Mariupol Gothic

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Mariupol Gothic is a Germanic language spoken by approximately 15,000 people on the northern coast of the Sea of Azov. It is an East Germanic language, closely related to Biblical Gothic, however the language is not a lineal descendant of Biblical Gothic. Nonetheless the speakers of Mariupol Gothic refer to themselves as "Goths" and their language still shares enough similarities with Gothic to be considered related. The language is critically endangered, with only a handful of native speakers remaining, with most acquiring the language as an L2.

History

The history of the Goths in Ukraine begins with the Ostrogothic settlement of the Black Sea in the 4th century. Along with the Greeks, Alans, Bulgars and others, they made up part of the population in Crimea that followed Orthodox Christianity and were incorporated into the Byzantine Empire as the Principality of Theodoro. After the secession of the principality in the 13th century, Theodoro was overrun by the Mongols and became a vassal of the Golden Horde. The principality enjoyed a period of peace until the Ottoman Empire annexed its capital city of Mangup in 1475.

The Goths managed to maintain their culture and language throughout Ottoman occupation, however a great number of them converted to Islam and assimilated into the Crimean Tatars. During her reign, Catharine the Great invited the Christian Crimean Goths to settle recently conquered lands north of the Sea of Azov. There they were given a special protective status within the Russian Empire and were exempt from the draft.

During World War II many Goths were expelled to various oblasts in Siberia to work as slave labour for the Soviet war machine. Like the Germans in the USSR, the Goths were feared to be sympathetic to the Nazis and therefore were persecuted heavily during World War II. While some Goths returned to the Black Sea after the war, many others had emigrated abroad to countries such as Brazil and Argentina.

Orthography

Since the 1920s Mariupol Gothic has been written in a Cyrillic alphabet based off of the Ukrainian script. The Biblical Gothic alphabet is also used, but it has been mostly limited to the liturgy. However, the Biblical Gothic letter þiuþ <𐌸> was imported to represent the /θ/ sound, it takes a form identical to that of Cyrillic psi.

Letter Position Latin Equivalent Phoneme
А а 1 A a /ɑ, ɑː/
Б б 2 B b /b/
В в 3 V v /v/
Г г 4 Gh gh /ɣ/
Ґ ґ 5 G g /g/
Д д 6 D d /d/
Е e 7 E e /e, eː/
Є є 8 Je je /je/
Э э 9 Ă ă /ə/
З з 10 Z z /z/
И и 11 I i /i, iː/
Ї ї 12 Ji ji /ji/
К к 13 K k /k/
Л л 14 L l /l/
М м 15 M m /m/
Н н 16 N n /n/
О o 17 O o /o, oː/
П п 18 P p /p/
Р р 19 R r /r/
С с 20 S s /s/
Т т 21 T t /t/
У у 22 U u /u, uː/
Ф ф 23 F f /f/
Ѱ ѱ 24 Th th /θ/
Х х 25 Ch ch /x/
Ш ш 26 Sch sch /ʃ/
Щ щ 27 St st /ʃt/
Ю ю 28 Ju ju /ju/
Я я 29 Ja ja /ja/

Phonology

Vowels

Adjectives

The adjectives have been greatly simplified since Proto-Germanic. They are divided into two different forms, strong and weak, and agree with case, number and gender with the noun they modify.

Strong Weak
Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
SG PL SG PL SG PL SG PL SG PL SG PL
NOM -эс -этэ
-
-энс -энс -энэ
OBL - -эн