Loaf Warden
(no party affiliation)
I know a great deal about the history of the English language. I know where it comes from, what phases it has gone through, and why it is still a Germanic language even though it looks so Latinate.
The history of a language like Italian is simple enough to guess. Obviously it's a direct descendant of Latin as it was spoken in the Italian peninsula, changing gradually over the years. It wouldn't be completely inaccurate to call Italian "Modern Latin", though of course nobody does.
But where the heck does French come from?
It's classified as a Romance language, and the Latinate elements are obvious even at a glance. So the answer should be, "It's a direct descendant of Latin as it was spoken in Gaul, changing gradually over the years. It's another dialect of 'Modern Latin'."
But the early history of France confuses the issue for me. As I understand it, the modern nation of France is a direct descendant of the Frankish Empire forged by Charlemagne.
But the Franks were a Germanic people. Germany itself is also a direct descendant of the Frankish Empire, through a different grandson of Charlemagne.
Obviously somebody in France was speaking a Latinate language called French by 1066, because that was the language imposed upon the Anglo-Saxons by the Norman invaders, and that's why English today looks so Latinate. (It would look more like Dutch and especially Frisian today if William had lost.)
So, what language did Charlemagne speak, two and a half centuries before William of Normandy? Did he speak Frankish? Or did he speak a Latinate ancestor of modern French? If he spoke a Latinate language, then when and why had the Franks abandoned their Germanic tongue? And if he did speak Frankish, then how and by what means did Frankish disappear from West Francia to be replaced by a descendant of Latin? Does modern French show signs of Frankish influence? Does Frankish survive today in any form in some small pocket of France the way certain Celtic languages survive in France and England? (I should point out before I get any violent flames that when I say 'England' here, I mean 'England'. It wasn't a sloppy way of saying 'Britain', because I'm not referring to Welsh or Scots Gaelic. I'm referring to Cornish.)
The history of a language like Italian is simple enough to guess. Obviously it's a direct descendant of Latin as it was spoken in the Italian peninsula, changing gradually over the years. It wouldn't be completely inaccurate to call Italian "Modern Latin", though of course nobody does.
But where the heck does French come from?
It's classified as a Romance language, and the Latinate elements are obvious even at a glance. So the answer should be, "It's a direct descendant of Latin as it was spoken in Gaul, changing gradually over the years. It's another dialect of 'Modern Latin'."
But the early history of France confuses the issue for me. As I understand it, the modern nation of France is a direct descendant of the Frankish Empire forged by Charlemagne.
But the Franks were a Germanic people. Germany itself is also a direct descendant of the Frankish Empire, through a different grandson of Charlemagne.
Obviously somebody in France was speaking a Latinate language called French by 1066, because that was the language imposed upon the Anglo-Saxons by the Norman invaders, and that's why English today looks so Latinate. (It would look more like Dutch and especially Frisian today if William had lost.)
So, what language did Charlemagne speak, two and a half centuries before William of Normandy? Did he speak Frankish? Or did he speak a Latinate ancestor of modern French? If he spoke a Latinate language, then when and why had the Franks abandoned their Germanic tongue? And if he did speak Frankish, then how and by what means did Frankish disappear from West Francia to be replaced by a descendant of Latin? Does modern French show signs of Frankish influence? Does Frankish survive today in any form in some small pocket of France the way certain Celtic languages survive in France and England? (I should point out before I get any violent flames that when I say 'England' here, I mean 'England'. It wasn't a sloppy way of saying 'Britain', because I'm not referring to Welsh or Scots Gaelic. I'm referring to Cornish.)

