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Draft:Old High Franconian language

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  • Comment: This reads well and is ready to go up if it can be properly sourced. However, the sources given are not specialized enough. You need two things. First, a reference to (or better still, a citation from) a discussion of this dialect in a major standard work on the subject, like Braune's Althochdeutsche Grammatik - maybe also backed up by something more recent. And secondly, you need sources for the sample texts, saying where you took them from and specifically stating that they are indeed in this dialect. Doric Loon (talk) 08:38, 16 July 2024 (UTC)

Old High Franconian
Old High Frankish
Native toFrancia
RegionUpper Lorraine
EthnicityRipuarian Franks
EraEvolved into Central Franconian, Rhine Franconian and East Franconian by the 11th century.
Early forms
Runes, Latin (later)
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologfran1264
Map of several Germanic languages in the year 962 A.D.

Old High Franconian (German: Althochfränkisch), or Old High Frankish, is a variety of West Germanic dialect spoken in areas within Upper Lorraine. It evolved from Frankish, alongside Old Dutch. It mostly is regarded as a German dialect despite its origins.[1]

In spite of the poor attestation of Frankish, Old Franconiany is richly attested with many texts in four main dialects, Old Middle Franconian, Old Rhine Franconian, Old East Franconian, and Old South Rhine Franconian.[2]

In the 11th century, Old Ripuarian Franconian evolved into the Franconian dialects spoken around the Rhine and Moselle valleys.[3]

Dialects

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The following are dialects and what they evolved into:

Sample text

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Old Rhine Franconian

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The Augsburger Gebet (English: Augsburg Prayer) is a prayer that can be traced back to Lorraine and is written in the Old Rhine Frankish dialect.

Got, thir eigenhaf ist, thaz io genathih bist.
Intfaa gebet unsar, thes bethurfun uuir sar,
thaz uns thio ketinun bindent thero sundun,
thinero mildo genad intbinde haldo!

English translation:

God, it's to you to prophesy,
that you are always gracious:
receive our prayer, which we need so much,
to which we, who are bound in the chains of sins,
soon free the grace of your mercy.

Old Central Frankish

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The Merseburg charms were possibly written in Old Central Frankish and are about the Franks' pagan beliefs.

Eiris sāᶎun idisi, sāᶎun hera duoder.
suma hapt heptidun, suma heri lezidun,
suma clūbōdun umbi cuoniouuidi:
insprinc haptbandun, invar vīgandun!

English translation:

Once sat women, they sat here, then there.
Some fastened bonds, some impeded an army,
Some unraveled fetters:
Escape the bonds, flee the enemy!

Old East Franconian

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Tatian's gospel harmony was translated into Old East Franconian in the 9th century. The following text used is the prologue of the text.

Bithiu uuanta manage zilotun ordinon saga thio in ûns gifulta sint rahhono, Só ûns saltun thie thar fon anaginne selbon gisahun inti ambahta uuarun uuortes, Uuas mir gisehan gifolgentemo fon anaginne allem gernlihho after antreitu thir scriben, thû bezzisto Theophile, Thaz thû forstantes thero uuorto fon them thû gilerit bist uuâr.

English translation:

Since indeed many have endeavored to order the narrative of the things which are complete in us, as those who themselves had seen from the beginning, and were ministers of the discourse, handed down to us. It seemed to me that I should from the beginning carefully write to you in order, most excellent Theophilus, that you may know the truth of those words of which you have been taught.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Davis, Graeme (2006). Comparative Syntax of Old English and Old Icelandic: Linguistic, Literary and Historical Implications. Peter Lang. pp. 93–94. ISBN 978-3-03910-270-9.
  2. ^ Reina, Javier Caro (2019-07-08). Central Catalan and Swabian: A Study in the Framework of the Typology of Syllable and Word Languages. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. p. 318. ISBN 978-3-11-057306-0.
  3. ^ Maciamo. "Eupedia". Eupedia. Retrieved 2024-06-07.