Provençal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Provençal Provençau |
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Spoken in: | France, Spain, Italy, Monaco, small community in California | |
Region: | Europe | |
Total speakers: | 362,000[1] | |
Language family: | Indo-European Italic Romance Italo-Western Western Gallo-Iberian Gallo-Romance Occitano-Romance Occitan Provençal |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | oc | |
ISO 639-2: | oci | |
ISO 639-3: | oci | |
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Provençal (Provençau) is one of several dialects of Occitan spoken by a minority of people, mostly in Provence (in southern France).
In the English-speaking world, "Provençal" is often used to refer to all dialects of Occitan, but actually refers specifically to the dialect spoken in the former province of Provence as well as south of Dauphiné and the Nîmes region in Languedoc and the upper valleys of Piedmont, Italy (Val Maira, Val Varacha, Val d'Estura, Entraigas, Limon, Vinai, Pignerol, Sestriera). Outside Europe, the language in spoken mainly in the Northern Californian counties of Tehama, Siskiyou, Napa, Alpine and Mono counties, especially in the Mono County town of Chalfant Valley. A small community in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties also exists in Southern California.
"Provençal" is also the customary name given to the older version of the langue d'oc used by the troubadours of medieval literature, corresponding to Old French or langue d'oil of the northern areas of France.
Also, some secluded areas of Sicily still bear significant traces of Provençal in terms of vocabulary and pronunciation.
On 2007-03-14 the ISO 639-3 code changed from prv to oci. (prv was merged into oci)
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[edit] Sub-Dialects
Two main sub-dialects are identified. These are:
- General Provençal
- Rodanenc (in French Rhodanien) around lower Rhône river, Arles, Avignon, Nîmes.
- A Rodanenc subvariety, the Shuadit or Judeo-Provençal is considered as extinct since 1977. It was spoken by the Jewish community around Avignon. When Jews were granted freedom of residence in France the dialect declined.
- Maritim or Centrau or Mediterranèu (Maritime or Central or Mediterranean) around Aix-en-Provence, Marseilles, Toulon, Cannes, Antibes, Grasse, Forcalquier, Castellane, Draguignan.
- Rodanenc (in French Rhodanien) around lower Rhône river, Arles, Avignon, Nîmes.
- Niçard in the lower County of Nice and Monaco.
- Gavòt (in French Gavot) in the Western Occitan Alps, around Digne, Sisteron, Gap, Barcelonnette and the upper County of Nice. It is not exactly a subdialect of Provençal, but rather a subdialect of Vivaro-Alpine (an Occitan dialect which is distinct from Provençal and located northward). But some people view Gavòt as a variety of Provençal since a part of the Gavot area (near Digne and Sisteron) belongs to historical Provence.
[edit] Literature
Modern Provençal literature was given impetus by Nobel laureate Frédéric Mistral and the association Félibrige he founded with other writers, like Théodore Aubanel. It has been enhanced and modernized since the second half of the 20th Century by the Institut d'Estudis Occitans and by major writers like Robert Lafont, Pierre Pessemesse, Claude Barsotti, Max-Philippe Delavouët, Philippe Gardy, Florian Vernet, Danielle Julien, Jòrgi Gròs and many others.
[edit] Miscellaneous
The Provençal language is not to be confused with the Franco-Provençal language, which is a linguistic sub-group of its own between the Langue d'oïl and Langue d'Oc.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Provencal Language at the Classic Encyclopedia, based on the 1911 Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica
[edit] External links
[edit] Ref:
- Manuel pratique de provençal contemporain, Alain Barthélemy-Vigouroux & Guy Martin, Édisud 2006, ISBN 2-7449-0619-0
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