Saterland Frisian language

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East Frisian (Seeltersk)
Spoken in: Germany
Region: Lower Saxony
Total speakers: 2,000
Ranking: Not in top 100
Genetic classification: Indo-European
 Germanic
  West Germanic
   Anglo-Frisian
    Frisian
     East Frisian
Official status
Official language of: Germany
Regulated by: -
Language codes
ISO 639-1-
ISO 639-2gem
SILFRS
See also: LanguageList of languages

Saterland Frisian, also known as Sater Frisian or Saterlandic (Seeltersk), is the last living dialect of the East Frisian language. It is closely related to the other Frisian languages, North Frisian, which, like Saterland Frisian is spoken in Germany, and West Lauwers Frisian, which is spoken in the Netherlands.

Contents

East Frisian and its decline

East Frisian used to be spoken in East Frisia (Ostfriesland), the region between the Dutch border and the river Weser, in the German state of Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen). The area also included to small districts on the east bank of the Weser, the lands of Wursten and Würden. The East Frisian language could be devided into two dialect groups: Weser Frisian to the east, and Ems Frisian to the west. Unfortunately, from 1500 onwards East Frisian slowly had to give way to the severe pressure put on it by the surrounding Low Saxon dialects, and nowadays it is all but extinct.

By the middle of the seventeenth century Ems Frisian had almost completely died out. Weser Frisian for the most part did not last much longer and held on only until 1700, although there are records of it still being spoken in the land of Wursten, to the east of the river Weser, in 1723. It held out the longest on the island of Wangerooge, where the very last Weser Frisian speaker was recorded to have died in 1953. Today, the East Frisian language is no longer spoken within the historical borders of East Frisia, yet a large number of the inhabitants of that region still consider themselves Frisians and insist on calling their Low Saxon dialect Freesk. In this dialect, referred to as Ostfriesisch in German, the Frisian substrate is still evident.

Sater Frisian

The last remaining living remnant of East Frisian is an Ems Frisian dialect called Sater Frisian or Saterlandic (its native name being Seeltersk), which is spoken in the Saterland area in the Verwaltungsbezirk Oldenburg, to the south of East Frisia proper. Saterland (Seelterlound in the local language), which is believed to have been colonised by Frisians from East Frisia in the eleventh century, was for a long time surrounded by impassable moors. This, together with the fact that Sater Frisian always had a status superior to Low Saxon among the inhabitants of the area, accounts for the preservation of the language throughout the centuries.

Speakers

Today, estimates of the number of speakers vary slightly. Sater Frisian is spoken by approximately 2,250 people, out of a total population of the Saterland area of some 10,000. An estimated 2,000 people might speak the language well, of which slightly less than a half are native speakers. The vast majority of all native speakers are found among the elder generation; Saterlandic thus is a seriously endangered language. It might, however, no longer be moribund, since several reports suggest the number of acquired speakers is raising among the younger generation and some of them raise their children in Saterlandic.

Dialects

There are three fully mutually intelligible dialects, corresponding to the three main villages of the municipality of Saterland: Ramsloh (Saterlandic: Roomelse), Scharrel (Schäddel), and Strücklingen (Strukelje). The Ramsloh dialect now somewhat enjoys a status as standard language, since a grammar and a word list were based on it.

Status

The German government apparently thinks the preservation of Sater Frisian is a lost cause, and seems to be unwilling to invest much money or energy in it. Most of the work to secure the endurance of this language is therefore done by the Seelter Buund ("Saterlandic Alliance"). Along whith North Frisian and five other languages, Sater Frisian was included in Part III of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages by Germany in 1998.



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