About Bryatesle and its relatives
Bryatesle is a dialect continuum encompassing about 30 million native speakers. It is the lingua franca of about 40 million additional speakers, has a rich literature - fictional, scientific, philosophic, religious and instructional, in both poetic and prose forms - liturgies in multiple religions, songs, humor, word games, and a variety of other linguistic devices. Dialectal differences are sufficient that several ends of the dialect continuum are not mutually intelligible, but the standard forms of the language provide common ground for scholars, businessmen, clergymen, government officials and regular people.
Short history
The pre-historic connections between Bryatesle and its kin languages indicate a rather sudden expansion from the Dairwueh-Bryatesle urheimat about 3800 years before the present year (bpy), after a previous split from Sargalk.
Bryatesle tribes started forming city states sometimes roughly 1800 bpy, at which time also writing systems were adopted from Tatediem cultures to the south. Maritime and fluvial trade networks led to about 40 city states forming around the sea of Sadgal and the sea of Gudnyt as well as the great lake Pajik over the next 800 years. Expansion both east- and northwards included assimilation of some Cwarminoid and Tatediem populations. Westwards, Dairwueh tribes partially resisted Bryatesle expansion, partially stood as equal partners in trade and industry, partially stood in political unity, partially expanded onto Bryatesle areas. Several westwards city states in fact were bilingual, and conflicts were not necessarily as much between Dairwueh and Bryatesle, but rather between distinct alliances of dairwobryatesle states.
About 1200 years ago, a stronger political unity over the dairwobryatesle world emerged, with Ykred emerging as a capital of sorts. This unity lasted 300 years, but after 200 years of dissolution and strife, the last 700 years have seen a somewhat less centralized, but still united dairwobryatesle world, now under the domination of the city-state Sţesar. Although some consolidation of the various standard Bryatesle dialects has occurred due to improved communications, significant differences persist.
Geoculturopolitically, there are occasional confrontations with the Ćwarmin civilization to the east. In the far east, the Ŋʒädär have some trade relations with the Dairwuobryatesle. Southwards, we find the Tatediem engaging in trade, diplomacy, proselytization and sometimes war.
Related languages
The Sargalk-Bryatesle-Dairwueh family consists of the following languages and major dialects (italicized)
- The Hefnarač-Sargaĺk Branch
- The Sargaĺk branch
- Sargaĺk
- northern Sargaĺk
- Inraj Sargaĺk
- Geʔamik †
- Tudiluk †
- The Hefnarač branch
- Hefnarač
- Sindeʔʔet †
- Bidlahʔa †
- The Rilgouz branch
- Simiz †
- Rilgouz
- The Adrk languages
- Adrk
- Tarts †
- Vimil
- The Dairwueh-Bryatesle Branch
- The Dairwueh Branch
- Dairwueh
- Western
- Central
- Bundur
- Vist †
- Kappeuje †
- The Nerazg Branch †
- The Bryatesle Branch
- Northern
- Bryatesle
- Western Tarist
- Southern
- Tarist
- Kurelwai †
- Trinzlye †
No comments:
Post a Comment