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{{Short description|Self-designation used by ancient Indo-Iranian peoples}}
{{Short description|Self-designation used by ancient Indo-Iranian peoples}}
{{About|the cultural and historical concept|other uses of "Arya" and "Aryan"}}
{{About|the cultural and historical concept|other uses of "Arya" and "Aryan"}}
{{pp-move-indef}}
{{cleanup lang|date=October 2021}}<!-- especially {{PIE}} -->
{{Indo-European topics}}
{{Indo-European topics}}
{{Hinduism}}
{{Hinduism}}
'''Aryan''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɛər|i|ə|n}};<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/aryan "Aryan"]. ''[[Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary]].''</ref> [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Indo-Iranian]] *''arya'') is a term which was originally used as a self-designation by [[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian peoples]] in [[Ancient history|ancient times]], in contrast to "non-Indo-Aryan" or "non-Iranian" peoples.<ref name="Schmitt_Aryans1" /><ref name="Witzel2012" />{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}} The idea of being an ''Aryan'' was religious, cultural and linguistic, not racial.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=11}}<ref>{{citation |last=Gnoli |first=Gherardo |chapter=Iranian Identity ii. Pre-Islamic Period |title=Encyclopaedia Iranica, online edition |location=New York |year=1996 |chapter-url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/iranian-identity-ii-pre-islamic-period}}</ref><ref>Reza Zia-Ebrahimi, [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2010/08/post-2.html Iranian Identity, the 'Aryan Race,' and Jake Gyllenhaal], PBS (Public Broadcasting Service), 6 August 2010.</ref> Although the root ''*h₂er(y)ós'' ('a member of one’s own group', in contrast to an outsider) is most likely of [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) origin,{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}} the use of ''Arya'' as an ethno-cultural self-designation is only attested to among Indo-Iranian peoples, and it is not known if PIE speakers had a term to designate themselves as a group.{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}}
'''Aryan''' or '''Arya''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɛər|i|ə|n}};<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/aryan "Aryan"]. ''[[Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary]].''</ref> [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Indo-Iranian]] *''arya'') is a term originally used as an [[ethnocultural]] self-designation by [[Indo-Iranians]] in ancient times, in contrast to the nearby outsiders known as 'non-Aryan' (*''an-arya'').<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":4" /> In [[Ancient India]], the term ''ā́rya'' was used by the [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan speakers]] of the [[Vedic period]] as an [[endonym]] (self-designation) and in reference to a region known as ''[[Āryāvarta]]'' ('abode of the Aryas'), where the Indo-Aryan culture emerged.{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|pp=4, 24}} In the ''[[Avesta]]'' scriptures, ancient [[Iranian peoples]] similarly used the term ''airya'' to designate themselves as an [[ethnic group]], and in reference to their mythical homeland, ''[[Airyanem Vaejah|Airyanǝm Vaēǰō]]'' ('expanse of the Aryas' or 'stretch of the Aryas').<ref name=":5" /><ref name="Gnoli" /> The [[Word stem|stem]] also forms the [[etymological]] source of place names such as ''[[Name of Iran#Etymology of "Iran"|Iran]]'' (*''Aryānām'') and ''[[Alania]]'' (*''Aryāna-'').<ref name="Mallory" />


In [[Ancient India]], the term ''ā́rya-'' was used by the [[Indo-Aryan people|Indo-Aryan speakers]] of the [[Vedic period]] as a religious label for themselves, as well as the name of the geographic region which was known as ''[[Āryāvarta]]'', where the [[Indo-Aryan people|Indo-Aryan]] culture emerged.<ref name="Gopal 1990 70">{{cite book|title=India through the ages|url=https://archive.org/details/indiathroughages00mada|last=Gopal|first=Madan|year= 1990| page= [https://archive.org/details/indiathroughages00mada/page/70 70]|editor=K.S. Gautam|publisher=Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India}}</ref><ref>Michael Cook (2014), ''Ancient Religions, Modern Politics: The Islamic Case in Comparative Perspective'', Princeton University Press, p.68: "Aryavarta [...] is defined by Manu as extending from the great Himalayas in the north to the Vindhyas of Central India in the south and extending from the sea in the west to the sea in the east."</ref> Similarly, ancient [[Iranian peoples]] used the term ''airya''- as an ethnic label for themselves and they also used it in reference to their mythical homeland, ''[[Airyanem Vaejah]]'', which is mentioned in the [[Avesta]] scriptures.<ref name="Witzel2012" /> The root also forms the [[etymological]] source of the place names ''[[Iran]]'' and ''[[Alania]]''.{{sfn|Mallory|1991|p=125}}<ref name="Schmitt_Aryans1">{{citation|last=Schmitt|first=Rüdiger|title=Encyclopedia Iranica|pages=684–687|year=1987|series=vol. 2|chapter=Aryans|chapter-url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/aryans|location=New York|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul}}</ref>
Although the stem ''*arya-'' may be of [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) origin,<ref name=":2" /> its use as an ethnocultural self-designation is only attested among Indo-Iranian peoples, and it is not known if PIE speakers had a term to designate themselves as 'Proto-Indo-Europeans'. In any case, scholars point out that, even in ancient times, the idea of being an ''Aryan'' was religious, cultural and linguistic, not racial.{{Sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=60–63}}<ref name=":0">{{harvnb|Witzel|2001|p=24|ps=: "''Arya''/''ārya'' does not mean a particular ''people'' or even a particular 'racial' group but all those who had joined the tribes speaking Vedic Sanskrit and adhering to their cultural norms (such as ritual, poetry, etc.)"}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{harvnb|Anthony|2007|p=408|ps=: "The ''Rigveda'' and ''Avesta'' agreed that the essence of their shared parental Indo-Iranian identity was linguistic and ritual, not racial. If a person sacrificed to the right gods in the right way using the correct forms of the traditional hymns and poems, that person was an Aryan."}}</ref>


In the 1850s the term "Aryan" was adopted as a [[Historical race concepts|racial category]] by French writer [[Arthur de Gobineau]]. Through the works of [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], Gobineau's ideas later influenced the [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial ideology]].{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} The atrocities committed in the name of this racial ideology have led academics to avoid the term "Aryan", which has been replaced in most cases by "[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]", with only the South Asian branch still being called "[[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]]."<ref name="Witzel2012" />
In the 1850s the term '[[Aryan_race|Aryan]]' was adopted as a [[Historical race concepts|racial category]] by French writer [[Arthur de Gobineau]], who, through the later works of [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], influenced the [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial ideology]].{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} Under [[Nazi Germany|Nazi rule]] (1933–1945), the term applied to most inhabitants of Germany excluding [[History of the Jews in Germany|Jews]].<ref name=":7">{{Cite book|last=Gordon|first=Sarah Ann|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9946459|title=Hitler, Germans, and the "Jewish Question"|date=1984|publisher=Princeton University Press|others=Mazal Holocaust Collection|isbn=0-691-05412-6|location=Princeton, N.J.|pages=96|oclc=9946459}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Longerich|first=Peter|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/610166248|title=Holocaust : the Nazi persecution and murder of the Jews|date=2010|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-280436-5|location=Oxford|pages=83,241|oclc=610166248}}</ref> [[Aryan certificate]] was a primary requirement to become a Reich citizen for those who were of German or related blood (Aryan) and wanted to become Reich citizens after the Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935. A "Swede or an Englishman, a Frenchman or Czech, a Pole or Italian" was considered to be related, that is, "Aryan". Those classified as 'non-Aryans,' especially Jews,<ref>{{cite web|date=2020|title=Aryan {{!}} Arian, adj. and n.|url=https://oed.com/view/Entry/11296|url-status=live|website=Oxford English Dictionary|quote=Under the Nazi régime (1933–45) applied to the inhabitants of Germany of non-Jewish extraction. cf. 1933 tr. Hitler's ''Mein Kampf'' in ''Times'' 25 July 15/6: "The exact opposite of the Aryan is the Jew." 1933 Education 1 Sept. 170/2: "The basic idea of the new law is that non-Aryans, that is to say mainly Jews..."}}</ref> were [[Racial policy of Nazi Germany|discriminated against]] before suffering the [[Genocide|systematic mass killing]] known as [[the Holocaust]] <ref name=":7" /> (see [[Porajmos]] for the genocide of the [[Romani people]]). The atrocities committed in the name of [[Aryanism|Aryanist]] supremacist ideologies have led academics to generally avoid the term 'Aryan', which has been replaced in most cases by '[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]', although the South Asian branch is still known as '[[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]]'.<ref name=":6" />


== Etymology ==
== Etymology ==
While the original meaning of Indo-Iranian ''*arya'' as a self-designator is uncontested, the origin of the word (and thus also its original meaning) remains uncertain.{{refn|group=note|There is no shortage of ideas, even in the present day. For a summary of the etymological problems involved, see {{harvnb|Siegert|1941–1942}}.}} The term ''Arya'' was first rendered into a modern European language in 1771 as ''Aryens'' by French Indologist [[Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron|Abraham-Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron]], who compared the Greek ''arioi'' with the [[Avestan]] ''airya'' and the country name ''[[Name of Iran|Iran]].'' A German translation of Anquetil-Duperron's work led to the introduction of the term ''Arier'' in 1776.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=20}} The [[Sanskrit]] ''ā́rya'' is rendered as 'noble' in [[William Jones (philologist)|William Jones]]' 1794 translation of the Indian ''[[Laws of Manu]]'',{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=20}} and the English ''Aryan'' (originally spelt ''Arian'') appeared a few decades later, first as an adjective in 1839, then as a noun in 1851.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Definition of Aryan|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Aryan|website=Merriam-Webster}}</ref> It is thought to be the self-designation used by all [[Indo-Iranian people]] in ancient times.<ref>William Hansen, [http://www.jfr.indiana.edu/review.php?id=404 ''Aryan Idols: Indo-European Mythology as Ideology and Science'' by Stefan Arvidsson (Book review) ] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180908092746/http://www.jfr.indiana.edu/review.php?id=404 |date=2018-09-08 }}, Journal of Folklore Research, 22 February 2007.</ref><ref>{{citation |first=Joan |last=Leopold |title=British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India, 1850–1870 |journal=The English Historical Review |volume=89 |number=352 |date=July 1974 |pages=578–603 |doi=10.1093/ehr/LXXXIX.CCCLII.578 |jstor=567427}}</ref>
[[File:Darius_I_the_Great's_inscription.jpg|thumb|One of the earliest epigraphically attested reference to the word ''arya'' occurs in the 6th-century BC [[Behistun inscription]], which describes itself as having been composed "in ''arya'' [language or script]" (§ 70). As is also the case for all other Old Iranian language usage, the ''arya'' of the inscription does not signify anything but "[[Etymology of Iran|Iranian]]".<ref name="Gershevitch2"><sup>''cf.''</sup> {{Cite book|last=Gershevitch|first=Ilya|title=Handbuch der Orientalistik, Literatur I|publisher=Brill|year=1968|location=Leiden|pages=1–31|chapter=Old Iranian Literature}}, p. 2.</ref>]]
The term ''Arya'' was first rendered into a modern European language in 1771 as ''Aryens'' by French Indologist [[Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron|Abraham-Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron]], who rightly compared the Greek ''arioi'' with the [[Avestan]] ''airya'' and the country name ''[[Name of Iran|Iran]].'' A German translation of Anquetil-Duperron's work led to the introduction of the term ''Arier'' in 1776.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=20}} The [[Sanskrit]] word ''ā́rya'' is rendered as 'noble' in [[William Jones (philologist)|William Jones]]' 1794 translation of the Indian ''[[Laws of Manu]]'',{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=20}} and the English ''Aryan'' (originally spelt ''Arian'') appeared a few decades later, first as an adjective in 1839, then as a noun in 1851.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Definition of Aryan|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Aryan|website=Merriam-Webster}}</ref>


=== Proto-Indo-European ===
=== Indo-Iranian ===
Indo-Iranian ''ar-'' is a syllable ambiguous in origin, from Indo-European ''ar-'', ''er-'', or ''or-''.<ref name="Bailey">{{citation|last=Bailey|first=Harold Walter|chapter=Arya|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|volume=2|year=1989|location=New York|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |chapter-url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/arya-an-ethnic-epithet-in-the-achaemenid-inscriptions-and-in-the-zoroastrian-avestan-tradition}}</ref> <!--Use more recent sources. The connection with the Celtic words is now generally accepted by scholars. See /etymology/ section--> The Indo-Iranian root [[wikt:Appendix:Proto-Indo-Iranian/arya-|''arya''-]] is probably derived from the reconstructed [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) word ''*h₂erós'' or ''*h₂eryós'', which means a 'member of one's own group', that is to say a 'peer' or a 'freeman'.<ref name="Laroche" /><ref name="Szemerényi" />{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}} Proposed cognates include:
The [[Sanskrit language|Sanskrit]] word ''ā́rya'' ([[wiktionary:आर्य|आर्य]]) was originally an ethnocultural term designating those who spoke [[Vedic Sanskrit]] and adhered to Vedic cultural norms (including religious rituals and poetry), in contrast to an outsider, or ''an-ā́rya'' ('non-Arya').{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|pp=4, 24}} By the time of the [[Buddha]] (5th–4th century BCE), it took the meaning of 'noble'.{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|p=4}} In [[Old Iranian languages]], the [[Avestan]] term ''airya'' ([[Old Persian]] ''ariya'') was likewise used as an ethnocultural self-designation by ancient [[Iranian peoples]], in contrast to an ''[[Aneran|an-airya]]'' ('non-Arya'). It designated those who belonged to the 'Aryan' (Iranian) ethnic stock, spoke the language and followed the religion of the 'Aryas'.<ref name=":5">{{harvnb|Bailey|1987|ps=: "It is used in the ''Avesta'' of members of an ethnic group and contrasts with other named groups (Tūirya, Sairima, Dāha, Sāinu or Sāini) and with the outer world of the ''An-airya'' 'non-Arya'."}}</ref><ref name="Gnoli">{{harvnb|Gnoli|2006|ps=: "Mid. Pers. ''ēr'' (plur. ''ērān''), just like Old Pers. ''ariya'' and Av. ''airya'', has an evident ethnic value, which is also present in the abstract term ''ērīh'', 'Iranian character, Iranianness'."}}</ref>
* Early PIE: ''*h₂erós'', a 'member of one's own group', in contrast to an outsider,{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
**[[Proto-Anatolian language|Anatolian]]: ''ʔor-o-'',<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kloekhorst|first=Alwin|title=Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon|date=2008|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-16092-7|pages=198|language=en}}</ref>
***[[Hittite language|Hittite]]: ''arā-'', 'member of one's own group, peer, friend',{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
***[[Lycian language|Lycian]]: ''arus-'', 'citizens';{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
**Classic PIE: ''*h₂eryós'',{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
***[[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Indo-Iranian]]: ''*arya-'', 'Aryan, [[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian']],{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}<ref name="Schmitt_Aryans1" />
****[[Old Indo-Aryan]]: ''árya-,'' 'Aryan, faithful to the Vedic religion'; ''ari-'', 'faithful, devoted person, kinsman'; ''aryá-'', 'kind, favourable, devoted',{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}<ref name="Schmitt_Aryans1" />
****[[Avestan]]: ''airya-'', 'Aryan', 'Iranian' in the larger sense;{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}<ref name="Schmitt_Aryans1" />
***[[Proto-Celtic language|Celtic]]: ''*aryo-'', 'freeman, noble',{{Sfn|Matasović|2009|p=43}}{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}
****[[Gaulish language|Gaulish]]: ''arios'', 'freeman, lord',{{Sfn|Matasović|2009|p=43}}{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}
****[[Old Irish]]: ''aire,'' 'freeman, noble, chief';{{Sfn|Matasović|2009|p=43}}{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
***[[Proto-Germanic language|Germanic]] ''*arjaz'', 'noble, distinguished, esteemed',''<ref name=":0" />''
****[[Old Norse]]: ''arjosteR'', 'foremost, most distinguished'.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Orel|first=Vladimir E.|title=A handbook of Germanic etymology|date=2003|publisher=Brill|isbn=1-4175-3642-X|location=Leiden|pages=23|oclc=56727400|author-link=Vladimir Orel}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Antonsen|first=Elmer H.|title=Runes and Germanic Linguistics|date=2002|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|isbn=978-3-11-017462-5|pages=127|language=en}}</ref>
The original PIE meaning had a clear emphasis on the "in-group status" as distinguished from that of outsiders, particularly those captured and incorporated into the group as slaves. In [[Anatolia]], the base word has come to emphasize personal relationship, whereas it took a more ethnic meaning in Indo-Iranian.{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}} The word ''*h₂er(y)ós'' itself may have come from the PIE root ''*h₂er-'', meaning 'to put together'.{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}{{sfn|Duchesne-Guillemin|1979|p=337|ps=: It thus seems that Ved. arya and Avest. airya are to be connected [...] with a Vedic homophone ''ari-'', ''aryá-'' 'righteous, loyal, devout', and with Indo-Iranian ''*ara-'' 'fitting, proper'.}} [[Oswald Szemerényi]] has also argued that it could be a Near-Eastern loanword from the [[Ugaritic]] ''ary'' ('kinsmen').<ref name="Szemerényi" />{{sfn|Arbeitman|1981|p=930}}


According to Bryant, no evidence for a Proto-Indo-European (as opposed to Indo-Iranian) ethnic name like "Aryan" has been found. The word was used by [[Herodotus]] in reference to the Iranian [[Medes]] whom he describes as the people who "were once universally known as Aryans".{{sfn|Briant|2002|p=180}}
These two terms derive from the reconstructed [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Proto-Indo-Iranian]] stem ''*arya''- or ''*āryo-'',<ref>{{harvnb|Szemerényi|1977|pp=125–146}}; {{harvnb|Watkins|1985|p=3}}; {{harvnb|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=304}}; {{harvnb|Fortson|2011|p=209}}</ref> which was probably the name used by the prehistoric [[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian peoples]] to designate themselves as an ethnocultural group.<ref name=":3">{{harvnb|Benveniste|1973|p=295|ps=: "''Arya'' ... is the common ancient designation of the 'Indo-Iranians'."}}</ref>{{Sfn|Gamkrelidze|Ivanov|1995|pp=657–658}}{{Sfn|Kuzmina|2007|p=456}} The term did not have any [[Race (human categorization)|racial]] connotation, which only emerged later in the works of 19th-century Western writers.{{Sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=60–63}}<ref name=":0"/>{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=408}} According to [[David W. Anthony]], "the ''[[Rigveda]]'' and ''[[Avesta]]'' agreed that the essence of their shared parental Indo-Iranian identity was linguistic and ritual, not racial. If a person sacrificed to the right gods in the right way using the correct forms of the traditional hymns and poems, that person was an Aryan."{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=408}}


=== In Sanskrit literature ===
=== Proto-Indo-European ===
In [[Sanskrit]] and related Indo-Aryan languages, ''ārya'' means "one who does noble deeds; a noble one". [[Āryāvarta]] ("abode of the ''ārya''s") is a common name for the northern [[Indian subcontinent]] in Sanskrit literature. ''[[Manusmṛti]]'' (2.22) gives the name to "the tract between the [[Himalayas|Himalaya]] and the [[Vindhya Range|Vindhya ranges]], from the Eastern Sea to the Western Sea".<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=J6AZAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA2 ''The [[Sacred Books of the East]]'', Volume 14], p. 2</ref> The title ''ārya'' was used with various modifications throughout the Indian Subcontinent. [[Kharavela]], the Emperor of Kalinga in second century BCE, is referred to as an ''ārya'' in the [[Hathigumpha inscription]]s of the [[Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves]] in [[Bhubaneswar]], [[Odisha]]. The [[Gurjara-Pratihara]] rulers in the 10th century were titled "[[Maharaja]]dhiraja of Āryāvarta".<ref>{{cite book|title=Al-Hind: Early medieval India and the expansion of Islam, 7th–11th centuries|first=André|last=Wink|publisher=BRILL|year=2002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g2m7_R5P2oAC&pg=PA284|page=284|isbn=0391041738}}</ref> Various Indian religions, chiefly [[Hinduism]], [[Jainism]] and [[Buddhism]], use the term ''ārya'' as an epithet of honour; a similar usage is found in the name of [[Arya Samaj]].
Since [[Adolphe Pictet]] (1799–1875), a number of scholars have proposed to derive the Indo-Iranian stem ''arya''- from the reconstructed [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] (PIE) term ''*h₂erós'' or ''*h₂eryós'', variously translated as 'member of one's own group, peer, freeman'; as 'host, guest; kinsman'; or as 'lord, ruler'.<ref name=":2">{{harvnb|Watkins|1985|p=3}}; {{harvnb|Gamkrelidze|Ivanov|1995|pp=657–658}}; {{harvnb|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}; {{harvnb|Anthony|2007|pp=92, 303}}</ref> However, the proposed Anatolian, Celtic and Germanic [[cognates]] are not universally accepted.<ref name="Delamarre">{{harvnb|Delamarre|2003|p=55|ps=: "Cette équation est cependant très controversée et de multiples tentatives pour expliquer indépendamment les formations celtiques et indo-iraniennes ont été produites : on a proposé entre autres de dériver le celtique ''ario''- de *''pṛrio''- [*''pṛhio''-, racine *''per(h)''- 'devant, en avant', d'où le sens dérivé 'qui est en avant, éminent' ; on pourrait expliquer alors le NP ''Ario-uistus'' comme "Celui qui connaît (/ est connu) en avance", < *''ario-wid-to''-, ''LG 60''. L'absence de corrélats indiscutables dans d'autres langues i.-e. (grec ''ari''-, ''eri''-, hitt. ''arawa'', runique ''arjosteR'' etc.) rend l'équation incertaine. Un fait d'ordre mythologique, la comparaison entre l'Irlandais ''Eremon'' et l'Indien ''Aryaman'', figures dotées de fonctions sociales similaires, renforcerait cependant la validité de la comparaison (*''Ario-men''-), cf. G. Dumézil ''Le troisième souverain'' et J. Puhvel ''Analecta'' 322-330."}}</ref><ref name=":02">{{harvnb|Matasović|2009|p=43|ps=: "A different etymology (e.g. in Meid 2005: 146) relates these Celtic words to PIE *''prh₃''- 'first' (Skt. ''pūrvá''- etc.), but this is less convincing because there are no traces of the laryngeal in the purported Celtic reflexes (*''prh₃yo''- would have probably given PCelt. *''frāyo''-)."}}</ref> In any case, the Indo-Iranian ethnic connotation is absent from the other Indo-European languages, which rather conceived the possible cognates of *''arya''- as a social status, and there is no evidence that [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] speakers had a term to refer to themselves as '[[Proto-Indo-Europeans]]'.{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}{{sfn|Fortson|2011|p=209}}


The usage of self-designation ''Arya'' was not limited to north India. The south indian emperor of Chola kingdom [[Rajendra Chola I]] gives himself the title ''Aryaputra'' (son of arya).
* Early PIE: ''*h₂erós'',{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
** [[Proto-Anatolian language|Anatolian]]: *''ʔor-o-'', 'peer, freeman',{{sfn|Kloekhorst|2008|p=198}}
*** [[Hittite language|Hittite]]: ''arā-'', 'comrade, peer, companion, friend'; ''arāwa-'', 'free from'; ''arawan(n)i-'', 'free, freeman (not being slave)'; ''natta ara'', 'not proper to the community',{{Sfn|Gamkrelidze|Ivanov|1995|pp=657–658}}{{snf|Mallory|Adams|1997|page=213}}{{sfn|Kloekhorst|2008|p=198}}
*** [[Lycian language|Lycian]]: ''arus-'', 'citizens'; ''arawa''-, 'freedom',{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}{{sfn|Kloekhorst|2008|p=198}}
** Late PIE: ''*h₂eryós'',{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
*** [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Indo-Iranian]]: ''*arya-'', 'Aryan, [[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian']],{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
**** [[Old Indo-Aryan]]: ''árya-'', 'Aryan, faithful to the Vedic religion'; ''aryá-'', 'kind, favourable, true, devoted'; ''arí-'', 'faithful; devoted person, ± kinsman';{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
**** [[Proto-Iranian language|Iranian]]: *''arya-'', 'Aryan, Iranian',{{Sfn|Mayrhofer|1992|pp=174–175}}
***** [[Avestan]]: ''airya''- (<small>pl.</small> ''aire''), 'Aryan, Iranian',{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006|p=}}{{snf|Mallory|Adams|2006|page=266}}
***** [[Old Persian]]: ''ariya-'', 'Aryan, Iranian',{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{Sfn|Mayrhofer|1992|pp=174–175}}''{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}''
*** [[Proto-Celtic language|Celtic]]: ''*aryo-'', 'freeman; noble'; or perhaps from *''prio-'' ('first > prominent, eminent'),<ref>{{harvnb|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213|ps=: "OIr ''aire'' 'freeman (whether commoner or noble), noble (as distinct from commoner)' (the latter meaning may be rather from *''pṛios'', a derivative of 'first')."}}</ref><ref name="Delamarre"/><ref name=":02"/>
**** [[Gaulish language|Gaulish]]: ''ario-'', 'freeman, lord; foremost',{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}{{Sfn|Matasović|2009|p=43}}
**** [[Old Irish]]: ''aire,'' 'freeman, chief; noble';{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}{{Sfn|Matasović|2009|p=43}}
*** [[Proto-Germanic language|Germanic]] ''*arjaz'', 'noble, distinguished, esteemed',{{sfn|Orel|2003|p=23}}
**** [[Old Norse]]: ''arjosteʀ'', 'foremost, most distinguished'.{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}{{sfn|Orel|2003|p=23}}<ref>{{Cite book|last=Antonsen|first=Elmer H.|title=Runes and Germanic Linguistics|date=2002|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|isbn=978-3-11-017462-5|pages=127}}</ref>


In ''[[Ramayana]]'' and ''[[Mahabharata]]'', ''ārya'' is used as an honorific for many characters including [[Hanuman]].
The term ''*h₂er(y)ós'' may derive from the PIE verbal [[Root (linguistics)|root]] ''*h₂er-'', meaning 'to put together'.{{sfn|Duchesne-Guillemin|1979|p=337}}{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}} [[Oswald Szemerényi]] has also argued that the stem could be a Near-Eastern loanword from the [[Ugaritic]] ''ary'' ('kinsmen'),{{sfn|Szemerényi|1977|pp=125–146}} although [[J. P. Mallory]] and [[Douglas Q. Adams]] find this proposition "hardly compelling".{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}} According to them, the original PIE meaning had a clear emphasis on the in-group status of the "freemen" as distinguished from that of outsiders, particularly those captured and incorporated into the group as slaves. In [[Anatolian languages|Anatolia]], the base word has come to emphasize personal relationship, whereas it took a more ethnic meaning among [[Indo-Iranians]], presumably because most of the unfree (*''anarya'') who lived among them were captives from other ethnic groups.{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213}}
[[File:Centum Satem map.png|thumb|300px|right|Indo-European language throughout Europe and the Middle East.]]


=== In Avesta and Persian literature ===
== Historical usage ==
<!--These sources get repeatedly removed from Arya and the usage in Iranian languages is very different than Indian.-->
Unlike the several meanings connected with ''ārya-'' in [[Old Indo-Aryan]], the [[Old Persian]] term only has an ethnic meaning.<ref>G. Gnoli,"Iranic Identity as a Historical Problem: the Beginnings of a National Awareness under the Achaemenians", in The East and the Meaning of History. International Conference (23–27 November 1992), Roma, 1994, pp. 147–67. [http://www.google.com/search?q=Emile+Benveniste+is+thus+quite+right+to+assert+that%2C+unlike+the+various+terms+connected+with+the+Aryan+arya-+in+Old+Indian%2C+the+Old+Iranian+arya-+is+documented+solely+as+an+ethnic&tbs=bks%3A1&tbo=1]</ref><ref name="iranica.com">G. Gnoli, "IRANIAN IDENTITY ii. PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD" in ''Encyclopædia Iranica''. Online accessed in 2010 at [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/iranian-identity-ii-pre-islamic-period]</ref> That is in contrast to Indo-Aryan usage, in which several secondary meanings evolved, the meaning of ''ar-'' as a self-identifier is preserved in Iranian usage, hence [[Iran (word)|the word "Iran"]]. The ''airya'' meant "Iranian", and ''[[aniran|anairya]]'' <ref name="Bailey"/><ref name="Schmitt"/> meant "non-Iranian". ''Arya'' may also be found as an ethnonym in Iranian languages, e.g., Alan and [[Persian language|Persian]] ''Iran'' and [[Ossetian language|Ossetian]] ''Ir/Iron''<ref name="Schmitt"/> The name is itself equivalent to Aryan, where Iran means "land of the Aryans,"<ref name="Bailey"/><ref name="iranica.com"/><ref name="Schmitt">R. Schmitt, "Aryans" in Encyclopædia Iranica:
Excerpt:"The name "Aryan" (OInd. āˊrya-, Ir. *arya- [with short a-], in Old Pers. ariya-, Av. airiia-, etc.) is the self designation of the peoples of Ancient India and Ancient Iran who spoke Aryan languages, in contrast to the "non-Aryan" peoples of those "Aryan" countries (cf. OInd. an-āˊrya-, Av. an-airiia-, etc.), and lives on in ethnic names like Alan (Lat. Alani, NPers. Īrān, Oss. Ir and Iron). Also accessed online: [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/aryans] in May 2010</ref><ref name="Bailey2">H.W. Bailey, "Arya" in Encyclopædia Iranica. Excerpt: "ARYA an ethnic epithet in the Achaemenid inscriptions and in the Zoroastrian Avestan tradition. [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/arya-an-ethnic-epithet-in-the-achaemenid-inscriptions-and-in-the-zoroastrian-avestan-tradition] Also accessed online in May, 2010.</ref><ref name="Language, Gherardo Gnoli 2002">The "Aryan" Language, Gherardo Gnoli, Instituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente, Roma, 2002.</ref><ref name="ReferenceB">D.N. Mackenzie, "ĒRĀN, ĒRĀNŠAHR" in Encyclopædia Iranica. Accessed here in 2010: [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/eran-eransah] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170313095654/http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/eran-eransah |date=2017-03-13 }}</ref><ref name="Dalby, Andrew 2004">Dalby, Andrew (2004), ''Dictionary of Languages'', Bloomsbury, {{ISBN|0-7475-7683-1}}</ref><ref>[http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/er-er-mazdesn G. Gnoli, "ĒR, ĒR MAZDĒSN"] in ''Encyclopædia Iranica''</ref> and has been in use since [[Sassanid]] times.<ref name="ReferenceB"/><ref name="Dalby, Andrew 2004"/>


The [[Avesta]] clearly uses airya/airyan as an ethnic name (Vd. 1; Yt. 13.143-44, etc.), where it appears in expressions such as airyāfi; daiŋˊhāvō "Iranian lands, peoples", airyō.šayanəm "land inhabited by Iranians", and airyanəm vaējō vaŋhuyāfi; dāityayāfi; "Iranian stretch of the good Dāityā", the river Oxus, the modern Āmū Daryā.<ref name="iranica.com"/> [[Old Persian]] sources also use this term for [[Iranian peoples|Iranians]]. [[Old Persian]] which is a testament to the antiquity of the Persian language and which is related to most of the languages/dialects spoken in [[Iran]] including modern [[Persian language|Persian]], the [[Kurdish languages]], Balochi, and [[Gilaki language|Gilaki]] makes it clear that Iranians referred to themselves as Arya.
=== Proto-Indo-Iranians ===
The term *''arya'' was used by [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|Proto-Indo-Iranian]] speakers to designate themselves as an ethnocultural group, encompassing those who spoke the language and followed the religion of the ''Aryas'' ([[Indo-Iranians]])'','' as distinguished from the nearby outsiders known as the *''Anarya'' ('non-Arya').<ref name=":4">{{harvnb|Schmitt|1987|ps=: "The name ''Aryan'' is the self designation of the peoples of Ancient India and Ancient Iran who spoke Aryan languages, in contrast to the 'non-Aryan' peoples of those 'Aryan' countries."}}</ref>{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=408}}{{Sfn|Kuzmina|2007|p=456}} Indo-Iranians (''Aryas'') are generally associated with the [[Sintashta culture]] (2100–1800 BC), named after the [[Sintashta|Sintashta archaeological site]] in [[Chelyabinsk Oblast]], Russia.{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=408}}{{Sfn|Kuzmina|2007|p=451}} Linguistic evidence show that Proto-Indo-Iranian (Proto-Aryan) speakers dwelled in the [[Eurasian steppe]], south of early [[Uralic languages|Uralic tribes]]; the stem *''arya''- was notably borrowed into the Pre-[[Sámi languages|Saami language]] as *''orja''-, at the origin of ''oarji'' ('southwest') and ''årjel'' ('Southerner'). The loanword took the meaning 'slave' in other [[Finno-Permic languages]], suggesting conflictual relations between Indo-Iranian and Uralic peoples in prehistoric times.{{Sfn|Rédei|1986|p=54}}{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=385}}<ref>{{Cite book|last=Koivulehto|first=Jorma|title=Early contacts between Uralic and Indo-European|publisher=Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne|year=2001|isbn=978-9525150599|editor-last=Carpelan|editor-first=Christian|pages=248|chapter=The earliest contacts between Indo-European and Uralic speakers|author-link=Jorma Koivulehto}}</ref>


The term "Airya/Airyan" appears in the royal Old Persian inscriptions in three different contexts:
The stem is also found in the Indo-Iranian god *''Aryaman,'' translated as 'Arya-spirited', 'Aryanness', or 'Aryanhood'; he was known in Vedic Sanskrit as ''[[Aryaman]]'' and in Avestan as ''[[Airyaman]]''.{{Sfn|Benveniste|1973|p=303}}{{sfn|Mallory|1989|p=130}}{{sfn|West|2007|pp=142–143}} The deity was in charge of welfare and the community, and connected with the institution of marriage.{{Sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=375}}{{sfn|West|2007|pp=142–143}} Through marital ceremonies, one of the functions of ''Aryaman'' was to assimilate women from other tribes to the host community.{{sfn|Benveniste|1973|p=72}} If the Irish heroes ''[[Érimón]]'' and [[Eochu Airem|''Airem'']] and the Gaulish personal name ''Ariomanus'' are also [[cognate]]s (i.e. linguistic siblings sharing a common origin), a deity of Proto-Indo-European origin named ''*h₂eryo-men'' may also be posited.{{Sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=375}}{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}{{sfn|West|2007|pp=142–143}}


# As the name of the language of the Old Persian version of the inscription of [[Darius I]] in [[Behistun]]
=== Ancient India ===
# As the ethnic background of Darius I in inscriptions at [[Naqsh-e-Rostam]] and [[Susa]] (Dna, Dse) and [[Xerxes I]] in the inscription from [[Persepolis]] (Xph)
[[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|The approximate extent of ''Āryāvarta'' during the late [[Vedic period]] (ca. 1100-500 BCE). ''Aryavarta'' was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while [[Greater Magadha]] in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010}}]]
# As the definition of the God of the Aryans, [[Ahura Mazda|Ahura Mazdā]], in the [[Elamite language]] version of the Behistun inscription.<ref name="Bailey"/><ref name="iranica.com"/><ref name="Schmitt"/>
[[Vedic Sanskrit]] speakers viewed the term ''ā́rya'' as a religious–linguistic category, referring to those who spoke the Sanskrit language and adhered to Vedic cultural norms, especially those who worshipped the Vedic gods ([[Indra]] and [[Agni]] in particular), took part in the sacrifices and festivals, and practiced the art of poetry.<ref>{{harvnb|Kuiper|1991|p=96}}; {{harvnb|Witzel|2001|pp=4, 24}}; {{harvnb|Bryant|2001|p=61}}; {{harvnb|Anthony|2007|p=11}}</ref>


For example in the Dna and Dse Darius and Xerxes describe themselves as "An Achaemenian, A Persian son of a Persian and an Aryan, of Aryan stock".<ref name="ReferenceA">R.G. Kent. Old Persian. Grammar, texts, lexicon. 2nd ed., New Haven, Conn.</ref> Although Darius the Great called his language the Aryan language,<ref name="ReferenceA"/> modern scholars refer to it as [[Old Persian]]<ref name="ReferenceA"/> because it is the ancestor of modern [[Persian language]].<ref>Professor [[Gilbert Lazard]]: "The language known as New Persian, which usually is called at this period (early Islamic times) by the name of Dari or Parsi-Dari, can be classified linguistically as a continuation of Middle Persian, the official religious and literary language of Sassanian Iran, itself a continuation of Old Persian, the language of the Achaemenids. Unlike the other languages and dialects, ancient and modern, of the Iranian group such as Avestan, Parthian, Soghdian, Kurdish, Balochi, Pashto, etc., Old Middle and New Persian represent one and the same language at three states of its history. It had its origin in Fars (the true Persian country from the historical point of view) and is differentiated by dialectical features, still easily recognizable from the dialect prevailing in north-western and eastern Iran" in Lazard, Gilbert 1975, "The Rise of the New Persian Language" in Frye, R. N., ''The Cambridge History of Iran'', Vol. 4, pp. 595–632, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.</ref>
The 'non-Aryas' designated primarily those who were not able to speak the ''āryā'' language correctly, the ''[[Mleccha]]'' or ''Mṛdhravāc.''{{Sfn|Thapar|2019|p=vii}} However, ''āryā'' is used only once in the [[Vedas]] to designate the language of the texts, the Vedic area being defined in the ''[[Aranyaka|Kauṣītaki Āraṇyaka]]'' as that where the ''āryā vāc'' ('Ārya speech') is spoken.{{Sfn|Thapar|2019|p=2}} Some 35 names of Vedic tribes, chiefs and poets mentioned in the ''[[Rigveda]]'' were of 'non-Aryan' origin, demonstrating that [[cultural assimilation]] to the ''ā́rya'' community was possible, and/or that some 'Aryan' families chose to give 'non-Aryan' names to their newborns.{{Sfn|Kuiper|1991|pp=6–8, 96|p=}}{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=11}}{{Sfn|Kuzmina|2007|p=453}} In the words of Indologist [[Michael Witzel]], the term ''ārya'' "does not mean a particular ''people'' or even a particular 'racial' group but all those who had joined the tribes speaking Vedic Sanskrit and adhering to their cultural norms (such as ritual, poetry, etc.)".{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|p=24}}


The Old Persian and [[Avestan language|Avestan]] evidence is confirmed by the Greek sources.<ref name="iranica.com"/> Herodotus in his Histories remarks about the Iranian Medes that: "These Medes were called anciently by all people Arians; " (7.62).<ref name="Bailey"/><ref name="iranica.com"/><ref name="Schmitt"/> In Armenian sources, the Parthians, Medes and Persians are collectively referred to as Aryans.<ref>R.W. Thomson. History of Armenians by Moses Khorenat'si. Harvard University Press, 1978. Pg 118, pg 166</ref> Eudemus of Rhodes apud Damascius (Dubitationes et solutiones in Platonis Parmenidem 125 bis) refers to "the Magi and all those of Iranian (áreion) lineage"; Diodorus Siculus (1.94.2) considers [[Zoroaster]] (Zathraustēs) as one of the Arianoi.<ref name="iranica.com"/>
In later Indian texts and Buddhist sources, ''ā́rya'' took the meaning of 'noble', such as in the terms ''Āryadésa''- ('noble land') for India, ''Ārya-bhāṣā''- ('noble language') for Sanskrit, or ''āryaka''- ('honoured man'), which gave the [[Pali]] ''ayyaka''- ('grandfather').{{sfn|Bailey|1987}} The term came to incorporate the idea of a high social status, but was also used as an honorific for the [[Brahman]]a or the Buddhist monks. Parallelly, the Mleccha acquired additional meanings that referred to people of lower castes or aliens.{{Sfn|Thapar|2019|p=vii}}


[[Strabo]], in his ''Geography'', mentions the unity of [[Medes]], Persians, Bactrians and [[Sogdians]]:<ref name="Language, Gherardo Gnoli 2002"/>{{quotation|The name of'' [[Ariana]] ''is further extended to a part of [[Persia]] and of Media, as also to the [[Bactrians]] and [[Sogdians]] on the north; for these speak approximately the same language, with but slight variations.|Geography, 15.8}}
=== Ancient Iran ===
In the words of scholar [[Gherardo Gnoli]], the Old Iranian ''airya'' ([[Avestan]]) and ''ariya'' ([[Old Persian]]) were collective terms denoting the "peoples who were aware of belonging to the one ethnic stock, speaking a common language, and having a religious tradition that centred on the cult of [[Ahura Mazda|Ahura Mazdā]]", in contrast to the 'non-Aryas', who are called ''anairya'' in [[Avestan]], ''anaryān'' in [[Parthian language|Parthian]], and ''[[anērān]]'' in [[Middle Persian]].{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006}}


The trilingual inscription erected by Shapur's command gives us a more clear description. The languages used are [[Parthian language|Parthian]], [[Middle Persian]] and Greek. In Greek the inscription says: "ego ... tou Arianon ethnous despotes eimi" which translates to "I am the king of the Aryans". In the Middle Persian Shapour says: "I am the Lord of the EranShahr" and in Parthian he says: "I am the Lord of AryanShahr".<ref name="ReferenceB"/><ref>MacKenzie D.N. Corpus inscriptionum Iranicarum Part. 2., inscription of the Seleucid and Parthian periods of Eastern Iran and Central Asia. Vol. 2. Parthian, London, P. Lund, Humphries 1976–2001</ref>
By the late 6th–early 5th century BC, the [[Achaemenid Empire|Achaemenid]] king [[Darius the Great]] and his son [[Xerxes I]] described themselves as ''ariya'' ('Arya') and ''ariya čiça'' ('of Aryan origin'). In the [[Behistun Inscription|Behistun inscription]], authored by Darius during his reign (522 – 486 BC), the [[Old Persian language]] is called ''ariya'', and the [[Elamite language|Elamite]] version of the inscription portrays the [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrian]] deity [[Ahura Mazda|Ahura Mazdā]] as the "god of the Aryas" (''ura-masda naap harriia-naum'').{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006}} In the sacred ''[[Avesta]]'' scriptures, the stem can also be found in poetic expressions such as the 'glory of the Aryas' (''airyanąm xᵛarənō'' ), the 'most swift-arrowed of the Aryas' (''xšviwi išvatəmō airyanąm''), associated with the mythical archer [[Arash the Archer|Ǝrəxša]], or the 'hero of the Aryas' (''arša airyanąm''), attached to Kavi Haosravō.{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}
{{multiple image
| align = right
| total_width = 350
| header = Darius at Behistun
| image1 = Behistun_relief_Darius_and_Gaumata.jpg
| caption1 = Full figure of Darius trampling rival [[Gaumata]]
| image2 = Behistun Darius the Great.jpg
| caption2 = Head of Darius with crenellated crown
}}


The [[Bactrian language]] (a Middle Iranian language) inscription of [[Kanishka the Great]], the founder of the [[Kushan Empire]] at Rabatak, which was discovered in 1993 in an unexcavated site in the Afghanistan province of [[Baghlan]], clearly refers to this Eastern Iranian language as Arya.<ref>N. Sims-Williams, "Further notes on the Bactrian inscription of Rabatak, with the Appendix on the name of Kujula Kadphises and VimTatku in Chinese". ''Proceedings of the Third European Conference of Iranian Studies'' (Cambridge, September 1995). Part 1: Old and Middle Iranian Studies, N. Sims-Williams, ed. Wiesbaden, pp 79–92</ref><ref>The "Aryan" Language, Gherardo Gnoli, Instituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente, Roma, 2002</ref>
The self-identifier was inherited in ethnic names such as the [[Parthian language|Parthian]] ''Ary'' (<small>pl.</small> ''Aryān''), the [[Middle Persian]] ''Ēr'' (<small>pl.</small> ''Ēran''), or the [[New Persian]] ''Irāni'' (<small>pl.</small> ''Irāniyān'').<ref name="Bailey3">{{harvnb|Bailey|1987|ps=: "In the inscription of Šāpūr I on the Kaʿba-ye Zardošt (ŠKZ), Parth. ''ʾryʾn W ʾnʾryʾn'' (''aryān ut anaryān''), Mid. Pers. ''ʾyrʾn W ʾnyrʾn'' (''ērān ut anērān''; cf. Armenian ''eran eut aneran'') comprises the inhabitants of all the known lands ... In the singular Parth. ''ʾry'', Mid. Pers. ''ʾyly'', Greek ''arian'' occurs in a title: ''ʾry mzdyzn nrysḥw MLKʾ'', *''ary mazdēzn Narēsahv šāh'' (Parth. ŠKZ 19); ''ʾyly mzdysn nrsḥy MLKʾ'' (Mid. Pers. version 24), Greek ''arian masdaasnou'' ... New Persian has ''ērān'' (western, ''īrān''), ''ērān-šahr''. In the Caucasus, Ossetic has Digoron ''erä'', ''irä'', Iron ''ir'', with Dig. ''iriston'', Iron ''iryston'' (the i-umlaut modifying the vowel  ''a''-, but leaving the -''r''- untouched), [and] the ancestral ''Alān''."}}</ref>{{Sfn|Mayrhofer|1992|pp=174–175}} The [[Scythian languages|Scythian]] branch has ''[[Alans|Alān]]'' or *''Allān'' (from *''Aryāna''; modern ''Allon''), ''[[Rhoxolani|Rhoxolāni]]'' ('Bright Alans'), ''Alanorsoi'' ('White Alans'), and possibly the modern [[Ossetian language|Ossetian]] ''Ir'' (<small>adj.</small> ''[[Iron people|Iron]]''), spelled ''Irä'' or ''Erä'' in the [[Digorian dialect]].<ref name="Bailey3"/><ref name="Mallory">{{harvnb|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=213|ps=: "Iran ''Alani'' (< *''aryana'') (the name of an Iranian group whose descendants are the Ossetes, one of whose subdivisions is the ''Iron'' [< *''aryana''-)), *''aryanam'' (<small>pl.</small>) ‘of the Aryans’ (> MPers ''Iran'')."}}</ref><ref name="Alemany">{{harvnb|Alemany|2000|pp=3–4, 8|ps=: "Nowadays, however, only two possibilities are admitted as regards [the etymology of ''Alān''], both closely related: (a) the adjective *''aryāna''- and (b) the <small>pl.</small> *''aryānām''; in both cases the underlying OIran. ajective *''arya''- 'Aryan' is found. It is worth mentioning that although it is not possible to give an unequivocal option because both forms produce the same phonetic result, most researchers tend to favour the derivative *''aryāna''-, because it has a more appropriate semantic value ... The ethnic name *''arya''- underlying in the name of the Alans has been linked to the Av. ''Airiianəm Vaēǰō'' 'the Aryan plain'."}}</ref> The [[Rabatak inscription]], written in the [[Bactrian language]] in the 2nd century CE, likewise uses the term ''ariao'' for 'Iranian'.{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006}} The name ''Arizantoi'', listed by Greek historian [[Herodotus]] as one of the six tribes composing the Iranian [[Medes]], is derived from the Old Iranian *''arya-zantu''- ('having Aryan lineage').<ref>{{cite book|last=Brunner|first=C. J.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|volume=2|chapter=Arizantoi|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/arizantoi-one-of-the-six-tribes-of-the-median-nation-as-listed-by-herodotus}}</ref> Herodotus also mentions that the Medes once called themselves ''Arioi'', and [[Strabo]] locates the land of ''Arianē'' between Persia and India. Other occurrences include the Greek ''áreion'' ([[Damascius]]), ''Arianoi'' ([[Diodorus Siculus]]) and ''arian'' (<small>pl.</small> ''arianōn''; [[Sasanian period]]), as well as the Armenian expression ''ari'' ([[Agathangelos]]), meaning 'Iranian'.{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006}}
In the post-Islamic era one can still see a clear usage of the term Aryan (Iran) in the work of the 10th-century historian [[Hamzah al-Isfahani]]. In his famous book "The History of Prophets and Kings", al-Isfahani writes, "Aryan which is also called [[Fars Province|Pars]] is in the middle of these countries and these six countries surround it because the South East is in the hands China, the North of the Turks, the middle South is India, the middle North is Rome, and the South West and the North West is the [[Sudan]] and Berber lands".<ref>Hamza Isfahani, Tarikh Payaambaraan o Shaahaan, translated by Jaf'ar Shu'ar, Tehran: Intishaaraat Amir Kabir, 1988.</ref> All this evidence shows that the name arya "Iranian" was a collective definition, denoting peoples (Geiger, pp.&nbsp;167 f.; Schmitt, 1978, p.&nbsp;31) who were aware of belonging to the one ethnic stock, speaking a common language, and having a religious tradition that centered on the cult of Ahura Mazdā.<ref name="iranica.com"/>


In [[Iranian languages]], the original self-identifier lives on in ethnic names like "[[Alans]]", "[[Iron dialect|Iron]]".<ref name="Schmitt"/> Similarly, [[Name of Iran|The word ''Iran'']] is the Persian word for land/place of the Aryan.<ref name="ReferenceC">Wiesehofer, Joseph ''Ancient Persia'' New York:1996 I.B. Tauris</ref>
Until the demise of the [[Parthian Empire]] (247 BC–224 AD), the Iranian identity was essentially defined as cultural and religious. Following conflicts between [[Manichaeism|Manichean]] universalism and [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrian]] nationalism during the 3rd century CE, however, traditionalistic and nationalistic movements eventually took the upper hand during the [[Sasanian Empire|Sasanian period]], and the Iranian identity (''ērīh'') came to assume a definite political value. Among Iranians (''ērān''), one ethnic group in particular, the [[Persians]], were placed at the centre of the ''Ērān-šahr'' ('Kingdom of the Iranians') ruled by the ''šāhān-šāh ērān ud anērān'' ('King of Kings of the Iranians and non-Iranians').{{Sfn|Gnoli|2006}}


=== In Latin literature ===
Ethical and ethnic meanings may also intertwine, for instance in the use of ''anēr'' ('non-Iranian') as a synonymous of 'evil' in ''anērīh ī hrōmāyīkān'' ("the evil conduct of the Romans, i.e. Byzantines"), or in the association of ''ēr'' ('Iranian') with good birth (''hutōhmaktom ēr martōm'', 'the best-born Arya man') and the use of ''ērīh'' ('Iranianness') to mean 'nobility' against "labor and burdens from poverty" in the 10th-century ''[[Dēnkard]]''.{{sfn|Bailey|1987}} The Indian opposition between ''ārya''- ('noble') and ''dāsá''- ('stranger, slave, enemy') is however absent from the Iranian tradition.{{sfn|Bailey|1987}} According to linguist [[Émile Benveniste]], the root ''*das-'' may have been used exclusively as a collective name by Iranian peoples: "If the word referred at first to Iranian society, the name by which this enemy people called themselves collectively took on a hostile connotation and became for the Aryas of India the term for an inferior and barbarous people."{{sfn|Benveniste|1973|pp=259–260}}
The word Arianus was used to designate Ariana,<ref>{{cite book|title=The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology|page=162|publisher=Taylor & Francis, Limited|year=1881}}</ref> the area comprising Afghanistan, Iran, North-western India and Pakistan.<ref>{{cite book|title=Udayana|quote=whole of Ariana (North-western India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran)|first=Udai|last=Arora|publisher=Anamika Pub & Distributors|year=2007|isbn=9788179751688}}</ref> In 1601, [[Philemon Holland]] used 'Arianes' in his translation of the Latin Arianus to designate the inhabitants of Ariana. This was the first use of the form ''Arian'' verbatim in the English language.<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&search=arian&searchmode=none Online Etymology Dictionary]</ref><ref>Robert K. Barnhart, Chambers Dictionary of Etymology pg. 54</ref><ref name="OED">{{citation|editor-last=Simpson|editor-first=John Andrew|editor2-last=Weiner|editor2-first=Edmund S. C.|chapter=Aryan, Arian|title=Oxford English Dictionary|volume=I|edition=2nd|year=1989|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=0-19-861213-3|page=[https://archive.org/details/oxfordenglishdic01oxfo/page/672 672]|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordenglishdic01oxfo/page/672}}</ref> In 1844 James Cowles Prichard first designated both the Indians and the Iranians "Arians" under the false assumption that the Iranians as well as the Indians self-designated themselves ''Aria''. The Iranians did use the form ''Airya'' as a designation for the "Aryans," but Prichard had mistaken ''Aria'' (deriving from OPer. Haravia) as a designation of the "Aryans" and associated the ''Aria'' with the place-name ''Ariana'' (Av. Airyana), the homeland of the Aryans.<ref>James ''Cowles Prichard'', Researches Into the Physical History of Mankid, Vol. 4 pg. 33</ref> The form ''Aria'' as a designation of the "Aryans" was, however, only preserved in the language of the Indo-Aryans.


== Usage ==
=== Place names ===
In ancient [[Sanskrit literature]], the term ''[[Āryāvarta]]'' (आर्यावर्त, the 'abode of the Aryas') was the name given to the cradle of the [[Indo-Aryan people|Indo-Aryan]] culture in northern India. The ''[[Manusmriti|Manusmṛiti]]'' locates ''Āryāvarta'' in "the tract between the [[Himalaya]] and the [[Vindhya]] ranges, from the Eastern ([[Bay of Bengal]]) to the Western Sea ([[Arabian Sea]])".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cook|first=Michael|title=Ancient Religions, Modern Politics: The Islamic Case in Comparative Perspective|date=2016|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-17334-4|author-link=Michael Cook (historian)|quote="Aryavarta ... is defined by Manu as extending from the Himalayas in the north to the [[Vindhyas]] of Central India in the south and from the sea in the west to the sea in the east."}}</ref>


=== South Asia ===
The stem ''airya-'' also appears in ''[[Airyanem Vaejah|Airyanəm Waēǰō]]'' (the 'stretch of the Aryas' or the 'Aryan plain'), which is described in the ''Avesta'' as the mythical homeland of the early Iranians, said to have been created as "the first and best of places and habitations" by the god [[Ahura Mazdā]]. It was referred to in [[Manichean Sogdian]] as ''ʾryʾn wyžn'' (''Aryān Wēžan''), and in [[Old Persian]] as ''*Aryānām Waiǰah'', which gave the [[Middle Persian]] ''Ērān-wēž'', said to be the region where the first cattle were created and where [[Zaratustra|Zaraθuštra]] first revealed the Good Religion.{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{sfn|MacKenzie|1998b}} The [[Sasanian Empire]], officially named ''Ērān-šahr'' ('Kingdom of the Iranians'; from Old Persian *''Aryānām Xšaθram''),{{Sfn|Alemany|2000|p=3}} could also be referred to by the abbreviated form ''Ērān'', as distinguished from the Roman West known as ''Anērān.'' The western variant ''Īrān'', abbreviated from ''Īrān-šahr'', is at the origin of the English country name [[Name of Iran|''Iran'']].{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{sfn|MacKenzie|1998a}}
[[File:Late Vedic Culture (1100-500 BCE).png|thumb|300px|The approximate extent of ''Āryāvarta'' during the late [[Vedic period]] (ca. 1100–500 BCE). ''Aryavarta'' was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while [[Greater Magadha]] in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2007}}{{sfn|Samuel|2010}}]]


The [[Sanskrit language|Sanskrit]] term ''ā́rya-'' ([[wikt:आर्य|आर्य]]){{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}} was originally used to designate those who worshipped the [[Vedic mythology|Vedic]] deities (especially [[Indra]]) and followed Vedic culture (e.g. the performance of sacrifice, [[Yajna]]).<ref name="OED2">{{cite web|title=Definition of Aryan|url=http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50012669|website=Oxford English Dictionary}}</ref><ref name="Encyclopaedic dictionary of Vedic terms, Volume 1 By Swami Parmeshwaranand">Encyclopaedic dictionary of Vedic terms, Volume 1 By Swami Parmeshwaranand, pages 120 to 128 [https://books.google.com/books?id=iJbgzl9JGdYC&pg=PP7&dq=Encyclopaedic+dictionary+of+Vedic+terms,+Volume+1+By+Parmeshwaranand+%28Swami.%29&hl=fr&ei=xYs9TOKFDtiG4ga_grTGAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> In early [[Vedas|Vedic]] literature, the term ''[[Āryāvarta]]'' (आर्यावर्त, 'abode of the Aryans') was the name given to northern India, where the [[Indo-Aryan people|Indo-Aryan]] culture was based. The ''[[Manusmriti|Manusmṛiti]]'' (2.22) locates ''Āryāvarta'' in "the tract between the [[Himalaya]] and the [[Vindhya]] ranges, from the Eastern (Bay of Bengal) to the Western Sea (Arabian Sea)".<ref name="Gopal 1990 70" /><ref>Michael Cook (2014), ''Ancient Religions, Modern Politics: The Islamic Case in Comparative Perspective'', Princeton University Press, p.68: "Aryavarta [...] is defined by Manu as extending from the Himalayas in the north to the [[Vindhyas]] of Central India in the south and from the sea in the west to the sea in the east."</ref>
''[[Alania]]'', the name of the medieval kingdom of the [[Alans]], derives from a dialectal variant of the Old Iranian stem *''Aryāna-'', which is also linked to the mythical ''[[Airyanem Vaejah|Airyanem Waēǰō]]''.<ref>{{harvnb|Benveniste|1973|p=300|ps=: "The name of ''Alani'' goes back to *''Aryana''-, which is yet another form of the ancient ''ārya''."}}</ref><ref name="Mallory" /><ref name="Alemany"/> Besides the ''ala''- development, *''air-y''- may have turned into the stem ''ir-y-'' via an [[i-mutation]] in modern [[Ossetian language]]s, as in the place name ''Iryston'' ([[Ossetia]]), here attached to the Iranian suffix *''[[-stan|-stān]]''.{{Sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{Sfn|Harmatta|1970|pp=78–81}}


==== Vedic Sanskrit ====
Other place names mentioned in the ''Avesta'' include ''airyō šayana'', a movable term corresponding to the 'territory of the Aryas', ''airyanąm dahyunąm'', the 'lands of the Aryas', ''Airyō-xšuθa'', a mountain in eastern Iran associated with [[Arash the Archer|Ǝrəxša]], and ''vīspe aire razuraya,'' the forest where Kavi Haosravō slew the god [[Vāyu]].{{sfn|Bailey|1987}}{{sfn|MacKenzie|1998b}}
The term Arya is used 36 times in 34 hymns in the [[Rigveda]]. While the word may ultimately derive from a tribal name, already in the Rigveda it appears as a religious distinction, separating those who sacrifice "properly" from those who do not belong to the [[historical Vedic religion]], presaging the usage in later Hinduism where the term comes to denote religious righteousness or piety. In [[Mandala 9|RV 9]].63.5, ''{{IAST|ârya}}'' "noble, pious, righteous" is used as contrasting with ''{{IAST|árāvan}}'' "not liberal, envious, hostile":
:''{{IAST|índraṃ várdhanto aptúraḥ kṛṇvánto víśvam âryam apaghnánto árāvṇaḥ}}''
:"[the [[Soma (drink)|Soma]]-drops], performing every noble work, active, augmenting Indra's strength, driving away the godless ones." (trans. Griffith)


==== Sanskrit epics ====
=== Personal names ===
Ārya and anārya are primarily used in the moral sense in the [[Hindu Epics]]. People are usually called Ārya or Anārya based on their behaviour. Ārya is typically one who follows the [[Dharma]].{{citation needed|date=May 2014}} For example, In [[Bhagavat Gita]], when [[Arjuna]] declines to fight [[Kurukshetra War|the war]] he is called out as ''anārya'' by [[Krishna]].{{efn|kutas tvā kaśmalamidaṁ viṣame samupasthitaṁ । '''anārya'''juṣṭaṁ asvargyaṁ akīrtikaraṁ ॥(Bhagavat Gīta, Chapter 2, Verse 2)}} According to the [[Mahabharata]], a person's behaviour (not wealth or learning) determines if he can be called an Arya.<ref>(Mbh: ''tasyam samsadi sarvasyam ksatttaram pujayamy aham/ vrttena hi bhavaty aryo na dhanena na vidyaya''. 0050880521)</ref><ref name="Bronkhorst 1999">Deshpande/ Gomez in Bronkhorst & Deshpande 1999</ref>
{{Main|Arya (name)|Aryan (name)}}
Old Persian names derived the stem *''arya''- include ''Aryabignes'' (*''arya-bigna'', 'Gift of the Aryans'), ''Ariarathes'' (*''Arya-wratha-'', 'having Aryan joy'), ''Ariobarzanēs'' (*''Ārya-bṛzāna''-, 'exalting the Aryans'), [[Ariaeus|''Ariaios'']] (*''arya-ai-'', probably used as a [[hypocorism]] of the precedent names), or ''[[Ariaramnes|Ariyāramna]]'' (whose meaning remains unclear).<ref>{{cite book|last=Shahbazi|first=A. Sh.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|isbn=|volume=2|chapter=Ariyāramna|author-link=Alireza Shapour Shahbazi|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/ariyaramna-greek-ariaramnes-old-persian-proper-name}}, {{cite book|last=Shahbazi|first=A. Sh.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|isbn=|volume=2|chapter=Ariabignes|author-link=Alireza Shapour Shahbazi|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/ariabignes-an-achaemenid-prince}}, {{cite book|last=Brunner|first=C. J.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|isbn=|volume=2|chapter=Ariaratus|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/ariaratus-one-of-the-three-sons-of-the-achaemenid-king-artaxerxes-ii}}, {{cite book|last=Lecoq|first=P.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|isbn=|volume=2|chapter=Ariobarzanes|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/ariobarzanes-greek-form-of-old-iranian-proper-name-arya-brzana}}, {{cite book|last=Shahbazi|first=A. Sh.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul|year=1986|volume=2|chapter=Ariaeus|author-link=Alireza Shapour Shahbazi|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/ariaeus-military-commander-in-the-army-of-cyrus-the-younger}}</ref> The English ''[[Alan (given name)|Alan]]'' and the French ''[[Alain (given name)|Alain]]'' (from Latin ''Alanus'') may have been introduced by Alan settlers to Western Europe during the first millennium AD.{{Sfn|Alemany|2000|p=5}}


==== Pan-religious use ====
The name [[Aryan (name)|''Aryan'']] (including derivatives such as ''Aaryan,'' ''[[Arya (name)|Arya]], Ariyan'' or ''Aria'') is still used as a given name or surname in modern South Asia and Iran. There has also been a rise in names associated with ''Aryan'' in the West, which have been popularized due to pop culture. According to the U.S. Social Security Administration in 2012, ''Arya'' was the fastest-rising girl's name in popularity in the U.S., jumping from 711th to 413th position.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Carlson|first=Adam|date=10 May 2013|title=Game of Thrones baby names on the march|publisher=Entertainment Weekly|url=https://ew.com/article/2013/05/10/arya-game-of-thrones-baby-names}}</ref> The name entered the top 200 most commonly used names for baby girls born in England and Wales in 2017.<ref>{{cite news|last=Mzimba|first=Lizo|date=20 September 2017|title=Game of Thrones Arya among 200 most popular names|publisher=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-41336738}}</ref>
The word ''ārya'' is often found in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts. In the Indian spiritual context, it can be applied to Rishis or to someone who has mastered the four noble truths and entered upon the spiritual path. According to Indian leader [[Jawaharlal Nehru]], the religions of [[India]] may be called collectively ''ārya dharma,'' a term that includes the religions that originated in the [[Indian subcontinent]] (e.g. [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and possibly [[Sikhism]]).<ref>
{{cite book |last=Kumar |first=Priya |title=Beyond tolerance and hospitality: Muslims as strangers and minor subjects in Hindu nationalist and Indian nationalist discourse |editor=Elisabeth Weber |work=Living Together: Jacques Derrida's Communities of Violence and Peace |publisher=Fordham University Press |year=2012 |isbn=9780823249923 |page=96}}
</ref>


[[Dayananda Saraswati|Swami Dayananda]] founded a Dharmic organisation [[Arya Samaj]] in 1875. [[Sri Aurobindo]] published a journal combining nationalism and spiritualism under the title ''[[Arya (journal)|Arya]]'' from 1914 to 1921.
=== In Latin literature ===
The word Arianus was used to designate [[Ariana]],<ref>{{cite book|title=The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology|page=162|publisher=Taylor & Francis, Limited|year=1881}}</ref> the area comprising Afghanistan, Iran, North-western India and Pakistan.<ref>{{cite book|title=Udayana|quote=whole of Ariana (North-western India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran)|first=Udai|last=Arora|publisher=Anamika Pub & Distributors|year=2007|isbn=9788179751688}}</ref> In 1601, [[Philemon Holland]] used 'Arianes' in his translation of the Latin Arianus to designate the inhabitants of Ariana. This was the first use of the form ''Arian'' verbatim in the English language.<ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?allowed_in_frame=0&search=arian&searchmode=none Online Etymology Dictionary]</ref><ref>Robert K. Barnhart, Chambers Dictionary of Etymology pg. 54</ref><ref name="OED">{{citation|editor-last=Simpson|editor-first=John Andrew|editor2-last=Weiner|editor2-first=Edmund S. C.|chapter=Aryan, Arian|title=Oxford English Dictionary|volume=I|edition=2nd|year=1989|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=0-19-861213-3|page=[https://archive.org/details/oxfordenglishdic01oxfo/page/672 672]|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/oxfordenglishdic01oxfo/page/672}}</ref>


The word ''[[Arya (Buddhism)|ārya]]'' ([[Pāli]]: ''ariya''), in the sense of "noble" or "exalted", is very frequently used in Buddhist texts to designate a spiritual warrior or hero, which use this term much more often than Hindu or Jain texts. Buddha's [[Dharma]] and [[Vinaya]] are the ''ariyassa dhammavinayo''. The [[Four Noble Truths]] are called the ''catvāry āryasatyāni'' ([[Sanskrit]]) or ''cattāri ariyasaccāni'' (Pali). The [[Noble Eightfold Path]] is called the ''āryamārga'' (Sanskrit, also ''{{IAST|āryāṣṭāṅgikamārga}}'') or ''ariyamagga'' (Pāli).
===Modern Persian nationalism===
In the aftermath of the [[Islamic conquest of Iran|Islamic conquest]] in Iran, racialist rhetoric became a literary idiom during the 7th century, i.e., when the Arabs became the primary "[[Other (philosophy)|Other]]" – the [[Aniran]] – and the antithesis of everything Iranian (i.e. Aryan) and [[Zoroastrian]]. But "the antecedents of [present-day] Iranian ultra-nationalism can be traced back to the writings of late nineteenth-century figures such as [[Mirza Fatali Akhundov]] and [[Mirza Aqa Khan Kermani]]. Demonstrating affinity with Orientalist views of the supremacy of the ''[[Aryan race|Aryan peoples]]'' and the mediocrity of the ''[[Semitic peoples]]'', Iranian nationalist discourse idealized pre-Islamic [[Achaemenid]] and [[Sassanid]] empires, whilst negating the 'Islamization' of [[Persis|Persia]] by Muslim forces."<ref name="MRZ">{{citation|last=Adib-Moghaddam|first=Arshin|title=Reflections on Arab and Iranian Ultra-Nationalism|year=2006|journal=Monthly Review Magazine|volume=11/06|url=http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/aam201106.html}}</ref> In the 20th century, different aspects of this idealization of a distant past would be instrumentalized by both the [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi monarchy]] (In 1967, Iran's [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi]] [[dynasty]] [overthrown in the [[1979 Iranian Revolution]]] added the title [[Aryamehr|Āryāmehr]] ''Light of the Aryans'' to the other styles of the [[Mohammad Reza Pahlavi|Iranian monarch]], the [[Shah of Iran]] being already known at that time as the [[Shah]]anshah (''King of Kings'')), and by the [[Iran|Islamic republic]] that followed it; the Pahlavis used it as a foundation for anticlerical monarchism, and the clerics used it to exalt Iranian values vis-á-vis westernization.<ref name="Keddie">{{citation|last1=Keddie|first1=Nikki R.|last2=Richard|first2=Yann|title=Modern Iran: Roots and Results of Revolution|year=2006|publisher=[[Yale University Press]]|isbn=0-300-12105-9|pages=[https://archive.org/details/moderniranrootsr00kedd/page/178 178f.]|url=https://archive.org/details/moderniranrootsr00kedd/page/178}}</ref>


In [[Buddhist texts]], the ārya pudgala (Pali: ''ariyapuggala, "noble person")'' are those who have the Buddhist ''[[śīla]]'' (Pāli ''sīla'', meaning "virtue") and who have reached a certain level of spiritual advancement on the [[Buddhist paths to liberation|Buddhist path]], mainly one of the [[Four stages of enlightenment|four levels of awakening]] or in [[Mahayana]] Buddhism, a [[bodhisattva]] level ([[Bhūmi (Buddhism)|bhumi]]). Those who despise Buddhism are often called "''anāryas''".
=== Modern religious use ===
The word ''ārya'' is often found in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts. In the Indian spiritual context, it can be applied to Rishis or to someone who has mastered the four noble truths and entered upon the spiritual path. According to Indian leader [[Jawaharlal Nehru]], the religions of [[India]] may be called collectively ''ārya dharma,'' a term that includes the religions that originated in the [[Indian subcontinent]] (e.g. [[Hinduism]], [[Buddhism]], [[Jainism]] and possibly [[Sikhism]]).<ref>{{cite book|last=Kumar|first=Priya|title=Beyond tolerance and hospitality: Muslims as strangers and minor subjects in Hindu nationalist and Indian nationalist discourse|work=Living Together: Jacques Derrida's Communities of Violence and Peace|publisher=Fordham University Press|year=2012|isbn=9780823249923|editor=Elisabeth Weber|page=96}}</ref>


The word ārya is also often used in [[Jainism]], in Jain texts such as the Pannavanasutta. In Avaśyakaniryukti, an early Jaina text, a character named ''Ārya Mangu'' is mentioned twice.<ref>{{cite book|author1=K. L. Chanchreek|author2=Mahesh Jain|title=Jainism: Rishabha Deva to Mahavira|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0YgRAQAAIAAJ|year=2003|publisher=Shree Publishers & Distributors|isbn=978-81-88658-01-5|page=276}}</ref>
The word ārya is also often used in [[Jainism]], in Jain texts such as the Pannavanasutta. In Avaśyakaniryukti, an early Jaina text, a character named ''Ārya Mangu'' is mentioned twice.<ref>{{cite book|author1=K. L. Chanchreek|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0YgRAQAAIAAJ|title=Jainism: Rishabha Deva to Mahavira|author2=Mahesh Jain|publisher=Shree Publishers & Distributors|year=2003|isbn=978-81-88658-01-5|page=276}}</ref>


===Persia===
== Scholarship ==


==== Avestan ====
=== 19th and early 20th century ===
The term Arya is used in ancient [[Persian language]] texts, for example in the [[Behistun inscription]] from the 5th century BCE, in which the Persian kings [[Darius the Great]] and [[Xerxes I of Persia|Xerxes]] are described as "Aryans of Aryan stock" (''arya arya chiça''). The inscription also refers to the deity [[Ahura Mazda]] as "the god of the Aryans", and to the ancient Persian language as "Aryan". In this sense the word seems to have referred to the elite culture of the ancient Iranians, including both linguistic, cultural and religious aspects. {{sfn|Briant|2002|p=180}}{{sfn|Kuz'mina|2007|pp=371–372}} The word also has a central place in the [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrian religion]] in which the "Aryan expanse" (''Airyana Vaejah'') is described as the mythical homeland of the Iranian people's and as the center of the world.{{sfn|Rose|2011}}
The term 'Aryan' was initially introduced into the English language through works of comparative philology, as a modern rendering of the Sanskrit word ''ā́rya''. First translated as 'noble' in [[William Jones (philologist)|William Jones]]' 1794 translation of the ''[[Laws of Manu]]'', early-19th-century scholars later noticed that the term was used in the earliest [[Vedas]] as an ethnocultural self-designation "comprising the worshipers of the gods of the Brahmans".<ref name="OED" />{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=20}} This interpretation was simultaneously influenced by the presence of the word ''Ἀριάνης'' (Ancient Greek) ~ ''Arianes'' (Latin) in classical texts, which had been rightly compared by [[Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron|Anquetil-Duperron]] in 1771 to the Iranian ''airya'' ([[Avestan]]) ~ ''ariya'' ([[Old Persian]]), a self-identifier used by the speakers of [[Iranian peoples|Iranian languages]] since ancient times. Accordingly, the term 'Aryan' came to refer in scholarship to the [[Indo-Iranian languages]], and, by extension, to the native speakers of the [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language]], the prehistoric [[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian peoples]].<ref>{{citation|last=Siegert|first=Hans|title=Zur Geschichte der Begriffe 'Arier' und 'Arisch'|journal=Wörter und Sachen|volume=4|pages=84–99|year=1941–1942|series=New Series}}</ref>


The [[Avestan]] term ''airya'' ('venerable'; [[Old Persian]] ''ariya'') was likewise used as self-designations by ancient Iranian peoples, in contrast to the ''anairya'' ('non-Arya').{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=304}}<ref name="Bailey" /> In the sacred ''[[Avesta]]'' scriptures, the root is also found place names like ''[[Airyanem Vaejah]]'' (the 'stretch' or 'plain of the Aryas'), the mythical homeland of the early Iranians, or ''airyō šayana'', the 'dwelling of the Aryas'.<ref name="Witzel2012" /><ref name="Bailey" /><ref>{{Cite web|last=MacKenzie|first=D. N.|date=1998|title=Ērān-Wēz|url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/eran-wez|website=Encyclopaedia Iranica}}</ref> The self-identifier lives on in several ethnic names in later [[Iranian languages]], such as [[Iranian peoples|''Iranian'']], [[Alans|''Alan'']] or [[Iron Ossetian|''Iron'']], and in place names like [[name of Iran|''Iran'']], the [[Persian language|Persian]] word for the land of the Iranians, and ''[[Alania]]'', the medieval kingdom of the Alans.{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}}{{sfn|Mallory|1991|p=125}}<ref name="R_Schmitt">{{citation|last=Schmitt|first=Rüdiger|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|volume=2|year=1989|chapter=Aryan|chapter-url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/aryans|location=New York|publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul}}</ref>[[Image:Darius I the Great's inscription.jpg|thumb|One of the earliest epigraphically attested reference to the word ''arya'' occurs in the 6th-century BC [[Behistun inscription]], which describes itself as having been composed "in ''arya'' [language or script]" (§ 70). As is also the case for all other Old Iranian language usage, the ''arya'' of the inscription does not signify anything but "[[Etymology of Iran|Iranian]]".<ref name="Gershevitch"><sup>''cf.''</sup> {{Cite book|last=Gershevitch|first=Ilya|chapter=Old Iranian Literature|title=Handbuch der Orientalistik, Literatur I|year=1968|location=Leiden|publisher=Brill|pages=1–31}}, p. 2.</ref>]]All these terms derive from the reconstructed [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|proto-Indo-Iranian]] root [[wikt:Appendix:Proto-Indo-Iranian/arya-|''*arya''-]],{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}}<ref name="Laroche">E. Laroche, Hommages à G. Dumézil, Brussels, 1960</ref><ref name="Szemerényi">[[Oswald Szemerényi|Szemerényi, Oswald]] (1977), "Studies in the Kinship Terminology of the Indo-European Languages", Acta Iranica III.16, Leiden: Brill pp 125–146</ref> alternatively spelled ''*aryo-.''{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=304}} It was probably the name used by the [[Indo-Iranians]] to designate themselves.{{sfn|Witzel|2000|p=1}}{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}}{{sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=304}} According to archeologist [[J. P. Mallory]], "[a]s an ethnic designation, the word [Aryan] is most properly limited to the Indo-Iranians".{{sfn|Mallory|1991|p=125}} The root is also found in the Indo-Iranian god *''Arya-man'' (Vedic ''[[Aryaman]]''; Avestan ''[[Airyaman]]''), the deity in charge of welfare and the community, connected to the building and maintenance of roads or pathways, but also with healing and the institution of marriage.{{Sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=375}}<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=West|first=Martin L.|title=Indo-European Poetry and Myth|date=2007|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-928075-9|pages=142–143|language=en}}</ref> If the Irish hero ''[[Érimón]]'' and the Gaulish personal name ''Ariomanus'' are also [[cognate]] (i.e. linguistic siblings sharing a common origin), a deity of Proto-Indo-European origin named ''*Aryomen'' may be posited.{{Sfn|Mallory|Adams|1997|p=375}}{{Sfn|Delamarre|2003|p=55}}<ref name=":1" />
During the 19th century, through the works of [[Friedrich Schlegel]] (1772–1829), [[Christian Lassen]] (1800–1876), [[Adolphe Pictet]] (1799–1875), and [[Max Müller]] (1823–1900), the terms ''Aryans'', ''Arier'', and ''Aryens'' came to be adopted by a number of Western scholars as a synonym of '[[Proto-Indo-Europeans|(Proto-)Indo-Europeans]]'.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=21}} Many of them indeed believed that ''Aryan'' was also the original self-designation used by the prehistoric speakers of the [[Proto-Indo-European language]], based on the erroneous assumptions that [[Sanskrit]] was the oldest [[Indo-European languages|Indo-European language]] and on the linguistically untenable position that ''[[Ériu]]'' (Ireland) was related to ''Arya''.<ref>{{harvnb|Schmitt|1987|ps=: "The use of the name 'Aryan', in vogue especially in the 19th century, as a designation of the entire Indo-European language family was based on the erroneous assumption that Sanskrit was the oldest IE. language, and the untenable view (primarily propagated by Adolphe Pictet) that the names of Ireland and the Irishmen were etymologically related to 'Aryan'."}}</ref> This hypothesis has since been abandoned in scholarship due to the lack of evidence for the use of ''arya'' as an ethnocultural self-designation outside the Indo-Iranian world.{{sfn|Fortson|2011|p=209}}


====Persian nationalism====
=== Contemporary scholarship ===
The name for the [[Sassanian Empire]] in [[Middle Persian]] is ''Eran Shahr'' which means ''Aryan Empire''.<ref>[[Josef Wiesehofer|Wiesehofer, Joseph]] ''Ancient Persia'' New York:1996 I.B. Tauris</ref> In the aftermath of the [[Islamic conquest of Iran|Islamic conquest]] in Iran, racialist rhetoric became a literary idiom during the 7th century, i.e., when the Arabs became the primary "[[Other (philosophy)|Other]]" – the [[Aniran]] – and the antithesis of everything Iranian (i.e. Aryan) and [[Zoroastrian]]. But "the antecedents of [present-day] Iranian ultra-nationalism can be traced back to the writings of late nineteenth-century figures such as [[Mirza Fatali Akhundov]] and [[Mirza Aqa Khan Kermani]]. Demonstrating affinity with Orientalist views of the supremacy of the ''[[Aryan race|Aryan peoples]]'' and the mediocrity of the ''[[Semitic peoples]]'', Iranian nationalist discourse idealized pre-Islamic <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Achaemenid]] and [[Sassanid]]<nowiki>]</nowiki><!-- the original word here is "Persian", but that word has been mangled beyond recognition on WP --> empires, whilst negating the 'Islamization' of [[Persis|Persia]] by Muslim forces."<ref name="MRZ">{{citation|last=Adib-Moghaddam|first=Arshin|title=Reflections on Arab and Iranian Ultra-Nationalism|year=2006|journal=Monthly Review Magazine|volume=11/06|url=http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/aam201106.html}}</ref> In the 20th century, different aspects of this idealization of a distant past would be instrumentalized by both the [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi monarchy]] (In 1967, Iran's [[Pahlavi dynasty|Pahlavi]] [[dynasty]] [overthrown in the [[1979 Iranian Revolution]]] added the title [[Aryamehr|Āryāmehr]] ''Light of the Aryans'' to the other styles of the [[Mohammad Reza Pahlavi|Iranian monarch]], the [[Shah of Iran]] being already known at that time as the [[Shah]]anshah (''King of Kings'')), and by the [[Iran|Islamic republic]] that followed it; the Pahlavis used it as a foundation for anticlerical monarchism, and the clerics used it to exalt Iranian values vis-á-vis westernization.<ref name="Keddie">{{citation|last1=Keddie|first1=Nikki R.|last2=Richard|first2=Yann|title=Modern Iran: Roots and Results of Revolution|year=2006|publisher=[[Yale University Press]]|isbn=0-300-12105-9|pages=[https://archive.org/details/moderniranrootsr00kedd/page/178 178f.]|url=https://archive.org/details/moderniranrootsr00kedd/page/178}}</ref> <!-- A nationalist dichotomy continues to this day, with the monarchial banner now taken up by Iranians in the diaspora, and the republican one represented in the figure of [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]].<ref name="MRZ" /> -->
In contemporary scholarship, the terms 'Aryan' and 'Proto-Aryan' are still sometimes used to designate the prehistoric Indo-Iranian peoples and their [[Proto-Indo-Iranian language|proto-language]]. However, the use of 'Aryan' to mean 'Proto-Indo-European' is now regarded as an "aberration to be avoided".<ref name="Witzel2012">{{harvnb|Witzel|2001}}</ref> The '[[Indo-Iranian languages|Indo-Iranian]]' subfamily of languages – which encompasses the [[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]], [[Iranian languages|Iranian]] and [[Nuristani languages|Nuristani]] branches – may also be referred to as the 'Aryan languages'.<ref>{{harvnb|Schmitt|1987|ps=: "''The Aryan parent language''.  The common ancestor of the historical Aryan or Indo-Iranian languages, called the Aryan parent language or Proto-Aryan, can be reconstructed by the methods of historical comparative linguistics."}}</ref>{{Sfn|Anthony|2007|p=385}}{{sfn|Fortson|2011|p=209}}


=== As a surname ===
However, the atrocities committed in the name of [[Aryanism|Aryanist]] racial ideologies during the first part of the 20th century have led academics to generally avoid the term 'Aryan', which has been replaced in most cases by 'Indo-Iranian', although its Indic branch is still called 'Indo-Aryan'.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=22}}{{sfn|Anthony|2007|p=10}}<ref name=":6">{{harvnb|Witzel|2001|p=3|ps=: "Linguists have used the term ''Ārya'' from early on in the 19th century to designate the speakers of most Northern Indian as well as of all Iranian languages and to indicate the reconstructed language underlying both Old Iranian and Vedic Sanskrit. Nowadays this well-reconstructed language is usually called Indo-Iranian (IIr.), while its Indic branch is called (Old) Indo-Aryan (IA)."}}</ref> The name 'Iranian', which stems from the [[Old Persian]] *''Aryānām'', also continues to be used to refer to specific [[ethnolinguistic group]]s.{{sfn|Schmitt|1987}}
The name [[Aryan (name)|''Aryan'']] (including derivatives such as ''[[Aaryan]],'' ''Arya, Ariyan'' or ''Aria'') is still used as a given name or surname in modern South Asia and Iran. There has also been a rise in names associated with ''Aryan'' in the West, which have been popularized due to pop culture.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Game of Thrones baby names on the march|url=https://ew.com/article/2013/05/10/arya-game-of-thrones-baby-names/|access-date=2020-10-28|website=EW.com|language=EN}}</ref> According to the U.S. Social Security Administration in 2012, ''Arya'' was the fastest-rising girl's name in popularity in the U.S., jumping from 711th to 413th position.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Game of Thrones baby names on the march|url=https://ew.com/article/2013/05/10/arya-game-of-thrones-baby-names/|access-date=2020-10-28|website=EW.com|language=EN|quote=In America, “Arya” is the fastest-rising baby name for girls. According to a press release from the U.S. Social Security Administration, the name jumped from 711 in 2011 to 413 in 2012.}}</ref> The name entered the top 200 most commonly used names for baby girls born in England and Wales in 2017.<ref>{{Cite news|date=2017-09-20|title=Game of Thrones Arya among 200 most popular names|language=en-GB|work=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-41336738|access-date=2020-10-28}}</ref>
* [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]] refers to the populations speaking an [[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan language]] or identifying as [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]]; they form the predominant group in Northern India.{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|p=3}} The largest Indo-Aryan ethnolinguistic groups are [[Hindi]]–[[Urdu]], [[Bengali language|Bengali]], [[Punjabi language|Punjabi]], [[Marathi language|Marathi]], [[Gujarati language|Gujarati]], [[Rajasthani language|Rajasthani]], [[Bhojpuri language|Bhojpuri]], [[Maithili language|Maithili]], [[Odia language|Odia]], and [[Sindhi language|Sindhi]]. More than 900 million people are native speakers of an Indo-Aryan language.{{sfn|Bryant|Patton|2005|pp=246–247}}
* [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]] (or Iranic) is used to designate the speakers of [[Iranian languages]] or the peoples who identify as "Iranians", especially in [[Greater Iran]]. Modern Iranian ethnolinguistic groups include [[Persians]], [[Pashtuns]], [[Kurds]], [[Tajiks]], [[Baloch people|Balochs]], [[Lurs]], [[Pamiris]], [[Zazas]], and [[Ossetians]]. An estimated 150 to 200 million people are native speakers of an Iranian language.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Windfuhr|first=Gernot L.|title=The Iranian Languages|date=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-79703-4|pages=1|author-link=Gernot Ludwig Windfuhr}}</ref>
Some authors writing for popular consumption have kept on using the word "Aryan" for all Indo-Europeans in the tradition of [[H. G. Wells]],<ref>Wells, H.G. ''[[The Outline of History]]'' New York:1920 Doubleday & Co. Chapter 19 The Aryan Speaking Peoples in Pre-Historic Times [Meaning the Proto-Indo-Europeans] Pages 271–285</ref><ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/86/19.html H.G. Wells describes the origin of the Aryans (Proto-Indo Europeans):]</ref> such as the science fiction author [[Poul Anderson]],<ref>See the Poul Anderson short stories in the 1964 collection [[Time and Stars]] and the ''Polesotechnic League'' stories featuring [[Nicholas van Rijn]]</ref> and scientists writing for the popular media, such as [[Colin Renfrew]].<ref>Renfrew, Colin. (1989). The Origins of Indo-European Languages. /Scientific American/, 261(4), 82–90. In explaining the [[Anatolian hypothesis]], the term "Aryan" is used to denote "all Indo-Europeans"</ref> According to [[Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper|F. B. J. Kuiper]], echoes of "the 19th century prejudice about 'northern' Aryans who were confronted on Indian soil with black barbarians [...] can still be heard in some modern studies."{{sfn|Kuiper|1991}}


==Scholarship and the racist notion of "Aryan"==
==Aryanism and racism==


=== The "Aryan race" ===
=== Invention of the "Aryan race" ===
{{main|Aryanism|Aryan race}}
{{main|Aryanism|Aryan race}}


Western notions of an "[[Aryan race]]" rose to prominence in late-19th- and early-20th-century [[Racialism (racial categorization)|racialism]], and the notions of an "Aryan race" became closely linked to [[Nordicism]], which posited Northern European racial superiority over all other peoples, an idea most notably embraced by [[Nazism]].{{refn|group=note| The Nazis believed that the "[[Nordic race|Nordic peoples]]" (who were also referred to as the "[[Germanic peoples]]") represent an ideal and "pure race" that was the purest representation of the original racial stock of those who were then called the Proto-Aryans.<ref>[[Joseph Pomeroy Widney|Widney, Joseph P]]. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=s9UKAAAAIAAJ&printsec=titlepage Race Life of the Aryan Peoples]'' New York: Funk & Wagnalls. 1907 In Two Volumes: Volume One--''The Old World'' Volume Two--''The New World'' ISBN B000859S6O See Chapter II—"Original Homeland of the Aryan Peoples" Pages 9–25—the term "Proto-Aryan" is used to describe the people today called [[Proto-Indo-Europeans]]</ref> The [[Nazi Party]] declared that the "Nordics" were the true Aryans because they claimed that they were more "pure" (less racially mixed) than other people of what were then called the "Aryan people".<ref name="hitler1925">[[Adolf Hitler|Hitler, Adolf]] ''[[Mein Kampf]]'' 1925</ref> This "[[master race]]" ideal engendered both the "[[Aryanization (Nazism)|Aryanization]]" programs of [[Nazi Germany]], in which the classification of people as "Aryan" and "non-Aryan" was most emphatically directed towards the exclusion of [[Jews]].<ref>{{citation|last=Campt|first=Tina|title=Other Germans: Black Germans and the Politics of Race, Gender, and Memory in the Third Reich|publisher=[[University of Michigan Press]]|year=2004|page=143}}</ref><ref group=note>Under the 1933 ''Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service'', a non-Aryan was defined as "an individual descended from a non-Aryan (in particular Jewish parents or grandparents)" ({{harvnb|Campt|2004|p=143}}).</ref>}} By the end of World War II, the word 'Aryan' had become associated by many with the racial ideologies and atrocities committed by the [[Nazi Germany|Nazis]]. By then, the term "[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]" and "[[Proto-Indo-Europeans|Indo-European]]" had made most uses of the term "Aryan" superfluous in the eyes of a number of scholars, and "Aryan" now survives in most scholarly usage only in the term "[[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]]" to indicate (speakers of) North Indian languages.
==== Origin ====
Drawing on racially-oriented interpretations of the Vedic ''Aryas'' as "fair-skinned foreign invaders" coming from the North, the term ''Aryan'' came to be adopted in the West as a [[Historical race concepts|racial category]] connected to a supremacist ideology known as [[Aryanism]], which conceived the [[Aryan race]] as the '[[superior race]]' responsible for most of the achievements of ancient civilizations.{{Sfn|Bryant|2001|pp=60–63}} [[Max Müller]], who had himself inaugurated the racial interpretations of the ''[[Rigveda]]'',{{Sfn|Bryant|2001|p=60}} denounced in 1888 those who spoke of an "Aryan race, Aryan blood, Aryan eyes and hair" as a nonsense comparable to a linguist speaking of "a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar".{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=269}} But for an increasing number of Western writers, especially among anthropologists and non-specialists influenced by [[Darwinism|Darwinist]] theories, the ''Aryans'' came to be seen as a "physical-genetic species" contrasting with the other human races rather than an ethnolinguistic category.{{Sfn|Goodrick-Clarke|1985|p=5}}{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=61}} During the late 19th–early 20th century, a fusion of Aryanism with [[Nordicism]] promoted by writers such as [[Joseph Arthur de Gobineau|Arthur de Gobineau]], [[Theodor Poesche]], [[Houston Chamberlain]], [[Paul Broca]], [[Karl Penka]] and [[Hans F. K. Günther|Hans Günther]] led to the portrayal of the Proto-Indo-Europeans as blond and tall, with blue eyes and dolichocephalic skulls.{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=268}}{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=43}} Modern scholars reject those views and remind that the idea of a Vedic opposition between ''ārya'' and ''dāsa'' underlying a racial division remains problematic, since "most of the [Vedic] passages may not refer to dark or light skinned people, but dark and light worlds."<ref>{{harvnb|Bryant|Patton|2005|p=8}}; cf. {{harvnb|Bryant|2001|pp=60–63}}</ref>


==== Aryan Indo-Europeans ====
==== Theories of racial supremacy ====
The term "Aryan" came to be used as the term for the newly discovered [[Indo-European languages]], and, by extension, the [[proto-Indo-Europeans|original speakers of those languages]]. The meaning of 'Aryan' that was adopted into the English language in the late 18th century was the one associated with the technical term used in comparative philology, which in turn had the same meaning as that evident in the very oldest [[Old Indo-Aryan]] usage, i.e. as a (self-) identifier of "[[Indo-Aryan peoples|(speakers of) Indo-Aryan languages]]".<ref name="OED"/>{{refn|group=note|The context being religious, Max Müller understood this to especially mean "the worshipers of the gods of the Brahmans". If this is seen from the point of view of the religious poets of the RigVedic hymns, an 'Aryan' was then a person who held the same religious convictions as the poet himself. This idea can then also be found in Iranian texts.}} This usage was simultaneously influenced by a word that appeared in classical sources (Latin and Greek ''Ἀριάνης'' ''Arianes'', e.g. in Pliny 1.133 and Strabo 15.2.1–8), and recognized to be the same as that which appeared in living Iranian languages, where it was a (self-)identifier of the "[[Iranian peoples|(speakers of) Iranian languages]]". Accordingly, 'Aryan' came to refer to the [[Indo-Iranian languages|languages of the Indo-Iranian language group]], and by extension, native [[Indo-Iranians|speakers of those languages]].<ref>{{citation|last=Siegert|first=Hans|title=Zur Geschichte der Begriffe 'Arier' und 'Arisch'|journal=Wörter und Sachen|series=New Series|volume=4|year=1941–1942|pages=84–99}}</ref>
[[File:Arthur_de_Gobineau.jpg|thumb|240x240px|[[Arthur de Gobineau]]]]
Arthur de Gobineau, the author of the influential ''[[Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races]]'' (1853), viewed the white or Aryan race as the only civilized one, and conceived cultural decline and [[miscegenation]] as intimately intertwined. According to him, northern Europeans had migrated across the world and founded the major civilizations, before being diluted through racial mixing with indigenous populations described as racially inferior, leading to the progressive decay of the ancient Aryan civilizations.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=45}} In 1878, [[German Americans|German American]] anthropologist Theodor Poesche published a survey of historical references attempting to demonstrate that the Aryans were light-skinned blue-eyed blonds.{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=268}} The use of ''Arier'' to mean 'non-Jewish' seems to have first occurred in 1887, when a Viennese physical fitness society decided to allow as members only "Germans of Aryan descent" (''Deutsche arischer Abkunft'').{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=21}} In ''[[The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century]]'' (1899), described as "one of the most important proto-Nazi texts", British-German writer Houston Chamberlain theorized an existential struggle to death between a superior German-Aryan race and a destructive Jewish-Semitic race.{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=155}} The best-seller ''[[The Passing of the Great Race]]'', published by American writer [[Madison Grant]] in 1916, warns of a danger of miscegenation with the immigrant "inferior races" – including speakers of Indo-European languages such as Slavs, Italians and Yiddish-speaking Jews – allegedly faced by the "racially superior" Germanic ''Aryans'', that is Americans of [[English Americans|English]], [[German Americans|German]] and [[Scandinavian Americans|Scandinavian]] descent.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}}


During the 19th century, it was proposed that "Aryan" was also the self-designation used by the [[Proto-Indo-Europeans]], a hypothesis that has since been abandoned due to a lack of evidence outside the Indo-Iranian branch.{{sfn|Fortson, IV|2011|p=209}} "Language" was considered a property of "ethnicity", and thus the speakers of the Indo-Iranian or Indo-European languages came to be called the "[[Aryan race]]", as contradistinguished from what came to be called the "[[Semitic people|Semitic race]]". Linguists still supposed that the age of a language determined its "superiority" (because it was assumed to have genealogical purity). Then, based on the assumption that Sanskrit was the oldest Indo-European language, and the (now known to be untenable)<ref name="Language History, Language Change, and Language Relationship by Hans Henrich Hock, Brian D. Joseph">Language History, Language Change, and Language Relationship by Hans Henrich Hock, Brian D. Joseph, 2009: "Aryan was extended to designate all Indo Europeans, under the false assumption that the Irish word ''Eire'' is cognate with ārya; and ill-founded theories about the racial identity of these Aryans... ", page 57 [https://books.google.com/books?id=IsYkilw7Q-oC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Language+History,+Language+Change,+and+Language+Relationship:&hl=fr&sa=X&ei=0LC6T6qgNoyG8gP679jWCg&ved=0CDUQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Language%20History%2C%20Language%20Change%2C%20and%20Language%20Relationship%3A&f=false]</ref> position that Irish [[Éire]] was etymologically related to "Aryan", in 1837 [[Adolphe Pictet]] popularized the idea that the term "Aryan" could also be applied to the entire Indo-European language family as well. The groundwork for this thought had been laid by [[Abraham Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron]].<ref>Zwischen Barbarenklischee und Germanenmythos: eine Analyse österreichischer ... by Elisabeth Monyk (2006), p. 31. [https://books.google.com/books?id=eaC-pL1lbroC&pg=PA31&lpg=PA31&dq=Schlegel+arier&source=bl&ots=_CXhs9T-09&sig=pjXpfDb7YwijDyf35jKFQ2MK1Tg&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=aSs_UqiqAYmr0QWY0IDwBg&ved=0CFAQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=Schlegel%20arier&f=false]</ref>
Led by [[Guido von List]] (1848–1919) and [[Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels]] (1874–1954), [[Ariosophy|Ariosophists]] founded an ideological system combining ''[[Völkisch movement|Völkisch]]'' nationalism with [[Western esotericism|esoterism]]. Prophesying a coming era of German (Aryan) world rule, they argued that a conspiracy against Germans – said to have been instigated by the non-Aryan races, the Jews, or the early Church – had "sought to ruin this ideal Germanic world by emancipating the non-German inferiors in the name of a spurious egalitarianism."{{Sfn|Goodrick-Clarke|1985|p=2}}


In particular, German scholar [[Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel]] published in 1819 the first theory linking the Indo-Iranian and the German languages under the Aryan group.<ref name="AHD">{{citation|last=Watkins|first=Calvert|chapter=Aryan|title=American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language|edition=4th|year=2000|location=New York|publisher=Houghton Mifflin|isbn=0-395-82517-2|quote=...when [[Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel|Friedrich Schlegel]], a German scholar who was an important early [[Indo-European studies|Indo-Europeanist]], came up with a theory that linked the Indo-Iranian words with the German word ''Ehre'', 'honor', and older Germanic names containing the element ''ario-'', such as the [[Suebi|Swiss]] {{sic}} warrior [[Ariovistus]] who was written about by [[Julius Caesar]]. Schlegel theorized that far from being just a designation of the Indo-Iranians, the word ''*arya-'' had in fact been what the Indo-Europeans called themselves, meaning [according to Schlegel] something like 'the honorable people.' (This theory has since been called into question.)|url=https://archive.org/details/americanheritage0000unse_a1o7}}</ref><ref>Schlegel, Friedrich. 1819. [https://books.google.com/books?id=mstLAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA453&focus=viewport&output=text Review of J. G. Rhode, Über den Anfang unserer Geschichte und die letzte Revolution der Erde], Breslau, 1819. Jahrbücher der Literatur VIII: 413ff</ref> In 1830 [[Karl Otfried Müller]] used "Arier" in his publications.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.deutschestextarchiv.de/book/view/mueller_kunst_1830?p=297|title= Müller, Karl Otfried: Handbuch der Archäologie der Kunst. Breslau, 1830.}}</ref>
==== North European hypothesis ====
{{main|North European hypothesis}}
[[File:Passing_of_the_Great_Race_-_Map_2.jpg|thumb|280x280px|"Expansion of the Pre-Teutonic Nordics" — Map from [[The Passing of the Great Race]] by [[Madison Grant]] showing hypothesized migrations of Nordic peoples.]]
In the meantime, the idea that Indo-European languages originated from South Asia gradually lost support among academics. After the end of the 1860s, alternative models of [[Indo-European migrations]] began to emerge, some of them locating their [[Proto-Indo-European homeland|ancestral homeland]] in Northern Europe.{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=268}}{{Sfn|Arvidsson|2006|p=52}} [[Karl Penka]], credited as "a transitional figure between Aryanism and Nordicism",<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hutton|first=Christopher M.|title=Race and the Third Reich: Linguistics, Racial Anthropology and Genetics in the Dialectic of Volk|date=2005|publisher=Polity|isbn=978-0-7456-3177-6|pages=108}}</ref> argued in 1883 that the Aryans originated in southern Scandinavia.{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=268}} In the early 20th century, German scholar [[Gustaf Kossinna]], attempting to equal a prehistoric [[material culture]] with the reconstructed [[Proto-Indo-European language]], contended on archaeological grounds that the 'Indo-Germanic' (''Indogermanische'') migrations originated from a homeland located in northern Europe.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} Until the end of World War II, scholarship was broadly divided between Kossinna's followers and those, initially led by [[Otto Schrader (philologist)|Otto Schrader]], who supported a [[Steppe hypothesis|steppe homeland]] in Eurasia, now the most widespread hypothesis among scholars.{{Sfn|Mallory|1989|p=269}}


====Aryan Nordic race====
===British Raj===
[[File:Passing of the Great Race - Map 4.jpg|thumb|right|300px|[[Madison Grant]]'s idea of the distribution of "Nordic" (red), "Alpine" (green) and "Mediterranean" (yellow) races in Europe.]]Drawing on misinterpreted references in the ''[[Rigveda]]'' by Western scholars in the 19th century, the term ''Aryan'' was adopted in the 1850s as a [[Historical race concepts|racial category]] by French writer [[Arthur de Gobineau]], whose ideology was based on an idea of blond northern European "Aryans" who had migrated across the world and founded all major civilizations, before being diluted through [[Miscegenation|racial mixing]] with local populations. De Gobineau supposed that "Aryan" corresponded to the suggested prehistoric Indo-European culture (1853–1855, ''Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races''). Further, de Gobineau believed that there were three basic races – white, yellow and black – and that everything else was caused by racial mixing, which he believed was the cause of chaos. The "[[master race]]", according to de Gobineau, were the Northern European "Aryans", who had remained "racially pure". Southern Europeans (including Spaniards and Southern Frenchmen), Eastern Europeans, North Africans, Middle Easterners, Iranians, Central Asians and Indians he considered to be racially mixed, and thus less than ideal. <!--While de Gobineau still saw the Northern Europeans as a subgroup of the "Aryans" (i.e. he did not equate Nordic peoples with "Aryans", but merely considered them to be the best representatives of it)-->
In India, the [[British Raj|British colonial government]] had followed de Gobineau's arguments along another line, and had fostered the idea of a superior "Aryan race" that co-opted the [[Indian caste system]] in favor of imperial interests.{{sfn|Leopold|1974}}{{sfn|Thapar|1996}} In its fully developed form, the British-mediated interpretation foresaw a segregation of Aryan and non-Aryan along the lines of caste, with the upper castes being "Aryan" and the lower ones being "non-Aryan". The European developments not only allowed the British to identify themselves as high-caste, but also allowed the Brahmins to view themselves as on-par with the British. Further, it provoked the reinterpretation of Indian history in racialist and, in opposition, [[Indian Nationalist]] terms.{{sfn|Leopold|1974}}{{sfn|Thapar|1996}}


By the 1880s, a number of linguists and anthropologists argued that the "Aryans" themselves had originated somewhere in northern Europe. A specific region began to crystallize when the linguist [[Karl Penka]] (''Die Herkunft der Arier. Neue Beiträge zur historischen Anthropologie der europäischen Völker'', 1886) popularized the idea that the "Aryans" had emerged in [[Scandinavia]] and could be identified by the distinctive Nordic characteristics of blond hair and blue eyes. The distinguished biologist [[Thomas Henry Huxley]] agreed with him, coining the term "Xanthochroi" to refer to fair-skinned Europeans (as opposed to darker Mediterranean peoples, who Huxley called "Melanochroi").<ref>{{citation|last = Huxley| first = Thomas| title=The Aryan Question and Pre-Historic Man|journal=The Nineteenth Century|year=1890|issue=XI/1890|url = http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/CE7/Aryan.html}}</ref>
=== Nazism and white supremacy ===
[[File:Birth of a nation Aryan quote.jpg|thumb|275px|An [[intertitle]] from the [[silent film]] blockbuster ''[[The Birth of a Nation]]'' (1915). "Aryan birthright" is here "white birthright", the "defense" of which unites "[[White race|whites]]" in the Northern and Southern U.S. against "[[coloreds]]". In another film of the same year, ''[[The Aryan]]'', [[William S. Hart]]'s "Aryan" identity is defined in distinction from other peoples.]]


This "[[Nordic race]]" theory gained traction following the publication of [[Charles Morris (American writer)|Charles Morris]]'s ''The Aryan Race'' (1888), which touches racist ideology. A similar rationale was followed by [[Georges Vacher de Lapouge]] in his book ''L'Aryen et son rôle social'' (1899, "The Aryan and his Social Role").
Through the works of [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], Gobineau's ideas influenced the [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial ideology]], which saw the "[[Aryan race]]" as innately superior to other putative racial groups.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} The Nazi official [[Alfred Rosenberg]] argued for a new "[[Blood and soil|religion of the blood]]" based on the supposed innate promptings of the Nordic soul to defend its "noble" character against racial and cultural degeneration. Rosenberg believed the [[Nordic race]] to be descended from [[Proto-Indo-Europeans|Proto-Aryans]], a hypothetical [[Prehistory|prehistoric]] people who dwelt on the [[North German Plain]] and who had ultimately originated from the lost continent of [[Atlantis]].{{refn|group=note|[[Alfred Rosenberg|Rosenberg, Alfred]], "[[The Myth of the 20th Century]]". The term "Atlantis" is mentioned two times in the whole book, the term "Atlantis-hypothesis" is mentioned just once. Rosenberg (page 24): "''It seems to be not completely impossible, that at parts where today the waves of the Atlantic ocean murmur and icebergs move along, once a blossoming land towered in the water, on which a creative race founded a great culture and sent its children as seafarers and warriors into the world; but if this Atlantis-hypothesis proves untenable, we still have to presume a prehistoric Nordic cultural center.''" Rosenberg (page 26): "''The ridiculed hypothesis about a Nordic creative center, which we can call Atlantis – without meaning a sunken island – from where once waves of warriors migrated to all directions as first witnesses of Nordic longing for distant lands to conquer and create, today becomes probable.''" Original: Es erscheint als nicht ganz ausgeschlossen, dass an Stellen, über die heute die Wellen des Atlantischen Ozeans rauschen und riesige Eisgebirge herziehen, einst ein blühendes Festland aus den Fluten ragte, auf dem eine schöpferische Rasse große, weitausgreifende Kultur erzeugte und ihre Kinder als Seefahrer und Krieger hinaussandte in die Welt; aber selbst wenn sich diese Atlantishypothese als nicht haltbar erweisen sollte, wird ein nordisches vorgeschichtliches Kulturzentrum angenommen werden müssen. ... Und deshalb wird die alte verlachte Hypothese heute Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass von einem nordischen Mittelpunkt der Schöpfung, nennen wir ihn, ohne uns auf die Annahme eines versunkenen atlantischen Erdteils festzulegen, die Atlantis, einst Kriegerschwärme strahlenförmig ausgewandert sind als erste Zeugen des immer wieder sich erneut verkörpernden nordischen Fernwehs, um zu erobern, zu gestalten."}} Under Rosenberg, the theories of [[Arthur de Gobineau]], [[Georges Vacher de Lapouge]], Blavatsky, [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], [[Madison Grant]], and those of [[Hitler]],<ref>Mein Kampf, tr. in The Times, 25 July 1933, p.&nbsp;15/6</ref> all culminated in [[Racial policy of Nazi Germany|Nazi Germany's race policies]] and the "[[Aryanization (Nazism)|Aryanization]]" decrees of the 1920s, 1930s, and early 1940s. In its "appalling medical model", the annihilation of the "racially inferior" ''[[Untermensch]]en'' was sanctified as the excision of a diseased organ in an otherwise healthy body,<ref>{{citation|last=Glover|first=Jonathan|chapter=Eugenics: Some Lessons from the Nazi Experience|editor-last=Harris|editor-first=John|editor2-last=Holm|editor2-first=Soren|title=The Future of Human Reproduction: Ethics, Choice, and Regulation|location=Oxford|publisher=Clarendon Press|year=1998|pages=57–65}}</ref> which led to the [[Holocaust]].[[File:ArnoBrekerDiePartei.jpg|thumb|220x220px|[[Arno Breker]]'s sculpture ''Die Partei (The Party)'', depicting a Nazi-era ideal of the "Nordic Aryan" racial type.|left]]According to [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial theorists]], the term "Aryans" (''Arier'') described the [[Germanic peoples]],<ref>Davies, Norman (2006). ''Europe at War: 1939–1945 : No Simple Victory'', p. 167</ref> and they considered the purest Aryans to be those that belonged to a "[[Nordic race]]" physical ideal, which they referred to as the "[[master race]]".{{refn|The ''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'' states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that ''Aryan''<!--source is in italics-->, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of [[Nazi Germany]], originally referred to a people who looked vastly different. Its history starts with the ancient [[Indo-Iranians]], peoples who inhabited parts of what are now <!-- THIS IS INSIDE A LITERAL QUOTATION --> [[Greater Iran|Iran]], [[Afghanistan]], Pakistan and India. <!-- THIS IS INSIDE A LITERAL QUOTATION -->"<ref name="AHD">{{citation|last=Watkins|first=Calvert|chapter=Aryan|title=American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language|edition=4th|year=2000|location=New York|publisher=Houghton Mifflin|isbn=0-395-82517-2|quote=...when [[Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel|Friedrich Schlegel]], a German scholar who was an important early [[Indo-European studies|Indo-Europeanist]], came up with a theory that linked the Indo-Iranian words with the German word ''Ehre'', 'honor', and older Germanic names containing the element ''ario-'', such as the [[Suebi|Swiss]] {{sic}} warrior [[Ariovistus]] who was written about by [[Julius Caesar]]. Schlegel theorized that far from being just a designation of the Indo-Iranians, the word ''*arya-'' had in fact been what the Indo-Europeans called themselves, meaning [according to Schlegel] something like 'the honorable people.' (This theory has since been called into question.)|url=https://archive.org/details/americanheritage0000unse_a1o7}}</ref>|group=note}} However, a satisfactory definition of "Aryan" remained problematic during [[Nazi Germany]].<ref>Ehrenreich, Eric (2007). ''The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution'', pp, 9–11</ref> Although the physical ideal of Nazi racial theorists was typically the tall, [[blond|blond haired]] and [[Eye color|light-eyed]] Nordic individual, such theorists accepted the fact that a considerable variety of hair and eye colour existed within the racial categories they recognised. For example, [[Adolf Hitler]] and many Nazi officials had dark hair and were still considered members of the [[Aryan race]] under Nazi racial doctrine, because the determination of an individual's racial type depended on a preponderance of many characteristics in an individual rather than on just one defining feature.<ref>"The range of blond hair color in pure Nordic peoples runs from flaxen and red to shades of chestnut and brown... It must be clearly understood that blondness of hair and of eye is not a final test of Nordic race. The Nordics include all the blonds, and also those of darker hair or eye when possessed of a preponderance of other Nordic characters. In this sense the word "blond" means those lighter shades of hair or eye color in contrast to the very dark or black shades which are termed brunet. The meaning of "blond" as now used is therefore not limited to the lighter or flaxen shades as in colloquial speech. In England among Nordic populations there are large numbers of individuals with hazel brown eyes joined with the light brown or chestnut hair which is the typical hair shade of the English and Americans. This combination is also common in Holland and Westphalia and is frequently associated with a very fair skin. These men are all of "blond" aspect and constitution and consequently are to be classed as members of the Nordic race." Quoted in Grant, 1922, p. 26.</ref> In September 1935, the Nazis passed the [[Nuremberg Laws]]. All Aryan Reich citizens were required to prove their Aryan ancestry; one way was to obtain an ''[[Ahnenpass]]'' ("ancestor pass") by providing proof through baptismal certificates that all four grandparents were of Aryan descent.<ref>Ehrenreich, Eric (2007). ''The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution'', p. 68</ref> In December of the same year, the Nazis founded ''[[Lebensborn]]'' ("Fount of Life") to counteract the falling Aryan birth rates in Germany, and to promote [[Nazi eugenics]].<ref name="bissell">{{cite news |last=Bissell |first=Kate |title=Fountain of Life |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4080822.stm |access-date=30 September 2011 |publisher=BBC Radio 4 |date=13 June 2005}}</ref>


====British Raj====
Many American [[White Supremacist|white supremacist]] [[Neo-Nazism|neo-Nazi]] groups and prison gangs refer to themselves as 'Aryans', including the [[Aryan Brotherhood]], the [[Aryan Nations]], the [[Aryan Republican Army]], the [[White Aryan Resistance]], or the [[Aryan Circle]].{{sfn|Goodrick-Clarke|2002|pp=232–233}}<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Blazak|first=Randy|date=2009|title=The prison hate machine|journal=Criminology & Public Policy|volume=8|issue=3|pages=633–640|doi=10.1111/j.1745-9133.2009.00579.x|issn=1745-9133}}</ref> Modern nationalist political groups and neo-Pagan movements in Russia claim a direct linkage between themselves as Slavs and the ancient 'Aryans',{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} and in some Indian nationalist circles, the term 'Aryan' can also be used in reference to an alleged Aryan 'race'.{{Sfn|Witzel|2001|p=4}}
In India, the [[British Raj|British colonial government]] had followed de Gobineau's arguments along another line, and had fostered the idea of a superior "Aryan race" that co-opted the [[Indian caste system]] in favor of imperial interests.<ref name="Thapar">{{citation|last=Thapar|first=Romila|title=The Theory of Aryan Race and India: History and Politics|journal=Social Scientist|volume=24|issue=1/3|date= January 1, 1996 |pages=3–29|doi=10.2307/3520116|issn=0970-0293|jstor=3520116}}</ref><ref name="Leopold">{{citation|last=Leopold|first=Joan|title=British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India, 1850–1870|journal=The English Historical Review|volume=89|issue=352|year=1974|pages=578–603|doi=10.1093/ehr/LXXXIX.CCCLII.578}}</ref> In its fully developed form, the British-mediated interpretation foresaw a segregation of Aryan and non-Aryan along the lines of caste, with the upper castes being "Aryan" and the lower ones being "non-Aryan". The European developments not only allowed the British to identify themselves as high-caste, but also allowed the Brahmins to view themselves as on-par with the British. Further, it provoked the reinterpretation of Indian history in racialist and, in opposition, [[Indian Nationalist]] terms.<ref name="Thapar" /><ref name="Leopold" />
 
==== Aryanism, Nazism and white supremacy ====
[[File:Birth of a nation Aryan quote.jpg|thumb|left|275px|An [[intertitle]] from the [[silent film]] blockbuster ''[[The Birth of a Nation]]'' (1915). "Aryan birthright" is here "white birthright", the "defense" of which unites "[[White race|whites]]" in the Northern and Southern U.S. against "[[coloreds]]". In another film of the same year, ''[[The Aryan]]'', [[William S. Hart]]'s "Aryan" identity is defined in distinction from other peoples.]]
 
Through the works of [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], Gobineau's ideas influenced the [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial ideology]], which saw the "[[Aryan race]]" as innately superior to other putative racial groups.{{sfn|Anthony|2007|pp=9–11}} The Nazi official [[Alfred Rosenberg]] argued for a new "[[Blood and soil|religion of the blood]]" based on the supposed innate promptings of the Nordic soul to defend its "noble" character against racial and cultural degeneration. Rosenberg believed the [[Nordic race]] to be descended from [[Proto-Indo-Europeans|Proto-Aryans]], an hypothetical [[Prehistory|prehistoric]] people who dwelt on the [[North German Plain]] and who had ultimately originated from the lost continent of [[Atlantis]].{{refn|group=note|[[Alfred Rosenberg|Rosenberg, Alfred]], "[[The Myth of the 20th Century]]". The term "Atlantis" is mentioned two times in the whole book, the term "Atlantis-hypothesis" is mentioned just once. Rosenberg (page 24): "''It seems to be not completely impossible, that at parts where today the waves of the Atlantic ocean murmur and icebergs move along, once a blossoming land towered in the water, on which a creative race founded a great culture and sent its children as seafarers and warriors into the world; but if this Atlantis-hypothesis proves untenable, we still have to presume a prehistoric Nordic cultural center.''" Rosenberg (page 26): "''The ridiculed hypothesis about a Nordic creative center, which we can call Atlantis – without meaning a sunken island – from where once waves of warriors migrated to all directions as first witnesses of Nordic longing for distant lands to conquer and create, today becomes probable.''" Original: Es erscheint als nicht ganz ausgeschlossen, dass an Stellen, über die heute die Wellen des Atlantischen Ozeans rauschen und riesige Eisgebirge herziehen, einst ein blühendes Festland aus den Fluten ragte, auf dem eine schöpferische Rasse große, weitausgreifende Kultur erzeugte und ihre Kinder als Seefahrer und Krieger hinaussandte in die Welt; aber selbst wenn sich diese Atlantishypothese als nicht haltbar erweisen sollte, wird ein nordisches vorgeschichtliches Kulturzentrum angenommen werden müssen. ... Und deshalb wird die alte verlachte Hypothese heute Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass von einem nordischen Mittelpunkt der Schöpfung, nennen wir ihn, ohne uns auf die Annahme eines versunkenen atlantischen Erdteils festzulegen, die Atlantis, einst Kriegerschwärme strahlenförmig ausgewandert sind als erste Zeugen des immer wieder sich erneut verkörpernden nordischen Fernwehs, um zu erobern, zu gestalten."}} Under Rosenberg, the theories of [[Arthur de Gobineau]], [[Georges Vacher de Lapouge]], Blavatsky, [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], [[Madison Grant]], and those of [[Hitler]],<ref>Mein Kampf, tr. in The Times, 25 July 1933, p.&nbsp;15/6</ref> all culminated in [[Racial policy of Nazi Germany|Nazi Germany's race policies]] and the "[[Aryanization (Nazism)|Aryanization]]" decrees of the 1920s, 1930s, and early 1940s. In its "appalling medical model", the annihilation of the "racially inferior" ''[[Untermensch]]en'' was sanctified as the excision of a diseased organ in an otherwise healthy body,<ref>{{citation|last=Glover|first=Jonathan|chapter=Eugenics: Some Lessons from the Nazi Experience|editor-last=Harris|editor-first=John|editor2-last=Holm|editor2-first=Soren|title=The Future of Human Reproduction: Ethics, Choice, and Regulation|location=Oxford|publisher=Clarendon Press|year=1998|pages=57–65}}</ref> which led to the [[Holocaust]].[[File:ArnoBrekerDiePartei.jpg|thumb|220x220px|[[Arno Breker]]'s sculpture ''Die Partei (The Party)'', depicting a Nazi-era ideal of the "Nordic Aryan" racial type.]]According to [[Nazism and race|Nazi racial theorists]], the term "Aryans" (''Arier'') described the [[Germanic peoples]],<ref>Davies, Norman (2006). ''Europe at War: 1939–1945 : No Simple Victory'', p. 167</ref> and they considered the purest Aryans to be those that belonged to a "[[Nordic race]]" physical ideal, which they referred to as the "[[master race]]".{{refn|The ''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'' states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that ''Aryan''<!--source is in italics-->, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of [[Nazi Germany]], originally referred to a people who looked vastly different. Its history starts with the ancient [[Indo-Iranians]], peoples who inhabited parts of what are now <!-- THIS IS INSIDE A LITERAL QUOTATION --> [[Greater Iran|Iran]], [[Afghanistan]], Pakistan and India. <!-- THIS IS INSIDE A LITERAL QUOTATION -->"<ref name="AHD" />|group=note}} However, a satisfactory definition of "Aryan" remained problematic during [[Nazi Germany]].<ref>Ehrenreich, Eric (2007). ''The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution'', pp, 9–11</ref> Although the physical ideal of Nazi racial theorists was typically the tall, [[blond|blond haired]] and [[Eye color|light-eyed]] Nordic individual, such theorists accepted the fact that a considerable variety of hair and eye colour existed within the racial categories they recognised. For example, [[Adolf Hitler]] and many Nazi officials had dark hair and were still considered members of the [[Aryan race]] under Nazi racial doctrine, because the determination of an individual's racial type depended on a preponderance of many characteristics in an individual rather than on just one defining feature.<ref>"The range of blond hair color in pure Nordic peoples runs from flaxen and red to shades of chestnut and brown... It must be clearly understood that blondness of hair and of eye is not a final test of Nordic race. The Nordics include all the blonds, and also those of darker hair or eye when possessed of a preponderance of other Nordic characters. In this sense the word "blond" means those lighter shades of hair or eye color in contrast to the very dark or black shades which are termed brunet. The meaning of "blond" as now used is therefore not limited to the lighter or flaxen shades as in colloquial speech. In England among Nordic populations there are large numbers of individuals with hazel brown eyes joined with the light brown or chestnut hair which is the typical hair shade of the English and Americans. This combination is also common in Holland and Westphalia and is frequently associated with a very fair skin. These men are all of "blond" aspect and constitution and consequently are to be classed as members of the Nordic race." Quoted in Grant, 1922, p. 26.</ref>
 
In September 1935, the Nazis passed the [[Nuremberg Laws]]. All Aryan Reich citizens were required to prove their Aryan ancestry; one way was to obtain an ''[[Ahnenpass]]'' ("ancestor pass") by providing proof through baptismal certificates that all four grandparents were of Aryan descent.<ref>Ehrenreich, Eric (2007). ''The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution'', p. 68</ref> In December of the same year, the Nazis founded ''[[Lebensborn]]'' ("Fount of Life") to counteract the falling Aryan birth rates in Germany, and to promote [[Nazi eugenics]].<ref name="bissell">{{cite news |last=Bissell |first=Kate |title=Fountain of Life |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4080822.stm |access-date=30 September 2011 |publisher=BBC Radio 4 |date=13 June 2005}}</ref>


=== "Aryan invasion theory" ===
=== "Aryan invasion theory" ===
{{Main|Indo-Aryan_migrations#"Aryan_invasion"|l1="Aryan invasion"}}
{{Main|Indo-Aryan_migrations#"Aryan_invasion"|l1="Aryan invasion"}}


Translating the sacred Indian texts of the [[Rigveda|Rig Veda]] in the 1840s, German linguist [[Max Müller|Friedrich Max Muller]] found what he believed was evidence of an ancient invasion of India by Hindu Brahmins, a group which he called "the Arya." In his later works, Muller was careful to note that he thought that Aryan was a linguistic rather than a racial category. Nevertheless, scholars used Muller's invasion theory to propose their own visions of racial conquest through [[South Asia]] and the [[Indian Ocean]]. In 1885, the New Zealand polymath [[Edward Tregear]] argued that an "Aryan tidal-wave" had washed over India and continued to push south, through the islands of the East Indian archipelago, reaching the distant shores of New Zealand. Scholars such as [[John Batchelor (missionary)|John Batchelor]], [[Jean Louis Armand de Quatrefages de Bréau|Armand de Quatrefages]], and [[Daniel Garrison Brinton|Daniel Brinton]] extended this invasion theory to the Philippines, Hawaii, and Japan, identifying indigenous peoples who they believed were the descendants of early Aryan conquerors.<ref name="Robinson2016">{{Cite book|last=Robinson|first=Michael|title=The Lost White Tribe: Explorers, Scientists, and the Theory that Changed a Continent|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2016|isbn=9780199978489|location=New York|pages=147–161}}</ref> With the discovery of the [[Indus Valley Civilisation]], mid-20th century archeologist [[Mortimer Wheeler]] argued that the large urban civilisation had been destroyed by the Aryans.<ref name="GLP">{{citation|author=Gregory L. Possehl|title=The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective|page=238|year=2002|publisher=Rowman Altamira|isbn=9780759101722}}</ref> This position was later discredited, with climate aridification becoming the likely cause of the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Malik|first1=Nishant|year=2020|title=Uncovering transitions in paleoclimate time series and the climate driven demise of an ancient civilization|url=https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0012059|journal=Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science|series=Nishant Malik, Chaos (2020)|volume=30|issue=8|page=083108|bibcode=2020Chaos..30h3108M|doi=10.1063/5.0012059|pmid=32872795}}</ref> The term "invasion", while it was once commonly used in regard to Indo-Aryan migration, is now usually used only by opponents of the Indo-Aryan migration theory.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} The term "invasion" does not any longer reflect the scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations,{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} and is now generally regarded as polemical, distracting and unscholarly.
Translating the sacred Indian texts of the [[Rigveda|Rig Veda]] in the 1840s, German linguist [[Max Müller|Friedrich Max Muller]] found what he believed was evidence of an ancient invasion of India by Hindu Brahmins, a group which he called "the Arya." In his later works, Muller was careful to note that he thought that Aryan was a linguistic rather than a racial category. Nevertheless, scholars used Muller's invasion theory to propose their own visions of racial conquest through [[South Asia]] and the [[Indian Ocean]]. In 1885, the New Zealand polymath [[Edward Tregear]] argued that an "Aryan tidal-wave" had washed over India and continued to push south, through the islands of the East Indian archipelago, reaching the distant shores of New Zealand. Scholars such as [[John Batchelor (missionary)|John Batchelor]], [[Jean Louis Armand de Quatrefages de Bréau|Armand de Quatrefages]], and [[Daniel Garrison Brinton|Daniel Brinton]] extended this invasion theory to the Philippines, Hawaii, and Japan, identifying indigenous peoples who they believed were the descendants of early Aryan conquerors.<ref name="Robinson2016">{{Cite book|last=Robinson|first=Michael|title=The Lost White Tribe: Explorers, Scientists, and the Theory that Changed a Continent|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2016|isbn=9780199978489|location=New York|pages=147–161}}</ref> With the discovery of the [[Indus Valley civilisation]], mid-20th century archeologist [[Mortimer Wheeler]] argued that the large urban civilisation had been destroyed by the Aryans.<ref name="GLP">{{citation|author=Gregory L. Possehl|title=The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective|page=238|year=2002|publisher=Rowman Altamira|isbn=9780759101722}}</ref> This position was later discredited, with climate aridification becoming the likely cause of the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Malik|first1=Nishant|year=2020|title=Uncovering transitions in paleoclimate time series and the climate driven demise of an ancient civilization|url=https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0012059|journal=Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science|series=Nishant Malik, Chaos (2020)|volume=30|issue=8|page=083108|bibcode=2020Chaos..30h3108M|doi=10.1063/5.0012059|pmid=32872795|s2cid=221468124}}</ref> The term "invasion", while it was once commonly used in regard to Indo-Aryan migration, is now usually used only by opponents of the Indo-Aryan migration theory.{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} The term "invasion" does not any longer reflect the scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations,{{sfn|Witzel|2005|p=348}} and is now generally regarded as polemical, distracting and unscholarly.


In recent decades, the idea of an Aryan migration into India has been disputed mainly by Indian scholars, who claim various alternate [[Indigenous Aryans]] scenarios contrary to established [[Kurgan model]]. However, these alternate scenarios are rooted in traditional and religious views on Indian history and identity and are universally rejected in mainstream scholarship.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Bryant|first=Edwin|title=The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture: The Indo-Aryan Migration Debate|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2001|isbn=0-19-513777-9}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Bryant|first1=Edwin|title=The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History|last2=Patton|first2=Laurie L.|publisher=Routledge|year=2005}}</ref>{{sfn|Singh|2008|p=186}}{{sfn|Witzel|2001}}{{refn|group=note|name="no support"|No support in mainstream scholarship:
In recent decades, the idea of an Aryan migration into India has been disputed mainly by Indian scholars, who claim various alternate [[Indigenous Aryans]] scenarios contrary to established [[Kurgan model]]. However, these alternate scenarios are rooted in traditional and religious views on Indian history and identity and are universally rejected in mainstream scholarship.{{sfnm|1a1=Bryant|1y=2001|2a1=Bryant|2a2=Patton|2y=2005|3a1=Singh|3y=2008|3p=186|4a1=Witzel|4y=2001}}{{refn|group=note|name="no support"|No support in mainstream scholarship:
* Romila Thapar (2006): "there is no scholar at this time seriously arguing for the indigenous origin of Aryans".{{sfn|Thapar|2006}}
* Romila Thapar (2006): "there is no scholar at this time seriously arguing for the indigenous origin of Aryans".{{sfn|Thapar|2006}}
* Wendy Doniger (2017): "The opposing argument, that speakers of Indo-European languages were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, is not supported by any reliable scholarship. It is now championed primarily by Hindu nationalists, whose religious sentiments have led them to regard the theory of Aryan migration with some asperity."<ref group=web name="Doniger_2017">Wendy Doniger (2017), [https://inference-review.com/article/another-great-story "Another Great Story"]", review of Asko Parpola's ''The Roots of Hinduism''; in: ''Inference, International Review of Science'', Volume 3, Issue 2</ref>
* Wendy Doniger (2017): "The opposing argument, that speakers of Indo-European languages were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, is not supported by any reliable scholarship. It is now championed primarily by Hindu nationalists, whose religious sentiments have led them to regard the theory of Aryan migration with some asperity."<ref group=web name="Doniger_2017">Wendy Doniger (2017), [https://inference-review.com/article/another-great-story "Another Great Story"]", review of Asko Parpola's ''The Roots of Hinduism''; in: ''Inference, International Review of Science'', Volume 3, Issue 2</ref>
* Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), in response to Narasimhan et al. (2019): "Hindutva activists, however, have kept the Aryan Invasion Theory alive, because it offers them the perfect strawman, 'an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument'&nbsp;... The Out of India hypothesis is a desperate attempt to reconcile linguistic, archaeological and genetic evidence with Hindutva sentiment and nationalistic pride, but it cannot reverse time's arrow&nbsp;... The evidence keeps crushing Hindutva ideas of history."<ref group=web name="Shahane_2019">Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), [https://scroll.in/article/937043/why-hindutva-supporters-love-to-hate-the-discredited-aryan-invasion-theory ''Why Hindutva supporters love to hate the discredited Aryan Invasion Theory''], Scroll.in</ref>
* Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), in response to Narasimhan et al. (2019): "Hindutva activists, however, have kept the Aryan Invasion Theory alive, because it offers them the perfect strawman, 'an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument'&nbsp;... The Out of India hypothesis is a desperate attempt to reconcile linguistic, archaeological and genetic evidence with Hindutva sentiment and nationalistic pride, but it cannot reverse time's arrow&nbsp;... The evidence keeps crushing Hindutva ideas of history."<ref group=web name="Shahane_2019">Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), [https://scroll.in/article/937043/why-hindutva-supporters-love-to-hate-the-discredited-aryan-invasion-theory ''Why Hindutva supporters love to hate the discredited Aryan Invasion Theory''], Scroll.in</ref>
* Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016): "Of course it is a fringe theory, at least internationally, where the Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) is still the official paradigm. In India, though, it has the support of most archaeologists, who fail to find a trace of this Aryan influx and instead find cultural continuity."<ref name="Elst_2016">Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016), Koenraad Elst: "I am not aware of any governmental interest in correcting distorted history", ''Swarajya Magazine''</ref>}} According to Michael Witzel, the "indigenous Aryans" position is not scholarship in the usual sense, but an "apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking":{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}} A number of alternative theories have been proposed. Renfrew's [[Anatolian hypothesis]] suggests a much earlier date for the Indo-European languages, proposing an origin in [[Anatolia]] and an initial spread with the earliest farmers who migrated to Europe. It has been the only serious alternative for the steppe-theory, but suffers from a lack of explanatory power. The Anatolian hypothesis also led to some support for the [[Armenian hypothesis]], which proposes that the [[Urheimat]] of the Indo-European language was south of the Caucasus. While the Armenian hypothesis has been criticized on archeological and chronological grounds, recent genetic research has led to a renewed interest. The [[Paleolithic Continuity Theory]] suggests an origin in the [[Paleolithic|Paleolithic period]], but has received very little interest in mainstream scholarship.
* Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016): "Of course it is a fringe theory, at least internationally, where the Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) is still the official paradigm. In India, though, it has the support of most archaeologists, who fail to find a trace of this Aryan influx and instead find cultural continuity."<ref name="Elst_2016">Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016), Koenraad Elst: "I am not aware of any governmental interest in correcting distorted history", ''Swarajya Magazine''</ref>}} According to Michael Witzel, the "indigenous Aryans" position is not scholarship in the usual sense, but an "apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking".{{sfn|Witzel|2001|p=95}} A number of other alternative theories have been proposed including [[Anatolian hypothesis]], [[Armenian hypothesis]], the [[Paleolithic Continuity Theory]] but these are not widely accepted and have received little or no interest in mainstream scholarship.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.370.8351&rep=rep1&type=pdf|title=Towards a generalised continuity model for Uralic and Indo European languages|year=2002| citeseerx=10.1.1.370.8351 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Horse, the Wheel, and Language: How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World|author=David W. Anthony|pages=300–400}}</ref>
 
===Present-day scholarly usage===
[[File:Map of Vedic India.png|thumb|right|250px|In academic scholarship, the only surviving use of the word "Aryan" among many scholars is that of the term "[[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]]", which indicates "(speakers of) languages descended from [[Prakrit]]s". Older usage to mean "(speakers of) [[Indo-Iranian languages]]" has been superseded among some scholars by the term "[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]"; however, "Aryan" is still used to mean "Indo-Iranian" by other scholars such as [[Josef Wiesehofer]] and [[Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza]]. The 19th-century meaning of "Aryan" as (native speakers of) [[Indo-European languages]]" is no longer used by most scholars, but has continued among some scholars such as [[Colin Renfrew]], and among some authors writing for the popular mass market such as [[H.G. Wells]] and [[Poul Anderson]].]]
 
By the end of World War II, the word "Aryan" among a number of people had lost its Romantic or idealist connotations and was associated by many with [[Nazi racism]] instead.
 
By then, the term "[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]" and "[[Proto-Indo-Europeans|Indo-European]]" had made most uses of the term "Aryan" superfluous in the eyes of a number of scholars, and "Aryan" now survives in most scholarly usage only in the term "[[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]]" to indicate (speakers of) North Indian languages. It has been asserted by one scholar that Indo-Aryan and Aryan may not be equated and that such an equation is not supported by the historical evidence<!-- "the equation of IA speakers with 'Aryan' (i.e. the original intruders and their direct descendants) is not supported by the historical evidence" Southworth 1974:204 reiterated in Kuiper 1991:8 -->,<ref name="Kuiper_1991">{{citation|last=Kuiper|first=B.F.J.|title=Aryans in the Rigveda|series=Leiden Studies in Indo-European|year=1991|location=Amsterdam|publisher=Rodopi|isbn=90-5183-307-5}}</ref> though this extreme viewpoint is not widespread.
 
The term "Aryan language family", while rarely used, may thus designate all [[Indo-Iranian languages]], that is to say the [[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan]] (including [[Dardic languages|Dardic]]), [[Iranian languages|Iranian]] and [[Nuristani languages|Nuristani]] languages.{{sfn|Edelman|1999|p=221}} However, the atrocities committed in the name of the [[Aryanism|Aryanist]] racial ideology have led academics to avoid the use of "Aryan", which has been replaced in most cases by "[[Indo-Iranians|Indo-Iranian]]", with only the South Asian branch still being called "Indo-Aryan" in scholarship.<ref name="Witzel2012" /> The term "Iranian", which stems from ''Aryan'', also continues to be used to refer to specific [[ethnolinguistic group]]s:
* [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]]: refers to the populations speaking an [[Indo-Aryan languages|Indo-Aryan language]] or identifying as [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]].<ref>{{Cite book|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203641880|title=The Indo-Aryan Controversy|date=2004-08-02|isbn=9780203641880|editor-last=Bryant|editor-first=Edwin|doi=10.4324/9780203641880|editor2-last=Patton|editor2-first=Laurie}}</ref> These ethnolinguistic groups, which form the predominant group in Northern India,<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DPWGpVvBvx8C&q=largest+indo+aryan+ethnolinguistic&pg=PA132|title=The Great Indian Corridor in the East|date=2007|publisher=Mittal Publications|isbn=978-81-8324-179-3|language=en}}</ref> are often used to attribute caste and ethnicity, and they are still implemented in the [[Reservation in India]] and the [[Quota system in Pakistan]]. An estimated ~1.3 billion people identify as Indo-Aryan today.
* [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]] (or Iranic): used to designate the speakers of [[Iranian languages]] or the peoples who identify as "Iranians", especially in [[Greater Iran]]. Modern Iranian ethnolinguistic groups include [[Persians]], [[Pashtuns]], [[Kurds]], [[Tajiks]], [[Baloch people|Baloch]], [[Lurs]], [[Pamiris]], [[Zazas]], and [[Ossetians]]. An estimated 200 million identify as Iranian peoples.
 
The use of the term to designate speakers of all Indo-European languages in scholarly usage is now regarded by some scholars as an "aberration to be avoided."<ref name=Witzel2012>{{harvnb|Witzel|2001}}</ref> However, some authors writing for popular consumption have continued using the word "Aryan" for "all Indo-Europeans" in the tradition of [[H. G. Wells]],<ref>Wells, H.G. ''[[The Outline of History]]'' New York:1920 Doubleday & Co. Chapter 19 The Aryan Speaking Peoples in Pre-Historic Times [Meaning the Proto-Indo-Europeans] Pages 271–285</ref><ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/86/19.html H.G. Wells describes the origin of the Aryans (Proto-Indo Europeans):]</ref> such as the science fiction author [[Poul Anderson]],<ref>See the Poul Anderson short stories in the 1964 collection [[Time and Stars]] and the ''Polesotechnic League'' stories featuring [[Nicholas van Rijn]]</ref> and scientists writing for the popular media, such as [[Colin Renfrew]].<ref>Renfrew, Colin. (1989). The Origins of Indo-European Languages. /Scientific American/, 261(4), 82–90. In explaining the [[Anatolian hypothesis]], the term "Aryan" is used to denote "all Indo-Europeans"</ref> Echoes of "the 19th century prejudice about 'northern' Aryans who were confronted on Indian soil with black barbarians [...] can still be heard in some modern studies."<!-- Kuiper 1991: 3-4 --><ref name="Kuiper_1991" /> In a socio-political context, the claim of a white, European Aryan race that includes only people of the Western and not the Eastern branch of the Indo-European peoples is entertained by certain circles, usually representing [[White nationalism|white nationalists]] who call for the halting of non-white immigration into Europe and limiting [[Immigration to the United States|immigration into the United States]].{{citation needed|date=December 2020}} They{{who?|date=December 2020}} argue that a large intrusion of immigrants can lead to [[ethnic conflict]]s such as the [[2005 Cronulla riots]] in Australia and the [[2005 civil unrest in France]].


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Arya (name)]]
* [[Arya (name)]]
* [[Airyanem Vaejah]]
* [[Airyanem Vaejah]]
* [[Aryavarta]]
* [[Arya Samaj]]
* [[Ariana]]
* [[Arya samaj]]
* [[Graeco-Aryan]]
* [[Graeco-Aryan]]
* [[Mleccha]]
* [[Yamnaya culture]]


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
Line 182: Line 173:


=== Bibliography ===
=== Bibliography ===
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* {{Citation | last=Talageri | first=Shrikant G. | author-link=Shrikant G. Talageri | year=2000 | title=The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis | place=New Delhi | publisher=[[Aditya Prakashan]] | isbn=81-7742-010-0 | url=http://www.bharatvani.org/books/rig/ | access-date= 15 May 2007}}.
*{{Cite book|last=Harmatta|first=János|title=Studies in the History and Language of the Sarmatians|date=1970|publisher=S.l|author-link=János Harmatta}}
* {{cite book |last=Thapar |first=Romila |date=2006 |title=India: Historical Beginnings and the Concept of the Aryan |publisher=National Book Trust |isbn=9788123747798 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=sDBuAAAAMAAJ&q=indigenous+aryans}}
<!-- K -->
* {{cite book|last=Trautmann|first=Thomas R.|author-link=Thomas Trautmann|title=Aryans and British India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dhbwDFfE9J8C|date=1 December 2005|publisher=Yoda Press|isbn=978-81-902272-1-6}}
*{{Cite book|last=Kloekhorst|first=Alwin|title=Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon|date=2008|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-16092-7|author-link=Alwin Kloekhorst}}
* {{Citation | last =Witzel | first =Michael | year =2000 | title =The Home of the Aryans. In: A. Hinze and E. Tichy (eds), "Festschrift fuer Johanna Narten zum 70. Geburtstag", Muenchener Studien zur Sprachwissenschaft, Beihefte NF 19| publisher =J. H. Roell | url =http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~witzel/AryanHome.pdf}}
*{{Cite book|last=Kuiper|first=F. B. J.|title=Aryans in the Rigveda|date=1991|publisher=Rodopi|isbn=90-5183-307-5|oclc=26608387|author-link=Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper}}
* {{citation|last=Witzel|first=Michael|title=Autochthonous Aryans? The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts|journal=Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies|volume=7|issue=3|year=2001|pages=1–115|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/267224370}}
*{{Cite book|last=Kuzmina|first=Elena E.|title=The Origin of the Indo-Iranians|date=2007|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-16054-5|author-link=Elena Efimovna Kuzmina}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Witzel|first=Michael|editor-last1=Bryant |editor-first1=Edwin |editor-last2=Patton |editor-first2=Laurie |encyclopedia=The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History |title=Indocentrism: Autochthonous visions of ancient India |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-79102-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NDRRNGj17EMC |access-date=25 March 2021 |language=en}}
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*{{Cite journal|last=Leopold|first=Joan|date=1974|title=British Applications of the Aryan Theory of Race to India, 1850-1870|journal=The English Historical Review|volume=89|issue=352|pages=578–603|doi=10.1093/ehr/LXXXIX.CCCLII.578|issn=0013-8266|jstor=567427}}
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*{{cite book|last=MacKenzie|first=D. N.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Iranica Foundation|year=1998a|volume=8|chapter=Ērān, Ērānšahr|author-link=David Neil MacKenzie|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/eran-eransah}}
*{{cite book|last=MacKenzie|first=D. N.|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Iranica Foundation|year=1998b|volume=8|chapter=Ērān-Wēz|author-link=David Neil MacKenzie|chapter-url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/eran-wez}}
*{{Cite book|last=Mallory|first=J. P.|title=In Search of the Indo-Europeans: Language, Archaeology, and Myth|date=1989|publisher=Thames and Hudson|isbn=9780500050521|author-link=J. P. Mallory}}
*{{Cite book|last1=Mallory|first1=J. P.|title=Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture|last2=Adams|first2=Douglas Q.|date=1997|publisher=Fitzroy Dearborn|isbn=978-1-884964-98-5|author-link=J. P. Mallory|author-link2=Douglas Q. Adams}}
*{{Cite book|last1=Mallory|first1=J. P.|title=The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World|last2=Adams|first2=Douglas Q.|date=2006|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-929668-2|author-link=J. P. Mallory|author-link2=Douglas Q. Adams}}
*{{Cite book|last=Matasović|first=Ranko|title=Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic|date=2009|publisher=Brill|isbn=9789004173361|author-link=Ranko Matasović}}
*{{Cite book|last=Mayrhofer|first=Manfred|title=Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Altindoarischen|date=1992|publisher=Carl Winter|isbn=3-533-03826-2|oclc=14693324|author-link=Manfred Mayrhofer}}
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*{{Cite book|last=Orel|first=Vladimir E.|title=A handbook of Germanic etymology|date=2003|publisher=Brill|isbn=1-4175-3642-X|oclc=56727400|author-link=Vladimir Orel}}
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*{{Cite book|last=Poliakov|first=Léon|title=The Aryan myth : a history of racist and nationalist ideas in Europe|date=1974|publisher=Basic Books|isbn=0-465-00452-0|oclc=1011605|author-link=Léon Poliakov}}
<!-- R -->
*{{Cite book|last=Rédei|first=Károly|title=Zu den indogermanisch-uralischen Sprachkontakten|date=1986|publisher=Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften|isbn=978-3-7001-0768-2}}
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* {{Cite book |last=Samuel | first=Geoffrey | year=2010 | title=The Origins of Yoga and Tantra | publisher=Cambridge University Press}}
*{{cite book|last=Schmitt|first=Rüdiger|title=Encyclopædia Iranica|publisher=Iranica Foundation|year=1987|volume=2|chapter=Aryans|author-link=Rüdiger Schmitt|chapter-url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/aryans}}
* {{cite book |last1=Singh |first1=Upinder |title=A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century |date=2008 |publisher=Pearson Education India |isbn=978-81-317-1677-9}}
*{{Cite book|last=Szemerényi|first=Oswald|title=Studies in the Kinship Terminology of the Indo-European Languages|date=1977|publisher=Brill|oclc=470049907|author-link=Oswald Szemerényi}}
<!-- T -->
*{{cite journal|last=Thapar|first=Romila|title=The Theory of Aryan Race and India: History and Politics|journal=Social Scientist|volume=24|issue=1/3|date=1996|pages=3–29|doi=10.2307/3520116|issn=0970-0293|jstor=3520116}}
*{{cite book|last=Thapar|first=Romila|date=2006|title=India: Historical Beginnings and the Concept of the Aryan|publisher=National Book Trust|isbn=9788123747798}}
*{{Cite book|last=Thapar|first=Romila|title=Which of Us are Aryans?: Rethinking the Concept of Our Origins|date=2019|publisher=Aleph|isbn=978-93-88292-38-2|author-link=Romila Thapar}}
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*{{Cite book|last=Watkins|first=Calvert|title=The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots|date=1985|publisher=Houghton Mifflin|isbn=0-395-37888-5|oclc=11533475|author-link=Calvert Watkins}}
*{{Cite book|last=West|first=Martin L.|title=Indo-European Poetry and Myth|date=2007|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-928075-9|author-link=Martin Litchfield West}}
*{{Cite book|last=Witzel|first=Michael|year=2000|chapter=The Home of the Aryans|editor-first1=A.|editor-last1=Hinze|editor-first2=E.|editor-last2=Tichy|title=Festschrift fuer Johanna Narten zum 70. Geburtstag|publisher =J. H. Roell}}
*{{Cite journal|last=Witzel|first=Michael|author-link=Michael Witzel|year=2001|title=Autochthonous Aryans? The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts|volume=7|pages=1–115|journal=Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies|issue=3|doi=10.11588/ejvs.2001.3.830}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Witzel|first=Michael|editor-last1=Bryant |editor-first1=Edwin |editor-last2=Patton |editor-first2=Laurie |encyclopedia=The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History |title=Indocentrism: Autochthonous visions of ancient India |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-79102-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NDRRNGj17EMC |access-date=25 March 2021 }}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*{{cite web|url=https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://scholar.google.ca/&httpsredir=1&article=2330&context=ocj|title=A word for Aryan originality|work=A. Kammpier}}
*{{cite web|url=https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://scholar.google.ca/&httpsredir=1&article=2330&context=ocj|title=A word for Aryan originality|work=A. Kammpier |ref=none}}
* {{citation | last1 =Arvidsson | first1 =Stefan | year =2006 | title =Aryan Idols: Indo-European Mythology as Ideology and Science | publisher =University of Chicago Press }}
*{{Cite book| editor-last=Bronkhorst|editor-first=J.|editor2-last=Deshpande|editor2-first=M.M.|title=Aryan and Non-Aryan in South Asia: Evidence, Interpretation, and Ideology|publisher=Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies, Harvard University|publication-date=1999|isbn=1-888789-04-2|year=1999}}
* {{Cite book|last =Edelman|first =Dzoj (Joy) I.|year =1999|title =On the history of non-decimal systems and their elements in numerals of Aryan languages. In: Jadranka Gvozdanović (ed.), "Numeral Types and Changes Worldwide"|publisher =Walter de Gruyter}}
* {{citation|last1=Fussmann|first1=G.|last2=Francfort|first2=H.P.|last3=Kellens|first3=J.|last4=Tremblay|first4=X.|title=Aryas, Aryens et Iraniens en Asie Centrale|date=2005|publisher=Institut Civilisation Indienne|isbn=2-86803-072-6 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|last1=Fussmann|first1=G.|last2=Francfort|first2=H.P.|last3=Kellens|first3=J.|last4=Tremblay|first4=X.|title=Aryas, Aryens et Iraniens en Asie Centrale|date=2005|publisher=Institut Civilisation Indienne|isbn=2-86803-072-6 |ref=none}}
* {{citation | first1 =Vyacheslav V.| last1 =Ivanov | first2 =Thomas | last2 =Gamkrelidze | title =The Early History of Indo-European Languages | journal =Scientific American | volume =262 | issue =3 | pages =110–116 | year =<!--March--> 1990 | doi =10.1038/scientificamerican0390-110 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|first1 =Vyacheslav V.| last1 =Ivanov|first2 =Thomas|last2 =Gamkrelidze|title =The Early History of Indo-European Languages|journal =Scientific American|volume =262|issue =3|pages =110–116|year =<!--March--> 1990|doi =10.1038/scientificamerican0390-110 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|last1=Lincoln|first1=Bruce|title=Theorizing Myth: Narrative, Ideology, and Scholarship|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1999 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|last1=Lincoln|first1=Bruce|title=Theorizing Myth: Narrative, Ideology, and Scholarship|publisher=University of Chicago Press|year=1999 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book|last1=Morey|first1=Peter|last2=Tickell|first2=Alex|title=Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Hf0geg3kl7sC|year=2005|publisher=Rodopi|isbn=90-420-1927-1 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book|last1=Morey|first1=Peter|last2=Tickell|first2=Alex|title=Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Hf0geg3kl7sC|year=2005|publisher=Rodopi|isbn=90-420-1927-1 |ref=none}}
* {{citation | last =Poliakov | first =Leon | year =1996 | title =The Aryan Myth: A History of Racist and Nationalistic Ideas in Europe | location =New York | publisher =[[Barnes & Noble Books]] | isbn=0-7607-0034-6 |ref=none}}<!--Translation of ''Le mythe aryen'', 1971-->
* {{cite book|last=Sugirtharajah|first=Sharada|title=Imagining Hinduism: A Postcolonial Perspective|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aIX4JYZHW2MC|year=2003|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-203-63411-0 |ref=none}}
* {{cite book|last=Sugirtharajah|first=Sharada|title=Imagining Hinduism: A Postcolonial Perspective|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aIX4JYZHW2MC|year=2003|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-0-203-63411-0 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|last=Tickell|first=A|year=2005|chapter=The Discovery of Aryavarta: Hindu Nationalism and Early Indian Fiction in English|title=Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism|editor1=Peter Morey|editor2=Alex Tickell|pages=25–53 |ref=none}}
* {{citation|last=Tickell|first=A|year=2005|chapter=The Discovery of Aryavarta: Hindu Nationalism and Early Indian Fiction in English|title=Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism|editor1=Peter Morey|editor2=Alex Tickell|pages=25–53 |ref=none}}
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{{Jainism topics}}
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{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:Etymologies]]
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[[Category:Esoteric anthropogenesis]]
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[[Category:Avesta]]
[[Category:Vedas]]
[[Category:Vedas]]
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[[Category:Buddhism]]
[[Category:Jainism]]
[[Category:Indo-European linguistics]]
[[Category:Indo-European linguistics]]

Revision as of 10:23, 28 June 2022


Aryan or Arya (/ˈɛəriən/;[1] Indo-Iranian *arya) is a term originally used as an ethnocultural self-designation by Indo-Iranians in ancient times, in contrast to the nearby outsiders known as 'non-Aryan' (*an-arya).[2][3] In Ancient India, the term ā́rya was used by the Indo-Aryan speakers of the Vedic period as an endonym (self-designation) and in reference to a region known as Āryāvarta ('abode of the Aryas'), where the Indo-Aryan culture emerged.[4] In the Avesta scriptures, ancient Iranian peoples similarly used the term airya to designate themselves as an ethnic group, and in reference to their mythical homeland, Airyanǝm Vaēǰō ('expanse of the Aryas' or 'stretch of the Aryas').[5][6] The stem also forms the etymological source of place names such as Iran (*Aryānām) and Alania (*Aryāna-).[7]

Although the stem *arya- may be of Proto-Indo-European (PIE) origin,[8] its use as an ethnocultural self-designation is only attested among Indo-Iranian peoples, and it is not known if PIE speakers had a term to designate themselves as 'Proto-Indo-Europeans'. In any case, scholars point out that, even in ancient times, the idea of being an Aryan was religious, cultural and linguistic, not racial.[9][10][11]

In the 1850s the term 'Aryan' was adopted as a racial category by French writer Arthur de Gobineau, who, through the later works of Houston Stewart Chamberlain, influenced the Nazi racial ideology.[12] Under Nazi rule (1933–1945), the term applied to most inhabitants of Germany excluding Jews.[13][14] Aryan certificate was a primary requirement to become a Reich citizen for those who were of German or related blood (Aryan) and wanted to become Reich citizens after the Nuremberg Laws were passed in 1935. A "Swede or an Englishman, a Frenchman or Czech, a Pole or Italian" was considered to be related, that is, "Aryan". Those classified as 'non-Aryans,' especially Jews,[15] were discriminated against before suffering the systematic mass killing known as the Holocaust [13] (see Porajmos for the genocide of the Romani people). The atrocities committed in the name of Aryanist supremacist ideologies have led academics to generally avoid the term 'Aryan', which has been replaced in most cases by 'Indo-Iranian', although the South Asian branch is still known as 'Indo-Aryan'.[16]

Etymology

One of the earliest epigraphically attested reference to the word arya occurs in the 6th-century BC Behistun inscription, which describes itself as having been composed "in arya [language or script]" (§ 70). As is also the case for all other Old Iranian language usage, the arya of the inscription does not signify anything but "Iranian".[17]

The term Arya was first rendered into a modern European language in 1771 as Aryens by French Indologist Abraham-Hyacinthe Anquetil-Duperron, who rightly compared the Greek arioi with the Avestan airya and the country name Iran. A German translation of Anquetil-Duperron's work led to the introduction of the term Arier in 1776.[18] The Sanskrit word ā́rya is rendered as 'noble' in William Jones' 1794 translation of the Indian Laws of Manu,[18] and the English Aryan (originally spelt Arian) appeared a few decades later, first as an adjective in 1839, then as a noun in 1851.[19]

Indo-Iranian

The Sanskrit word ā́rya (आर्य) was originally an ethnocultural term designating those who spoke Vedic Sanskrit and adhered to Vedic cultural norms (including religious rituals and poetry), in contrast to an outsider, or an-ā́rya ('non-Arya').[20][4] By the time of the Buddha (5th–4th century BCE), it took the meaning of 'noble'.[21] In Old Iranian languages, the Avestan term airya (Old Persian ariya) was likewise used as an ethnocultural self-designation by ancient Iranian peoples, in contrast to an an-airya ('non-Arya'). It designated those who belonged to the 'Aryan' (Iranian) ethnic stock, spoke the language and followed the religion of the 'Aryas'.[5][6]

These two terms derive from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-Iranian stem *arya- or *āryo-,[22] which was probably the name used by the prehistoric Indo-Iranian peoples to designate themselves as an ethnocultural group.[2][23][24] The term did not have any racial connotation, which only emerged later in the works of 19th-century Western writers.[9][10][25] According to David W. Anthony, "the Rigveda and Avesta agreed that the essence of their shared parental Indo-Iranian identity was linguistic and ritual, not racial. If a person sacrificed to the right gods in the right way using the correct forms of the traditional hymns and poems, that person was an Aryan."[25]

Proto-Indo-European

Since Adolphe Pictet (1799–1875), a number of scholars have proposed to derive the Indo-Iranian stem arya- from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European (PIE) term *h₂erós or *h₂eryós, variously translated as 'member of one's own group, peer, freeman'; as 'host, guest; kinsman'; or as 'lord, ruler'.[8] However, the proposed Anatolian, Celtic and Germanic cognates are not universally accepted.[26][27] In any case, the Indo-Iranian ethnic connotation is absent from the other Indo-European languages, which rather conceived the possible cognates of *arya- as a social status, and there is no evidence that Proto-Indo-European speakers had a term to refer to themselves as 'Proto-Indo-Europeans'.[28][29]

The term *h₂er(y)ós may derive from the PIE verbal root *h₂er-, meaning 'to put together'.[39][28] Oswald Szemerényi has also argued that the stem could be a Near-Eastern loanword from the Ugaritic ary ('kinsmen'),[40] although J. P. Mallory and Douglas Q. Adams find this proposition "hardly compelling".[28] According to them, the original PIE meaning had a clear emphasis on the in-group status of the "freemen" as distinguished from that of outsiders, particularly those captured and incorporated into the group as slaves. In Anatolia, the base word has come to emphasize personal relationship, whereas it took a more ethnic meaning among Indo-Iranians, presumably because most of the unfree (*anarya) who lived among them were captives from other ethnic groups.[28]

Historical usage

Proto-Indo-Iranians

The term *arya was used by Proto-Indo-Iranian speakers to designate themselves as an ethnocultural group, encompassing those who spoke the language and followed the religion of the Aryas (Indo-Iranians), as distinguished from the nearby outsiders known as the *Anarya ('non-Arya').[3][25][24] Indo-Iranians (Aryas) are generally associated with the Sintashta culture (2100–1800 BC), named after the Sintashta archaeological site in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia.[25][41] Linguistic evidence show that Proto-Indo-Iranian (Proto-Aryan) speakers dwelled in the Eurasian steppe, south of early Uralic tribes; the stem *arya- was notably borrowed into the Pre-Saami language as *orja-, at the origin of oarji ('southwest') and årjel ('Southerner'). The loanword took the meaning 'slave' in other Finno-Permic languages, suggesting conflictual relations between Indo-Iranian and Uralic peoples in prehistoric times.[42][43][44]

The stem is also found in the Indo-Iranian god *Aryaman, translated as 'Arya-spirited', 'Aryanness', or 'Aryanhood'; he was known in Vedic Sanskrit as Aryaman and in Avestan as Airyaman.[45][46][47] The deity was in charge of welfare and the community, and connected with the institution of marriage.[48][47] Through marital ceremonies, one of the functions of Aryaman was to assimilate women from other tribes to the host community.[49] If the Irish heroes Érimón and Airem and the Gaulish personal name Ariomanus are also cognates (i.e. linguistic siblings sharing a common origin), a deity of Proto-Indo-European origin named *h₂eryo-men may also be posited.[48][35][47]

Ancient India

The approximate extent of Āryāvarta during the late Vedic period (ca. 1100-500 BCE). Aryavarta was limited to northwest India and the western Ganges plain, while Greater Magadha in the east was habitated by non-Vedic Indo-Aryans, who gave rise to Jainism and Buddhism.[50][51]

Vedic Sanskrit speakers viewed the term ā́rya as a religious–linguistic category, referring to those who spoke the Sanskrit language and adhered to Vedic cultural norms, especially those who worshipped the Vedic gods (Indra and Agni in particular), took part in the sacrifices and festivals, and practiced the art of poetry.[52]

The 'non-Aryas' designated primarily those who were not able to speak the āryā language correctly, the Mleccha or Mṛdhravāc.[53] However, āryā is used only once in the Vedas to designate the language of the texts, the Vedic area being defined in the Kauṣītaki Āraṇyaka as that where the āryā vāc ('Ārya speech') is spoken.[54] Some 35 names of Vedic tribes, chiefs and poets mentioned in the Rigveda were of 'non-Aryan' origin, demonstrating that cultural assimilation to the ā́rya community was possible, and/or that some 'Aryan' families chose to give 'non-Aryan' names to their newborns.[55][56][57] In the words of Indologist Michael Witzel, the term ārya "does not mean a particular people or even a particular 'racial' group but all those who had joined the tribes speaking Vedic Sanskrit and adhering to their cultural norms (such as ritual, poetry, etc.)".[58]

In later Indian texts and Buddhist sources, ā́rya took the meaning of 'noble', such as in the terms Āryadésa- ('noble land') for India, Ārya-bhāṣā- ('noble language') for Sanskrit, or āryaka- ('honoured man'), which gave the Pali ayyaka- ('grandfather').[59] The term came to incorporate the idea of a high social status, but was also used as an honorific for the Brahmana or the Buddhist monks. Parallelly, the Mleccha acquired additional meanings that referred to people of lower castes or aliens.[53]

Ancient Iran

In the words of scholar Gherardo Gnoli, the Old Iranian airya (Avestan) and ariya (Old Persian) were collective terms denoting the "peoples who were aware of belonging to the one ethnic stock, speaking a common language, and having a religious tradition that centred on the cult of Ahura Mazdā", in contrast to the 'non-Aryas', who are called anairya in Avestan, anaryān in Parthian, and anērān in Middle Persian.[59][33]

By the late 6th–early 5th century BC, the Achaemenid king Darius the Great and his son Xerxes I described themselves as ariya ('Arya') and ariya čiça ('of Aryan origin'). In the Behistun inscription, authored by Darius during his reign (522 – 486 BC), the Old Persian language is called ariya, and the Elamite version of the inscription portrays the Zoroastrian deity Ahura Mazdā as the "god of the Aryas" (ura-masda naap harriia-naum).[59][33] In the sacred Avesta scriptures, the stem can also be found in poetic expressions such as the 'glory of the Aryas' (airyanąm xᵛarənō ), the 'most swift-arrowed of the Aryas' (xšviwi išvatəmō airyanąm), associated with the mythical archer Ǝrəxša, or the 'hero of the Aryas' (arša airyanąm), attached to Kavi Haosravō.[59]

Darius at Behistun
Full figure of Darius trampling rival Gaumata
Head of Darius with crenellated crown

The self-identifier was inherited in ethnic names such as the Parthian Ary (pl. Aryān), the Middle Persian Ēr (pl. Ēran), or the New Persian Irāni (pl. Irāniyān).[60][32] The Scythian branch has Alān or *Allān (from *Aryāna; modern Allon), Rhoxolāni ('Bright Alans'), Alanorsoi ('White Alans'), and possibly the modern Ossetian Ir (adj. Iron), spelled Irä or Erä in the Digorian dialect.[60][7][61] The Rabatak inscription, written in the Bactrian language in the 2nd century CE, likewise uses the term ariao for 'Iranian'.[33] The name Arizantoi, listed by Greek historian Herodotus as one of the six tribes composing the Iranian Medes, is derived from the Old Iranian *arya-zantu- ('having Aryan lineage').[62] Herodotus also mentions that the Medes once called themselves Arioi, and Strabo locates the land of Arianē between Persia and India. Other occurrences include the Greek áreion (Damascius), Arianoi (Diodorus Siculus) and arian (pl. arianōn; Sasanian period), as well as the Armenian expression ari (Agathangelos), meaning 'Iranian'.[59][33]

Until the demise of the Parthian Empire (247 BC–224 AD), the Iranian identity was essentially defined as cultural and religious. Following conflicts between Manichean universalism and Zoroastrian nationalism during the 3rd century CE, however, traditionalistic and nationalistic movements eventually took the upper hand during the Sasanian period, and the Iranian identity (ērīh) came to assume a definite political value. Among Iranians (ērān), one ethnic group in particular, the Persians, were placed at the centre of the Ērān-šahr ('Kingdom of the Iranians') ruled by the šāhān-šāh ērān ud anērān ('King of Kings of the Iranians and non-Iranians').[33]

Ethical and ethnic meanings may also intertwine, for instance in the use of anēr ('non-Iranian') as a synonymous of 'evil' in anērīh ī hrōmāyīkān ("the evil conduct of the Romans, i.e. Byzantines"), or in the association of ēr ('Iranian') with good birth (hutōhmaktom ēr martōm, 'the best-born Arya man') and the use of ērīh ('Iranianness') to mean 'nobility' against "labor and burdens from poverty" in the 10th-century Dēnkard.[59] The Indian opposition between ārya- ('noble') and dāsá- ('stranger, slave, enemy') is however absent from the Iranian tradition.[59] According to linguist Émile Benveniste, the root *das- may have been used exclusively as a collective name by Iranian peoples: "If the word referred at first to Iranian society, the name by which this enemy people called themselves collectively took on a hostile connotation and became for the Aryas of India the term for an inferior and barbarous people."[63]

Place names

In ancient Sanskrit literature, the term Āryāvarta (आर्यावर्त, the 'abode of the Aryas') was the name given to the cradle of the Indo-Aryan culture in northern India. The Manusmṛiti locates Āryāvarta in "the tract between the Himalaya and the Vindhya ranges, from the Eastern (Bay of Bengal) to the Western Sea (Arabian Sea)".[64]

The stem airya- also appears in Airyanəm Waēǰō (the 'stretch of the Aryas' or the 'Aryan plain'), which is described in the Avesta as the mythical homeland of the early Iranians, said to have been created as "the first and best of places and habitations" by the god Ahura Mazdā. It was referred to in Manichean Sogdian as ʾryʾn wyžn (Aryān Wēžan), and in Old Persian as *Aryānām Waiǰah, which gave the Middle Persian Ērān-wēž, said to be the region where the first cattle were created and where Zaraθuštra first revealed the Good Religion.[59][65] The Sasanian Empire, officially named Ērān-šahr ('Kingdom of the Iranians'; from Old Persian *Aryānām Xšaθram),[66] could also be referred to by the abbreviated form Ērān, as distinguished from the Roman West known as Anērān. The western variant Īrān, abbreviated from Īrān-šahr, is at the origin of the English country name Iran.[20][59][67]

Alania, the name of the medieval kingdom of the Alans, derives from a dialectal variant of the Old Iranian stem *Aryāna-, which is also linked to the mythical Airyanem Waēǰō.[68][7][61] Besides the ala- development, *air-y- may have turned into the stem ir-y- via an i-mutation in modern Ossetian languages, as in the place name Iryston (Ossetia), here attached to the Iranian suffix *-stān.[59][69]

Other place names mentioned in the Avesta include airyō šayana, a movable term corresponding to the 'territory of the Aryas', airyanąm dahyunąm, the 'lands of the Aryas', Airyō-xšuθa, a mountain in eastern Iran associated with Ǝrəxša, and vīspe aire razuraya, the forest where Kavi Haosravō slew the god Vāyu.[59][65]

Personal names

Old Persian names derived the stem *arya- include Aryabignes (*arya-bigna, 'Gift of the Aryans'), Ariarathes (*Arya-wratha-, 'having Aryan joy'), Ariobarzanēs (*Ārya-bṛzāna-, 'exalting the Aryans'), Ariaios (*arya-ai-, probably used as a hypocorism of the precedent names), or Ariyāramna (whose meaning remains unclear).[70] The English Alan and the French Alain (from Latin Alanus) may have been introduced by Alan settlers to Western Europe during the first millennium AD.[71]

The name Aryan (including derivatives such as Aaryan, Arya, Ariyan or Aria) is still used as a given name or surname in modern South Asia and Iran. There has also been a rise in names associated with Aryan in the West, which have been popularized due to pop culture. According to the U.S. Social Security Administration in 2012, Arya was the fastest-rising girl's name in popularity in the U.S., jumping from 711th to 413th position.[72] The name entered the top 200 most commonly used names for baby girls born in England and Wales in 2017.[73]

In Latin literature

The word Arianus was used to designate Ariana,[74] the area comprising Afghanistan, Iran, North-western India and Pakistan.[75] In 1601, Philemon Holland used 'Arianes' in his translation of the Latin Arianus to designate the inhabitants of Ariana. This was the first use of the form Arian verbatim in the English language.[76][77][78]

Modern Persian nationalism

In the aftermath of the Islamic conquest in Iran, racialist rhetoric became a literary idiom during the 7th century, i.e., when the Arabs became the primary "Other" – the Aniran – and the antithesis of everything Iranian (i.e. Aryan) and Zoroastrian. But "the antecedents of [present-day] Iranian ultra-nationalism can be traced back to the writings of late nineteenth-century figures such as Mirza Fatali Akhundov and Mirza Aqa Khan Kermani. Demonstrating affinity with Orientalist views of the supremacy of the Aryan peoples and the mediocrity of the Semitic peoples, Iranian nationalist discourse idealized pre-Islamic Achaemenid and Sassanid empires, whilst negating the 'Islamization' of Persia by Muslim forces."[79] In the 20th century, different aspects of this idealization of a distant past would be instrumentalized by both the Pahlavi monarchy (In 1967, Iran's Pahlavi dynasty [overthrown in the 1979 Iranian Revolution] added the title Āryāmehr Light of the Aryans to the other styles of the Iranian monarch, the Shah of Iran being already known at that time as the Shahanshah (King of Kings)), and by the Islamic republic that followed it; the Pahlavis used it as a foundation for anticlerical monarchism, and the clerics used it to exalt Iranian values vis-á-vis westernization.[80]

Modern religious use

The word ārya is often found in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts. In the Indian spiritual context, it can be applied to Rishis or to someone who has mastered the four noble truths and entered upon the spiritual path. According to Indian leader Jawaharlal Nehru, the religions of India may be called collectively ārya dharma, a term that includes the religions that originated in the Indian subcontinent (e.g. Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and possibly Sikhism).[81]

The word ārya is also often used in Jainism, in Jain texts such as the Pannavanasutta. In Avaśyakaniryukti, an early Jaina text, a character named Ārya Mangu is mentioned twice.[82]

Scholarship

19th and early 20th century

The term 'Aryan' was initially introduced into the English language through works of comparative philology, as a modern rendering of the Sanskrit word ā́rya. First translated as 'noble' in William Jones' 1794 translation of the Laws of Manu, early-19th-century scholars later noticed that the term was used in the earliest Vedas as an ethnocultural self-designation "comprising the worshipers of the gods of the Brahmans".[78][18] This interpretation was simultaneously influenced by the presence of the word Ἀριάνης (Ancient Greek) ~ Arianes (Latin) in classical texts, which had been rightly compared by Anquetil-Duperron in 1771 to the Iranian airya (Avestan) ~ ariya (Old Persian), a self-identifier used by the speakers of Iranian languages since ancient times. Accordingly, the term 'Aryan' came to refer in scholarship to the Indo-Iranian languages, and, by extension, to the native speakers of the Proto-Indo-Iranian language, the prehistoric Indo-Iranian peoples.[83]

During the 19th century, through the works of Friedrich Schlegel (1772–1829), Christian Lassen (1800–1876), Adolphe Pictet (1799–1875), and Max Müller (1823–1900), the terms Aryans, Arier, and Aryens came to be adopted by a number of Western scholars as a synonym of '(Proto-)Indo-Europeans'.[84] Many of them indeed believed that Aryan was also the original self-designation used by the prehistoric speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language, based on the erroneous assumptions that Sanskrit was the oldest Indo-European language and on the linguistically untenable position that Ériu (Ireland) was related to Arya.[85] This hypothesis has since been abandoned in scholarship due to the lack of evidence for the use of arya as an ethnocultural self-designation outside the Indo-Iranian world.[29]

Contemporary scholarship

In contemporary scholarship, the terms 'Aryan' and 'Proto-Aryan' are still sometimes used to designate the prehistoric Indo-Iranian peoples and their proto-language. However, the use of 'Aryan' to mean 'Proto-Indo-European' is now regarded as an "aberration to be avoided".[86] The 'Indo-Iranian' subfamily of languages – which encompasses the Indo-Aryan, Iranian and Nuristani branches – may also be referred to as the 'Aryan languages'.[87][43][29]

However, the atrocities committed in the name of Aryanist racial ideologies during the first part of the 20th century have led academics to generally avoid the term 'Aryan', which has been replaced in most cases by 'Indo-Iranian', although its Indic branch is still called 'Indo-Aryan'.[88][89][16] The name 'Iranian', which stems from the Old Persian *Aryānām, also continues to be used to refer to specific ethnolinguistic groups.[20]

Some authors writing for popular consumption have kept on using the word "Aryan" for all Indo-Europeans in the tradition of H. G. Wells,[93][94] such as the science fiction author Poul Anderson,[95] and scientists writing for the popular media, such as Colin Renfrew.[96] According to F. B. J. Kuiper, echoes of "the 19th century prejudice about 'northern' Aryans who were confronted on Indian soil with black barbarians [...] can still be heard in some modern studies."[97]

Aryanism and racism

Invention of the "Aryan race"

Origin

Drawing on racially-oriented interpretations of the Vedic Aryas as "fair-skinned foreign invaders" coming from the North, the term Aryan came to be adopted in the West as a racial category connected to a supremacist ideology known as Aryanism, which conceived the Aryan race as the 'superior race' responsible for most of the achievements of ancient civilizations.[9] Max Müller, who had himself inaugurated the racial interpretations of the Rigveda,[98] denounced in 1888 those who spoke of an "Aryan race, Aryan blood, Aryan eyes and hair" as a nonsense comparable to a linguist speaking of "a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar".[99] But for an increasing number of Western writers, especially among anthropologists and non-specialists influenced by Darwinist theories, the Aryans came to be seen as a "physical-genetic species" contrasting with the other human races rather than an ethnolinguistic category.[100][101] During the late 19th–early 20th century, a fusion of Aryanism with Nordicism promoted by writers such as Arthur de Gobineau, Theodor Poesche, Houston Chamberlain, Paul Broca, Karl Penka and Hans Günther led to the portrayal of the Proto-Indo-Europeans as blond and tall, with blue eyes and dolichocephalic skulls.[102][103] Modern scholars reject those views and remind that the idea of a Vedic opposition between ārya and dāsa underlying a racial division remains problematic, since "most of the [Vedic] passages may not refer to dark or light skinned people, but dark and light worlds."[104]

Theories of racial supremacy

Arthur de Gobineau, the author of the influential Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races (1853), viewed the white or Aryan race as the only civilized one, and conceived cultural decline and miscegenation as intimately intertwined. According to him, northern Europeans had migrated across the world and founded the major civilizations, before being diluted through racial mixing with indigenous populations described as racially inferior, leading to the progressive decay of the ancient Aryan civilizations.[105] In 1878, German American anthropologist Theodor Poesche published a survey of historical references attempting to demonstrate that the Aryans were light-skinned blue-eyed blonds.[102] The use of Arier to mean 'non-Jewish' seems to have first occurred in 1887, when a Viennese physical fitness society decided to allow as members only "Germans of Aryan descent" (Deutsche arischer Abkunft).[84] In The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (1899), described as "one of the most important proto-Nazi texts", British-German writer Houston Chamberlain theorized an existential struggle to death between a superior German-Aryan race and a destructive Jewish-Semitic race.[106] The best-seller The Passing of the Great Race, published by American writer Madison Grant in 1916, warns of a danger of miscegenation with the immigrant "inferior races" – including speakers of Indo-European languages such as Slavs, Italians and Yiddish-speaking Jews – allegedly faced by the "racially superior" Germanic Aryans, that is Americans of English, German and Scandinavian descent.[12]

Led by Guido von List (1848–1919) and Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels (1874–1954), Ariosophists founded an ideological system combining Völkisch nationalism with esoterism. Prophesying a coming era of German (Aryan) world rule, they argued that a conspiracy against Germans – said to have been instigated by the non-Aryan races, the Jews, or the early Church – had "sought to ruin this ideal Germanic world by emancipating the non-German inferiors in the name of a spurious egalitarianism."[107]

North European hypothesis

"Expansion of the Pre-Teutonic Nordics" — Map from The Passing of the Great Race by Madison Grant showing hypothesized migrations of Nordic peoples.

In the meantime, the idea that Indo-European languages originated from South Asia gradually lost support among academics. After the end of the 1860s, alternative models of Indo-European migrations began to emerge, some of them locating their ancestral homeland in Northern Europe.[102][108] Karl Penka, credited as "a transitional figure between Aryanism and Nordicism",[109] argued in 1883 that the Aryans originated in southern Scandinavia.[102] In the early 20th century, German scholar Gustaf Kossinna, attempting to equal a prehistoric material culture with the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European language, contended on archaeological grounds that the 'Indo-Germanic' (Indogermanische) migrations originated from a homeland located in northern Europe.[12] Until the end of World War II, scholarship was broadly divided between Kossinna's followers and those, initially led by Otto Schrader, who supported a steppe homeland in Eurasia, now the most widespread hypothesis among scholars.[99]

British Raj

In India, the British colonial government had followed de Gobineau's arguments along another line, and had fostered the idea of a superior "Aryan race" that co-opted the Indian caste system in favor of imperial interests.[110][111] In its fully developed form, the British-mediated interpretation foresaw a segregation of Aryan and non-Aryan along the lines of caste, with the upper castes being "Aryan" and the lower ones being "non-Aryan". The European developments not only allowed the British to identify themselves as high-caste, but also allowed the Brahmins to view themselves as on-par with the British. Further, it provoked the reinterpretation of Indian history in racialist and, in opposition, Indian Nationalist terms.[110][111]

Nazism and white supremacy

An intertitle from the silent film blockbuster The Birth of a Nation (1915). "Aryan birthright" is here "white birthright", the "defense" of which unites "whites" in the Northern and Southern U.S. against "coloreds". In another film of the same year, The Aryan, William S. Hart's "Aryan" identity is defined in distinction from other peoples.

Through the works of Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Gobineau's ideas influenced the Nazi racial ideology, which saw the "Aryan race" as innately superior to other putative racial groups.[12] The Nazi official Alfred Rosenberg argued for a new "religion of the blood" based on the supposed innate promptings of the Nordic soul to defend its "noble" character against racial and cultural degeneration. Rosenberg believed the Nordic race to be descended from Proto-Aryans, a hypothetical prehistoric people who dwelt on the North German Plain and who had ultimately originated from the lost continent of Atlantis.[note 1] Under Rosenberg, the theories of Arthur de Gobineau, Georges Vacher de Lapouge, Blavatsky, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Madison Grant, and those of Hitler,[112] all culminated in Nazi Germany's race policies and the "Aryanization" decrees of the 1920s, 1930s, and early 1940s. In its "appalling medical model", the annihilation of the "racially inferior" Untermenschen was sanctified as the excision of a diseased organ in an otherwise healthy body,[113] which led to the Holocaust.

Arno Breker's sculpture Die Partei (The Party), depicting a Nazi-era ideal of the "Nordic Aryan" racial type.

According to Nazi racial theorists, the term "Aryans" (Arier) described the Germanic peoples,[114] and they considered the purest Aryans to be those that belonged to a "Nordic race" physical ideal, which they referred to as the "master race".[note 2] However, a satisfactory definition of "Aryan" remained problematic during Nazi Germany.[116] Although the physical ideal of Nazi racial theorists was typically the tall, blond haired and light-eyed Nordic individual, such theorists accepted the fact that a considerable variety of hair and eye colour existed within the racial categories they recognised. For example, Adolf Hitler and many Nazi officials had dark hair and were still considered members of the Aryan race under Nazi racial doctrine, because the determination of an individual's racial type depended on a preponderance of many characteristics in an individual rather than on just one defining feature.[117] In September 1935, the Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws. All Aryan Reich citizens were required to prove their Aryan ancestry; one way was to obtain an Ahnenpass ("ancestor pass") by providing proof through baptismal certificates that all four grandparents were of Aryan descent.[118] In December of the same year, the Nazis founded Lebensborn ("Fount of Life") to counteract the falling Aryan birth rates in Germany, and to promote Nazi eugenics.[119]

Many American white supremacist neo-Nazi groups and prison gangs refer to themselves as 'Aryans', including the Aryan Brotherhood, the Aryan Nations, the Aryan Republican Army, the White Aryan Resistance, or the Aryan Circle.[120][121] Modern nationalist political groups and neo-Pagan movements in Russia claim a direct linkage between themselves as Slavs and the ancient 'Aryans',[12] and in some Indian nationalist circles, the term 'Aryan' can also be used in reference to an alleged Aryan 'race'.[21]

"Aryan invasion theory"

Translating the sacred Indian texts of the Rig Veda in the 1840s, German linguist Friedrich Max Muller found what he believed was evidence of an ancient invasion of India by Hindu Brahmins, a group which he called "the Arya." In his later works, Muller was careful to note that he thought that Aryan was a linguistic rather than a racial category. Nevertheless, scholars used Muller's invasion theory to propose their own visions of racial conquest through South Asia and the Indian Ocean. In 1885, the New Zealand polymath Edward Tregear argued that an "Aryan tidal-wave" had washed over India and continued to push south, through the islands of the East Indian archipelago, reaching the distant shores of New Zealand. Scholars such as John Batchelor, Armand de Quatrefages, and Daniel Brinton extended this invasion theory to the Philippines, Hawaii, and Japan, identifying indigenous peoples who they believed were the descendants of early Aryan conquerors.[122] With the discovery of the Indus Valley civilisation, mid-20th century archeologist Mortimer Wheeler argued that the large urban civilisation had been destroyed by the Aryans.[123] This position was later discredited, with climate aridification becoming the likely cause of the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisation.[124] The term "invasion", while it was once commonly used in regard to Indo-Aryan migration, is now usually used only by opponents of the Indo-Aryan migration theory.[125] The term "invasion" does not any longer reflect the scholarly understanding of the Indo-Aryan migrations,[125] and is now generally regarded as polemical, distracting and unscholarly.

In recent decades, the idea of an Aryan migration into India has been disputed mainly by Indian scholars, who claim various alternate Indigenous Aryans scenarios contrary to established Kurgan model. However, these alternate scenarios are rooted in traditional and religious views on Indian history and identity and are universally rejected in mainstream scholarship.[126][note 3] According to Michael Witzel, the "indigenous Aryans" position is not scholarship in the usual sense, but an "apologetic, ultimately religious undertaking".[129] A number of other alternative theories have been proposed including Anatolian hypothesis, Armenian hypothesis, the Paleolithic Continuity Theory but these are not widely accepted and have received little or no interest in mainstream scholarship.[130][131]

See also

Notes

  1. Rosenberg, Alfred, "The Myth of the 20th Century". The term "Atlantis" is mentioned two times in the whole book, the term "Atlantis-hypothesis" is mentioned just once. Rosenberg (page 24): "It seems to be not completely impossible, that at parts where today the waves of the Atlantic ocean murmur and icebergs move along, once a blossoming land towered in the water, on which a creative race founded a great culture and sent its children as seafarers and warriors into the world; but if this Atlantis-hypothesis proves untenable, we still have to presume a prehistoric Nordic cultural center." Rosenberg (page 26): "The ridiculed hypothesis about a Nordic creative center, which we can call Atlantis – without meaning a sunken island – from where once waves of warriors migrated to all directions as first witnesses of Nordic longing for distant lands to conquer and create, today becomes probable." Original: Es erscheint als nicht ganz ausgeschlossen, dass an Stellen, über die heute die Wellen des Atlantischen Ozeans rauschen und riesige Eisgebirge herziehen, einst ein blühendes Festland aus den Fluten ragte, auf dem eine schöpferische Rasse große, weitausgreifende Kultur erzeugte und ihre Kinder als Seefahrer und Krieger hinaussandte in die Welt; aber selbst wenn sich diese Atlantishypothese als nicht haltbar erweisen sollte, wird ein nordisches vorgeschichtliches Kulturzentrum angenommen werden müssen. ... Und deshalb wird die alte verlachte Hypothese heute Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass von einem nordischen Mittelpunkt der Schöpfung, nennen wir ihn, ohne uns auf die Annahme eines versunkenen atlantischen Erdteils festzulegen, die Atlantis, einst Kriegerschwärme strahlenförmig ausgewandert sind als erste Zeugen des immer wieder sich erneut verkörpernden nordischen Fernwehs, um zu erobern, zu gestalten."
  2. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language states at the beginning of its definition, "[it] is one of the ironies of history that Aryan, a word nowadays referring to the blond-haired, blue-eyed physical ideal of Nazi Germany, originally referred to a people who looked vastly different. Its history starts with the ancient Indo-Iranians, peoples who inhabited parts of what are now Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. "[115]
  3. No support in mainstream scholarship:
    • Romila Thapar (2006): "there is no scholar at this time seriously arguing for the indigenous origin of Aryans".[127]
    • Wendy Doniger (2017): "The opposing argument, that speakers of Indo-European languages were indigenous to the Indian subcontinent, is not supported by any reliable scholarship. It is now championed primarily by Hindu nationalists, whose religious sentiments have led them to regard the theory of Aryan migration with some asperity."[web 1]
    • Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), in response to Narasimhan et al. (2019): "Hindutva activists, however, have kept the Aryan Invasion Theory alive, because it offers them the perfect strawman, 'an intentionally misrepresented proposition that is set up because it is easier to defeat than an opponent's real argument' ... The Out of India hypothesis is a desperate attempt to reconcile linguistic, archaeological and genetic evidence with Hindutva sentiment and nationalistic pride, but it cannot reverse time's arrow ... The evidence keeps crushing Hindutva ideas of history."[web 2]
    • Koenraad Elst (May 10, 2016): "Of course it is a fringe theory, at least internationally, where the Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT) is still the official paradigm. In India, though, it has the support of most archaeologists, who fail to find a trace of this Aryan influx and instead find cultural continuity."[128]
  1. Wendy Doniger (2017), "Another Great Story"", review of Asko Parpola's The Roots of Hinduism; in: Inference, International Review of Science, Volume 3, Issue 2
  2. Girish Shahane (September 14, 2019), Why Hindutva supporters love to hate the discredited Aryan Invasion Theory, Scroll.in

References

  1. "Aryan". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Benveniste 1973, p. 295: "Arya ... is the common ancient designation of the 'Indo-Iranians'."
  3. 3.0 3.1 Schmitt 1987: "The name Aryan is the self designation of the peoples of Ancient India and Ancient Iran who spoke Aryan languages, in contrast to the 'non-Aryan' peoples of those 'Aryan' countries."
  4. 4.0 4.1 Witzel 2001, pp. 4, 24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Bailey 1987: "It is used in the Avesta of members of an ethnic group and contrasts with other named groups (Tūirya, Sairima, Dāha, Sāinu or Sāini) and with the outer world of the An-airya 'non-Arya'."
  6. 6.0 6.1 Gnoli 2006: "Mid. Pers. ēr (plur. ērān), just like Old Pers. ariya and Av. airya, has an evident ethnic value, which is also present in the abstract term ērīh, 'Iranian character, Iranianness'."
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 213: "Iran Alani (< *aryana) (the name of an Iranian group whose descendants are the Ossetes, one of whose subdivisions is the Iron [< *aryana-)), *aryanam (pl.) ‘of the Aryans’ (> MPers Iran)."
  8. 8.0 8.1 Watkins 1985, p. 3; Gamkrelidze & Ivanov 1995, pp. 657–658; Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 213; Anthony 2007, pp. 92, 303
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Bryant 2001, pp. 60–63.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Witzel 2001, p. 24: "Arya/ārya does not mean a particular people or even a particular 'racial' group but all those who had joined the tribes speaking Vedic Sanskrit and adhering to their cultural norms (such as ritual, poetry, etc.)"
  11. Anthony 2007, p. 408: "The Rigveda and Avesta agreed that the essence of their shared parental Indo-Iranian identity was linguistic and ritual, not racial. If a person sacrificed to the right gods in the right way using the correct forms of the traditional hymns and poems, that person was an Aryan."
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 Anthony 2007, pp. 9–11.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Gordon, Sarah Ann (1984). Hitler, Germans, and the "Jewish Question". Mazal Holocaust Collection. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 96. ISBN 0-691-05412-6. OCLC 9946459.
  14. Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust : the Nazi persecution and murder of the Jews. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 83, 241. ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5. OCLC 610166248.
  15. "Aryan | Arian, adj. and n." Oxford English Dictionary. 2020. Under the Nazi régime (1933–45) applied to the inhabitants of Germany of non-Jewish extraction. cf. 1933 tr. Hitler's Mein Kampf in Times 25 July 15/6: "The exact opposite of the Aryan is the Jew." 1933 Education 1 Sept. 170/2: "The basic idea of the new law is that non-Aryans, that is to say mainly Jews..."{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  16. 16.0 16.1 Witzel 2001, p. 3: "Linguists have used the term Ārya from early on in the 19th century to designate the speakers of most Northern Indian as well as of all Iranian languages and to indicate the reconstructed language underlying both Old Iranian and Vedic Sanskrit. Nowadays this well-reconstructed language is usually called Indo-Iranian (IIr.), while its Indic branch is called (Old) Indo-Aryan (IA)."
  17. cf. Gershevitch, Ilya (1968). "Old Iranian Literature". Handbuch der Orientalistik, Literatur I. Leiden: Brill. pp. 1–31., p. 2.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Arvidsson 2006, p. 20.
  19. "Definition of Aryan". Merriam-Webster.
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 20.5 20.6 Schmitt 1987.
  21. 21.0 21.1 Witzel 2001, p. 4.
  22. Szemerényi 1977, pp. 125–146; Watkins 1985, p. 3; Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 304; Fortson 2011, p. 209
  23. 23.0 23.1 Gamkrelidze & Ivanov 1995, pp. 657–658.
  24. 24.0 24.1 Kuzmina 2007, p. 456.
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 Anthony 2007, p. 408.
  26. 26.0 26.1 Delamarre 2003, p. 55: "Cette équation est cependant très controversée et de multiples tentatives pour expliquer indépendamment les formations celtiques et indo-iraniennes ont été produites : on a proposé entre autres de dériver le celtique ario- de *pṛrio- [*pṛhio-, racine *per(h)- 'devant, en avant', d'où le sens dérivé 'qui est en avant, éminent' ; on pourrait expliquer alors le NP Ario-uistus comme "Celui qui connaît (/ est connu) en avance", < *ario-wid-to-, LG 60. L'absence de corrélats indiscutables dans d'autres langues i.-e. (grec ari-, eri-, hitt. arawa, runique arjosteR etc.) rend l'équation incertaine. Un fait d'ordre mythologique, la comparaison entre l'Irlandais Eremon et l'Indien Aryaman, figures dotées de fonctions sociales similaires, renforcerait cependant la validité de la comparaison (*Ario-men-), cf. G. Dumézil Le troisième souverain et J. Puhvel Analecta 322-330."
  27. 27.0 27.1 Matasović 2009, p. 43: "A different etymology (e.g. in Meid 2005: 146) relates these Celtic words to PIE *prh₃- 'first' (Skt. pūrvá- etc.), but this is less convincing because there are no traces of the laryngeal in the purported Celtic reflexes (*prh₃yo- would have probably given PCelt. *frāyo-)."
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 28.5 28.6 Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 213.
  29. 29.0 29.1 29.2 Fortson 2011, p. 209.
  30. 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 Mallory & Adams 2006, p. 266.
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 Kloekhorst 2008, p. 198.
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Mayrhofer 1992, pp. 174–175.
  33. 33.0 33.1 33.2 33.3 33.4 33.5 Gnoli 2006.
  34. Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 213: "OIr aire 'freeman (whether commoner or noble), noble (as distinct from commoner)' (the latter meaning may be rather from *pṛios, a derivative of 'first')."
  35. 35.0 35.1 35.2 35.3 Delamarre 2003, p. 55.
  36. 36.0 36.1 Matasović 2009, p. 43.
  37. 37.0 37.1 Orel 2003, p. 23.
  38. Antonsen, Elmer H. (2002). Runes and Germanic Linguistics. Walter de Gruyter. p. 127. ISBN 978-3-11-017462-5.
  39. Duchesne-Guillemin 1979, p. 337.
  40. Szemerényi 1977, pp. 125–146.
  41. Kuzmina 2007, p. 451.
  42. Rédei 1986, p. 54.
  43. 43.0 43.1 Anthony 2007, p. 385.
  44. Koivulehto, Jorma (2001). "The earliest contacts between Indo-European and Uralic speakers". In Carpelan, Christian (ed.). Early contacts between Uralic and Indo-European. Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne. p. 248. ISBN 978-9525150599.
  45. Benveniste 1973, p. 303.
  46. Mallory 1989, p. 130.
  47. 47.0 47.1 47.2 West 2007, pp. 142–143.
  48. 48.0 48.1 Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 375.
  49. Benveniste 1973, p. 72.
  50. Bronkhorst 2007.
  51. Samuel 2010.
  52. Kuiper 1991, p. 96; Witzel 2001, pp. 4, 24; Bryant 2001, p. 61; Anthony 2007, p. 11
  53. 53.0 53.1 Thapar 2019, p. vii.
  54. Thapar 2019, p. 2.
  55. Kuiper 1991, pp. 6–8, 96.
  56. Anthony 2007, p. 11.
  57. Kuzmina 2007, p. 453.
  58. Witzel 2001, p. 24.
  59. 59.00 59.01 59.02 59.03 59.04 59.05 59.06 59.07 59.08 59.09 59.10 Bailey 1987.
  60. 60.0 60.1 Bailey 1987: "In the inscription of Šāpūr I on the Kaʿba-ye Zardošt (ŠKZ), Parth. ʾryʾn W ʾnʾryʾn (aryān ut anaryān), Mid. Pers. ʾyrʾn W ʾnyrʾn (ērān ut anērān; cf. Armenian eran eut aneran) comprises the inhabitants of all the known lands ... In the singular Parth. ʾry, Mid. Pers. ʾyly, Greek arian occurs in a title: ʾry mzdyzn nrysḥw MLKʾ, *ary mazdēzn Narēsahv šāh (Parth. ŠKZ 19); ʾyly mzdysn nrsḥy MLKʾ (Mid. Pers. version 24), Greek arian masdaasnou ... New Persian has ērān (western, īrān), ērān-šahr. In the Caucasus, Ossetic has Digoron erä, irä, Iron ir, with Dig. iriston, Iron iryston (the i-umlaut modifying the vowel a-, but leaving the -r- untouched), [and] the ancestral Alān."
  61. 61.0 61.1 Alemany 2000, pp. 3–4, 8: "Nowadays, however, only two possibilities are admitted as regards [the etymology of Alān], both closely related: (a) the adjective *aryāna- and (b) the pl. *aryānām; in both cases the underlying OIran. ajective *arya- 'Aryan' is found. It is worth mentioning that although it is not possible to give an unequivocal option because both forms produce the same phonetic result, most researchers tend to favour the derivative *aryāna-, because it has a more appropriate semantic value ... The ethnic name *arya- underlying in the name of the Alans has been linked to the Av. Airiianəm Vaēǰō 'the Aryan plain'."
  62. Brunner, C. J. (1986). "Arizantoi". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  63. Benveniste 1973, pp. 259–260.
  64. Cook, Michael (2016). Ancient Religions, Modern Politics: The Islamic Case in Comparative Perspective. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-17334-4. Aryavarta ... is defined by Manu as extending from the Himalayas in the north to the Vindhyas of Central India in the south and from the sea in the west to the sea in the east.
  65. 65.0 65.1 MacKenzie 1998b.
  66. Alemany 2000, p. 3.
  67. MacKenzie 1998a.
  68. Benveniste 1973, p. 300: "The name of Alani goes back to *Aryana-, which is yet another form of the ancient ārya."
  69. Harmatta 1970, pp. 78–81.
  70. Shahbazi, A. Sh. (1986). "Ariyāramna". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul., Shahbazi, A. Sh. (1986). "Ariabignes". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul., Brunner, C. J. (1986). "Ariaratus". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul., Lecoq, P. (1986). "Ariobarzanes". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul., Shahbazi, A. Sh. (1986). "Ariaeus". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. 2. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  71. Alemany 2000, p. 5.
  72. Carlson, Adam (10 May 2013). "Game of Thrones baby names on the march". Entertainment Weekly.
  73. Mzimba, Lizo (20 September 2017). "Game of Thrones Arya among 200 most popular names". BBC News.
  74. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Including Zoology, Botany, and Geology. Taylor & Francis, Limited. 1881. p. 162.
  75. Arora, Udai (2007). Udayana. Anamika Pub & Distributors. ISBN 9788179751688. whole of Ariana (North-western India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran)
  76. Online Etymology Dictionary
  77. Robert K. Barnhart, Chambers Dictionary of Etymology pg. 54
  78. 78.0 78.1 Simpson, John Andrew; Weiner, Edmund S. C., eds. (1989), "Aryan, Arian", Oxford English Dictionary, vol. I (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, p. 672, ISBN 0-19-861213-3
  79. Adib-Moghaddam, Arshin (2006), "Reflections on Arab and Iranian Ultra-Nationalism", Monthly Review Magazine, 11/06
  80. Keddie, Nikki R.; Richard, Yann (2006), Modern Iran: Roots and Results of Revolution, Yale University Press, pp. 178f., ISBN 0-300-12105-9
  81. Kumar, Priya (2012). Elisabeth Weber (ed.). Beyond tolerance and hospitality: Muslims as strangers and minor subjects in Hindu nationalist and Indian nationalist discourse. p. 96. ISBN 9780823249923. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  82. K. L. Chanchreek; Mahesh Jain (2003). Jainism: Rishabha Deva to Mahavira. Shree Publishers & Distributors. p. 276. ISBN 978-81-88658-01-5.
  83. Siegert, Hans (1941–1942), "Zur Geschichte der Begriffe 'Arier' und 'Arisch'", Wörter und Sachen, New Series, 4: 84–99
  84. 84.0 84.1 Arvidsson 2006, p. 21.
  85. Schmitt 1987: "The use of the name 'Aryan', in vogue especially in the 19th century, as a designation of the entire Indo-European language family was based on the erroneous assumption that Sanskrit was the oldest IE. language, and the untenable view (primarily propagated by Adolphe Pictet) that the names of Ireland and the Irishmen were etymologically related to 'Aryan'."
  86. Witzel 2001
  87. Schmitt 1987: "The Aryan parent language. The common ancestor of the historical Aryan or Indo-Iranian languages, called the Aryan parent language or Proto-Aryan, can be reconstructed by the methods of historical comparative linguistics."
  88. Arvidsson 2006, p. 22.
  89. Anthony 2007, p. 10.
  90. Witzel 2001, p. 3.
  91. Bryant & Patton 2005, pp. 246–247.
  92. Windfuhr, Gernot L. (2013). The Iranian Languages. Routledge. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-135-79703-4.
  93. Wells, H.G. The Outline of History New York:1920 Doubleday & Co. Chapter 19 The Aryan Speaking Peoples in Pre-Historic Times [Meaning the Proto-Indo-Europeans] Pages 271–285
  94. H.G. Wells describes the origin of the Aryans (Proto-Indo Europeans):
  95. See the Poul Anderson short stories in the 1964 collection Time and Stars and the Polesotechnic League stories featuring Nicholas van Rijn
  96. Renfrew, Colin. (1989). The Origins of Indo-European Languages. /Scientific American/, 261(4), 82–90. In explaining the Anatolian hypothesis, the term "Aryan" is used to denote "all Indo-Europeans"
  97. Kuiper 1991.
  98. Bryant 2001, p. 60.
  99. 99.0 99.1 Mallory 1989, p. 269.
  100. Goodrick-Clarke 1985, p. 5.
  101. Arvidsson 2006, p. 61.
  102. 102.0 102.1 102.2 102.3 Mallory 1989, p. 268.
  103. Arvidsson 2006, p. 43.
  104. Bryant & Patton 2005, p. 8; cf. Bryant 2001, pp. 60–63
  105. Arvidsson 2006, p. 45.
  106. Arvidsson 2006, p. 155.
  107. Goodrick-Clarke 1985, p. 2.
  108. Arvidsson 2006, p. 52.
  109. Hutton, Christopher M. (2005). Race and the Third Reich: Linguistics, Racial Anthropology and Genetics in the Dialectic of Volk. Polity. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-7456-3177-6.
  110. 110.0 110.1 Leopold 1974.
  111. 111.0 111.1 Thapar 1996.
  112. Mein Kampf, tr. in The Times, 25 July 1933, p. 15/6
  113. Glover, Jonathan (1998), "Eugenics: Some Lessons from the Nazi Experience", in Harris, John; Holm, Soren (eds.), The Future of Human Reproduction: Ethics, Choice, and Regulation, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 57–65
  114. Davies, Norman (2006). Europe at War: 1939–1945 : No Simple Victory, p. 167
  115. Watkins, Calvert (2000), "Aryan", American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.), New York: Houghton Mifflin, ISBN 0-395-82517-2, ...when Friedrich Schlegel, a German scholar who was an important early Indo-Europeanist, came up with a theory that linked the Indo-Iranian words with the German word Ehre, 'honor', and older Germanic names containing the element ario-, such as the Swiss [sic] warrior Ariovistus who was written about by Julius Caesar. Schlegel theorized that far from being just a designation of the Indo-Iranians, the word *arya- had in fact been what the Indo-Europeans called themselves, meaning [according to Schlegel] something like 'the honorable people.' (This theory has since been called into question.)
  116. Ehrenreich, Eric (2007). The Nazi Ancestral Proof: Genealogy, Racial Science, and the Final Solution, pp, 9–11
  117. "The range of blond hair color in pure Nordic peoples runs from flaxen and red to shades of chestnut and brown... It must be clearly understood that blondness of hair and of eye is not a final test of Nordic race. The Nordics include all the blonds, and also those of darker hair or eye when possessed of a preponderance of other Nordic characters. In this sense the word "blond" means those lighter shades of hair or eye color in contrast to the very dark or black shades which are termed brunet. The meaning of "blond" as now used is therefore not limited to the lighter or flaxen shades as in colloquial speech. In England among Nordic populations there are large numbers of individuals with hazel brown eyes joined with the light brown or chestnut hair which is the typical hair shade of the English and Americans. This combination is also common in Holland and Westphalia and is frequently associated with a very fair skin. These men are all of "blond" aspect and constitution and consequently are to be classed as members of the Nordic race." Quoted in Grant, 1922, p. 26.
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Bibliography

Further reading

  • "A word for Aryan originality". A. Kammpier.
  • Bronkhorst, J.; Deshpande, M.M., eds. (1999). Aryan and Non-Aryan in South Asia: Evidence, Interpretation, and Ideology. Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies, Harvard University. ISBN 1-888789-04-2.
  • Edelman, Dzoj (Joy) I. (1999). On the history of non-decimal systems and their elements in numerals of Aryan languages. In: Jadranka Gvozdanović (ed.), "Numeral Types and Changes Worldwide". Walter de Gruyter.
  • Fussmann, G.; Francfort, H.P.; Kellens, J.; Tremblay, X. (2005), Aryas, Aryens et Iraniens en Asie Centrale, Institut Civilisation Indienne, ISBN 2-86803-072-6
  • Ivanov, Vyacheslav V.; Gamkrelidze, Thomas (1990), "The Early History of Indo-European Languages", Scientific American, 262 (3): 110–116, doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0390-110
  • Lincoln, Bruce (1999), Theorizing Myth: Narrative, Ideology, and Scholarship, University of Chicago Press
  • Morey, Peter; Tickell, Alex (2005). Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism. Rodopi. ISBN 90-420-1927-1.
  • Sugirtharajah, Sharada (2003). Imagining Hinduism: A Postcolonial Perspective. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-203-63411-0.
  • Tickell, A (2005), "The Discovery of Aryavarta: Hindu Nationalism and Early Indian Fiction in English", in Peter Morey; Alex Tickell (eds.), Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism, pp. 25–53