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The Baltic languages form one branch of the Indo-European language family. In this group there are two extant languages: the East-Baltic Latvian and Lithuanian, and many extinct languages, including the West-Baltic Old Prussian and Curonian. Prussian was spoken in Prussia (since 1945 Kaliningrad and northern Poland). With the ongoing Christianization and Germanization of Prussia, the Old Prussian language became extinct at the end of the 17th century.
Distribution of the most significant Baltic languages
Before the first conquest attempts a thousand years ago, the Balts lived protected at the Baltic Sea. Therefore the Baltic languages remained some of the oldest and least changed Indo-European languages. They did have trade connections for thousands of years along the ancient amber roads.
Today the Latvian language is considered younger than East Lithuanian, although that greatly changed from its first recording in the 16th century. The old Prussian language retained the most archaic features. It was written down in the 14th century in the Elbing Prussian Vocabulary.
The Baltic languages have for a long time been oral languages, the Balts did not use writing until fairly recently. (The first books were published in 1547 in Lithuanian and 1585 in Latvian. However, writing in those languages was not widespread until the middle of the 19th century, partly due to the fact that Latvia and Lithuania were not independent at that time and the countries which ruled them attempted to impose their languages as the languages for writing.)
- West Baltic languages †
- East Baltic languages (4.7 M)
See also
External link
af:Balties
ca:Llengua bàltica
de:Baltische Sprachen
et:Balti keeled
eo:Balta lingvaro
fr:Langues baltes
lt:Baltų kalbos
nl:Baltische talen
no:Baltiske språk
pl:Języki bałtyckie
ro:Limbile baltice
sv:Baltiska språk
az:Baltik qrupu
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