fbpx
Wikipedia

Calvert Watkins

Calvert Watkins (/ˈwɒtkɪnz/; March 13, 1933 – March 20, 2013) was an American linguist and philologist, known for his book How to Kill a Dragon. He was a professor of linguistics and the classics at Harvard University and after retirement went to serve as professor-in-residence at UCLA.[1]

Calvert Watkins
Born(1933-03-13)March 13, 1933
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
DiedMarch 20, 2013(2013-03-20) (aged 80)
Los Angeles, California, United States
TitleVictor S. Thomas Professor of Linguistics and Classics
Spouses
ChildrenCynthia Watkins, David Cushman, Catherine Cushman, and Nicholas Watkins
Awards
Academic background
EducationHarvard University (BA, 1954; PhD, 1959)
ThesisIndo-European origins of the Celtic verb (1962)
Academic work
DisciplineLinguist
Sub-disciplineHistorical linguistics
Notable studentsJoshua Katz
Notable worksHow to Kill a Dragon

Early life

Family

Calvert Watkins was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on March 13, 1933, to Ralph James Watkins, an economist[2] and government advisor,[3] and Willye Ward, a Spanish teacher who translated the personal memoirs of former Mexican president Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.[4] Much of Watkins's childhood was spent in New York City, and he graduated from Friends Seminary in Manhattan before beginning his career at Harvard University.[2] Watkins's early exposure to Latin and Greek inspired him at the age of fifteen to decide to become an Indo-Europeanist.[2]

Education

Watkins received his initial undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 1954, graduating summa cum laude,[3] and his Ph.D in Linguistics in 1959.[1] During his time at Harvard, Watkins also studied abroad at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris, France, from 1954 to 1955 as well as the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, School of Celtic Studies from 1957 to 1958.[2]

Career

Harvard

In 1959, Watkins was initially appointed the position of instructor at Harvard University. He later became assistant professor in 1960, associate professor with tenure in 1962, and full professor in 1966.[2] In 1989 Watkins was appointed to the position of Victor. S Thomas Professor of Linguistics and Classics.[2] Linguists influenced by Watkins during his tenure at Harvard include Ives Goddard, Jay Jasanoff, D. Gary Miller, Michael Silverstein, Alice Harris, H. Craig Melchert, Alan Nussbaum, Brent Vine, Mark Hale, Andrew Garrett, Joshua Katz and Benjamin Fortson.[5]

Watkins remained dedicated to the research and development of historical linguistics throughout his entire academic and professional career. In 1982 he was a founding member of the "East Coast Indo-European Conference" in which he participated in a large majority of its annual meetings.[2]

University of California, Los Angeles

Upon his retirement from Harvard in 2003, Watkins moved to Los Angeles, California and began teaching at the University of California, Los Angeles alongside his wife, Stephanie Jamison.[2] Watkins continued to promote the importance of historical linguistics at UCLA by remaining active in the annual UCLA Indo-European Conference.[2] In 2013, the 25th annual conference was dedicated to the memory of Watkins.[6]

Early published works

His doctoral dissertation at Harvard University, Indo-European Origins of the Celtic Verb I. The Sigmatic Aorist (Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1962), which deeply reflected the structuralist approach of Jerzy Kuryłowicz, opened a fresh era of creative work in Celtic comparative linguistics and the study of the verbal system of Indo-European languages.

On page 96 of Indo-European Origins of the Celtic Verb (1962), Watkins noted the following pattern in the history of the Celtic verb, as well as in Polish and Persian: “the development [...] or presence [...] of a zero ending in the 3sg., and the spread of this 3sg. form to other members of the paradigm." This became known in the field as Watkins' Law. [7] The "law" as it relates to Proto-Celtic was already observed in 1909 by Rudolf Thurneysen on page 422 (section 683) of his Grammar of Old Irish, but it was Watkins who noticed that the same pattern occurred in the histories of other languages.[8]

Watkins, in a sense, completed his contribution to this area with his Indogermanische Grammatik, vol. 3, part 1: Geschichte der indogermanischen Verbalflexion (1969). Meanwhile, his work on Indo-European vocabulary and poetics yielded a large number of articles on (among others) Celtic, Anatolian, Greek, Italic and Indo-Iranian material, presented directly in his Selected Writings and indirectly in his book, How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics (Oxford University Press, 1995).

He contributed his expertise on Indo-European languages to the first edition of The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language and edited The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots (ISBN 0-618-08250-6).[1] He also pointed out that of all the Celtic languages, Old Irish is the closest match to the theorized Proto-Indo European mother tongue and that Old Irish represents an extraordinary ancient language whose structure can only be compared with that of Vedic Sanskrit.[9]

How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics

How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics was published on November 16, 1995, through Oxford University Press and attempted to establish a formulaic method of comparative linguistics which exemplified the importance of the poetic formula in order to better trace the development of Indo-European languages by working backwards and identifying patterns from their mother language, Proto-Indo-European.[10] The book is divided into two main halves, the first of which acts as a definition and introduction to the study of Indo-European poetics which is expanded upon by implementing Watkins' idea of the "dragon-slaying myth" and defending this concept through a number of case studies involving languages connected by a common theme.[11] Watkins expands upon the "dragon-slaying myth" in part two of the text by offering new research into his proposed formula of "HERO SLAY SERPENT",[11] he also attempts to reconstruct an example of Proto-Indo-European through the comparative method of historical linguistics.

Lingua Franca reviewer Marc L'Heureux commented that Watkins also implements historical evidence to favor the development of language such as the relationship between the patron and the poet.[11] He further opined that through the ceremonious delivery from the poet, the word choices became preserved as historical evidence of the language in question. Thus the poet was not only a wielder of great power, according to Watkins as the patron's prestige was inherently tied to the poet's prowess, but a recorder of language that has allowed for research to be conducted in order to better understand the development of ancient languages.[11]

How to Kill a Dragon received favorable acclaim and is now considered to be a definitive text which transformed the study of Indo-European poetics.[12] How to Kill a Dragon earned Watkins the 1998 Goodwin Award for Classical Studies.[12]

Legacy and awards

Death

Calvert Watkins died in his sleep at the age of 80 in Los Angeles, California on March 20, 2013. He was the Distinguished Professor in Residence of the Department of Classics and the Program in Indo-European Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he had moved in 2003 after retiring from Harvard University as Victor S. Thomas Professor of Linguistics and the Classics.[15]

Published works

  • "Review of Kenneth Jackson, Language and History in Early Britain: A Chronological Survey of the Britannic Languages, First to Twelfth Century A.D.," Language 30 (1954) 513–18;  P. Guiraud, Bibliographie critique de la statistique linguistique rev. & completed by D. Houchin, J. Puhvel & Watkins under the direction of J. Whatmough (Utrecht, 1954). REVS: BSL L 1954,2 44–46 Cohen; Emerita XXIV 1956 187 Tovar
  • "The Phonemics of Gaulish: The Dialect of Narbonensis," Language 31 (1955) 9–19
  • "Preliminaries to a Historical and Comparative Analysis of the Syntax of the Old Irish Verb," Celtica 6 (1963) 1–49
  • "Indo-European Metrics and Archaic Irish Verse," Celtica 6 (1963) 194–249; "Lat. nox, by night. A Problem in Syntactic Reconstruction," Symbolae linguisticae in honorem J. Kuryłowicz, ed. A. Heinz (Wrocław, 1965) 351–358
  • "An Indo-European Construction in Greek and Latin," HSCP 71 (1966) 115–119; J. Kuryłowicz, Indogermanische Grammatik, III, 1. Teil : Formenlehre : Geschichte der indogermanischen Verbalflexion by Watkins (Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, 1969) REV. Paideia XXX 1975 382–386 Pisani; WZHalle XXI 1972, 1 99–102 Barschel | DLZ XCII 1971 849–851 Sternemann | Language XLVIII 1972 687–695 Wyatt
  • "The Indo-European Origin of English," The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language New York: American Heritage and Houghton Mifflin, 1969) xix-xx
  • "Indo-European and the Indo Europeans," ibid., 1496–502; "Indo-European Roots," ibid., 1505–50
  • "A Latin-Hittite Etymology," Language 45 (1969) 235–242
  • "A Further Remark of Lachmann's Law," HSCP 74 (1970) 55–65
  • "On the Family of arceō, ἀρκέω, and Hittite h⌣ark-," HSCP 74 (1970) 67–74
  • "An Indo-European Agricultural Term, Latin ador, Hittite h⌣at-," HSCP 77 (1973) 187–194
  • "Etyma Enniana," HSCP 77 (1973) 195–206
  • "Latin suppus," JIES 1 (1973) 394–399
  • "I.-E. Star," Sprache 20 (1974) 10–14
  • "God," Antiquitates Indogermanicae. Studien zur indogermanischen Altertumskunde und zur Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte der indogermanischen Völker. Gedenkschrift für Hermann Guentert zur 25. Wiederkehr seines Todestages am 23. April 1973, ed. M. Mayrhofer, W. Meid, B. Schlerath & R. Schmitt (Innsbruck, 1974) 101–110
  • "La famille indo-européenne de grec ὄρχις. Linguistique, poétique et mythologie," BSL 70 (1975) 11–26
  • "Latin ador, Hittite hat- Again. Addenda to HSCP LXXVII 187–193," HSCP 79 (1975) 181–187; "Latin iouiste et le vocabulaire religieux indo-européen," Mélanges offerts à E. Benveniste (Paris, 1975) 527–534; "La désignation indo-européenne du tabou," Langue, discours, société. Pour Émile Benveniste ed. J. Kristeva, J.C. Milner, & N. Ruwet (Paris, 1975) 208–214
  • "Towards Proto-Indo-European Syntax: Problems and Pseudo-Problems," Chicago Linguistic Society (Parasession on diachronic syntax) 12.2 (1976) 305–26
  • "Observations on the Nestor's Cup Inscription," HSCP 80 (1976) 25–40
  • "Syntax and Metrics in the Dipylon Vase Inscription," Studies in Greek, Italic, and Indo-European Linguistics Offered to Leonard R. Palmer on the Occasion of his Seventieth Birthday June 5, 1976, ed. Davies A. Morpurgo & W. Meid (Innsbruck, 1976) 431–441
  • "À propos de μῆνις," BSL 72, 1 (1977) 187–209; "ἀνόστεος ὁν πόδα τένδει," Étrennes de septantaine. Travaux de linguistique et de grammaire comparée offerts à Michel Lejeune (Paris, 1978) 231–235
  • "La désignation indo-européenne du tabou," Langue, discours, société. Pour Émile Benveniste ed. J. Kristeva, J.C. Milner, & N. Ruwet (Paris, 1975) 208–214
  • "Let Us Now Praise Famous Grains," PAPS 122 (1978) 9–17; "A Greco-Hittite Etymology," Serta Indogermanica. Festschrift für Günter Neumann zum 60. Geburtstag, ed. J. Tischler (Innsbruck, 1982) 455–457
  • "The Language of the Trojans," Troy and the Trojan War. A Symposium Held at Bryn Mawr College, October, 1984, ed. M.T. Mellink (Bryn Mawr, PA, 1986) 45–62
  • "The Name of Meleager," O-o-pe-ro-si. Festschrift für Ernst Risch zum 75. Geburtstag, ed. A. Etter (Berlin, 1986) 320–328
  • "Questions linguistiques de poétique, de mythologie et de pré-droit en indo-européen," LALIES 5 (1987) 3–29
  • "'In the Interstices of Procedure.' Indo-European Legal Language and Comparative Law," Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz, ed. Wolfgang Meid (Innsbruck, 1987) 305–314; Studies in Memory of Warren Cowgill (1929–1985). Papers from the Fourth East Coast Indo-European Conference, Cornell University, June 6–9, 1986 (ed.) (Berlin & New York, 1987) REVS.: Kratylos XXXV 1990 41–48 Rix; ILing XII 1987–88 188 R. Gusmani
  • "New Parameters in Historical Linguistics, Philology, and Culture History," Language 65 (1989) 783–99
  • "Le dragon hittite Illuyankas et le géant grec Typhôeus," CRAI (1992) 319–330; How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics (Oxford, 1995) REVS: CJ 1997–1998 92 (4): 417–422 Dunkel; JAOS 1997 117 (2): 397–398 Klein; Language 1997 73 (3): 637–641 Justus; CO 1996–1997 74 (3): 123 Klein; CW 1998–1999 92 (2): 175–176 Kelly; BSL 1998 93 (2): 116–130 Bader; Kratylos 2000 45: 36–46 Schlerath; CR 2000 N. S. 50 (1): 101–103 Konstan; EMC 2000 N. S. 19 (3): 399–406 Bubenik; IF 2001 106 : 282–290 Keydana
  • "Greece in Italy outside Rome," HSCP 97 (1995) 35–50
  • "Homer and Hittite Revisited," Style and Tradition: Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen, ed. Peter E. Knox and Clive Foss (Stuttgart, 1998) 201–211
  • The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots (revised and ed.), 2nd ed. (Boston, 2000)
  • "A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar: the Origin of the Aegis Again," HSCP 100 (2000) 1–14; "L'Anatolie et la Grèce : résonances culturelles, linguistiques et poétiques," CRAI (2000) 1143–1158
  • "À la suite des perspectives tracées par Michel Lejeune: aspects du grec et du celtique," CRAI (2001) 213–223
  • "An Indo-European Linguistic Area and Its Characteristics: Ancient Anatolia. Areal Diffusion as a Challenge to the Comparative Method? in Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance: Problems in Comparative Linguistics ed. Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald & R.M.W. Dixon (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001) 44–63
  • "The Golden Bowl: Thoughts on the New Sappho and its Asianic Background," ClAnt 26,2 (2007) 305–325
  • "The Erbessos Blues and Other Tales of the Semantics of Case and the Semantics of Love among the Western Greeks," La langue poétique indo-européenne : actes du colloque de travail de la Société des études indo-européennes (Indogermanische Gesellschaft, Society for Indo-European studies), Paris, 22–24 octobre 2003, ed. Georges-Jean Pinault and Daniel Petit (Leuven, 2006) 517–521
  • "Hipponactea quaedam," Hesperos: Studies in Ancient Greek Poetry Presented to M. L. West on His Seventieth Birthday, ed. Patrick J. Finglass, Christopher Collard, and Nicholas J. Richardson (Oxford, 2007) 118–125.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Calvert Watkins dies at 80". Harvard Gazette. 2013-03-28. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "In Memoriam: Calvert Watkins" (PDF). The Journal of Indo-European Studies. 51: 506–526. 2013.
  3. ^ a b Gordon, Laura. "WATKINS, Calvert Ward". Departmental Web Site Template | Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  4. ^ "Willye W. Watkins, Translated Memoirs of Mexican President". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-10-07.
  5. ^ Joseph, Brian D. (2000). "Review of "Mír Cuirad: Studies in Honor of Calvert Watkins" by Jay Jasanoff, H. Craig Melchert, & Lisi Oliver". Diachronica. 17 (2): 451–458. doi:10.1075/dia.17.2.11jos. ISSN 0176-4225.
  6. ^ Jamison, Stephanie W.; Melchert, H. Craig; Vine, Brent (2014). "Remembrance of Calvert Watkins". Proceedings of the 25th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference: 1–19.
  7. ^ Mark Janse, "Watkins’ Law and the development of agglutinative inflections in Asia Minor Greek" Journal of Greek Linguistics 9 (2009) 93–109(Brill) https://brill.com/view/journals/jgl/9/1/article-p93_4.xml?language=en
  8. ^ Rudolf Thurneysen, A Grammar of Old Irish translators D.A Binchy and Osborn Bergin (1946), Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. p. 422 https://archive.org/details/thurneysen-a-grammar-of-old-irish/page/n1/mode/2up
  9. ^ Watkins, Calvert (1962). Indo-European Origins of the Celtic Verb. Dublin Institute for Advances Studies.
  10. ^ McCarthy, William Bernard (Spring 1999). "Review". The Journal of American Folklore. 112 (444): 220–222. doi:10.2307/541955. JSTOR 541955.
  11. ^ a b c d L'Heureux, Marc G. (2016-06-16). "Book Review of How to Kill a Dragon: aspects of Indo-European linguistics". Lingua Frankly. 1 (1). doi:10.6017/lf.v1i1.5633. ISSN 2333-6552.
  12. ^ a b How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. 2001-05-17. ISBN 978-0-19-514413-0.
  13. ^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Calvert W. Watkins". www.gf.org. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  14. ^ "List of Previous Goodwin Award Winners". Society for Classical Studies. 2010-06-06. Retrieved 2018-11-11.
  15. ^ Jasanoff, Jay H.; Joseph, Brian D. (2015-03-20). "Calvert Ward Watkins". Language. 91 (1): 245–252. doi:10.1353/lan.2015.0011. ISSN 1535-0665. S2CID 143995815.

External links

  • Calvert Watkins at the Database of Classical Scholars
  • Essay by Calvert Watkins on Indo-European, from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
  • How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics, limited preview

calvert, watkins, ˈwɒtkɪnz, march, 1933, march, 2013, american, linguist, philologist, known, book, kill, dragon, professor, linguistics, classics, harvard, university, after, retirement, went, serve, professor, residence, ucla, born, 1933, march, 1933pittsbur. Calvert Watkins ˈwɒtkɪnz March 13 1933 March 20 2013 was an American linguist and philologist known for his book How to Kill a Dragon He was a professor of linguistics and the classics at Harvard University and after retirement went to serve as professor in residence at UCLA 1 Calvert WatkinsBorn 1933 03 13 March 13 1933Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United StatesDiedMarch 20 2013 2013 03 20 aged 80 Los Angeles California United StatesTitleVictor S Thomas Professor of Linguistics and ClassicsSpousesJane Williams Cushman married 1961 Stephanie Jamison married 1980 ChildrenCynthia Watkins David Cushman Catherine Cushman and Nicholas WatkinsAwardsGuggenheim Fellowship Goodwin AwardAcademic backgroundEducationHarvard University BA 1954 PhD 1959 ThesisIndo European origins of the Celtic verb 1962 Academic workDisciplineLinguistSub disciplineHistorical linguisticsNotable studentsJoshua KatzNotable worksHow to Kill a Dragon Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family 1 2 Education 2 Career 2 1 Harvard 2 2 University of California Los Angeles 2 3 Early published works 2 4 How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics 2 5 Legacy and awards 3 Death 4 Published works 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditFamily Edit Calvert Watkins was born in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania on March 13 1933 to Ralph James Watkins an economist 2 and government advisor 3 and Willye Ward a Spanish teacher who translated the personal memoirs of former Mexican president Gen Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna 4 Much of Watkins s childhood was spent in New York City and he graduated from Friends Seminary in Manhattan before beginning his career at Harvard University 2 Watkins s early exposure to Latin and Greek inspired him at the age of fifteen to decide to become an Indo Europeanist 2 Education Edit Watkins received his initial undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 1954 graduating summa cum laude 3 and his Ph D in Linguistics in 1959 1 During his time at Harvard Watkins also studied abroad at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris France from 1954 to 1955 as well as the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies School of Celtic Studies from 1957 to 1958 2 Career EditHarvard Edit In 1959 Watkins was initially appointed the position of instructor at Harvard University He later became assistant professor in 1960 associate professor with tenure in 1962 and full professor in 1966 2 In 1989 Watkins was appointed to the position of Victor S Thomas Professor of Linguistics and Classics 2 Linguists influenced by Watkins during his tenure at Harvard include Ives Goddard Jay Jasanoff D Gary Miller Michael Silverstein Alice Harris H Craig Melchert Alan Nussbaum Brent Vine Mark Hale Andrew Garrett Joshua Katz and Benjamin Fortson 5 Watkins remained dedicated to the research and development of historical linguistics throughout his entire academic and professional career In 1982 he was a founding member of the East Coast Indo European Conference in which he participated in a large majority of its annual meetings 2 University of California Los Angeles Edit Upon his retirement from Harvard in 2003 Watkins moved to Los Angeles California and began teaching at the University of California Los Angeles alongside his wife Stephanie Jamison 2 Watkins continued to promote the importance of historical linguistics at UCLA by remaining active in the annual UCLA Indo European Conference 2 In 2013 the 25th annual conference was dedicated to the memory of Watkins 6 Early published works Edit His doctoral dissertation at Harvard University Indo European Origins of the Celtic Verb I The Sigmatic Aorist Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1962 which deeply reflected the structuralist approach of Jerzy Kurylowicz opened a fresh era of creative work in Celtic comparative linguistics and the study of the verbal system of Indo European languages On page 96 of Indo European Origins of the Celtic Verb 1962 Watkins noted the following pattern in the history of the Celtic verb as well as in Polish and Persian the development or presence of a zero ending in the 3sg and the spread of this 3sg form to other members of the paradigm This became known in the field as Watkins Law 7 The law as it relates to Proto Celtic was already observed in 1909 by Rudolf Thurneysen on page 422 section 683 of his Grammar of Old Irish but it was Watkins who noticed that the same pattern occurred in the histories of other languages 8 Watkins in a sense completed his contribution to this area with his Indogermanische Grammatik vol 3 part 1 Geschichte der indogermanischen Verbalflexion 1969 Meanwhile his work on Indo European vocabulary and poetics yielded a large number of articles on among others Celtic Anatolian Greek Italic and Indo Iranian material presented directly in his Selected Writings and indirectly in his book How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Oxford University Press 1995 He contributed his expertise on Indo European languages to the first edition of The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language and edited The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo European Roots ISBN 0 618 08250 6 1 He also pointed out that of all the Celtic languages Old Irish is the closest match to the theorized Proto Indo European mother tongue and that Old Irish represents an extraordinary ancient language whose structure can only be compared with that of Vedic Sanskrit 9 How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Edit How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics was published on November 16 1995 through Oxford University Press and attempted to establish a formulaic method of comparative linguistics which exemplified the importance of the poetic formula in order to better trace the development of Indo European languages by working backwards and identifying patterns from their mother language Proto Indo European 10 The book is divided into two main halves the first of which acts as a definition and introduction to the study of Indo European poetics which is expanded upon by implementing Watkins idea of the dragon slaying myth and defending this concept through a number of case studies involving languages connected by a common theme 11 Watkins expands upon the dragon slaying myth in part two of the text by offering new research into his proposed formula of HERO SLAY SERPENT 11 he also attempts to reconstruct an example of Proto Indo European through the comparative method of historical linguistics Lingua Franca reviewer Marc L Heureux commented that Watkins also implements historical evidence to favor the development of language such as the relationship between the patron and the poet 11 He further opined that through the ceremonious delivery from the poet the word choices became preserved as historical evidence of the language in question Thus the poet was not only a wielder of great power according to Watkins as the patron s prestige was inherently tied to the poet s prowess but a recorder of language that has allowed for research to be conducted in order to better understand the development of ancient languages 11 How to Kill a Dragon received favorable acclaim and is now considered to be a definitive text which transformed the study of Indo European poetics 12 How to Kill a Dragon earned Watkins the 1998 Goodwin Award for Classical Studies 12 Legacy and awards Edit Honorary Member of the Royal Irish Academy 1968 2 Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1973 2 Member of the American Philosophical Society 1975 2 Senior Fellowship for Independent Study and Research from the National Endowment for the Humanities 1984 85 2 Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy 1987 2 Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Correspondant Etranger 1990 2 Guggenheim Fellowships for demonstration of exceptional capacity for productive scholarship and exceptional creative ability in the arts in the field of linguistics 1991 13 Goodwin Award for Classical Studies for How to Kill a Dragon 1998 14 President of the Linguistic Society of America in 1988 2 Associe Etranger Membre de l Institut 1999 2 Death EditCalvert Watkins died in his sleep at the age of 80 in Los Angeles California on March 20 2013 He was the Distinguished Professor in Residence of the Department of Classics and the Program in Indo European Studies at the University of California Los Angeles where he had moved in 2003 after retiring from Harvard University as Victor S Thomas Professor of Linguistics and the Classics 15 Published works Edit Review of Kenneth Jackson Language and History in Early Britain A Chronological Survey of the Britannic Languages First to Twelfth Century A D Language 30 1954 513 18 P Guiraud Bibliographie critique de la statistique linguistique rev amp completed by D Houchin J Puhvel amp Watkins under the direction of J Whatmough Utrecht 1954 REVS BSL L 1954 2 44 46 Cohen Emerita XXIV 1956 187 Tovar The Phonemics of Gaulish The Dialect of Narbonensis Language 31 1955 9 19 Preliminaries to a Historical and Comparative Analysis of the Syntax of the Old Irish Verb Celtica 6 1963 1 49 Indo European Metrics and Archaic Irish Verse Celtica 6 1963 194 249 Lat nox by night A Problem in Syntactic Reconstruction Symbolae linguisticae in honorem J Kurylowicz ed A Heinz Wroclaw 1965 351 358 An Indo European Construction in Greek and Latin HSCP 71 1966 115 119 J Kurylowicz Indogermanische Grammatik III 1 Teil Formenlehre Geschichte der indogermanischen Verbalflexion by Watkins Heidelberg Carl Winter Universitatsverlag 1969 REV Paideia XXX 1975 382 386 Pisani WZHalle XXI 1972 1 99 102 Barschel DLZ XCII 1971 849 851 Sternemann Language XLVIII 1972 687 695 Wyatt The Indo European Origin of English The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language New York American Heritage and Houghton Mifflin 1969 xix xx Indo European and the Indo Europeans ibid 1496 502 Indo European Roots ibid 1505 50 A Latin Hittite Etymology Language 45 1969 235 242 A Further Remark of Lachmann s Law HSCP 74 1970 55 65 On the Family of arceō ἀrkew and Hittite h ark HSCP 74 1970 67 74 An Indo European Agricultural Term Latin ador Hittite h at HSCP 77 1973 187 194 Etyma Enniana HSCP 77 1973 195 206 Latin suppus JIES 1 1973 394 399 I E Star Sprache 20 1974 10 14 God Antiquitates Indogermanicae Studien zur indogermanischen Altertumskunde und zur Sprach und Kulturgeschichte der indogermanischen Volker Gedenkschrift fur Hermann Guentert zur 25 Wiederkehr seines Todestages am 23 April 1973 ed M Mayrhofer W Meid B Schlerath amp R Schmitt Innsbruck 1974 101 110 La famille indo europeenne de grec ὄrxis Linguistique poetique et mythologie BSL 70 1975 11 26 Latin ador Hittite hat Again Addenda to HSCP LXXVII 187 193 HSCP 79 1975 181 187 Latin iouiste et le vocabulaire religieux indo europeen Melanges offerts a E Benveniste Paris 1975 527 534 La designation indo europeenne du tabou Langue discours societe Pour Emile Benveniste ed J Kristeva J C Milner amp N Ruwet Paris 1975 208 214 Towards Proto Indo European Syntax Problems and Pseudo Problems Chicago Linguistic Society Parasession on diachronic syntax 12 2 1976 305 26 Observations on the Nestor s Cup Inscription HSCP 80 1976 25 40 Syntax and Metrics in the Dipylon Vase Inscription Studies in Greek Italic and Indo European Linguistics Offered to Leonard R Palmer on the Occasion of his Seventieth Birthday June 5 1976 ed Davies A Morpurgo amp W Meid Innsbruck 1976 431 441 A propos de mῆnis BSL 72 1 1977 187 209 ἀnosteos ὁn poda tendei Etrennes de septantaine Travaux de linguistique et de grammaire comparee offerts a Michel Lejeune Paris 1978 231 235 La designation indo europeenne du tabou Langue discours societe Pour Emile Benveniste ed J Kristeva J C Milner amp N Ruwet Paris 1975 208 214 Let Us Now Praise Famous Grains PAPS 122 1978 9 17 A Greco Hittite Etymology Serta Indogermanica Festschrift fur Gunter Neumann zum 60 Geburtstag ed J Tischler Innsbruck 1982 455 457 The Language of the Trojans Troy and the Trojan War A Symposium Held at Bryn Mawr College October 1984 ed M T Mellink Bryn Mawr PA 1986 45 62 The Name of Meleager O o pe ro si Festschrift fur Ernst Risch zum 75 Geburtstag ed A Etter Berlin 1986 320 328 Questions linguistiques de poetique de mythologie et de pre droit en indo europeen LALIES 5 1987 3 29 In the Interstices of Procedure Indo European Legal Language and Comparative Law Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz ed Wolfgang Meid Innsbruck 1987 305 314 Studies in Memory of Warren Cowgill 1929 1985 Papers from the Fourth East Coast Indo European Conference Cornell University June 6 9 1986 ed Berlin amp New York 1987 REVS Kratylos XXXV 1990 41 48 Rix ILing XII 1987 88 188 R Gusmani New Parameters in Historical Linguistics Philology and Culture History Language 65 1989 783 99 Le dragon hittite Illuyankas et le geant grec Typhoeus CRAI 1992 319 330 How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Oxford 1995 REVS CJ 1997 1998 92 4 417 422 Dunkel JAOS 1997 117 2 397 398 Klein Language 1997 73 3 637 641 Justus CO 1996 1997 74 3 123 Klein CW 1998 1999 92 2 175 176 Kelly BSL 1998 93 2 116 130 Bader Kratylos 2000 45 36 46 Schlerath CR 2000 N S 50 1 101 103 Konstan EMC 2000 N S 19 3 399 406 Bubenik IF 2001 106 282 290 Keydana Greece in Italy outside Rome HSCP 97 1995 35 50 Homer and Hittite Revisited Style and Tradition Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen ed Peter E Knox and Clive Foss Stuttgart 1998 201 211 The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo European Roots revised and ed 2nd ed Boston 2000 A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar the Origin of the Aegis Again HSCP 100 2000 1 14 L Anatolie et la Grece resonances culturelles linguistiques et poetiques CRAI 2000 1143 1158 A la suite des perspectives tracees par Michel Lejeune aspects du grec et du celtique CRAI 2001 213 223 An Indo European Linguistic Area and Its Characteristics Ancient Anatolia Areal Diffusion as a Challenge to the Comparative Method in Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance Problems in Comparative Linguistics ed Alexandra Y Aikhenvald amp R M W Dixon Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 44 63 The Golden Bowl Thoughts on the New Sappho and its Asianic Background ClAnt 26 2 2007 305 325 The Erbessos Blues and Other Tales of the Semantics of Case and the Semantics of Love among the Western Greeks La langue poetique indo europeenne actes du colloque de travail de la Societe des etudes indo europeennes Indogermanische Gesellschaft Society for Indo European studies Paris 22 24 octobre 2003 ed Georges Jean Pinault and Daniel Petit Leuven 2006 517 521 Hipponactea quaedam Hesperos Studies in Ancient Greek Poetry Presented to M L West on His Seventieth Birthday ed Patrick J Finglass Christopher Collard and Nicholas J Richardson Oxford 2007 118 125 References Edit a b c Calvert Watkins dies at 80 Harvard Gazette 2013 03 28 Retrieved 2018 10 07 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q In Memoriam Calvert Watkins PDF The Journal of Indo European Studies 51 506 526 2013 a b Gordon Laura WATKINS Calvert Ward Departmental Web Site Template Rutgers The State University of New Jersey Retrieved 2018 11 10 Willye W Watkins Translated Memoirs of Mexican President Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 10 07 Joseph Brian D 2000 Review of Mir Cuirad Studies in Honor of Calvert Watkins by Jay Jasanoff H Craig Melchert amp Lisi Oliver Diachronica 17 2 451 458 doi 10 1075 dia 17 2 11jos ISSN 0176 4225 Jamison Stephanie W Melchert H Craig Vine Brent 2014 Remembrance of Calvert Watkins Proceedings of the 25th Annual UCLA Indo European Conference 1 19 Mark Janse Watkins Law and the development of agglutinative inflections in Asia Minor Greek Journal of Greek Linguistics 9 2009 93 109 Brill https brill com view journals jgl 9 1 article p93 4 xml language en Rudolf Thurneysen A Grammar of Old Irish translators D A Binchy and Osborn Bergin 1946 Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies p 422 https archive org details thurneysen a grammar of old irish page n1 mode 2up Watkins Calvert 1962 Indo European Origins of the Celtic Verb Dublin Institute for Advances Studies McCarthy William Bernard Spring 1999 Review The Journal of American Folklore 112 444 220 222 doi 10 2307 541955 JSTOR 541955 a b c d L Heureux Marc G 2016 06 16 Book Review of How to Kill a Dragon aspects of Indo European linguistics Lingua Frankly 1 1 doi 10 6017 lf v1i1 5633 ISSN 2333 6552 a b How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Oxford New York Oxford University Press 2001 05 17 ISBN 978 0 19 514413 0 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Calvert W Watkins www gf org Retrieved 2018 11 10 List of Previous Goodwin Award Winners Society for Classical Studies 2010 06 06 Retrieved 2018 11 11 Jasanoff Jay H Joseph Brian D 2015 03 20 Calvert Ward Watkins Language 91 1 245 252 doi 10 1353 lan 2015 0011 ISSN 1535 0665 S2CID 143995815 External links EditCalvert Watkins at the Database of Classical Scholars Essay by Calvert Watkins on Indo European from The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics limited preview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calvert Watkins amp oldid 1162248104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.