Gallo-Romance languages


The Gallo-Romance branch of the Romance languages includes in the narrowest sense French, Occitan, and Franco-Provençal. However, other definitions are far broader, variously encompassing Catalan, the Gallo-Italic languages, and the Rhaeto-Romance languages.
Old Gallo-Romance was one of the three languages in which the Oaths of Strasbourg were written in 842 AD.

Classification

The Gallo-Romance group includes:
Other language families which are sometimes included in Gallo-Romance:
In the view of some linguists Rhaeto-Romance and Gallo-Italic form a single linguistic unity named "Rhaeto-Cisalpine" or "Padanian", which includes also the Venetian and Istriot dialects, whose Italianate features are deemed to be superficial and secondary in nature.

Traditional geographical extension

How far the Gallo-Romance languages spread varies a great deal depending on which languages are included in the group. Those included in its narrowest definition were historically spoken in the north of France, parts of Flanders, Alsace, part of Lorraine, the Wallonia region of Belgium, the Channel Islands, parts of Switzerland, and northern Italy.
Today, a single Gallo-Romance language dominates much of this geographic region and has also spread overseas.
At its broadest, the area also encompasses southern France, Catalonia, the Valencian Country and the Balearic islands in eastern Spain, and much of northern Italy.

General characteristics

The Gallo-Romance languages are generally considered the most innovative among the Romance languages. Northern France was the epicentre. Characteristic Gallo-Romance features generally developed earliest and appear in their most extreme manifestation in the langue d'oïl, gradually spreading out from there along riverways and roads. The earliest vernacular Romance writing occurred in Northern France, as the development of vernacular writing in a given area was forced by the almost total inability of Romance speakers to understand Classical Latin, still the vehicle of writing and culture.
Gallo-Romance languages are usually characterised by the loss of all unstressed final vowels other than . However, when the loss of a final vowel would result in an impossible final cluster, a prop vowel appears in place of the lost vowel, usually. Generally, the same changes also occurred in final syllables closed by a consonant.
Furthermore, loss of in a final syllable was early enough in Primitive Old French that the Classical Latin third singular was often preserved: venit "he comes" > > > > > . Elsewhere, final vowel loss occurred later or unprotected was lost earlier.
Other than southern Occitano-Romance, the Gallo-Romance languages are quite innovative, with French and some of the Gallo-Italian languages rivaling each other for the most extreme phonological changes compared with more conservative languages. For example, French sain, saint, sein, ceint, seing meaning "healthy, holy, breast, girds, signature" are all pronounced.
In other ways, however, the Gallo-Romance languages are conservative. The older stages of many of the languages are famous for preserving a two-case system consisting of nominative and oblique, fully marked on nouns, adjectives and determiners, inherited almost directly from the Latin nominative and accusative cases and preserving a number of different declensional classes and irregular forms.
In the opposite of the normal pattern, the languages closest to the oïl epicentre preserve the case system the best, and languages at the periphery lost it early. For example, the case system was preserved in Old Occitan until around the 13th century but had already been lost in Old Catalan, despite the fact that there were very few other differences between the two.
The Occitan group is known for an innovatory ending on many subjunctive and preterite verbs and an unusual development of , which, in many varieties, merges with .
The following tables show two examples of the extensive phonological changes that French has undergone.
LanguageChangeFormPronun.
Vulgar Latinsaˈpūtum
Western Romancevowel changes,
first lenition
Gallo-Romanceloss of final vowels
second lenition
pre-Frenchfinal devoicing,
loss of length
loss of /v/ near
rounded vowel
early Old Frenchfronting of /u/seüṭ
Old Frenchloss of dental fricativesseü
Frenchcollapse of hiatussu

LanguageChangeFormPronun.
Vulgar Latinvītam
Western Romancevowel changes,
first lenition
early Old Frenchsecond lenition,
loss of length,
final /a/ to /ə/
viḍe
Old Frenchloss of dental fricativesvie
Frenchloss of final schwavie

These are the notable characteristics of the Gallo-Romance languages:
Gallo-Italian languages have a number of features in common with the other Italian languages: