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The Frisian language has a long history that can be traced back to the 7th century, when the Frisians were an independent people with their own distinct culture and language. At that time, the Frisian language was very different from the modern language spoken today.
Old Frisian: 800 – 1550 Middle Frisian: 1550 – 1800 New Frisian: 1800 – present. Taking its cue from Romanticism, a Frisian language and emancipation movement arose which aimed to prevent the demise of the language and sought its recognition. New Frisian writers appeared, such as the Halbertsma brothers.
2 Φεβ 2020 · These are the Frisians, inhabiting the historic region known as Frisia on the coasts of the North Sea. Today, Frisia is partly in the Netherlands and partly in Germany, but the identity and the history of the Frisian people is recognized and supported.
25 Μαρ 2019 · In an equally thought-provoking contribution, Peter Schrijver points to potential Celtic vestiges in the early development of the Frisian language, suggesting its vowel system, in particular, stems from the convergence of Celtic and Germanic dialects between the estuaries of the Rhine and the Ems.
25 Αυγ 2018 · Summary. The story of Frisia and the Frisians is one of a changing landscape, people, identity and name, as well as one of constant connections across the North Sea. For an understanding of the pre- and proto-historical Frisians and their archaeological traces, we first consider the changing landscape that they inhabited.
History. Prior to the appearance of the modern Frisians, their namesake, the ancient Frisii, enter recorded history in the Roman account of Drusus 's 12 BC war against the Rhine Germans and the Chauci. [12] .
Frisian dates back as far as the Early Middle Ages. It began to become a language distinct from other North Sea Germanic languages, such as Old English. During the High Middle Ages, Old Frisian was used as a written language (e.g. in legal texts) and as the official regional language.