Arpitania
Arpitania is a term which denotes the purported ethnic or cultural unity of the Western Alps, represented by speakers of Franco-Provençal.
"Arpitania" roughly corresponds to the historical County of Savoy and its successor state the Duchy of Savoy:
- France. The northwestern salient is seen linguistically transitional between Arpitan, Occitan, and other Oïl languages.
- Italy
- Switzerland
Creation
In Aosta, Krutwig befriended the young Maoist activist Joseph Henriet. Influenced by Krutwig, Henriet declared the local patois the descendant of the Neolithic "Garalditan language". He later replaced the term garalditan with harpitan, a conflation of the patois words arpa "alp", arpian "one who works on an alp", and the Basque etymology Basque harri-pe "under the rocks" proposed by Krutwig.
Around 1980, Harriet dropped the Basque-inspired initial h-, now proposing an "Arpitan confederation" uniting Savoy and the Valais. With the failure of his Arpitan political movement, he retired to private life.
The term arpitan since the 1990s has found usage beyond the immediate sphere of Henriet's activities, especially driven by online use. Pichard suggests its newfound success was due to the happy rhyme with Occitan and the unwieldiness of the alternative francoprovençal. The alternative term patois, while viewed with affection in Switzerland, has a condescending or "humiliating" connotation in France. An Aliance Culturèla Arpitana was founded in 2004.