| Author |
Lecture |
pages |
|
| Nicholas Sims-Williams |
Preface
|
vii |
ARTICLE |
| Ronald Eric Emmerick |
Hunting the hapax: Sir Harold W. Bailey (18991996)
|
1-17 |
ARTICLE |
| J P Mallory |
Archaeological models and Asian Indo-Europeans
|
19-42 |
ARTICLE |
| Asko Parpola |
From the dialects of Old Indo-Aryan to Proto-Indo-Aryan and Proto-Iranian
|
43-102 |
ARTICLE |
| Almuth Degener |
The Nuristani languages
|
103-117 |
ARTICLE |
| RichardSalomon |
Gandhari and the other Indo-Aryan languages in the light of newly-discovered Kharosthi manuscripts
|
119-134 |
ARTICLE |
| K R Norman |
Pali and the languages of early Buddhism
|
135-150 |
ARTICLE |
| O von Hinüber |
The vocabulary of Buddhist Sanskrit: Problems and perspectives
|
151-164 |
ARTICLE |
| Jost Gippert |
The Avestan language and its problems
|
165-187 |
ARTICLE |
| Alexander Lubotsky |
Scythian elements in Old Iranian
|
189-202 |
ARTICLE |
| Frantz Grenet |
Regional interaction in Central Asia and Northwest India in the Kidarite and Hephthalite periods
|
203-224 |
ARTICLE |
| Nicholas Sims-Williams |
Ancient Afghanistan and its invaders: Linguistic evidence from the Bactrian documents and inscriptions
|
225-242 |
ARTICLE |
| Georges-Jean Pinault |
Tocharian and Indo-Iranian: relations between two linguistic areas
|
243-284 |
ARTICLE |
| Ilya Gershevitch |
Professor Sir Harold Bailey: An appreciation
|
285-296 |
ARTICLE |
|