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Iberian Romance languages

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This article is about a subdivision of the Romance language family. For the broader group of languages spoken in the Iberian Peninsula, see Iberian languages.

The formation of Iberian Romance languages followed more or less this process:

  1. Separation of East Iberian (Catalan) on one side of the peninsula from West Iberian Romance on the other. Catalan is sometimes regarded as a transition language between Iberian Romance and Gallo-Romance languages.
  2. West Iberian Romance split into Castilian - Astur-Leonese - Extremaduran, in central Iberia, and Galician-Portuguese in western Iberia.

During this stage a group of Romance dialects collectively known as Mozarabic were spoken in Moorish Iberia. With the Christian Reconquest of the peninsula, they were replaced with the Iberian Romance languages of the north, becoming extinct. Another language close to Mozarabic, Aragonese, still has some speakers today. Mozarabic and Aragonese are classified by linguists as Pyrenean-Mozarabic, a separate group from Iberian Romance and Gallo-Romance.

It is important to note that power structures enormously influenced the formation of the Iberian languages. If kingdoms and states had formed in a different fashion, there could now be a single Galician-Portuguese language, or a multiplicity of languages. This political aspect was important in the development of every language.

Thus, there are four major Romance languages in Iberia today:

And three main groups of minor Romance languages, Astur-Leonese/Extremaduran, Aragonese, and Occitan (in its Aranese dialect).

Portuguese, Spanish, Catalan and Occitan have the status of international languages, being officially spoken in more than one state:

See also

Categories


Iberian Romance languages | Languages of Spain | Languages of Portugal

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