on the Language of the Medieval Slavic Population in the Area between the Danube and the Adriatic (from a Linguistic Perspective)
Keywords:
Middle Ages, Territory between the Alps and the Adriatic, Language and identity of the Slavic populationAbstract
The article treats the problem of the language of the Slavic population between the Danube and the Adriatic Sea at the turn of the first millennium AD and its differentiation from the language of other groups of Slavs. The first part focuses on theoreti- cal foundations for linguistics in conjunction with other disciplines to establish a reasonably reliable picture of the language spoken by these populations and how to refer to this language. The second part builds on this foundation and illuminates the linguistic evidence for the relevant space and time. The interpretation of the material demonstrates that by the time of the turn of the millennium there had already been irreversible, exclusive linguistic innovations on the basis of which it is necessary to view the population at the relevant place and time as a community whose language had already begun to differentiate from other Slavic communities. The evidence for this is based on a small bundle of isoglosses that in the following centuries increased, so that by the time of the formation of standard languages this area could already be conceived of as the linguistic border of the Slovene language.
