Saturday, February 29, 2020


Comparative geography of local languages ​​in Europe and America: differentiation, standardization and political recognition 
First Part
Danilo Anton

1. Introduction
 The historical evolution of traditional societies that possessed community structures and modes of self-sustainable production and consumption led to the formation of differentiated local cultures. Although there was an exchange with neighboring communities due to their relative isolation, particular linguistic characteristics were developed, different from the neighboring languages. These idiomatic or dialect variations, which could sometimes be very important, acted as the defining axis of these cultures.
As the states developed, with more or less centralized administration, the need to adopt one or more common languages ​​was generated. In some cases, lingua franca developed as was the case with Swahili in East Africa and Tuscan in Italy.
In other cases the language that was imposed belonged to the strongest region (culturally, economically and / or politically), as was the case of Spanish in Spain, English in the British Isles and Mandarin in China, or the colonial power dominant (English in India, French in northwestern African countries, Russian in the Russian Federation).
As new states became established and independent during the 19th and 20th centuries, the national languages ​​were consolidated. This phenomenon occurred mainly in the European continent and in Asia, and to a lesser extent in Africa.
In the American continent there was a different process. Due to the invasion and occupation of the native territories the local cultures were partially or totally substituted eliminating or weakening the indigenous languages. A similar situation occurred in Australia and New Zealand.
In these regions, no national state was established based on native cultures. All states arose from former foreign colonies (Spanish, English, Portuguese, French) that gained independence during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
In the following paragraphs we will analyze the comparative linguistic ethnogeography of Europe and America with some references to the rest of the world that we consider relevant to the subject considered.

2. Linguistic differentiation in Europe and the political recognition of local languages
In Europe, this evolution throughout history led to the formation of several hundred different languages ​​or local dialects.
The expansion of some states (Greek-Macedonian and Roman Empires) in the so-called classical era (5th century BC to 6th century AD) and Greek-Byzantine gave rise to linguistic homogenization due to the imposition of certain strong languages ​​on weaker ones.
In particular, Latin (in Western Europe and the western half of the Mediterranean Sea) and Greek (in the eastern half of the Mediterranean Sea) were expanded.
From the fall of the Roman Empire of the West, in the fifth century, linguistic differentiation intensified. Thus, after several centuries of transformation, local languages, strongly influenced by written, bureaucratic and religious Latin gave rise to several linguistic varieties generally called "Romance languages" in the former provinces of the Empire. In the Iberian Peninsula the Galician-Portuguese language, Spanish, Catalan, Asturian, Leonese and others were developed. In the Italian peninsula and neighboring islands, the Tuscan language, Piedmontese, Lombard, Veneto, Sardinian, Corsican, Calabrian, Sicilian, etc. evolved. In the ancient transalpine galias these processes gave rise to the Provencal language, Occitan, French, Romansh, Walloon and others. In Dacia the Romanian emerged. In North Africa the influence was less due to the strong Phoenician roots and pre-existing Berbers. The Afro-Romance languages ​​that emerged are extinguished in the early medieval period as well as in the British Isles a British Romance language became extinct in the early Middle Ages.
In the Greco-speaking area the local differentiation was minor due to the longer duration of the Greco-Byzantine domination and the Ottoman invasion in Anatolia that imposed the Turkish languages ​​replacing Greek in the main centers of the former Byzantine Empire.
In the European regions that did not experience Roman or Greco-Byzantine domination, families with different ethno-linguistic roots were developed (German-Scandinavian, Slavic, Finnish, Magyar, Albanian, Celtic and Euzkaro languages, among others).
At the beginning of the 20th century, 150 different languages ​​were spoken in Europe, including numerous dialect varieties. Among them there were about 60 languages ​​with sufficient demographic volume and local predominance to transcend politically and culturally.
In fact, 41 languages ​​became dominant official languages ​​(national languages) in their respective states. The process of defense and officialization of national languages ​​proved complex and it was necessary to resist the cultural and political domination of dominant (sometimes occupying) states. Some languages ​​survived but did not become dominant official languages ​​(eg Basque, Catalan, Breton, Welsh, Corsican, Sardinian, Sami, Tatar, Chechen).
Many of the new states emerged as a result of the dissolution of the Soviet Union. This is the case of Ukrainian, Belarusian, Moldovan, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian, Armenian, Georgian and Azeri. Something similar happened as a result of the break-up of Yugoslavia that resulted in the establishment of independent states with their own national languages ​​(Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegrin, Macedonian, Albanian languages ​​of Kosovo, etc.).
In any case, after this long evolutionary history, the resulting official ethno-linguistic geography in Europe is one of the most diverse in the world (see Tables 1 and 2).
The multiple historical episodes that marked European political evolution led to the formation of numerous national states that, in most cases, managed to preserve their own languages.
Because of this, many local languages, now recognized as national languages, have social prestige and state support, in particular educational and economic.
Table 1 shows the 49 European states with their respective dominant and secondary languages, including the approximate number of speakers of each of them.guage

1.              Andorra Catalán 50,000
2.              Armenia Armenian3,200,000
3.              Azerbaijan Azeri 8,500,000
4.              Austria German 8,000,000
5.              Belgium   Flemish  6,100,000
6.              Walloon (French) 600,000
7.              Belarus Belarusian 7,000,000
8.              Bulgaria Bulgarian 7,000,000
9.              Croatia  Coatian (Serbo-Croatian) 4,000,000
10.          Denmark Danish 5,500,000
11.          Slovakia Slovakia 5,000,000
12.          Slovenia Slovenian 1,900,000
13.          Spain  Spanish 44,000,000
14.          Estonia  Estonian 920,000
15.          Finland  Finnish 5,000,000
16.          France French 65,000,000
17.          Georgia Georgian 4,000,000
18.          Greece Greek 11,000,000
19.          Netherlands Dutch 20,000,000
20.          Hungary Hungarian 9,000,000I
21.          Ireland English 6,000,000 Irish 3,000,000
22.          Iceland  Icelandic  300,000
23.          Italy Italian 60,000,000
24.          Latvia Latvian 1,400,000
25.          Lithuania Lithuanian 3,000,000
26.          Luxembourg Luxembourgish 350,000
27.          Macedonia Macedonian 1,800,000
28.          Malta   Maltese 330,000
29.          Moldova Moldovan (Romanian) 3,200,000
30.          Montenegro Serbo-Croatian 300,000 Montenegrin 200,000
31.          Norway Norwegian 4,500,000
32.          Poland Polish 38,000,000
33.          Portugal Portuguese 11,000,000
34.          United Kingdom English 61,000,000
35.          Czech Republic Czech 10,000,000
36.          Romania    Romanian 20,000,000
37.          Russia    Russian 142,000,000
38.          Serbia Serbian (Serbo-Croatian) 7,000,000
39.          Sweden  Swedish 9,000,000
40.          Ukraine Ukrainian 37,000,000

To be continued

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