Galician-Portuguese

(Redirected from Medieval Galician)

Galician-Portuguese is a branch of Romance languages. They were first spoken in Northwestern Iberia and spread to the south. They are now spoken in all of Portugal and Northwestern Spain. The main two languages are Galician and Portuguese. All Galician-Portuguese languages were once all the same language, but have since split. Portuguese was spread to Brazil during the colonial era and it is also now spoken there.[1]

Galician-Portuguese
Geographic
distribution:
Western Iberia
Linguistic classification:Indo-European
Subdivisions:
Linguistic map Southwestern Europe-en.gif
The languages of Iberia and how they have spread over time. Galician-Portuguese languages are shown in blue.

Galician-Portuguese Media

References

  1. Maia, Clarinda de Azevedo (1997). História do galego-português: estado linguístico da Galiza e do noroeste de Portugal desde o século XIII ao século XVI (com referência à situação do galego moderno) [History of Galician-Portuguese: linguistic state of Galicia and Northwest Portugal from the 13th to the 16th centuries: (with reference to the situation of modern Galician)] (in Portuguese) (Reimpressã da edição do INIC (1986) ed.). Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. pp. 883–891. ISBN 9789723107463.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)