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Aryan, former name given to a people who were said to speak an archaic Indo-European language and who were

thought to have settled in prehistoric times in ancient Iran and the northern Indian subcontinent. The theory of an
Aryan race appeared in the mid-19th century and remained prevalent until the mid-20th century. According to the
hypothesis, these probably light-skinned Aryans were the group who invaded and conquered ancient India from the
north and whose literature, religion, and modes of social organization subsequently shaped the course of Indian
culture, particularly the Vedic religion that informed and was eventually superseded byHinduism.
However, since the late 20th century, a growing number of scholars have rejected both the Aryan invasion hypothesis
and the use of the term Aryan as a racial designation, suggesting that the Sanskrit term arya (noble or
distinguished), the linguistic root of the word, was actually a social rather than an ethnic epithet. Rather, the term is
used strictly in a linguistic sense, in recognition of the influence that the language of the ancient northern migrants
had on the development of the Indo-European languages of South Asia. In the 19th century the term was used as a
synonym for Indo-European and also, more restrictively, to refer to the Indo-Iranian languages. It is now used in
linguistics only in the sense of the term Indo-Aryan languages, a branch of the larger Indo-European language family.
In Europe the notion of white racial superiority emerged in the 1850s, propagated most assiduously by the comte de
Gobineau and later by his disciple Houston Stewart Chamberlain, who first used the term Aryan for the white race.
Members of this so-called race spoke Indo-European languages, were credited with all the progress that benefited
humanity, and were purported to be superior to Semites, yellows, and blacks. Believers in Aryanism came to
regard the Nordic and Germanic peoples as the purest members of the race. This notion, which had been
repudiated by anthropologists by the second quarter of the 20th century, was seized upon by Adolf Hitler and
the Nazis and was made the basis of the German government policy of exterminating Jews, Roma (Gypsies), and
other non-Aryans.
In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, many white supremacist groups adopted the name Aryan as a label for their
ideology. Because of this usage and its association with Nazism, the term has acquired a pejorative meaning.

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