Quellen:

    • Öffentliches Amt für die okzitanische Sprache (OPLO), Okzitanisch heute – soziolinguistische Umfrage 2020 (2020): https://www.ofici-occitan.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/OPLO_Enquete-sociolingusitique-occitan-2020_Resultats.pdf

    • Diese „okzitanische Sprache“ [Wikipedia](chatgpt://generic-entity?number=0): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occitan_Language

    • Regionale Daten für Val d’Aran basierend auf Idescat und OPLO 2020 (Sprachkompetenz gerundet auf ~60 %).

    • Die Zahlen von Valadas Occitanas basieren auf soziolinguistischen Berichten aus dem Piemont (gerundet auf ~30 %).

    • Guardia Piemontesische und französische Departements (Lozère, Dordogne, Aveyron) basierend auf OPLO und lokalen Studien (gerundete Schätzungen).

    Notizen

    • Die Prozentsätze stellen den geschätzten Anteil der Bevölkerung dar, der Okzitanisch sprechen kann, basierend auf gerundeten Zahlen aus OPLO 2020 und anderen soziolinguistischen Umfragen.

    • Val d’Aran ist das einzige okzitanischsprachige Gebiet, in dem die Mehrheit der Bevölkerung noch die Sprache sprechen kann (>50 %).

    • In Val d’Aran besteht ein großer Teil der aktuellen Bevölkerung aus neuen spanischsprachigen Einwanderern, was den gewohnheitsmäßigen täglichen Gebrauch von Aranesisch auf etwa 16–20 % reduziert, obwohl die Quote „kann sprechen“ viel höher ist.

    Von Neither_Ticket3829

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    15 Kommentare

    1. beamer_boy2000 on

      I’m so sad France killed off the only enjoyable dialect to hear in their country 😭

    2. Ok_Nerve7581 on

      I was raised in the part of Italy that says 20-30% and I promise you, I have met a person speaking occitan maybe twice in my life.

      People there like the culture and would gladly fly the flag, but it’s just folklore, there is very very little left of occitan culture. Only some isolated communities in the Alps.

    3. French chauvinism is crazy to me, if I were born in this region I would have wanted to learn the language ASAP.

    4. MustardLabs on

      France’s insistence on cultural homogeneity is such an interesting thing to see French people try and explain their way out of. Like, no, your society is fundamentally supremacist.

    5. And the worst thing is that nobody will ever have to face justice for what was done to Occitan.

    6. pugsington01 on

      They still havent recovered from the Albigensian crusade, and probably never will

    7. Appropriate-Pop2824 on

      yeah, it’s wild how language policies have shaped regional identities

    8. uwu_01101000 on

      Please, if you’re living in France, do your best to at least learn the basis of your region’s dialect. Most of them are easy to learn thanks to their closeness to French. Literally my entire family is Turkish and I still managed to learn enough of Alsatian to have a convo in it even though it’s a German dialect. I am begging you.

    9. Sufficient-Package- on

      I think the sad reality is that most from the south of France care significantly less than the pearl clutching commenters in this comment section do

    10. Urist_Galthortig on

      I visited Marseilles and Aix en Provence last year and looked for Occitan language materials and hoped to hear it. I found some Occitan resources, but they were nearly non-existent. If I met people who speak Occitan there, they don’t really speak it much in public, mostly French.

      Edit: the main thing I learned before I went is that Occitan is basically an umbrella for a bunch of southern dialects that generally use oc instead oui. It’s even in the name of region Languedoc. It has a lot of commonalities with Catalan, but like, Catalan is supported whereas Occitan dialects like the government, cultural, and financial support needed to flourish. Breton in NW France struggles Ave they have a handful of schools that can teach in the local language.

    11. Fit_Season_55 on

      Nah way exaggerated numbers,just read the comments of the People that actually live there

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