La Spezia–Rimini Line Explained

In the linguistics of the Romance languages, the La Spezia–Rimini Line, also known as the Massa–Senigallia Line, is a line that demarcates a number of important isoglosses that distinguish Romance languages south and east of the line from Romance languages north and west of it. The line divides northern and central Italy, running approximately between the cities of La Spezia and Rimini (or, according to some linguists, between Massa and Senigallia, which lie about 40 kilometres further to the south).[1] Romance languages south and east of it include Italian and the Eastern Romance languages (Romanian, Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian, Istro-Romanian), whereas Catalan, French, Occitan, Portuguese, Romansh, Spanish, and the Gallo‒Italic languages are representatives of the Western group. In this classification, the Sardinian language is not part of either Western or Eastern Romance.[2]

It has been suggested that the origin of these developments is to be found during the last decades of the Western Roman Empire and the Ostrogothic Kingdom (–535 AD). During this period, the area of Italy north of the line was dominated by an increasingly Germanic Roman army of (northern) Italy, followed by the Ostrogoths; the Roman Senate and Papacy became the dominant social elements south of the line. As for the provinces outside Italy, the social influences in Gaul and Iberia were broadly similar to those in northern Italy, whereas the Balkans were dominated by the Byzantine Empire at this time (and later, by Slavic peoples).[3] In either case, it coincides approximately with the northern range of the Apennine Mountains, which could have helped the development of these linguistic differences.

Generally speaking, the Western Romance languages have common innovations that the eastern Romance languages tend to lack. The three isoglosses considered traditionally are:

To these should be added a fourth criterion, generally more decisive than the phenomenon of voicing:

Plural of nouns

See main article: Romance plurals. North and west of the line (excluding all Northern Italian varieties) the plural of nouns was adapted from the Latin accusative case, and is marked with pronounced as //s// regardless of grammatical gender or declension. South and east of the line, the plurals of nouns are marked by changing the final vowel, either because these were taken from the Latin nominative case, or because the original pronounced as //s// changed into a vocalic sound (see the Romance plurals origin debate). Compare the plurals of cognate nouns in Aromanian, Romanian, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, French, Sardinian and Latin:

Eastern Romance Western Romance Sardinian Latin English
AromanianRomanian Italian Spanish Portuguese Catalan French accusative
yeatsã
yets
viață
vieți
vita
vite
vida
vidas
vida
vidas
vida
vides
vie
vies
bida
bidas
life
lives
lupu
lupi
lup
lupi
lupo
lupi
lobo
lobos
lobo
lobos
llop
llops
loup
loups
lupu
lupos/-us
wolf
wolves
omu
uamini
om
oameni
uomo
uomini
hombre
hombres
homem
homens
home
homes/hòmens
homme
hommes
ómine/-i
ómines/-is
man
men
an
anji
an
ani
anno
anni
año
años
ano
anos
any
anys
an
ans
annu
annos
year
years
steauã
steali/-e
stea
stele
stella
stelle
estrella
estrellas
estrela
estrelas
estrella
estrelles
étoile
étoiles
istedda
isteddas
star
stars
tser
tseri/-uri
cer
ceruri
cielo
cieli
cielo
cielos
céu
céus
cel
cels
ciel
cieux/ciels
chelu
chelos
sky
skies

Result of ci/ce palatalization

The pronunciation of Latin ci/ce, as in and, has a divide that roughly follows the line: Italian and Romanian use pronounced as //tʃ// (as in English church), while most Western Romance languages use pronounced as //(t)s//. The exceptions are some Gallo-Italic languages immediately north of the line, as well as Mozarabic and (partially) Norman.

Voicing and degemination of consonants

Another isogloss boundary that coincides with La Spezia–Rimini Line deals with the restructured voicing of voiceless consonants, mainly Latin sounds pronounced as /link/, pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/, which occur between vowels. Thus, Latin ('chain') becomes catena in Italian, but cadeia in Portuguese, cadena in Catalan and Spanish, cadéna/cadèina in Emilian, caéna/cadéna in Venetian and chaîne in French (with loss of intervocalic pronounced as /link/). Voicing, or further weakening, even to loss of these consonants is characteristic of the western branch of Romance; their retention is characteristic of eastern Romance.

However, the differentiation is not totally systematic, and there are exceptions to the isogloss: Gascon dialects in south-west France and Aragonese in northern Aragon, Spain (geographically Western Romance) also retain the original Latin voiceless stop between vowels. The presence in Tuscany and elsewhere below the line of a small percentage but large number of voiced forms both in general vocabulary and in traditional toponyms also challenges its absolute integrity.

The criterion of preservation vs. simplification of Latin geminate consonants is more definite. The simplification illustrated by Spanish boca pronounced as //ˈboka// 'mouth' vs. Tuscan bocca pronounced as //ˈbokka//, both continuations of Latin, typifies all of Western Romance and is systematic for all geminates except pronounced as //s// (pronounced differently if single/double even in French), pronounced as //rr// in some locales (e.g. Spanish carro and caro are still distinct), and to some degree for earlier pronounced as //ll// and pronounced as //nn// which, while not preserved as geminates, did not generally merge with the singletons (e.g. pronounced as //n// > pronounced as //n// but pronounced as //nn// > pronounced as /link/ in Spanish, > pronounced as //ˈaɲo// 'year'). Nevertheless, the La Spezia–Rimini line is real in this respect for most of the consonant inventory, although simplification of geminates to the east in Romania spoils the neat east-west division.

Indeed, the significance of the La Spezia–Rimini Line is often challenged by specialists of both Romance dialectology and Italian dialectology. One reason is that while it demarcates preservation (and expansion) of phonemic geminate consonants (Central and Southern Italy) from their simplification (in Northern Italy, Gaul, and Iberia), the areas affected do not correspond consistently with those defined by voicing criterion. Romanian, which on the basis of lack of voicing, i-plurals and palatalisation to pronounced as //tʃ// is classified with Central and Southern Italian, has experienced simplification of geminates, a defining characteristic of Western Romance, after the rhotacism of intervocalic pronounced as //l//.

See also

Sources

Note that, until, the word Lombard meant Cisalpine, but its meaning has been narrowed, referring now only to the administrative region of Lombardy .

Notes and References

  1. Book: Renzi, Lorenzo . Nuova introduzione alla filologia romanza . 1985 . il Mulino . Bologna . 88-15-04340-3 . 176 .
  2. Ruhlen M. (1987). A guide to the world's languages, Stanford University Press, Stanford.
  3. Book: Brown, Peter . The World of Late Antiquity . 1970 . W. W. Norton . New York . 0-393-95803-5 . 131 .