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  1. Bibliography. External links. Dalmatian language. Dalmatian or Dalmatic ( Italian: dalmatico, Croatian: dalmatski) was a group of Romance varieties that developed along the coast of Dalmatia. Over the centuries they were increasingly influenced, and then supplanted, by Croatian and Venetian. [1]

  2. Article History. Key People: Matteo Giulio Bartoli. Related Topics: Romance languages. Vegliot Dalmatian. Ragusan Dalmatian. Dalmatian language, extinct Romance language formerly spoken along the Dalmatian coast from the island of Veglia (modern Krk) to Ragusa (modern Dubrovnik).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The earliest reference on the language dates from the 10th century and it is estimated that about 50,000 people spoke it at that time along the eastern Adriatic in the Dalmatian coast from Fiume (Rijeka) as far south as Kotor (Cattaro) in Montenegro (according to the linguist Matteo Bartoli).

  4. Dalmatian was a Romance language spoken mainly in the Dalmatia region of Croatia until the end of the 19th century. It was spoken along the coast of Croatia from Fiume (now Rijeka) to Cottora (Kotor). The last native speaker, Tuone Udaina, died in 1898.

  5. El dalmático o dálmata es una lengua romance extinta, hablada hasta el siglo XIX a lo largo de las costas de Dalmacia, en lo que actualmente es Croacia y pequeñas partes de Montenegro y Bosnia y Herzegovina. Se distinguían dos tipos de dialectos: El septentrional o vegliota, hablado en la isla de Veglia (Krk en croata).

  6. Dalmatian receded rapidly from the late Middle Ages before Croatian and Venetian. The only substantial texts are from nineteenth-century Krk. We have fragmentary evidence for fourteenth-century Ragusan, but this variety is heavily influenced by Venetian, the dominant Romance language of the eastern Adriatic and, as an official language, also by ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DalmatiaDalmatia - Wikipedia

    The language and the laws were initially Latin, but after a few centuries they developed their own neo-Latin language (the "Dalmatico"), that lasted until the 19th century. The cities were maritime centres with a huge commerce mainly with the Italian peninsula and with the growing Republic of Venice. [51]