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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Aspects of Multilingualism in European Language History

Edited by Kurt Braunmüller and Gisella Ferraresi
University of Hamburg

2003. viii, 291 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1922 0 / EUR 70.00
978 1 58811 446 4 / USD 105.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9601 6 / EUR 70.00 / USD 105.00
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This volume gives an up-to-date account of various situations of language contact and multilingualism in Europe especially from a historical point of view. Its ten contributions present newly collected data from different parts of the continent seen through diverse theoretical perspectives. They show a richness of topics and data that not only reveal numerous historical and sociological facts but also afford considerable insight into possible effects multilingualism and language contact might have on language change. The collection begins its journey through Europe in the British Isles. Then it turns to northern Europe and looks at how multilingualism worked in three towns that are all marked by border and contact situations. The journey continues with linguistic-historical and political-historical visits to Sweden and to Lithuania before the reader is taken to central Europe, where we will deal with the influence of Latin on written German.As far as southern Europe is concerned, the study continues on the Iberian peninsula, where the relationship between Portuguese and Spanish is focused, to be followed by Sardinia and Malta, two islands whose unique geohistorical positions give rise to some consideration of multilingualism in the Mediterranean.


Table of contents


Scholars of language contact and mulitlingualism will find this collection of articles very useful and informative. It is very laudable that diachrony is paid the attention it truly deserves. Hopefully, the book under review marks the beginning of the intensification of research on language contact and multlingualism in the past.
STUF 57(4), 2004