It is interesting that your map is the only one that shows that gothic did NOT disappear from Pomeranian (East Germany) ! On other maps on Utube East Germanic Languages have totally disappeared from Pomeranian and Silesia !!
Please do this with Greek Languages, Italic Languages, Celtic Languages, Iranian Languages, Slavic Languages, and Punic Languages! I noticed a very small pocket of Ostrogoths survived in Northern Sardinia to the present, their language could be called Ostrogothic or Sardinian Gothic, they would be a minority, however it would be cool to see some of the Goths survived to the present in the lands they conquered from the Romans long before despite the fact that most of it was lost.
I like how English isn't as dominant, but still dominant enough. Do Crimean and Hungarian switch? Like Hungarian dies out, but Crimean doesn't? Are there two French states, a Germanic one and a Mediterranean one?
There probably isn't a french state, but an occitan state. Southern France didn't speak french untill recently. Even as late as 1870 the majority of southern French did not speak french according to french records.
@matthiuskoenig3378 I mean. It depends what's considered a French dialect. Although I'd say Occitanian could be more safely assumed (personally) to be a middle tongue between the Italic and Hispanic language groups.
The maps at the beginning is wrong, all the east coast up to Ångermanland and central Jämtland were inhabited by people who spoke the same language as in Trøndelag and Uppland
the French language came from Latin. The franks ruled over gaul (modern day france) but many of the people still spoke Latin. This evolved into French. Same with the Visigoths in Iberia and Ostrogoths in Italy
Would be cool to se borders in the same alternativ Europe
Yeah.
It is interesting that your map is the only one that shows that gothic did NOT disappear from Pomeranian (East Germany) ! On other maps on Utube East Germanic Languages have totally disappeared from Pomeranian and Silesia !!
Please do this with Greek Languages, Italic Languages, Celtic Languages, Iranian Languages, Slavic Languages, and Punic Languages! I noticed a very small pocket of Ostrogoths survived in Northern Sardinia to the present, their language could be called Ostrogothic or Sardinian Gothic, they would be a minority, however it would be cool to see some of the Goths survived to the present in the lands they conquered from the Romans long before despite the fact that most of it was lost.
Celtic and Slavic have already been done
@@ShayminLover492 yeah but in the slavic video they actually spreaded out less than irl
I wish this would have been reality...
Cool video!
Gread good work
cool
I like how English isn't as dominant, but still dominant enough.
Do Crimean and Hungarian switch? Like Hungarian dies out, but Crimean doesn't?
Are there two French states, a Germanic one and a Mediterranean one?
There probably isn't a french state, but an occitan state. Southern France didn't speak french untill recently. Even as late as 1870 the majority of southern French did not speak french according to french records.
@matthiuskoenig3378 I mean. It depends what's considered a French dialect. Although I'd say Occitanian could be more safely assumed (personally) to be a middle tongue between the Italic and Hispanic language groups.
Hello, I recommend you to make a video like these but with the Paleobalkan languages *where is the Albanian*
For the next, do Alternate Latin languages please.
Romance*
Interesting, the Geatish language formed in southern Sweden, or Scania.
No scania is further south lol
Cool
please do alternate history of latin language
The maps at the beginning is wrong, all the east coast up to Ångermanland and central Jämtland were inhabited by people who spoke the same language as in Trøndelag and Uppland
Where does Yiddish fit in? The Ashkenazim are certainly a Germanic people by language.
Maybe the Maccabees Rebellion doesn't occur, so the Diaspora isn't a thing?
The French Language came from Frankish?
the French language came from Latin. The franks ruled over gaul (modern day france) but many of the people still spoke Latin. This evolved into French. Same with the Visigoths in Iberia and Ostrogoths in Italy
Genetically yes linguistically no
@@HogBurger French is a direct descendant of Latin. The Franks assimilated into the Latin-speaking world with surprisingly little effect.
It's ugly