Karelian language

Karelian
karjala, karjalan kieli
kard'al, kard'alan kiel'
kariela, karielan kieli
Native toRussia, Finland
RegionRepublic of Karelia, Tver Oblast (Tver Karelia)
EthnicityKarelians
Native speakers
9000 native speakers, 14,000 total (Russia) (2020)
11,000 fluent speakers, 30,000 with some knowledge (Finland)
Uralic
Dialects
Latin (Karelian alphabet) Cyrillic (in the past, 1820–1940, before the Latin script was officially adopted in 1989)
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-2krl
ISO 639-3krl
Glottologkare1335
ELPKarelian
Distribution of Karelian and Ludic at the beginning of the 20th century
Karelian is classified as "definitely endangered" by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
PeopleKarelians
LanguageKarelian;
Livvi-Karelian
CountryKarelia

Karelian (/kəˈrlɪən, kəˈrljən/; Karelian Proper and Livvi-Karelian: karjala, karjalan kieli; Ludian: kard'al, kard'alan kiel'; Tver Karelian: kariela, karielan kieli) is a Finnic language spoken mainly by the Karelian people in the Russian Republic of Karelia. Linguistically, Karelian is closely related to the Finnish dialects spoken in eastern Finland, and some Finnish linguists have even classified Karelian as a dialect of Finnish, but nowadays it is widely considered a separate language. Karelian is not to be confused with the Southeastern dialects of Finnish, sometimes referred to as karjalaismurteet ("Karelian dialects") in Finland. In the Russian 2020–2021 census, around 9,000 people spoke Karelian natively, but around 14,000 said they were able to speak the language. There are around 11,000 speakers of Karelian in Finland, and around 30,000 people in Finland have at least some knowledge of Karelian.

The Karelian language is a group of two supradialects. The two supradialects are Karelian Proper (which comprises Northern Karelian and South Karelian (including the Tver enclave dialects)) and Olonets Karelian (Livvi Karelian). The Ludic language is sometimes considered one more dialect of Karelian, sometimes a separate language. There is no single standard Karelian language, so each writer writes in Karelian according to their own dialectal form. All variants are written with the Latin-based Karelian alphabet, though the Cyrillic script has been used in the past.

Based upon toponymic and historical evidence, a form of Karelian was also spoken among the extinct Bjarmians in the 15th century.