Ladino: Difference between revisions

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==History==
==History==


It diverged from the [[Spanish language]] the same way the [[Yiddish language]] diverged from the [[German language]].
It diverged from the [[Spanish language]] the same way the [[Yiddish language]] diverged from the [[German language]].<ref name=JudezmoBunis/>
Jewish people lived relatively isolated from their neighbors, isolated enough for the languages to diverge.
Jewish people lived relatively isolated from their neighbors, isolated enough for the languages to diverge.



Revision as of 05:35, 18 August 2022

Ladino, also called Sephardic, is a Romance language, originating among jewish people, living in moorish Spain.[1]

History

It diverged from the Spanish language the same way the Yiddish language diverged from the German language.[1] Jewish people lived relatively isolated from their neighbors, isolated enough for the languages to diverge.

The moors had conquered Spain by the early eighth centuries. Charles Martel stopped Muslim expansion into what is now France at the Battle or Tours, in 713. During the next 700 years small Christian kingdoms very slowly conquered bits of moorish Spain.

Spain's muslim rulers had been relatively tolerant of jewish people. The new Christian rulers weren't tolerant of either muslims or jews. The Spanish inquisition put great pressure on muslims and jews to either convert to Christianity, or pretend to convert to Christianity, while practicing their real religion in secret, or to leave. Jewish people fleeing the Spanish inquisition spread Ladino across North Africa.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 David M. Bunis. Judezmo/Ladino/Judeo-Spanish, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Retrieved on 2022-08-18. “In medieval Christian דרפס/ Sĕfarad or Iberia, Jews primarily used Hebrew when writing for Jews literate in that language, and their local everyday variety of Ibero-Romance when writing for other Jews.”