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Andalusi Romance

Andalusi Romance, also called Mozarabic[a] or Ajami,[3] refers to the varieties of Ibero-Romance that developed in Al-Andalus, the parts of the medieval Iberian Peninsula under Islamic control. Romance, or vernacular Late Latin, was the common tongue for the majority of the population in the wake of the Umayyad conquest in the early eighth century. Over the following centuries, it was gradually superseded by Andalusi Arabic as the main spoken language in the Muslim-controlled south. At the same time, as the northern Christian kingdoms pushed south into Al-Andalus, their respective Romance varieties (especially Castilian) gained ground at the expense of Andalusi Romance[4] as well as Arabic. The final extinction of the former may be estimated to 1300 CE.[3]

Andalusi Romance
Mozarabic
לטן‎ / لتن
RegionAl-Andalus
Extinctby the Late Middle Ages
Arabic
Hebrew
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3mxi
mxi
Glottologmoza1249
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Consuelo López Morillas criticizes this kind of a representation of the linguistic landscape in medieval Iberia for equating linguistic frontiers with political frontiers, and for deceptively fragmenting Romance into several varieties—throughout the peninsula people described their language as ladino instead of leonés, navarro, etc.[1]

The medieval Ibero-Romance varieties were broadly similar (with Castilian standing out as an outlier). Andalusi Romance was not distinguished from the others primarily by its linguistic features, but rather by virtue of being written in the Arabic script.[5] What is known or hypothesized about the particular linguistic features of Andalusi Romance is based on relatively sparse evidence, of which the Kharjas are the most important.

Names edit

The traditional term for the Romance varieties used in al-Andalus is "Mozarabic," derived from Mozarab, (from the Arabic: مُسْتَعْرَب, romanizedmusta‘rab, lit.'Arabized') a term used to refer to Christians in al-Andalus.[1]

Some scholars dislike the term for its ambiguity. According to Consuelo Lopez-Morillas:

It has been objected that the term straddles ambiguously the realms of religion and language, and further implies, erroneously, that the dialect was spoken only by Christians. The very form of the word suggests (again a false perception) that it denotes a language somehow related to Arabic.[1]: 47 

To describe the varieties of Romance in al-Andalus, Spanish scholars are increasingly using romance andalusí (from the Arabic: أَنْدَلُسِيّ, romanized: andalusī, lit.'of al-Andalus'), or Andalusi Romance in English.[1]

Speakers of Andalusi Romance, like speakers of Romance anywhere else on the peninsula, would have described their spoken language simply as "ladino," i.e. Latin.[1] The term Ladino has since come to have the specialized sense of Judeo-Spanish.[b][6] Arab writers used the terms al-Lathinī[7] or al-'ajamīya (العَجَمِيَّة, from ʿajam, 'non-Arab').

History edit

Umayyad conquest edit

Romance was the main language spoken by the population of Iberia when the Umayyads conquered Hispania in 711.[1]: 46  Under Muslim rule, Arabic became a superstrate prestige language and would remain the dominant vehicle of literature, high culture, and intellectual expression in Iberia for five centuries (8th–13th).[1]: 36 

Over the centuries, Arabic spread gradually in Al-Andalus, primarily through conversion to Islam.[1] While Alvarus of Cordoba lamented in the 9th century that Christians were no longer using Latin, Richard Bulliet estimates that only 50% of the population of al-Andalus had converted to Islam by the death of Abd al-Rahman III in 961, and 80% by 1100.[8] By about 1260, Muslim territories in Iberia were reduced to the Emirate of Granada, in which more than 90% of the population had converted to Islam and Arabic-Romance bilingualism seems to have disappeared.[8]

Archival record edit

What is known or hypothesized of the particular linguistic features of Andalusi Romance is based on relatively sparse evidence, including Romance topographical and personal names, legal documents from the Mozarabs of Toledo, names in botanical texts, occasional isolated romance words in the zajal poetry of Ibn Quzman, and Pedro de Alcalá's Vocabulista.[9]

The Kharjas edit

The discovery in the late 1940s of the Kharjas, refrains in Romance in muwashshah poetry otherwise written in Arabic and Hebrew, illuminated some morphological and syntactic features of Andalusi Romance, including sentence rhythms and phrasal patterns.[9]

Influences edit

Other than the obvious Arabic influence, and remnants of a pre-Roman substratum, early Mozarabic may also have been affected by African Romance, which would have been carried over to the Iberian Peninsula by the Berbers who made up most of the Islamic army that conquered it and remained prominent in the Andalusi administration and army for centuries to come. The possible interaction between these two Romance varieties has yet to be investigated.[10][page needed]

Language use edit

Mozarabic was spoken by Mozarabs (Christians living as dhimmis), Muladis (natives converted to Islam), Jews, and possibly some of the ruling Arabs and Berbers. The cultural and literary language of the Mozarabs was at first Latin, but as time passed, it came to rather be Arabic, even among Christians.[citation needed]

Due to the continual emigration of Mozarabs to the Christian kingdoms of the north, Arabic toponyms are found even in places where Arab rule was ephemeral.[citation needed]

Mozarabic had a significant impact on the formation of Spanish, especially Andalusian Spanish, and served as a vehicle for the transmission of numerous Andalusi Arabic terms into both.[citation needed]

Scripts edit

Because Mozarabic was not a language of higher culture, such as Latin or Arabic, it had no standard writing-system.[citation needed] Numerous Latin documents written by early Mozarabs are, however, extant.[11]

The bulk of surviving material in Mozarabic is found in the choruses (or kharjas) of Andalusi lyrical compositions known as muwashshahs, which were otherwise written in Arabic.[12] The script used to write the Mozarabic kharjas was invariably Arabic or Hebrew, less often the latter. This poses numerous problems for modern scholars attempting to interpret the underlying Mozarabic. Namely:[13]

  • Arabic script:
    • did not reliably indicate vowels
    • relied on diacritical points, quite often lost or distorted when copying manuscripts, to distinguish the following series of consonants: b-t-ṯ-n-y;[c] ğ-ḥ-ḫ; d-ḏ; r-z; s-s̆; ṣ-ḍ; ṭ-ẓ; '-ġ; f-q; and h-a (word-finally)
    • rendered the following consonants in similar ways: r-w-d, ḏ; '-l-k (word-initially); ', ġ-f, q-m (word-initially and medially); n-y (word-finally)
    • had no specific means to indicate the following Romance sounds: /p, v (β), ts, dz, s̺, z̺, tʃ, ʎ, ɲ, e, o/
  • Hebrew script:
    • also did not reliably indicate vowels
    • rendered the following consonants in similar ways: r-d; g-n; y-w; k-f; s-m (word-finally)

The overall effect of this, combined with the rampant textual corruption, is that modern scholars can freely substitute consonants and insert vowels to make sense of the kharjas, leading to considerable leeway, and hence inaccuracy, in interpretation.[14]

Phonological features edit

It is widely agreed that Mozarabic had the following features:[15]

  • The diphthongs /au̯, ai̯/, the latter possibly changed to /ei̯/
  • Diphthongization of stressed Latin /ŏ, ĕ/[16]
  • Palatalization and affrication of Latin /k/ before front vowels to /tʃ/
  • Retention of Latin /j/ before front vowels
  • Shift of the feminine plural /-as/ to /-es/[16]

The following two features remain a matter of debate, largely due to the ambiguity of the Arabic script:[15][17][18]

  • Palatalization of Latin /nn, ll/ to /ɲ, ʎ/
  • Lenition of intervocalic Latin /p t k s/ to /b d ɡ z/
    • Much of the controversy over the voicing of Latin /p t k/ has centered on the Arabic letters Qāf and Ṭāʾ, which in fact had both voiced and voiceless pronunciations in different varieties of Arabic. It is likely that both pronunciations were found in the Iberian Peninsula.[18]
    • Ramón Menéndez Pidal has shown (sporadic) evidence of voicing in Latin inscriptions from the south of the Iberian Peninsula in the second century AD.[18]
    • There are a few cases of original Latin /t k/ being represented with indisputably voiced consonants in Arabic, like [ɣ], [d], and [ð].[17][19]

Sample text edit

Presented below is one of the few kharjas whose interpretation is secure from beginning to end. It has been transcribed from a late thirteen-century copy in Hebrew script, but it is also attested (in rather poor condition) in an Arabic manuscript from the early twelfth century.[20]

Transcription Interpretation Translation
ky fr'yw 'w ky s̆yr'd dmyby
ḥbyby
nwn tyṭwlgs̆ dmyby

ke farayo aw ke s̆erad de mibe,
habībī?
non te twelgas̆ de mibe.

What shall I do, or what shall become of me,
my friend?
Don't take yourself from me.

Another kharja is presented below, transcribed from Arabic script by García Gómez:[21]

Transcription Interpretation Translation
mw sīdī 'ibrāhīm
y' nw'mn dlŷ
f'nt myb
d̠y njt
in nwn s̆ nwn k'rs̆
yrym tyb
grmy 'wb
'frt
Mew sīdī 'Ibrāhīm,
yā nuēmne dolz̊e,
fēn-te mīb
dē nojte.
In nōn, si nōn kērís̆,
yirē-me tīb
—gar-me 'a 'ob!—
a fer-te.

My lord Ibrahim,
oh [what a] sweet name,
come to me
at night.
If not, if you do not want to,
I will go to you
—tell me where!—
to see you.

However the above kharja, like most others, presents numerous textual difficulties. Below is Jones' transcription of it, with vowels inserted and uncertain readings italicized.[22] Note the discrepancies.

Transcription Possible emendations
fən sīdi ibrāhīm
nwāmni dalji
fānta mīb
d̠ī nuxti
in nūn s̆i-nūn kāris̆
f/bīrīmə tīb
gar mī <a> ūb
ləgar-ti
sīdi ibrāhīm
-
-
-
-
f-īrīmə tīb
gari mi ūb
-

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ From Mozarab, from the Arabic: مستعرب, romanizedmusta‘rab, lit.'Arabized', a term used to refer to Christians in al-Andalus. Despite being called Mozarabic, the local Romance vernaculars were spoken by Christians, Jews, and Muslims, and these Romance varieties—while having loanwords from Arabic—are not Arabic languages.[2]
  2. ^ This coincides with the Italian name for the Ladin language, a Rhaeto-Romance language spoken in northern Italy.
  3. ^ N and y were, however, distinct word-finally.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h López-Morillas, Consuelo (2000). "Language". The literature of Al-Andalus. New York: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521471596.004. ISBN 9781139177870.
  2. ^ López-Morillas, Consuelo (2000). "Language". The literature of Al-Andalus. New York: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521471596.004. ISBN 9781139177870.
  3. ^ a b "Mozarabic language | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
  4. ^ Morillas, Consuelo López (2000-08-31), Menocal, María Rosa; Scheindlin, Raymond P.; Sells, Michael (eds.), "Language", The Literature of Al-Andalus (1 ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 31–59, doi:10.1017/chol9780521471596.004, ISBN 978-0-521-47159-6, retrieved 2023-02-21, Romance speakers from all over the peninsula, had they been asked, would have identified their spoken tongue as ladino, certainly not as leonés, navarro, or any other variety. All shades of Hispano-Romance share many linguistic features; only Castilian was anomalous, and in its eventual expansion southward it ruptured a fundamental unity of speech. East, west, and south of Castile, in both Islamic and Christian lands, the most characteristic traits of HispanoRomance recur. Were it not for the historical accident of Castilian expansion, Spanish would sound very different today, and its contrasts with Portuguese and Catalan would stand out in less sharp relief... Andalusi Romance, virtually untouched by outside linguistic influences in the first centuries of its history, may have been doomed from the moment in 1085 when Alfonso VI and his Castilian troops entered Toledo. The dialect of Castile had been forged in the northern mountains, where Basque speakers had never been subjugated and the veneer of Latinization was thin, and many of its features were anomalous within Hispano-Romance. Yet Castile proved as vigorous and expansionist in language as it was in politics and arms. Like an advancing wedge, the kingdom and its language pressed into Arab-held territory. The neighboring kingdoms were also marching southward: Galicia moved down the Atlantic coast, conquering what was to become Portugal, and the Catalan speakers of the northeast expanded along the Mediterranean and across to the Balearic Islands. But Castile encroached on the territory to its west and east, gaining particularly at the expense of León and Navarre, so that the "wedge" soon became a bulge. Within it Castilian, once an isolated minor dialect, came to be the tongue of the whole central peninsula.
  5. ^ López-Morillas, Consuelo (2000). "Language". The literature of Al-Andalus. New York: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521471596.004. ISBN 9781139177870.
  6. ^ Wright 1982: 158
  7. ^ Wright 1982: 156, 158
  8. ^ a b Bulliet, Richard W. (1979-12-31). Conversion to Islam in the Medieval Period. De Gruyter. doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674732810. ISBN 9780674732803. Cited in Morillas, Consuelo López (2000-08-31), Menocal, María Rosa; Scheindlin, Raymond P.; Sells, Michael (eds.), "Language", The Literature of Al-Andalus (1 ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 31–59, doi:10.1017/chol9780521471596.004, ISBN 978-0-521-47159-6, retrieved 2023-02-17
  9. ^ a b Morillas, Consuelo López (2000-08-31), Menocal, María Rosa; Scheindlin, Raymond P.; Sells, Michael (eds.), "Language", The Literature of Al-Andalus (1 ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 31–59, doi:10.1017/chol9780521471596.004, ISBN 978-0-521-47159-6, retrieved 2023-02-17
  10. ^ Francisco Marcos-Marín 2015
  11. ^ Gil 1973
  12. ^ Wright 1982: 161
  13. ^ Craddock 1980: 13–14
  14. ^ Craddock 1980: 15
  15. ^ a b Craddock 2002:588
  16. ^ a b Penny 2000:75–80
  17. ^ a b Galmés de Fuentes 1983:91–100
  18. ^ a b c Hanlon, David (15 February 2019). "Lenition in the mozarabic dialects: A reappraisal". Al-Qanṭara. 18 (1): 121–135. doi:10.3989/alqantara.1997.v18.i1.518. S2CID 160621620. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  19. ^ Torreblanca, Máximo (1986). "Las oclusivas sordas hispanolatinas: El testimonio árabe". Anuario de Letras (in Spanish). 24: 5–26. doi:10.19130/iifl.adel.24.0.1986.1094 (inactive 1 August 2023).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of August 2023 (link)
  20. ^ Craddock 1980: 4–6
  21. ^ García Gómez 1965: 82–85
  22. ^ Jones 1988: 33

Bibliography edit

  • Corriente Córdoba, Federico & Sáenz-Badillos, Ángel. 1994. Nueva propuesta de lectura de las xarajât de la serie árabe con texto romance. Revista de filología española 73 (3–4). 283–289.
  • Craddock, Jerry R. 1980. The language of the Mozarabic jarchas. UC Berkeley: Research Center for Romance Studies.
  • Craddock, Jerry R. (2002). "Mozarabic Language". In Gerli, E. Michael; Armistead, Samuel G. (eds.). Medieval Iberia: An Encyclopedia. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315161594. ISBN 978-0415939188. OCLC 50404104.
  • Galmés de Fuentes, Alvaro (1983). Dialectología mozárabe. Madrid: Gredos. ISBN 978-8424909161.
  • García Gómez, Emilio. 1965. Las jarchas romances de la serie árabe en su marco. Madrid: Sociedad de Estudios y Publicaciones.
  • Gil, Juan. 1973. Corpus scriptorum muzarabicorum. 2 vols. Madrid: CSIC.
  • Jones, Alan. 1988. Romance kharjas in Andalusian Arabic muwaššaḥ poetry. London: Ithaca Press.
  • Marcos-Marín, Francisco A. 1998. Romance andalusí y mozárabe: Dos términos no sinónimos. In Andrés Suárez, Irene & López Molina, Luis (eds.), Estudios de Lingüística y Filología Españolas: Homenaje a Germán Colón. 335–341. Madrid: Gredos.
  • Marcos Marín, Francisco. 2015. Notas sobre los bereberes, el afrorrománico y el romance andalusí. Hesperia: Culturas del Mediterráneo 19. 203–222.
  • Menéndez Pidal, Ramón. 2005. Historia de la lengua española. 2 vols. Madrid: Fundación Ramón Menendez Pidal. ISBN 84-89934-11-8
  • Penny, Ralph J. (2000). Variation and change in Spanish. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139164566. ISBN 0521780454. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  • Wright, Roger. 1982. Late Latin and Early Romance in Spain and Carolingian France. Liverpool: Francis Cairns. ISBN 0-905205-12-X

andalusi, romance, mozarabic, redirects, here, people, mozarabs, mozarabic, architecture, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, re. Mozarabic redirects here For the people see Mozarabs For the art see Mozarabic art and architecture This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Andalusi Romance news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Andalusi Romance also called Mozarabic a or Ajami 3 refers to the varieties of Ibero Romance that developed in Al Andalus the parts of the medieval Iberian Peninsula under Islamic control Romance or vernacular Late Latin was the common tongue for the majority of the population in the wake of the Umayyad conquest in the early eighth century Over the following centuries it was gradually superseded by Andalusi Arabic as the main spoken language in the Muslim controlled south At the same time as the northern Christian kingdoms pushed south into Al Andalus their respective Romance varieties especially Castilian gained ground at the expense of Andalusi Romance 4 as well as Arabic The final extinction of the former may be estimated to 1300 CE 3 Andalusi RomanceMozarabicלטן لتن RegionAl AndalusExtinctby the Late Middle AgesLanguage familyIndo European ItalicRomanceWestern RomanceIbero RomancePyrenean MozarabicAndalusi RomanceWriting systemArabicHebrewLatinLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code mxi class extiw title iso639 3 mxi mxi a Linguist ListmxiGlottologmoza1249This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Consuelo Lopez Morillas criticizes this kind of a representation of the linguistic landscape in medieval Iberia for equating linguistic frontiers with political frontiers and for deceptively fragmenting Romance into several varieties throughout the peninsula people described their language as ladino instead of leones navarro etc 1 The medieval Ibero Romance varieties were broadly similar with Castilian standing out as an outlier Andalusi Romance was not distinguished from the others primarily by its linguistic features but rather by virtue of being written in the Arabic script 5 What is known or hypothesized about the particular linguistic features of Andalusi Romance is based on relatively sparse evidence of which the Kharjas are the most important Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Umayyad conquest 3 Archival record 3 1 The Kharjas 4 Influences 5 Language use 6 Scripts 7 Phonological features 8 Sample text 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 BibliographyNames editThe traditional term for the Romance varieties used in al Andalus is Mozarabic derived from Mozarab from the Arabic م س ت ع ر ب romanized musta rab lit Arabized a term used to refer to Christians in al Andalus 1 Some scholars dislike the term for its ambiguity According to Consuelo Lopez Morillas It has been objected that the term straddles ambiguously the realms of religion and language and further implies erroneously that the dialect was spoken only by Christians The very form of the word suggests again a false perception that it denotes a language somehow related to Arabic 1 47 To describe the varieties of Romance in al Andalus Spanish scholars are increasingly using romance andalusi from the Arabic أ ن د ل س ي romanized andalusi lit of al Andalus or Andalusi Romance in English 1 Speakers of Andalusi Romance like speakers of Romance anywhere else on the peninsula would have described their spoken language simply as ladino i e Latin 1 The term Ladino has since come to have the specialized sense of Judeo Spanish b 6 Arab writers used the terms al Lathini 7 or al ajamiya الع ج م ي ة from ʿajam non Arab History editUmayyad conquest edit Romance was the main language spoken by the population of Iberia when the Umayyads conquered Hispania in 711 1 46 Under Muslim rule Arabic became a superstrate prestige language and would remain the dominant vehicle of literature high culture and intellectual expression in Iberia for five centuries 8th 13th 1 36 Over the centuries Arabic spread gradually in Al Andalus primarily through conversion to Islam 1 While Alvarus of Cordoba lamented in the 9th century that Christians were no longer using Latin Richard Bulliet estimates that only 50 of the population of al Andalus had converted to Islam by the death of Abd al Rahman III in 961 and 80 by 1100 8 By about 1260 Muslim territories in Iberia were reduced to the Emirate of Granada in which more than 90 of the population had converted to Islam and Arabic Romance bilingualism seems to have disappeared 8 Archival record editWhat is known or hypothesized of the particular linguistic features of Andalusi Romance is based on relatively sparse evidence including Romance topographical and personal names legal documents from the Mozarabs of Toledo names in botanical texts occasional isolated romance words in the zajal poetry of Ibn Quzman and Pedro de Alcala s Vocabulista 9 The Kharjas edit The discovery in the late 1940s of the Kharjas refrains in Romance in muwashshah poetry otherwise written in Arabic and Hebrew illuminated some morphological and syntactic features of Andalusi Romance including sentence rhythms and phrasal patterns 9 Influences editOther than the obvious Arabic influence and remnants of a pre Roman substratum early Mozarabic may also have been affected by African Romance which would have been carried over to the Iberian Peninsula by the Berbers who made up most of the Islamic army that conquered it and remained prominent in the Andalusi administration and army for centuries to come The possible interaction between these two Romance varieties has yet to be investigated 10 page needed Language use editMozarabic was spoken by Mozarabs Christians living as dhimmis Muladis natives converted to Islam Jews and possibly some of the ruling Arabs and Berbers The cultural and literary language of the Mozarabs was at first Latin but as time passed it came to rather be Arabic even among Christians citation needed Due to the continual emigration of Mozarabs to the Christian kingdoms of the north Arabic toponyms are found even in places where Arab rule was ephemeral citation needed Mozarabic had a significant impact on the formation of Spanish especially Andalusian Spanish and served as a vehicle for the transmission of numerous Andalusi Arabic terms into both citation needed Scripts editBecause Mozarabic was not a language of higher culture such as Latin or Arabic it had no standard writing system citation needed Numerous Latin documents written by early Mozarabs are however extant 11 The bulk of surviving material in Mozarabic is found in the choruses or kharjas of Andalusi lyrical compositions known as muwashshahs which were otherwise written in Arabic 12 The script used to write the Mozarabic kharjas was invariably Arabic or Hebrew less often the latter This poses numerous problems for modern scholars attempting to interpret the underlying Mozarabic Namely 13 Arabic script did not reliably indicate vowels relied on diacritical points quite often lost or distorted when copying manuscripts to distinguish the following series of consonants b t ṯ n y c g ḥ ḫ d ḏ r z s s ṣ ḍ ṭ ẓ ġ f q and h a word finally rendered the following consonants in similar ways r w d ḏ l k word initially ġ f q m word initially and medially n y word finally had no specific means to indicate the following Romance sounds p v b ts dz s z tʃ ʎ ɲ e o Hebrew script also did not reliably indicate vowels rendered the following consonants in similar ways r d g n y w k f s m word finally The overall effect of this combined with the rampant textual corruption is that modern scholars can freely substitute consonants and insert vowels to make sense of the kharjas leading to considerable leeway and hence inaccuracy in interpretation 14 Phonological features editIt is widely agreed that Mozarabic had the following features 15 The diphthongs au ai the latter possibly changed to ei Diphthongization of stressed Latin ŏ ĕ 16 Palatalization and affrication of Latin k before front vowels to tʃ Retention of Latin j before front vowels Shift of the feminine plural as to es 16 The following two features remain a matter of debate largely due to the ambiguity of the Arabic script 15 17 18 Palatalization of Latin nn ll to ɲ ʎ Lenition of intervocalic Latin p t k s to b d ɡ z Much of the controversy over the voicing of Latin p t k has centered on the Arabic letters Qaf and Ṭaʾ which in fact had both voiced and voiceless pronunciations in different varieties of Arabic It is likely that both pronunciations were found in the Iberian Peninsula 18 Ramon Menendez Pidal has shown sporadic evidence of voicing in Latin inscriptions from the south of the Iberian Peninsula in the second century AD 18 There are a few cases of original Latin t k being represented with indisputably voiced consonants in Arabic like ɣ d and d 17 19 Sample text editPresented below is one of the few kharjas whose interpretation is secure from beginning to end It has been transcribed from a late thirteen century copy in Hebrew script but it is also attested in rather poor condition in an Arabic manuscript from the early twelfth century 20 Transcription Interpretation Translationky fr yw w ky s yr d dmybyḥbybynwn tyṭwlgs dmyby ke farayo aw ke s erad de mibe habibi non te twelgas de mibe What shall I do or what shall become of me my friend Don t take yourself from me Another kharja is presented below transcribed from Arabic script by Garcia Gomez 21 Transcription Interpretation Translationmw sidi ibrahimy nw mn dlŷf nt mybd y njtin nwn s nwn k rs yrym tybgrmy wb frt Mew sidi Ibrahim ya nuemne dolz e fen te mibde nojte In nōn si nōn keris yire me tib gar me a ob a fer te My lord Ibrahim oh what a sweet name come to meat night If not if you do not want to I will go to you tell me where to see you However the above kharja like most others presents numerous textual difficulties Below is Jones transcription of it with vowels inserted and uncertain readings italicized 22 Note the discrepancies Transcription Possible emendationsfen sidi ibrahimya nwamni daljifanta mibd i nuxtiin nun s i nun karis f birime tibgar mi lt a gt ublegar ti mu sidi ibrahim f irime tibgari mi ub See also editAljamiado Mozarabs Mozarabic Rite Mozarabic art and architecture Andalusian Arabic History of SpainNotes edit From Mozarab from the Arabic مستعرب romanized musta rab lit Arabized a term used to refer to Christians in al Andalus Despite being called Mozarabic the local Romance vernaculars were spoken by Christians Jews and Muslims and these Romance varieties while having loanwords from Arabic are not Arabic languages 2 This coincides with the Italian name for the Ladin language a Rhaeto Romance language spoken in northern Italy N and y were however distinct word finally References edit a b c d e f g h Lopez Morillas Consuelo 2000 Language The literature of Al Andalus New York Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521471596 004 ISBN 9781139177870 Lopez Morillas Consuelo 2000 Language The literature of Al Andalus New York Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521471596 004 ISBN 9781139177870 a b Mozarabic language Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2023 06 04 Morillas Consuelo Lopez 2000 08 31 Menocal Maria Rosa Scheindlin Raymond P Sells Michael eds Language The Literature of Al Andalus 1 ed Cambridge University Press pp 31 59 doi 10 1017 chol9780521471596 004 ISBN 978 0 521 47159 6 retrieved 2023 02 21 Romance speakers from all over the peninsula had they been asked would have identified their spoken tongue as ladino certainly not as leones navarro or any other variety All shades of Hispano Romance share many linguistic features only Castilian was anomalous and in its eventual expansion southward it ruptured a fundamental unity of speech East west and south of Castile in both Islamic and Christian lands the most characteristic traits of HispanoRomance recur Were it not for the historical accident of Castilian expansion Spanish would sound very different today and its contrasts with Portuguese and Catalan would stand out in less sharp relief Andalusi Romance virtually untouched by outside linguistic influences in the first centuries of its history may have been doomed from the moment in 1085 when Alfonso VI and his Castilian troops entered Toledo The dialect of Castile had been forged in the northern mountains where Basque speakers had never been subjugated and the veneer of Latinization was thin and many of its features were anomalous within Hispano Romance Yet Castile proved as vigorous and expansionist in language as it was in politics and arms Like an advancing wedge the kingdom and its language pressed into Arab held territory The neighboring kingdoms were also marching southward Galicia moved down the Atlantic coast conquering what was to become Portugal and the Catalan speakers of the northeast expanded along the Mediterranean and across to the Balearic Islands But Castile encroached on the territory to its west and east gaining particularly at the expense of Leon and Navarre so that the wedge soon became a bulge Within it Castilian once an isolated minor dialect came to be the tongue of the whole central peninsula Lopez Morillas Consuelo 2000 Language The literature of Al Andalus New York Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521471596 004 ISBN 9781139177870 Wright 1982 158 Wright 1982 156 158 a b Bulliet Richard W 1979 12 31 Conversion to Islam in the Medieval Period De Gruyter doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674732810 ISBN 9780674732803 Cited in Morillas Consuelo Lopez 2000 08 31 Menocal Maria Rosa Scheindlin Raymond P Sells Michael eds Language The Literature of Al Andalus 1 ed Cambridge University Press pp 31 59 doi 10 1017 chol9780521471596 004 ISBN 978 0 521 47159 6 retrieved 2023 02 17 a b Morillas Consuelo Lopez 2000 08 31 Menocal Maria Rosa Scheindlin Raymond P Sells Michael eds Language The Literature of Al Andalus 1 ed Cambridge University Press pp 31 59 doi 10 1017 chol9780521471596 004 ISBN 978 0 521 47159 6 retrieved 2023 02 17 Francisco Marcos Marin 2015 Gil 1973 Wright 1982 161 Craddock 1980 13 14 Craddock 1980 15 a b Craddock 2002 588 a b Penny 2000 75 80 a b Galmes de Fuentes 1983 91 100 a b c Hanlon David 15 February 2019 Lenition in the mozarabic dialects A reappraisal Al Qanṭara 18 1 121 135 doi 10 3989 alqantara 1997 v18 i1 518 S2CID 160621620 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Torreblanca Maximo 1986 Las oclusivas sordas hispanolatinas El testimonio arabe Anuario de Letras in Spanish 24 5 26 doi 10 19130 iifl adel 24 0 1986 1094 inactive 1 August 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link Craddock 1980 4 6 Garcia Gomez 1965 82 85 Jones 1988 33Bibliography editCorriente Cordoba Federico amp Saenz Badillos Angel 1994 Nueva propuesta de lectura de las xarajat de la serie arabe con texto romance Revista de filologia espanola 73 3 4 283 289 Craddock Jerry R 1980 The language of the Mozarabic jarchas UC Berkeley Research Center for Romance Studies Craddock Jerry R 2002 Mozarabic Language In Gerli E Michael Armistead Samuel G eds Medieval Iberia An Encyclopedia London Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315161594 ISBN 978 0415939188 OCLC 50404104 Galmes de Fuentes Alvaro 1983 Dialectologia mozarabe Madrid Gredos ISBN 978 8424909161 Garcia Gomez Emilio 1965 Las jarchas romances de la serie arabe en su marco Madrid Sociedad de Estudios y Publicaciones Gil Juan 1973 Corpus scriptorum muzarabicorum 2 vols Madrid CSIC Jones Alan 1988 Romance kharjas in Andalusian Arabic muwassaḥ poetry London Ithaca Press Marcos Marin Francisco A 1998 Romance andalusi y mozarabe Dos terminos no sinonimos In Andres Suarez Irene amp Lopez Molina Luis eds Estudios de Linguistica y Filologia Espanolas Homenaje a German Colon 335 341 Madrid Gredos Marcos Marin Francisco 2015 Notas sobre los bereberes el afrorromanico y el romance andalusi Hesperia Culturas del Mediterraneo 19 203 222 Menendez Pidal Ramon 2005 Historia de la lengua espanola 2 vols Madrid Fundacion Ramon Menendez Pidal ISBN 84 89934 11 8 Penny Ralph J 2000 Variation and change in Spanish Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139164566 ISBN 0521780454 Retrieved 21 June 2022 Wright Roger 1982 Late Latin and Early Romance in Spain and Carolingian France Liverpool Francis Cairns ISBN 0 905205 12 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andalusi Romance amp oldid 1172456200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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