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Lecture | Comparative Indo-European Linguistics (CIEL) Seminars

Waves Across the Atlantic: Reevaluating the Genetic Position of Faroese

  • Simon den Hertog
Date
Friday 6 June 2025
Time
Series
Comparative Indo-European Linguistics (CIEL) Seminars
Location
Lipsius
Cleveringaplaats 1
2311 BD Leiden
Room
0.03

Abstract

Faroese, spoken by approximately 70,000 people in the Faroe Islands, Denmark and beyond, is traditionally classified as a West Nordic language alongside Icelandic and (West) Norwegian. Within this subgroup, it is often paired with Icelandic under the “Insular Nordic” subclade—in opposition to the “Continental Nordic” languages, i.e., Danish, Swedish, and (certain varieties of) Norwegian—or left unclassified. However, recent scholarship tentatively suggests closer ties between Faroese and Southwest Norwegian, making the classification of Faroese a contentious yet underexplored issue.

This presentation reexamines the genetic position of Faroese through existing evidence and newly identified linguistic innovations, revealing a complex network of isoglosses between the Nordic-speaking islands and Mainland Scandinavia. Further enriched by historical records and novel genomic data, the findings suggest that the Faroese people maintained robust social ties with Southwestern Norwegians, evidenced by a sizable set of shared innovations. Contact with Icelanders seems to have been far more slight, and is supported by only a handful of innovations. While the presence of shared Faroese-Icelandic innovations prevents Faroese from being unilaterally classified as “Norwegian-Faroese” or “Continental Nordic”, the overwhelming number of Faroese-Norwegian isoglosses invites the reexamination of the “Insular Nordic” label, which does not adequately capture the position of Faroese.

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