Karakhanid, also known as Khaqani Turkic (lit. meaning 'imperial'[1] or 'royal',[2] self referring to as 'Türki' or 'Türkçe'),[3] was a Turkic language developed in the 11th century during the Middle Turkic period under the Kara-Khanid Khanate. It has been described as the first literary Islamic Turkic language. It is sometimes classified under the Old Turkic category, rather than Middle Turkic, as it is contemporary to the East Old Turkic languages of Orkhon Turkic and Old Uyghur. Eastern Middle Turkic languages, namely Khorezmian Turkic and later Chagatai are descendants of the Karakhanid language.[4]

Karakhanid
Khaqani
Türki/Türkçe
Native toKara-Khanid Khanate
RegionCentral Asia
Era11th century
Language codes
ISO 639-3xqa
xqa
Glottologqara1244

Karakhanid vocabulary was influenced by Arabic and Persian loanwords, but the language itself was still noted to be similar to the Old Uyghur language. The language was written using the Arabic script. Mahmud al-Kashgari's Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk and Yūsuf Balasaguni's Kutadgu Bilig are considered to be important literary works written in Karakhanid language.[4]

History

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It was spoken between the 5th-15th centuries. It is one of the three parts of the Old Turkic period. According to Ligeti's classification, it is divided into three periods:

  1. Mani and Buddha translations and the foundation period of Uyghur written language
  2. Chagatai writing language period
  3. Kipchak and Oghuz language relics period

Ḥāqāni Turkic (Khāghānī/Khāqānī Türkī) can also be called the Old Kashgar language. It was the literary language used by the Turks in this area until the beginning of the 14th century. Karakhanid Turkic and Khorezmian Turkic in the west were replaced by Chaghatai Turkic in the Timurid period.

Alphabet

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Plain End Middle Start Name ALA-LC Transcription Modern Turkish
elif a, â a, e, â
hemze ˀ ', a, e, i, u, ü
be b, p b
pe p p
te t t
se s s
cim c, ç c
çim ç ç
ha h
ẖ, x h
dal d d
zel z z
re r r
ze z z
je j j
sin s s
şın ş ş
sad s
ﺿ dad ż, ḍ d, z
t
z
ayın ', h
gayın ġ g, ğ
fe f f
kaf ḳ, q k
kef k, g, ŋ k, g, ğ, n
gef¹ g g, ğ
nef, sağır kef ŋ n
lam l l
mim m m
nun n n
vav v, w, o, ô, ö, u, û, ü v, o, ö, u, ü, û
he h, e, a h, e, a
lamelif la
ye y, ı, i, î y, ı, i, î

Additional Letters

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Only 18 of these letters are used. There are seven more letters which have no place in spelling, but are necessary in pronunciation and are not considered as root letters. Some Turkic languages require these letters. They are:

پ p
ج c
رۛ j
ف f
غ g
ك g
ڭ ŋ

Literary works

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Turkic elders valued the native language and left 21 works.[5] The most important and valuable of these that have reached our hands are;

The famous work Kutadgu Bilig written by Yusuf Has Hajip (Yūsuf Khāss Hājib), which was written in Karakhanid Turkic for the first time during the Karakhanid State, and the famous work Divān-ı Lügati't-Türk written in the same century by Kāshgarlı Mahmud. Unfortunately, four works mentioned by Ibn Muhannā, one work called Bilik mentioned by Abu Hayyan (Abū Mūsā Ǧābir ibn Ḥayyān) and others have not been found. There was also a Turkic poet named Çuçu during the Karakhanid period.

Phonology

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Vowels are found in Karakhanid Turkic, as in all periods of Turkic language.

Front Vowels Back Vowels
/e/ /a/
/i/ /ɯ/
/ø/ /o/
/y/ /u/

References

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  1. ^ Jan P. Beckmann; Wolfgang Kluxen (1981). Sprache und Erkenntnis im Mittelalter. p. 832.
  2. ^ Svatopluk Soucek (2000). A history of inner Asia. p. 89.
  3. ^ Yusuf Has Hacib. Kutadğu Bilig. Translated by Mustafa S. Kaçalin. T. C. Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı Kütüphaneler ve Yayımlar Genel Mudürlüğü. p. 3. ISBN 978-975-17-3359-7.
  4. ^ a b Johanson, Lars; Csató, Éva Á (2015-04-29). The Turkic Languages. Routledge. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-136-82527-9.
  5. ^ Atalay, Besim (2006). Divanü Lügati't – Türk. Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi. ISBN 975-16-0405-2, Cilt I, sayfa VIII.
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Note 2