North Slavic languages
The term North Slavic languages is used in three main senses:
- for a number of proposed groupings or subdivisions of the Slavic languages. However, "North Slavic" is not widely used in this sense. Modern scholars usually divide the Slavic languages into West Slavic, East Slavic, and South Slavic.
- for the West Slavic and East Slavic languages considered as a combined unit, particularly when contrasted to South Slavic languages.
- for a number of constructed languages that were created in the 20th and 21st century, and have been derived from existing Slavic languages.
Proposed subdivisions
The following uses of the term "North Slavs" or "North Slavic" are found:
File:Meyers b12 s0486a.jpg|thumb|In this map of Austria-Hungary from Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, Czechs, Moravians, Slovaks, Poles, and "Ruthenians" are marked as "North-Slavs", while other Slavic groups are marked as "South-Slavs".
- 'North Slavs', 'Northslavs' or 'North Hungarian Slavs' were used as synonyms for the combination of Slovaks and Rusyns living in the northern parts of the Kingdom of Hungary within the Austrian Empire by several Slavic authors and politicians writing between 1848 and 1861. They imagined Slovaks and Rusyns to be one nation or ethnic group consisting of two equal tribes that inhabited a shared ethno-territory and was entitled to political representation in the Imperial Council of Austria.
- 'North Slavs', 'Czechoslavs' and 'Slovaks' were used as synonyms for the combination of Czechs, Slovaks and Rusniaks/Rustines by Ján Thomášek. The ethno-territory that he imagined corresponds with that of the later First Czechoslovak Republic.
- As a synonym for the combination of Czechs, Slovaks, and Poles.
- As an extinct branch of Slavic. suggested that a separate, now extinct, branch of North Slavic languages once existed, different from both South, West, and East Slavic. The dialect formerly spoken in the vicinity of Novgorod contains several Proto-Slavic archaisms that did not survive in any other Slavic language, and may be considered a remnant of an ancient North Slavic branch. Another candidate is Slovincian in the Lekhitic subgroup.
- An as alternative to or combination of the West Slavic and East Slavic languages into one group, due to the fact that the South Slavic dialects were geographically cut off by the Hungarian settlement of the Pannonian plain in the 9th century along with Austria and Romania being geographical barriers, in addition to the Black Sea. Due to this geographical separation, the North Slavs and South Slavs developed independently of each other with noteworthy cultural differences; as such, various theorists claim that the language communities often grouped into West and East Slavic sub-branches share enough linguistic characteristics to be categorised together as North Slavs. North Slavonic peoples today include the Belarusians, Czechs, Poles, Rusyns, Russians, Slovaks, Sorbs, and Ukrainians. Ukrainian and Belarusian have both been hugely influenced by Polish in the past centuries due to their geographic and cultural proximity, as well as due to the Polonisation of the Ruthenian population of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
- The concept has also been utilised in the archaeological studies as well as that of the pre-Christian beliefs of Slavic peoples in the Early Middle Ages by scholars in the 2010s.
Constructed languages
- Sevorian, the language of a fictional island in the Baltic Sea;
- three Uralic-inspired languages from the alternative history project Ill Bethisad:
- * Vozgian,
- * Nassian and
- * Skuodian ; and
- Novegradian, a project embedded in a highly elaborated fictional context.