Digital Latin Dialectology (DiLaDi): Tracing Linguistic Variation in the Light of Ancient and Early Medieval Sources

ERC (European Research Council)HORIZON-ERCID: 101098102
EC Contribution
€23,375
Consortium Size
2 orgs
Start Year
2023
Summary

DiLaDi is an interdisciplinary project that aims to perform a novel comprehensive study on the variation of the Latin Language over the 1st millennium A.D. considering the geographical and chronological perspectives as well as the transition from Latin to Romance by processing and analysing textual errors (deviations from the norm) of ancient and early medieval primary documents with the help of the Computerized Historical Linguistic Database of Latin Inscriptions of the Imperial Age (LLDB) that employs a revolutionary method of data analysis.DiLaDi aims to give a breakthrough impetus to relevant research by involving a group of sources that have so far not been adequately considered in research: original parchment charters of private law from mostly the 7th-8th centuries, that are available in large numbers and are very rich in data reflecting linguistic changes, the involvement of which could open up further perspectives for the research of history and dialectology of late Latin based on working with a Database which has so far relied mainly on inscriptions. The project plan will be implemented by a 10-person research group with the help of a large data collection team in international collaboration. Within the project framework, at least 50,000 new data forms will be added to the unique LLDB Database, while results will be disseminated through the organisation of 5 international workshops, the delivery of at least 50 lectures, and the publication of 50 studies and 1 monograph; at the same time, potential future collaborators will be educated in at least 5 university courses, while the scientific advancement of the participating researchers will be ensured by the submission of 3 PhD theses and 1 habilitation thesis. As a result, this research will allow for a better understanding of the processes that led to the development of Romance languages and determined the linguistic, ethnic, and even cultural features of medieval and modern Europe.

Consortium (2)

Project Results (12)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (12)
Back vowel mergers in Dalmatian Latin and Dalmatian Romance
Varietate delectamur: Multifarious Approaches to Synchronic and Diachronic Variation in Latin· 2025DOI
Béla Adamik
Non-standard Latin and local influences in divine names: vowel and declension variants in the religious epigraphy of Roman Pannonia
One Cult, Multiple Cultures: Multilingualism and Religion in the Roman Mediterranean· 2025DOI
Tünde Vágási
Shaping shapes. <i>Sicilicus </i>and other diacritics in Latin epigraphy
Varietate delectamur: Multifarious Approaches to Synchronic and Diachronic Variation in Latin· 2025DOI
Lucia Tamponi, Serena Barchi
Some evidence on <i>geminatio consonantium </i>between standardisation and variation
Varietate delectamur: Multifarious Approaches to Synchronic and Diachronic Variation in Latin· 2025DOI
Lucia Tamponi
A Curse Against the Greens
Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis· 2024DOI
György Németh, Andrea Barta
Demonstratives in the charters of St. Gall
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Dorottya Pálfi
Gender confusions and other linguistic changes
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Béla Szlovicsák
Inscriptions in stone, literacy in question: The confusion between <b> and <v> in inscriptions from Roman Africa
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Lucia Tamponi
Latin theonyms and epithets in the light of epigraphic evidence: The case and declension system
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Tünde Vágási
Lost in syllabification. Special cases of geminatio consonantium and syllabarum diuisio through the fringes of the Latin-Greek writing koine
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Serena Barchi
On the interaction between vowel confusions (<e> for /i/ and <o> for /u/) and lexical stress in Latin inscriptions from Rome (ca. 119 BCE – ca. 600 CE)
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Alessandro Papini
Vowel mergers in the Latin of the Danubian provinces of the Roman Empire as evidenced in inscriptions
Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae· 2024DOI
Béla Adamik