Dear Indologists,

 

I am very sorry to hear the news of Frank’s passing. Although I did not 
interact much with him when I was a student at Penn, After participating in a 
couple of Roundtables at Harvard in the early 200os organized by Michael 
Witzel, I had several exchanges with him regarding Dravidian linguistics. He 
was quite willing to read draft articles and comment on them so that I could 
improve them. He was very accessible and kind. At Penn had more interaction 
with David McAlpin. Unfortunately, both are no longer there leaving a big void 
in the field of Dravidian pre-history.

 

Regards,

Palaniappan

 

 

From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of indology list 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: "Witzel, Michael" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, September 20, 2025 at 9:14 PM
To: indology list <[email protected]>
Cc: Michael Witzel <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Franklin C. Southworth (1929-2025)

 

Dear Colleagues,

Chiming in with the great tributes to my old friend Frank. We had been in 
contact for many decades:  personally during our visits to Hawaii, Japan and in 
the US. We had started several projects, notably the (still  incomplete) 
substrate dictionary at TUFS's AA-ken (Tokyo University of Foreign Languages)  
http://www.aa.tufs.ac.jp/sarva.

In about 2015 or so he told me that he wanted to retire from research and spend 
time on his music .. and politics.

 

I will always remember him as a gentle, impressive and always innovative friend 
and colleague.

 

Michael Witzel,

Wales Research Prof. of Sanskrit

Residence: Zushi, Kanagawa, Japan

 



On Sep 21, 2025, at 2:14, Deven Patel via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:

 

Dear Colleagues:

 

It is with sadness that we report the passing of Franklin C. Southworth, 
Professor Emeritus in the Department of South Asia Regional Studies at the 
University of Pennsylvania. Franklin Southworth was a leading historical 
linguist of South Asia. Over the course of his distinguished career, Professor 
Southworth made foundational contributions to our understanding of the 
Dravidian and Indo-Aryan language families, their interactions, and the ways in 
which linguistic evidence can illuminate the prehistory of the subcontinent. 
His last academic contributions include an article entitled “Rice and Language 
Across Asia: Crops, Movement, and Social Change” (2011) and the Routledge 
volume Linguistic Archaeology of South Asia (2005), which synthesized decades 
of research into a landmark study of language contact, migration, and cultural 
exchange.  Trained in linguistics and anthropology, Professor Southworth spent 
much of his academic life at Penn, where he taught and mentored generations of 
students in South Asian linguistics, anthropology, and area studies.  

 

Professor Southworth's webpage gives a longer list of his intellectual 
contributions: https://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~fsouth/

 

Warmly,

 

Deven

 

-- 

Deven M. Patel


_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology




_______________________________________________ INDOLOGY mailing list 
[email protected] 
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology 

_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology

Reply via email to