Navarrese Romance
| Navarrese | |
|---|---|
| Navarrese Romance | |
| Romance navarro | |
Treasury register in the Court of Auditors of Navarre of 1402 (AGN, Comptos Reg. 267) | |
| Native to | Northern Spain |
| Region | Kingdom of Navarre |
| Ethnicity | Navarrese |
| Era | 10–17th centuries |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | Old Latin
|
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| Glottolog | None |
Navarrese Romance | |
Navarrese Romance, simplified as Navarrese is one of the extinct Iberian Romance, which was used during the 10th to 17th centuries in the Kingdom of Navarre. In addition to the use of Medieval Latin, present as a general phenomenon throughout Western Europe, and Occitan, more sporadically, practically all medieval Navarrese documentation, both public and private, is written in Navarrese Romance.
According to linguists, this Romance dialect, both because of its birth in a geographical environment that supported the Basque and because of its secular coexistence with it, the origin and development of Navarrese offers problems and peculiar characteristics in the history of Spanish linguistics. Despite the volume of legal and chronicle texts of the Navarrese Romance until the beginning of the 20th century it was considered that they were composed in Castilian or Provençal or in a mixture of both.