Looking through the "foreword" section, it's pretty clear that this is more fictional than real.How viable is the Novegradian conlang project for Novgorodian dialect names?
Looking through the "foreword" section, it's pretty clear that this is more fictional than real.How viable is the Novegradian conlang project for Novgorodian dialect names?
I didn't put too much effort into defining the Ruthenian and Russian border because the borders of cultures most likely have to be changed quite significantly based on everyone's feedback about Russia and additional feedback about Ruthenia. Also, like you know, the border isn't very well defined between those 2. I most likely will review my map later and look into that border in more detail. You might be right that Kursk-Orel dialects could be lumped together with Russian rather than Ruthenian.View attachment 1218351
Some of the lines match on pretty well, though Smolenskian should stretch a bit further to cover a few locations right across the modern border (they speak the right dialect.
Looks like you've got the Kursk-Orel dialects in Ruthenian with the mixed zone in Ryazanian. I don't hate the compromise, I guess, though I'm not sure that the Kursk-Orel group wouldn't just be better in Southern Russian (Ryazanian).
Is the kipchack language in Lithuania proper meant to represent tatars, karaims? Because that is a very nice inclusion for the to live there during the game, but I think they were brought to live around Trakai mainly by the grand Duke Vytautas the Great around 1397 so a bit after the start date.This is a draft of just splitting East Slavic into 3 dialects. Smolenskian being Ruthenian makes Ukrainian look crazy big, would it be better as Russian or Belarusian?
View attachment 1218272
Definitely not, since it has fictional sound changes and even some revised history before 1337How viable is the Novegradian conlang project for Novgorodian dialect names?
Grammar of the Novegradian Language — Names
www.veche.net
On the about page they talk about an imagined scenario when Novgorod republic survives and their language diverge so much, that it is even formed their own branch called North Slavic.How viable is the Novegradian conlang project for Novgorodian dialect names?
Grammar of the Novegradian Language — Names
www.veche.net
Lol you put a strikethrough on the post, btw unrelated, is the balkan feedback going to be done soon? People are loosing their minds over thereHow viable is the Novegradian conlang project for Novgorodian dialect names?
Grammar of the Novegradian Language — Names
www.veche.net
To make it clear that the idea was abandoned because others came up with better sourcesLol you put a strikethrough on the post,
The point of dialects is to provide flavor names, not to be an actual representation of said dialects, the current setup is ideal for that purposeHow I think dialects should look like. (map)
View attachment 1218350
Notes:
- Russian could be separated between North Western dialect (Novgorodian) and North Eastern dialect (Muscovian). Based on sources I have seen I am uncertain how different they were from each other at the game start (14th century). I left it as one.
- Ruthenian should split several centuries after the game start, but during and after the game start it should be ideally 1.
- I followed preexcisting Belarussian and Russian border for Ruthenian and Russian border. But that could (and most likely should) change based on dialectical borders that might be misrepresented on the current map.
- Because Votians spoke language most similar to Estonian, I think it is better to put their language together with Estonian. Although, they could also be split apart into 2 (Estonian and Votic). Similarily Izhorians spoke language that is most similar to Karelian and they should be put together with them or they could be also split into 2 (Karelian and Ingrian). Both of them are currently ahistorically represented by Ingrians, who moved into that are during Swedish rule (17th century).
- Livonian and Southern Estonian should be separate dialects (and in Southern Estonian case also a separate culture) because how old those languages are. They are both older than the Slavic split into West and East Slavic. Southern Estonian is especially unique because they use their own version of Latin alphabet that has letter for sounds that don't excist iin other Finnic languages.
- Veps/Vepsians historically lived mostly between Ladoga and Onega lakes (where they still live nowadays) and their culture streched fair bit south from that area. Strangely in the game Veps are on the other side of the Onega lake and they live in a way smaller area. They should have their own language (Vepsian), but they could also be lumped together with Karelian who spoke most similar language.
- Inclusion of Semigallian and Samogitian languages I am uncertain of. especially in case of Semigallian I don't know how dissimilar it was from Latvian that Latgalians speak.
- Riga was mostly German town. I doubt that Livonian nor even latgallian was spoken more than German.
/edit - I will most likely remake it this map later with more research put into Ruthenian-Russian border and some other things that I mainly mentioned in my notes above.
Linguist Anatolij Žuravliov suggested there was a now-extinct North Slavic branch and Old Novgorodian was part of it, so that's not just fictional speculations.On the about page they talk about an imagined scenario when Novgorod republic survives and their language diverge so much, that it is even formed their own branch called North Slavic.
Source provided by @Streamlet is better. And if for some names there are no alternatives, I think it’s better to default to Russian
So that's why in Latvian Pskov is called ''Pleskava'', interesting.Linguist Anatolij Žuravliov suggested there was a now-extinct North Slavic branch and Old Novgorodian was part of it, so that's not just fictional speculations.
Pskov should be named Pleskov (Плесков) because "Pskov" is a Muscovite-influenced name while Pleskov is mentioned with its original name as early as in the 11th century writings. The Pleskovian Republic should also have Pleskovian as a Novgorodian dialect and Skobari (скобари, native Pleskovian Slavs) as the primary culture.
There was also the Rostov-Suzdalj language to the Northeast, I suggest considering it as a unified language for Northeast Slavs (Vologdans, Viatkans, Kostromans, etc.) at that time.
Not for the start date, but I also suggest adding the formation of the Siberiak (or Starožyly) culture during colonization of Siberia, similar to how Brits colonizing North America can become Americans in EU4.
Overall, having a North Slavic language branch and culture group would be neat.
Calling these Ukrainian and Belarusian is highly anachronistic. During whole timespan of the game White Ruthenia and Ukraine meant only the part of marked areas and were on the same level as Black Ruthenia, Polesia, Podolia, Volhynia etc.
Smolenskian to Russian, Polatskian and Severian to Ruthenian.If we were to explore this, exactly which cultures would have Ruthenian language and which would have Russian? Particularly where do Smolenskian, Severian, Polatskian lie on the spectrum?
The problem is that if we start to divide based on standards, we will make almost everything that is currently represented as a dialect a separate language.And here is the book in Ukrainian from 1974 called ‘Acts of the XIV century’ with known Ruthenian documents, acts, agreements, trading contracts etc. from the XIV century:
Грамоти XIV ст.
Not translated, but written as it was originally. There is a link to every paragraph there.
Still the Church Slavonic had some presence and influence in official and semi-official documents, but it is clear, that in the mid and late XIV century the Ruthenian language was already a separate thing, distinctive from the Old East Slavic or the Church Slavonic.
And much more understandable for modern-day people than the Old East Slavic (of course only if you know how to read it).
That’s why I think, that there should be Ruthenian and Russian languages on the game. Old East Slavic probably had not been actual by that time for decades.
Agree on consistency.The problem is that if we start to divide based on standards, we will make almost everything that is currently represented as a dialect a separate language.
- Dialects are for flavour, and for that, we need unique to the dialect names.
- Unique to the dialect names come from unique to dialect sources.
- Those sources probably will also include texts, not just names
- From those texts, we can deduce that dialects are separate languages as it was clearly a separate thing.
Sweedish was a thing in 1225
Middle Low German has been documented in writing since about 1225/34
And Novgorodian is found in birch bark writings, dating from the 11th to 15th centuries
Venetian was first attested in writing in the 13th century.
For all those cases there are quite a lot of sources as I understand
And all of that is not translated. You can also make claims like: How much influence did the German language have on Scandinavian, will that be enough to make it separate from Norwegian?
That's why I think first we need to know the methodology upon which they separate the languages. From my experience, the difference between modern German dialects from the North and the South is much more severe than between modern East Slavic languages. But it also can boil down to when I learned them.
Polesian should be split imo. Since it roughly matches the area of IRL transitional dialects, it doesn't make much sense to put it in either. I think the norther half of Polesian should be split off and put into Belarusian, while Polesian itself can go into Ukrainian.Polesian and Polatskian cultures under Ruthenian language – Belarusian dialect.