
Catalán
Catalan is another of the Romance languages spoken in Spain, with its
earliest literary text, the Homilies d'Organya, dating back to around
the middle of the 12th century. In the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries,
Catalan literature flourished, first under the influence of Provençal
literature and later as the producer of its own thematic and formal
resources. From the 16th to the 18th centuries it underwent a period
of decline, in which the Spanish royalty and other political upheavals
imposed different restrictions. Until it emerged in the 19th century
with the movement known as the Renaixença, Renaissance.
Its modern linguistic normalization was brought about with the creation
in 1907 by Prat de la Riba of the Institut d'Estudis Catalans, whose
principal pursuit was higher scientific research of all the elements
of the Catalan culture. And it is at this famed Institut where Pompeu
Fabra effected the regulation and grammatical systematisation of the
Catalan; thus unifying norms for its spelling (1913).
Both Castilian and Catalan (since 1979) are the official languages of
Catalonia and the Balearic Islands (since 1983).
Catalan is also spoken in some areas of Aragon and Murcia and, outside
Spain, in the French Roussillon region, the Principality of Andorra
and in the Italian city of Alguer (Sardinia). It is the mother tongue
of some 5 to 6 million people. Many Castilian/Spanish speaking people
who live in any of these aforementioned areas speak and understand it.