expansion stopped roughly at the Red River Delta (modern northern Vietnam). At that time, the region was inhabited by Proto-Vietic and early Mon-Khmer groups, but the great Khmer Empire would not arise for another 1,000 years. Part 3: Could There Be Any Contact or Borrowing