ANDALUSI ROMANCE AND DEMOGRAPHIC AND CULTURAL MIGRATION IN MEDIEVAL IBERIA
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7203/Normas.6.8215Keywords:
Andalusi Romance, Hugo Schuchardt, wave modeAbstract
Lapesa (1981: 189) proposes that the “Mozarabic” dialects disappeared as the Christian kingdoms “reconquered” the southern regions of the Iberian Peninsula. According to this author, the disappearance of the Mozarabic language closes a chapter of Spanish linguistic history (Lapesa, 1981: 192). Thus, the dialect spoken today in Andalusia is perceived as a variant of the Castilian spoken by newcomers who moved to the area from the north during the "Reconquista" and resettlement of Al-Andalus (cf. Mondéjar, 2007: 12, Llorente, 1962: 229, Pharies, 2007: 192-194). However, the so-called "Reconquista" is only one of many factors to be considered, if we aim to study how migration has contributed to linguistic changes in the Iberian Peninsula in the Middle Ages.
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