Italiot Greek Explained

Italiot Greek
States:Italy
Region:Salento, Calabria
Ethnicity:Griko people
Familycolor:Indo-European
Fam2:Hellenic
Fam3:Greek
Fam4:AtticIonic (Disputed)
Doric (Disputed)
Isoexception:dialect
Script:Greek alphabet, Latin alphabet
Glotto:apul1236
Glottoname:Apulia-Calabrian Greek
Map:GrikoSpeakingCommunitiesTodayV4.png
Mapscale:1
Mapcaption:Location map of the Italiot-speaking areas in Salento and Calabria
Ietf:el-IT

Italiot Greek, also known as Italic-Greek and Salentino-Calabrian Greek refers to two varieties of Modern Greek spoken in Italy by the Griko people.

Italiot Greek refers to the Greek varieties spoken in areas of southern Italy, a historical remnant of Magna Graecia. There are two small Griko-speaking communities known as the Griko people who live in the Italian regions of Calabria, the southern tip of the Italian peninsula, and in Apulia, its southeasternmost corner. These varieties too are thought to have developed on the basis of an originally Doric ancient dialect, and have preserved some elements of it, though to a lesser extent than Tsakonian. They subsequently adopted influences from ancient Koiné, but became isolated from the rest of the Greek-speaking world after the decline of Byzantine rule in Italy during the Middle Ages. Among their linguistic peculiarities, besides influences from local Romance languages, is the preservation of the infinitive, which was lost in the modern Greek of the Balkans.

The dialects are: