Simon de Bruxelles
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For hundreds of years the dwindling band of surviving Cornish-speakers have been so divided that they could not even agree what their language should be called.
Now after protracted and delicate neogtiations, Cornwall’s hardy linguistic scholars have set aside their differences to settle a standard written form for the language they treasure.
Since the early 20th century there has been a successful campaign to revive spoken Cornish, but the use of sources from different eras meant there were several versions of how it should be written. The result was a rivalry between proponents of Unified Cornish, Kernewek Kemmyn, Modern Cornish, Unified Cornish Revised, Kernowak Standard, Kernewek Dasunys and other variants that would have left speakers of the original language utterly bemused.
As a measure of the differences Cornish-speakers could not even agree whether the language should be called Kernowek, Kernewek or Curnoack.
Now after two years of negotiation, scholars from all the different factions have reached agreement on a Standard Written Form which will be used in future in education, in pamphlets and brochures, and on public signs.
A thousand years ago, Cornish, which is closely related to Breton and Welsh, was spoken by most of the population in southwest England. Its decline began in 1549 when the Latin prayer book was replaced by an English version, provoking a revolt by people who spoke only Cornish. The repression that followed culminated in the massacre of 4,000 rebels and left a bitterness that lingers to this day.
Cornish retreated down the peninsula. The last monoglot Cornish speaker is believed to have been a man called Chesten Marchant who died at Gwithian in 1676. Dorothy Pentreath, the last native speaker, died in 1777 at Mousehole. The last living link with the language was broken in 1891 with the death of John Davey, of Zennor, who took to the grave the Cornish phrases his grandfather had taught him.
By 1900 Cornish was a dead language that survived only in a few manuscripts and the notes of 18th and 19th-century linguistic scholars who had recorded what they could before it vanished completely.
Its reconstruction and revival began in the early 1900s with renewed interest in Cornish heritage and there are now about 300 people who can speak it fluently, with several thousand more who have at least a rudimentary grasp.
Cornish is unique among minority European languages because it was revived after having died out. A team of scholars led by a Norwegian linguist, Trond Trosterud, devised the standard written form under the auspices of the Cornish Language Partnership.
Its development officer Jenefer Lowe, who has been speaking Cornish since she was a girl, said: “There were scholastic disagreements and some pretty firmly held opinions but we managed to reach agreement in the end. The standard form draws on the forms already in existence. This means that users of any form will find much that is familiar, alongside some differences.”
Benjamin Bruch, a former lecturer in Celtic studies at Harvard University who helped to draw up the SWF, said: “It is a critical and extremely exciting time in the history of the language. There has been a huge change in perception and awareness of the language over the past ten years.”
He added that he hopes the move will encourage a stronger sense of Cornish identity. “If you have no language you have no land. A lot of people feel it is part of their identity, part of their heritage. Cornwall is lucky because people are working hard to use it more and more. It gives it a fighting chance when others are going.”
Cornwall County Council is now asking that Cornish be recognised by the EU as an official regional or minority language, like Welsh or Gaelic. That could ease the way for EU funding for teaching – which at present is restricted to DVDs in three secondary schools. Frances Bennett, a teacher of Modern Cornish, said: “Young children are really keen to learn the language. It’s like a secret code to them.”
Starting point
Myttin da
Good morning
Dohajydh da
Good afternoon
Gorthugher da
Good evening
Fatla genes?
How are you?
Meur ras
Thank you
Marpleg Please
Pinta korev marpleg
Pint of beer, please
Yeghes da/Sewena
Cheers
A vynn’ta kavoes neppyth dh’y dhybri?
Do you want something to eat?
Ple’ma an bysva?
Where is the toilet?
My a’th kar
I love you
Dyw genes
Goodbye (God be with you)
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I have known about, and have spoken, Cornish nearly all my life and so have my children. I know many people to whom I would naturally speak Cornish. If it is a dead language then does that mean that we don't exist? Or do we exist in some mythical kingdom outside of the realm of Great Britain?
Loveday, Praze an Beeble, Cornwall
I hope Cornwall, does not, when its language is recognised, erect all public signs in Cornish, as in Wales. When ever I drive in Wales I am swamped with all that Welsh, erected, for the benefit of a tiny minority of Welsh people, all of whom speak English !
C.Wood, Camberleyu, UK
Fantastic news for Cornish and Cornwall!
As a Gaelic speaker I am really pleased to see the progress that Kernewek is making.
Alasdair, Glaschu / Glasgow, Alba / Scotland
My children attended a 'taster session' in the local library and are really looking forward to being taught the language in their school after this Summer. Most other children are as well.
Well done on this agreement !
Bryn M, Redruth, Cornwall,
I think that it is a real cause for celebration. Well done to all who have worked so hard to come to an agreement and to reinstate what was lost. Of course Cornish was spoken by the vast magority of people living in that area. It is so closely related to Welsh and Breton.
David Petersen, Carmarthen,
Love it. As a fractious, argumentative ex-pat Cornishman myself, only we could argue for years about the proper form of a language hardly any of us speak.
still, I'm all for showing our heritage through Standard Cornish may the harmony last until next week, when we fall out about something else!
Kevin, London, United Kingdom
Teaching The Cornish Language to children will be one of the biggest waste of time and tax payers money. It is a dead language and only spoken if at all in cornwall so it is useless in the wider world. Teach children more useful languages like Chinese, French etc
James, Leicester,
They can throw/ waste as much money on trying to bring back this little used language. Sadly much of todays Cornish language is based on modern Welsh.
Instead of wasting money on this - surely it's better to invest in modern languages.
I have never heard Cornish spoken in the county.
Jack, Redruth, England
Glad to finally see some time and money well spent on something TRULY indiginous and British. From small acorns . . .
Lucas, Herts., uk
C Weatherhill, I hate to burst your bubble, but the Celtic languages aren't "indigenous" to the British Isles as you claim. They are descended from Indo-European and once flourished on the Continent. Don't forget - everyone was new here once.
John F, London,
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