Low Franconian
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Low Franconian is a special group of languages and dialects. Experts study these in history and language. Many old and modern ways of speaking are very close to the Dutch language. These languages and dialects are spoken in several places around the world.
Most people who speak Low Franconian live in the Netherlands, the northern part of Belgium called Flanders, a region called Nord in France, and western Germany near the Lower Rhine. You can also hear these languages in faraway places like Suriname, South Africa, and Namibia. This group of languages helps us learn about how people in these areas talk and share their history.
Terminology
Low Franconian is a group of languages and dialects related to the Dutch language. Experts use this term to talk about these languages, but the people who speak them do not call themselves “Low Franconian.”
Sometimes, Low Franconian is grouped with Low Saxon, also called Low German. This grouping is not because of shared language changes. Instead, it is because these languages did not go through a sound change called the High German consonant shift. The name “Franconian” was created by a German expert named Wilhelm Braune. He divided Franconian languages into groups based on whether they went through this sound change.
Origins
Main article: Frankish language
Even though it is called "Franconian," most of these languages are not very close to the old language spoken by the Franks. This is because later changes from other German languages altered them. However, the Low Franconian languages are special. They are the closest living relatives to the old Frankish language.
Scholars study old versions of Dutch and some words that moved into old French to understand the Frankish language. Old Low Franconian is just another name for Old Dutch. It split into two main groups: one spoken in areas like Flanders and Holland, and the other in places like Limburg and the Rhineland. The first group is the direct ancestor of today’s Dutch language.
Modern classification
Low Franconian includes several language groups spoken in parts of the Netherlands, Belgium, France, and Germany.
One group is West Low Franconian, found north of a special language line. This includes types like Brabantish, West Flemish, East Flemish, Zeelandic, and Hollandic.
The other group is South Low Franconian, often called Limburgish. This group shares some special sounds with other nearby languages.
Area loss
Until the Early Modern Period, people speaking Low Franconian used Middle Dutch or Early Modern Dutch for writing and official matters. In the 19th century, big changes happened in the area of French Flanders. The French government encouraged people to use French instead.
In the Lower Rhine area, local Low Franconian languages were used until the 17th century but later replaced by standard German. In places like Upper Guelders and Cleves, which later became part of Prussia, Dutch was replaced by German for official use. Though people still speak Low Franconian varieties there today, many now also use local German dialects because of easier travel and more media. In Brussels, which used to speak Dutch, most people now speak French, even though the area is officially bilingual.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Low Franconian, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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