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Baltic languages

The Baltic languages form one branch of the Indo-European language family. In this group there are two extant languages: the East-Baltic Latvian and Lithuanian, and many extinct languages, including the West-Baltic Old Prussian, Curonian. Prussian was spoken in Prussia (since 1945 Kaliningrad and northern Poland). With the ongoing Christianization and Germanisation Old Prussian language became extinct at the end of 17th century.

Before the first conquest attempts a thousand years ago, the Balts lived protected at the Baltic Sea. Therefore the Baltic languages remained some of the oldest and least changed Indo-European languages. They did have trade connections for thousands of years along the ancient amber roads.

Today the Latvian language is considered younger than East Lithuanian, although that greatly changed from its first recording in the 16th century. The old Prussian language retained the most archaic features. It was written down in the 14th century in the Elbing Prussian Vocabulary.

The Baltic languages have for a long time been verbal languages, the Balts did not use writing until fairly recently.

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Balt | Baltic | Baltic Prussia | Baltic States | Baltic peoples | Baltic state | Baltics | Balts | Belarus | Belarus' | Belaruss | Belorus | Belorussia | Byelorussia | Class P: Language and Literature (Library of Congress classification) | Curonian language | Diachronic linguistics | Diacritic | Eesti | Eesti keel | Estonian language | European language | European languages | Finland/History | Finnish (language) | Finnish language | Finnish language/history | Galindan language | Hacek | Historical-comparative linguistics | Historical linguistics | History of Finland | ISO639 | ISO 3166-1:BY | ISO 3166-1:LT | ISO 3166-1:LV | ISO 639 | ISO 639-1 | ISO 639-2 | ISO 8859-13 | ISO language code | Indo-European | Indo-European Languages | Indo-European family | Indo-European language | Indo-European language family | Indo-European languages/Satem | Indo-Germanic | Indo-Germanic languages | IndoEuropean | Jatvingian | Jatwingian-Sudauer language | Language code | Language codes | Latin-7 | LatviA | Latvian language | Latvians | Library of Congress Classification/Class P -- Language and Literature | Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature | Lietuva | List of Languages | Lithuania | Locative case | Norbert Jokl | Number in the world | Numbers in various languages | Old Prussian | Old Prussian language | Old Prussians | Origins of Prussia | PERKUNAS | Percunis | Perkona tevs | Perkonins | Perkonitis | Perkons | Proto-Indo-European | Proto Indo-European language | Prussia (Baltic) | Prussian | Prussian language | Republic of Belarus | Satem | Selonian language | Sudovian language | Vecais tevs | Verner's Law | Verners Law | White Ruthenia

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Baltic languages".

 

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