Antoine
Meillet was one of the most influential French linguists of the early
twentieth century. He made important contributions to Armenian Studies,
particularly in the linguistic field, but also was well acquainted with
other areas of Armenian culture.
Meillet
was born in Moulins on November 11, 1866. He studied at the Sorbonne
from 1885-1889, where he was a disciple of Ferdinand de Saussure, the
pioneer of semiotics, and Michel Breal. He was appointed professor of
comparative linguistics of Indo-European languages at the École Pratique
des Hautes Etudes until 1931. One of his students was Hrachia Adjarian,
the foremost name of Armenian linguistics in the twentieth century. He
completed his doctoral dissertation in 1897. In 1905 he was elected to
the Collège de France, where he taught comparative and general
linguistics until his death. He was the mentor of a generation of
linguists and philologists, among them names related to Armenian Studies
like Émile Benveniste and Georges Dumézil.
His
approach, quite novel for his time, took into account historical
grammar, philological evidence, and facts of cultural history such as
language contacts and sociolinguistic influences. He covered nearly all
branches of the Indo-European family in his enormous output of about two
dozen books, more than 500 articles, and many book reviews. In 1903 he
published his most important work, Introduction à l’étude comparative des langues indo-européennes
(Introduction to the Comparative Study of the Indo-European Languages),
which explained the relationships of Indo-European languages to one
another and to the parent Indo-European tongue.
Meillet
became engaged in learning the Armenian language and in elucidating its
origin from the beginning of his studies. He studied Modern Armenian
with Auguste Carrière, then the holder of the Armenian chair at the Ecole des Langues Vivantes
(now the Institute Nationale des Langues et Civilisations Orientales,
INALCO). He went to Vienna and studied Classical Armenian at the
Mekhitarist Congregation from 1890-1891. As member of a research group
in the Caucasus, in 1891 he visited Armenia and researched the
manuscripts at the library of the monastery of Holy Etchmiadzin. He went
back in 1903, while he was the holder of the Armenian chair
(1902-1905). He was well acquainted with the ancient literary tradition
of Armenian, as well as with its philological aspects. He dealt with
textual problems of Armenian manuscripts, not least with the problems of
the spelling in several ancient manuscripts of the Armenian Gospels and
with the study of particular passages in works of Armenian authors.
In
a great number of articles, Meillet treated various problems of
Armenian etymology and historical phonology and morphology. The fact
that he is still considered one of the founders of comparative studies
of the Armenian language is primarily the result of his pioneering work
on Armenian syntax, which had been more or less ignored by all Armenian
linguists before him. The result of all his studies was distilled in two
monographs: his authoritative Esquisse de la grammaire comparée de l’arménien classique
(Outline of a Comparative Grammar of Classical Armenian, 1902), a
fundamental historical phonology and morphology of the language, and a
short introductory description of Armenian in his Altarmenisches Elementarbuch
(Elementary Course of Old Armenian, 1913), with some emphasis on
syntax. Meillet also devoted several minor studies to the influence of
Iranian on Armenian vocabulary.
An
engaged scholar and citizen, Meillet raised his voice in 1903-1905
against the confiscation of the properties of the Armenian Church in the
Russian Empire and in 1915-1918, in the years of the Armenian Genocide.
In 1919 he founded the Society of Armenian Studies with Frederic Macler
and others, and was instrumental in the launching of the oldest
Armenian Studies journal in Western languages, the Revue des études arméniennes, in 1920. A year later, he founded the Revue des études slaves.
Meillet’s
scholarly merits were acknowledged with the French Legion of Honor. He
was appointed member of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres
in 1924 and elected as member of more than a dozen foreign academies of
sciences. He received honorary doctorates from the universities of
Berlin, Padua, Dublin, Oxford, and Brussels.
The great French linguist passed away on September 21, 1936, in Châteaumeillant, France.