The dialect of La Brigue, Briga Alta, Realdo, Viozene, and Verdeggia is also named Brigasc.
History and position
Royasc is the mountainous adaptation of the western Ligurian dialect. It received influence from the Occitan language as the Upper Roya valley was partly ruled by the County of Nice.
Its structure is Ligurian, but its position is discussed: some include it in the Ventimiglia dialect (intemelian)[1] but others consider it a member of a very distinct group of Alpine Ligurian dialects, along with Pignasc and Triorasc.[2]
Tende is one of the alpine areas where Royasc is still spoken
Italian Royasc-speaking communes put themselves under the State Law for the protection of minorities, using the Occitan name to do so.[3]
↑Werner Forner, "À propos du Ligurien Intémélien. La côte, l'arrière-pays", in Travaux du Cercle Linguistique de Nice, 7-8 (1985-1986), pp. 29-61; Werner Forner, "Areallinguistik I: Ligurien", in Lexikon der Romanistischen Linguistik (LRL), IV, Tübingen 1988, pp. 453-469; Werner Forner, "Géographie linguistique et reconstruction, à l'exemple du ligurien intémélien", in Actes du I Colloque International sur l'ancien provençal, l'ancien français et l'ancien ligurien, Nice sept. 1986 ("Bulletin du Centre de Romanistique et de Latinité Tardive"), Nice 1989, pp. 125-140
↑Jean-Philippe DALBERA, "Le royasque: un ensemble dialectal aux confins de la langue d'oc et du ligurien", in Le site du Mont Bego de la protohistoire à nos jours. Actes du colloque de Nice (15-16 mars 2001) par J. Magail e J.P. Jaume, Nice, Serre Éditeur 2005, p. 135-144. See the online map
↑Servizio Beni e attività culturali della Provincia di Torino, Atlante delle minoranze linguistiche storiche del Piemonte e della Provincia di Imperia, (Download link on the Chambra d'Oc website)
↑Venetian is either grouped with the rest of the Italo-Dalmatian or the Gallo-Italic languages, depending on the linguist, but the major consensus among linguists is that in the dialectal landscape of northern Italy, Veneto dialects are clearly distinguished from Gallo-Italic dialects.