US researcher launches ‘Crowdsourcing Romeyka’ to save rare Greek dialect

·

A connection between the language of Homer and Romeyka, an endangered form of Greek that is spoken by only a few thousand people in remote mountain villages of northern Turkey, has been found by researchers.

According to the Guardian, Romeyka has no written form, but has survived orally in the mountain villages around Trabzon, near the coast of Black Sea.

With its remaining speakers ageing, the dialect is now threatened with extinction, leading a University of Cambridge academic, Ioanna Sitaridou, to launch a “last chance” crowdsourcing tool to record its unique linguistic structures.

The Crowdsourcing Romeyka project is open to native speakers across the world who want to upload a recording of themselves talking in the language.

Ioanna Sitaridou, a professor of Spanish and historical linguistics, said she anticipated that many were likely to be in the US and Australia, as well as spread across Europe.

“There is a very significant diaspora which is separated by religion and national identity [from the communities in Turkey], but still shares so much,” she said to the Guardian.

Sitaridou has established that rather than having developed from modern Greek, Romeyka descended from the Hellenistic form of the language spoken in the centuries before Christ, and shares some key features with ancient Greek.

As a result, Sitaridou has concluded that “Romeyka is a sister, rather than a daughter, of modern Greek”, a finding she says disrupts the claim that modern Greek is an “isolate” language, meaning it is unrelated to any other European language.

Though the history of the Greek presence in the Black Sea is not always easy to disentangle from legend, the Greek language expanded with the spread of Christianity. “Conversion to Islam across Asia Minor was usually accompanied by a linguistic shift to Turkish, but communities in the valleys retained Romeyka,” Sitaridou said.

Source: The Guardian

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Full-circle as Throwback officially opens its new headquarters in the former Sydney Kings home

A powerful moment of heritage, culture and community was celebrated on Wednesday night as Throwback, opened its new 2,000-square-metre HQ.

Inaugural Women of the Greek Diaspora Forum held in Canberra

The Embassy of Greece in Australia hosted the inaugural Women of the Greek Diaspora Forum together with The Hellenic Initiative Australia.

GOCNSW leadership race recast as mass withdrawals reshape November 30 ballot

GOCNSW heads to the polls with 26 candidates confirmed on the ballot, after a wave of withdrawals first reported by The Greek Herald.

GCM meets Hellenic Army Academy Chief to advance future youth and defence exchanges

This week, Bill Papastergiadis OAM, Simela Stamatopoulos and Dimitra Georgantzoglou met with Major General Anastasios Polychronos.

Councillor Virginia Tachos elected Brimbank Mayor

Cr Virginia Tachos has been declared the Mayor of Brimbank after being elected by her fellow Councillors at the Council Meeting.

You May Also Like

Greece’s 2026 budget to deliver €3.2bn in permanent income support

More than 5 million Greek households will receive permanent income support from 2026 under measures totalling €3.2 billion annually.

Sacred union in a secular age: SOFIA USYD explores love and faith at Annual Forum

On Thursday, May 15, more than 60 students came together for the Annual Forum hosted by SOFIA USYD. More details here.

Firefighters tame fire near Athens which killed one person

Hundreds of Greek firefighters, armed with more than 200 fire engines and 20 water-bombing aircraft, have contained the fires near Athens.