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Griko language

Griko (endonym: Griko/Γκρίκο), sometimes spelled Grico, is one of the two dialects of Italiot Greek (the other being Calabrian Greek or Grecanico), spoken by Griko people in Salento, province of Lecce, Italy.[2][3][4][5][6] Some Greek linguists consider it to be a Modern Greek dialect and often call it Katoitaliótika (Greek: Κατωιταλιώτικα, lit.'Southern Italian') or Grekanika (Γραικάνικα). Griko and Standard Modern Greek are partially mutually intelligible.[7]

Griko

Italy

(20,000 cited 1981)[1]
40,000 to 50,000 L2 speakers

apul1237  Apulian Greek

56-AAA-aia

el-u-sd-it75

Classification[edit]

The most popular hypothesis on the origin of Griko is the one by Gerhard Rohlfs[8] and Georgios Hatzidakis, that Griko's roots go as far back in history as the time of the ancient Greek colonies in Southern Italy and Sicily in the eighth century BC. The Southern Italian dialect is thus considered to be the last living trace of the Greek elements that once formed Magna Graecia.


There are, however, competing hypotheses according to which Griko may have preserved some Doric elements, but its structure is otherwise mostly based on Koine Greek, like almost all other Modern Greek dialects.[9] Thus, Griko should rather be described as a Doric-influenced descendant of Medieval Greek spoken by those who fled the Byzantine Empire to Italy trying to escape the Turks. The idea of Southern Italy's Greek dialects being historically derived from Medieval Greek was proposed for the first time in the 19th century by Giuseppe Morosi.[10]

Official status[edit]

By Law 482 of 1999, the Italian parliament recognized the Griko communities of Reggio Calabria and Salento as a Greek ethnic and linguistic minority. It states that the Republic protects the language and culture of its Albanian, Catalan, Germanic, Greek, Slovene and Croat populations and of those who speak French, Franco-Provençal, Friulian, Ladin, Occitan and Sardinian.[11] According to UNESCO data from 2011, the two dialects of Griko are classified as severely endangered languages.[12]

Nasal+stop clusters [ᵐb, ⁿd, ᵑɡ] along with voiceless equivalents [ᵐp, ⁿt, ᵑk] also are heard.

The cacuminal /ɖ/ may also be realized as an affricate [ɖːʐ], and consonant sequences /tr/ and /tːr/ may be pronounced as [ʈʂ] and [ʈːʂ] among speakers.

[z] is heard as a realization of /s/ when before a voiced consonant.

A few cases of a palatal lateral [ʎ] can be heard, possibly as a result of the influence of Standard Italian.

Hellenic languages

Calabrian Greek dialect

Griko people

. "The Greek-Speaking Population of Southern Italy." The Journal of Hellenic Studies. Vol. 10 (1889), pp. 11–42.

H. F. Tozer

On the Brink: Griko; A Language of Resistance and Celebration - Cultural Survival

o Griko Derentinò (in Griko, Italian, Standard-Greek and French)

Glossa Grika

Coordination of Grecìa Salentina Associations (Italian, Greek and English)

Enosi Griko

(in Italian, Greek and English)

Pos Matome Griko

Archived 2021-08-28 at the Wayback Machine official site (in Italian)

Grecìa Salentina

Salentine Peninsula, Greece and Greater Greece (in Italian, Greek and English)

Gaze On The Sea

English-Griko dictionary

by Ghetonia

Kalinifta

folk song of the Griko-speaking communities of southern Italy, by Eleni & Souzana Vougioukli

Oria mou rodinedda