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Tables of Contents for In Search of the Indo-Europeans
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Foreword
7
2
The Discovery of the Indo-Europeans
9
15
August Schleicher
14
8
The Indo-European hypothesis
22
2
The Indo-Europeans in Asia
24
42
The Anatolians
24
6
The Phrygians
30
3
The Armenians
33
2
The Indo-Aryans
35
13
The Iranians
48
8
The Tocharians
56
7
Conclusions
63
3
The Indo-Europeans in Europe
66
44
The Greeks
66
6
The Thracians
72
1
The Illyrians
73
3
The Slavs
76
5
The Balts
81
3
The Germans
84
3
Italy
87
8
The Celts
95
12
Earlier configurations
107
3
Proto-Indo-European Culture
110
18
Environment
114
3
Economy
117
3
Settlement
120
1
Technology
120
2
Social organization
122
4
Conclusion
126
2
Indo-European Religion
128
15
Dumezil and tripartition
130
5
Horse sacrifice
135
2
The cattle cycle
137
1
Human sacrifice and punishment
138
1
War of the Functions
139
1
Dualism and Indo-European ideology
140
1
Mythology and reality
141
2
The Indo-European Homeland Problem
143
43
Defining the homeland
144
1
The neighbours of the Proto-Indo-Europeans
145
6
Internal linguistic evidence
151
5
Interference and substrates
156
2
Linguistic palaeontology
158
6
Archaeology
164
22
The Archaeology of the Proto-Indo-Europeans
186
36
Dawn of the Proto-Indo-Europeans
187
1
Emergence of Proto-Indo-European society
188
7
The Eneolithic period of the western Pontic
195
2
The Early Eneolithic of the Pontic steppe and forest-steppe
197
9
Early Eneolithic in the East
206
4
The Yamnaya cultural-historical area
210
5
Proto-Indo-European culture
215
7
Indo-European Expansions
222
44
Expansion into Asia
223
8
Expansion into the Caucasus
231
2
Southeastern Europe and western Anatolia
233
10
Central and Northern Europe
243
14
The process of expansion
257
5
Recapitulation
262
4
Epilogue
266
7
The Aryan myth
266
4
The legacy
270
3
Notes to the text
273
5
Bibliography
278
6
Sources of illustrations
284
1
Acknowledgments
285
1
Index
285