Chagatai language
| Chagatai | |
|---|---|
| چغتای Čaġatāy | |
Chagatai (چغتای) written in Nastaliq script | |
| Region | Central Asia |
| Extinct | c. 1921 Developed into Uyghur and Uzbek |
Turkic
| |
Early forms | |
| Perso-Arabic script (Nastaliq) | |
| Official status | |
Official language in | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-2 | chg |
| ISO 639-3 | chg |
chg | |
| Glottolog | chag1247 |
Chagatai (چغتای, Čaġatāy), also known as Turki, Eastern Turkic, or Chagatai Turkic (Čaġatāy türkīsi), is an extinct Turkic language that was once widely spoken across Central Asia. It remained the shared literary language in the region until the early 20th century. It was used across a wide geographic area including western or Russian Turkestan (i.e. parts of modern-day Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan), Eastern Turkestan (where a dialect, known as Kaşğar tılı, developed), Crimea, the Volga region (such as Tatarstan and Bashkortostan), etc. Chagatai is the ancestor of the Uzbek and Uyghur languages. Kazakh and Turkmen, which are not within the Karluk branch but are in the Kipchak and Oghuz branches of the Turkic languages respectively, were nonetheless heavily influenced by Chagatai for centuries.
Ali-Shir Nava'i was the greatest representative of Chagatai literature.
Chagatai literature is still studied in modern Uzbekistan, where the language is seen as the predecessor and the direct ancestor of modern Uzbek, and the literature is regarded as part of the national heritage of Uzbekistan.