A friend of mine & I was watching a show on the break up of the Roman Empire. At one point, the show referred to the Latin West and Greek East. This started a discussion.
I've always assumed that the Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, Portugese, French and for some reason Romanian) were derived from Latin. My friend insists that Italian is nothing like Latin.
Are the Romance languages derived from Latin? If not, why was Western Europe referred to as the Latin West?
Latin was the official language of the Romans. So didn't they speak it in Byzantium as well as in Rome? If they picked up the local Greek language instead, that would explain why they were referred to as the Greek East. --But if they spoke Latin, why then would they be the Greek East?
I've always assumed that the Romance languages (Italian, Spanish, Portugese, French and for some reason Romanian) were derived from Latin. My friend insists that Italian is nothing like Latin.
Are the Romance languages derived from Latin? If not, why was Western Europe referred to as the Latin West?
Latin was the official language of the Romans. So didn't they speak it in Byzantium as well as in Rome? If they picked up the local Greek language instead, that would explain why they were referred to as the Greek East. --But if they spoke Latin, why then would they be the Greek East?
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