Saterland Frisian language


Saterland Frisian, also known as Sater Frisian, Saterfrisian or Saterlandic, spoken in the Saterland municipality of Lower Saxony in Germany, is the last living dialect of the East Frisian language. It is closely related to the other Frisian languages: North Frisian, spoken in Germany as well, and West Frisian, spoken in the Dutch province of Friesland.

Classification

From a diachronical perspective, Saterland Frisian is an Emsfrisian dialect of the East Frisian language. Emsfrisian used to be spoken in the western half of the East Frisian peninsula and in the Ommelanden. The other East Frisian dialect group was the Weserfrisian, formerly spoken from the eastern half of the East Frisian peninsula to beyond the Weser.
Together with West Frisian and North Frisian it belongs to the Frisian branch of the Germanic languages. The three Frisian languages evolved from Old Frisian. Among the living Frisian dialects, the one spoken in Heligoland is the closest to Saterland Frisian. The closest language other than Frisian dialects is English.
Frisian and English are often grouped together as Anglo-Frisian languages. Today, English, Frisian and Lower German, sometimes also Dutch, are grouped together under the label North Sea Germanic. Low German, which is closely related to Saterland Frisian, lacks many North Sea Germanic features already from the Old Saxon period onward. In turn, Saterland Frisian has had prolonged close contact with Low German.

History

Settlers from East Frisia, who left their homelands around 1100 AD due to natural disasters, established the Frisian language in the Saterland. Since the sparse population at the time of their arrival spoke Old Saxon, the Frisian language of the settlers came into close contact with Low German.
In East Frisia, the assimilation of Frisian speakers into the Low German speaking population was well under way in the early 16th century. The dialect of the Saterland persisted mostly due to geography. As the Saterland is surrounded by bogland, its inhabitants had few contacts with adjacent regions. The villages built on sandy hills were basically like islands. Until the 19th century, the settlement area was almost exclusively reachable by boat via the river Sagter Ems, the exception being walking on frozen or dried out bogland during times of extreme weather.
Politically, the land did not belong to the County of East Frisia, which came into existence in the 15th century, but changed hands frequently until it became part of the County of Oldenburg. The resulting border was not merely political, but also denominational, as the Saterland was recatholicized. The Saterland was also linguistically and culturally different from Oldenburg. This led to further isolation.
Colonialization of the bogland, with construction of roads and railways, led to the Saterland being less isolated. Nevertheless, Saterfrisian survived, because most of the community living in the Saterland continued to use the language. This common linguistic area was disturbed following World War II. German repatriates from Eastern Europe were settled in the Saterland, leading to Standard German gradually replacing Saterfrisian. While the predicted language death in the late 20th century did not happen, and the number of speakers remained stable, the Saterfrisian speaking community nowadays make up only a minority of the Saterland population.

Geographic distribution

Today, estimates of the number of speakers vary slightly. Saterland Frisian is spoken by about 2,250 people, out of a total population in Saterland of some 10,000; an estimated 2,000 people speak the language well, slightly fewer than half of those being native speakers. The great majority of native speakers belong to the older generation; Saterland Frisian is thus a seriously endangered language. It might, however, no longer be moribund, as several reports suggest that the number of speakers is rising among the younger generation, some of whom raise their children in Saterlandic.

Current revitalization efforts

Since about 1800, Sater Frisian has attracted the interest of a growing number of linguists. Media coverage sometimes argues that this linguistic interest, particularly the work of Marron Curtis Fort, helped preserve the language and revive interest among speakers in transmitting it to the next generation. During the last century, a small literature developed in it. Also, the New Testament of the Bible was translated into Sater Frisian by Fort, who was himself a Christian.
Children's books in Saterlandic are few, compared to those in German. Margaretha Grosser, a retired member of the community of Saterland, has translated many children's books from German into Saterlandic. A full list of the books and the time of their publication can be seen on the German Wikipedia page of Margaretha Grosser.
Recent efforts to revitalize Saterlandic include the creation of an app called "Kleine Saterfriesen" on Google Play. According to the app's description, it aims at making the language fun for children to learn, as it teaches them Saterlandic vocabulary in many different domains. There have been more than 500 downloads of the app since its release in December 2016, according to statistics on Google Play Store.
The language remains capable of producing neologisms as evidenced by a competition during the COVID-19 pandemic to create a Saterfrisian word for anti-Covid face masks held in late 2020 / early 2021 which resulted in the term "Sküüldouk" being adopted with face masks having the Saterfrisian sentence "Bäte dusse Sküüldouk wädt Seeltersk boald!" written on them gaining some local popularity.

Official status

The German government has not committed significant resources to the preservation of Sater Frisian. Most of the work to secure the endurance of this language is therefore done by the Seelter Buund. Along with North Frisian and five other languages, Sater Frisian was included in Part III of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages by Germany in 1998.

Dialects

There are three fully mutually intelligible dialects, corresponding to the three main villages of the municipality of Saterland: Ramsloh, Scharrel, and Strücklingen. The Ramsloh dialect now somewhat enjoys a status as a standard language, since a grammar and a word list were based on it.

Phonology

The phonology of Saterland Frisian is regarded as very conservative linguistically, as the entire East Frisian language group was conservative with regards to Old Frisian. The following tables are based on studies by Marron C. Fort.

Vowels

Monophthongs

The consonant is often realised as a vowel in the syllable coda depending on its syllable structure.
Short vowels:
GraphemePhonemeExample
afat
äSät
eze
iLid
oDot
öbölkje
uBuk
üDjüpte

Semi-long vowels:
GraphemePhonemeExample
iePiene
uukuut

Long vowels:
GraphemePhonemeExample
aaPaad
äätään
eeDee
íeWíek
oadoalje
ooRoop
ööröögje
öäGöäte
üüDüwel
úuMúus

Diphthongs

GraphemePhonemeExample
aiBail
auDau
ääusääuwen
äiwäit
äuhäuw
eeuskeeuw
ieuGrieuw
íeuíeuwen
iuKiuwe
oaitoai
oifloitje
ooiswooije
ouBloud
öiBöije
uuitruuije
üüiSküüi

Consonants

Today, voiced plosives in the syllable coda are usually terminally devoiced. Older speakers and a few others may use voiced codas.

Plosives

GraphemePhonemeExampleNotes
pPik
tToom
kkoold
bBabe Occasionally voiced in syllable coda
dDai May be voiced in syllable coda by older speakers
gGäize A realization especially used by younger speakers instead of.

Fricatives

Other consonants

Morphology

Personal pronouns

The subject pronouns of Saterland Frisian are as follows:
The numbers 1–10 in Saterland Frisian are as follows:
Saterland FrisianEnglish
aan
een
one
twäin
two
two
träi
trjo
three
fjauerfour
fieuwfive
säkssix
sogenseven
oachteeight
njúgennine
tjoonten

Numbers one through three in Saterland Frisian vary in form based on the gender of the noun they occur with. In the table, "m." stands for masculine, "f." for feminine, and "n." for neuter.
For the purposes of comparison, here is a table with numbers 1–10 in 4 West Germanic languages:
Saterland FrisianLow GermanGermanEnglish
aan
een
eeneinsone
twäin
two
tweezweitwo
träi
trjo
dreedreithree
fjauerveervierfour
fieuwfieffünffive
säkssösssechssix
sogensöbensiebenseven
oachteachtachteight
njúgennegenneunnine
tjoonteihnzehnten