Upper Sorbian
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| Please help improve this article or section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (September 2007) |
| Upper Sorbian Hornjoserbsce, Hornjoserbšćina |
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| Pronunciation: | [ˈhɔrnjɔˌsɛrbskʲi] | |
| Spoken in: | Germany | |
| Region: | Saxony | |
| Total speakers: | 55,000 | |
| Language family: | Indo-European Slavic West Slavic Sorbian Upper Sorbian |
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| Writing system: | Latin (Sorbian variant) | |
| Official status | ||
| Official language in: | regional language in Germany (Brandenburg and Saxony) | |
| Regulated by: | no official regulation | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | none | |
| ISO 639-2: | wen | |
| ISO 639-3: | hsb | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Upper Sorbian (Hornjoserbsce) is a minority language spoken in Germany in the historical province of Upper Lusatia, today part of Saxony. A West Slavic language, it strongly resembles Czech.
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The history of the Upper Sorbian language in Germany began with the Slavic migrations during the 6th Century AD. Since the 12th Century, there was a massive influx of rural Germanic settlers from Flanders, Saxony, Thuringia and Franconia. The preceding devastation of the country by martial actions, began the slow decrease of the Upper Sorbian language. Besides, in the Saxony region, the Sorbian language was legally subordinated to the German language. Language prohibitions were later added: In 1293, the Sorbian language was forbidden in Berne castle before the courts, in 1327 that language was forbidden in Zwickau and Leipzig, and from 1424 in Meissen. Further there was the condition in many guilds of the cities of the area to accept only members of German-language origin.
The central areas of the Milzener and Lusitzer, in the area of the today's Lausitz, was relatively little affected by the new German language settlements and from legal restrictions. The language had therefore flourished there. By the 17th Century, the number of Upper Sorbian speakers there grew to over 300,000. The oldest evidence of the Upper Sorbian written language is the „Burger Eydt Wendisch” monument, and was discovered in the city of Bautzen since the year 1532.
There are estimated to be 60,000 speakers of Upper Sorbian, of which approximately 40,000 live in Saxony and approx. 20,000 live in Brandenburg of Germany. This puts Upper Sorbian as the third largest minority language of Germany, after Turkish and Danish, but before Frisian. Since the nationality affiliations in Germany are not officially recorded and Upper Sorbian nationality is self-identified, these figures are only estimations[citation needed]. The number of the active speakers may be substantially smaller. Some scholars predict that Upper Sorbian is in danger of extinction. Computer forecasts predict that in 20-30 years time, there will only be 7,000 speakers of Lower Sorbian and 13,000 Upper Sorbian left in the world (They also believe that Lower Sorbian may have gone extinct by that time). In the opinion of language experts, by the end of the 21st century Upper Sorbian will not have become extinct yet[citation needed]. Nevertheless at present, no further future reliable forecasts can be made.
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)Hornjoserbski dictionary
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)SorbWord
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)Sorbian 'language practice' page Leipzig University's
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)Sorbian information page Leipzig University's
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)Wortschatz.de
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)at sibz.whyi.org
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)at Böhmak.de
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)at Böhmak.de
- (German)(Upper Sorbian)at sibz.whyi.org
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| West Slavic | Czech · Kashubian · Knaanic† · Lower Sorbian · Pannonian Rusyn · Polabian† · Polish · Pomeranian† · Slovak · Slovincian† · Upper Sorbian |
| East Slavic | Belarusian · Old East Slavic† · Old Novgorod dialect† · Russian · Carpathian Rusyn · Ruthenian† · Ukrainian |
| South Slavic | Banat Bulgarian · Bulgarian · Church Slavonic · Macedonian · Old Church Slavonic† · Serbo-Croatian (Bosnian, Bunjevac, Croatian, Montenegrin, Serbian, Šokac) · Slavic (Greece) · Slovenian |
| Other | Proto-Slavic† · Russenorsk† · Slavoserbian† |
| (†) denotes Extinct | |