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A Gatty Lecture by Pittayawat (Joe) Pittayaporn, Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics; head of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Research Unit, Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University Held as a webinar on February 11, 2021 at 8:00pm EST, this was a part of the Southeast Asia Program's weekly Ronald and Janette Gatty Lecture Series. The linguistic landscape of central Thailand prior to the 13th century was radically different from today. It is generally believed that the area was pre-dominantly Mon-Khmer speaking. O’Connor (1995) suggests that the Tai migration into Southeast Asia started in the first millennium A.D. Diller (2000) similarly suggests that the southwest-ward migration of Tai speakers started in the 10th century. In this talk, I discuss when and how Old Thai, the language attested in 14th-15th century inscriptions, came to replace aboriginal languages of the area. By examining its development from Proto-Southwestern Tai (Pittayaporn 2009), I argue that Old Thai was first spoken in central Thailand some time before the oldest surviving Thai text was inscribed, perhaps in the 13th century. In addition, I hypothesize based on linguistic and genetic evidence that the Thai language came to dominate central Thailand mainly through migration of Tai-speaking population, rather than ethnolinguistic assimilation of indigenous non-Tai speakers. For more information on future Gatty Lectures and to register, please visit https://einaudi.cornell.edu/programs/...