The Galician Language

Discover a language from the past that's in fine fettle in the present.

Alfonso Daniel Rodríguez CastelaoRegional Government of Galicia

In the words of A. D. Rodríguez Castelao, every language is a source of art, the vehicle of expression of the people's original soul. Here is the history of the language in which the people inhabiting Galicia in the last millennium expressed their creative will.

Foro do Bo Burgo de Castro Caldelas (1228)Original Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ForoBoBurgo.jpg

Origins

Galician is a Romance language, the result of the evolution of Latin introduced by Roman soldiers to the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula from the first century AD onwards. It is possible to speak of the existence of Galician, as a language distinct from Latin, from the ninth century onwards.

Parchment Vindel: manuscript of the cantigas de amigo by Martín Códax (13th Century)Original Source: The Morgan Library & Museum

The consolidation of Galician as a cultured language

Coinciding with the heyday of the Jacobean pilgrimages in the Middle Ages was the gradual consolidation of Galician as a written language. At that time, the territories of Galicia and Portugal were part of the Galician-Portuguese linguistic area.

Galician-Portuguese lyrical poetry with profane themesRegional Government of Galicia

The earliest preserved written manifestations

The cantiga (song) 'Ora faz ost'o senhor de Navarra' (1196) and the manuscript called 'Noticia do Torto' (1212) are the oldest writings on record. These and other contemporary texts were a first attempt to grammatically organize the Neo-Latin language.

The Cantigas of Santa MariaRegional Government of Galicia

Galician, an expression of human creativity

There are still some 1,650 cantigas from the Galician-Portuguese lyric, proof of the vitality of this Neo-Latin language. Alfonso X wrote in Galician-Portuguese and used his scriptorium to compose the Cantigas de Santa María, a colossal literary work.

LIFE Photo Collection

Los Séculos Escuros (16th-18th centuries), a period of absences

After the Middle Ages, and especially after the 16th century, a new political and social context prevailed in Galicia that resulted in the total absence of the Galician language in formal and cultural uses, although it did remain alive and buoyant in spoken and popular spheres.

Fray Martín SarmientoRegional Government of Galicia

In defense and illustration of the Galician language

In the 18th century, and influenced by the ideals of the Enlightenment, voices started to criticize the marginal situation of Galician. Fray Martín Sarmiento, an important figure in Spain during this period, fought for its use in schools and in literary creation.

Exhibition on Rosalía de Castro (2016)Original Source: Axencia Turismo de Galicia

The Rexurdimento, a time of revival

The Rexurdimento is the cultural revival movement that took place in the second half of the 19th century. An illustrious figure in this period was Rosalía de Castro, who published the book of poems Cantares Gallegos (1863), the first contemporary work written entirely in the Galician language.

Promotional poster of the 1936 Statute of Galicia (1936) by Camilo Díaz BaliñoRegional Government of Galicia

The conquest of social normality

In the 20th century, Galician regained its cultural uses, thanks to entities such as the Irmandades da Fala, the Grupo Nós, and the Seminario de Estudos Galegos. These advances crystallized in its formalization in the statute of autonomy, approved in a referendum in 1936.

Law of Linguistic NormalizationRegional Government of Galicia

A fully-fledged language

Galician experienced the greatest advances in its social and political status after the end of the Spanish dictatorship in 1975. The approval of the Statute of Autonomy of Galicia (1981) and the Law of Linguistic Normalization (1983) were two very important historical milestones.

Plaza de Abastos of Santiago de Compostela (1941)Regional Government of Galicia

Galician in today's society

There are 2,700,000 people living in Galicia, and almost 2,000,000 use the language in their daily interactions. It is used in the educational system, where a bilingual model is implemented, as well as in the public sector, at universities, on the Internet, in commerce, etc.

Aerial view of Ribadeo and the mouth of the river Eo (2020)Regional Government of Galicia

From local to universal

Nowadays, it is spoken in Galicia and in the westernmost areas of the Principality of Asturias and the Autonomous Region of Castile and León. It remains alive in the Galician emigrant community and is the subject of study and learning at 36 universities in 16 countries across the Americas and Europe.

Galician dictionaries (2021)Original Source: Secretaría Xeral de Política Lingüística. Xunta de Galicia

A 21st-century language

Despite being a language that is remarkably homogeneous, it has formal varieties of a territorial nature. There are three dialectal areas: Eastern, Central, and Western. Standard Galician is governed by the Real Academia Gallega, which was founded in 1906.

Tui International Bridge over the Miño River (2020)Regional Government of Galicia

The link with Portuguese

Galicia has always had close ties with Portugal, and the language is the most obvious of them all. This makes it possible to bolster the international reach of Galician and have a competitive advantage in areas such as culture or the economy.

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