Late Latin

E197625

Late Latin is the transitional form of the Latin language used from roughly the 3rd to 6th centuries AD, bridging Classical Latin and the later medieval and Romance-language developments.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Late Latin canonical 4
Latin 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf form of Latin
historical language stage
written language
characteristic greater lexical borrowing from Greek
increasing Christian vocabulary
mixture of Classical and Vulgar Latin features
simplification of syntax
classificationIssue boundary with Classical Latin is conventional rather than sharp
continuedAs learned and liturgical language in the Middle Ages
developedInto Medieval Latin
follows Classical Latin
influenced Romance languages
Vulgar Latin
ISOStatus has no separate ISO 639-3 code from Latin
languageBranch Italic languages
languageFamily Indo-European language family
surface form: Indo-European languages
notableAuthor Ambrose of Milan
Augustine of Hippo
Gregory of Tours
Jerome
notableWork Vulgate
surface form: Vulgate Bible
notSameAs Classical Latin
Vulgar Latin
overlapsWith Vulgar Latin
parentLanguage Latin
precedes Medieval Latin
region Byzantine Empire
surface form: Eastern Roman Empire

Western Roman Empire
role bridge between Classical Latin and Romance languages
status extinct as a native spoken language
subfamily Latino-Faliscan languages
timePeriod Late Antiquity
typicalGenre biblical commentaries
ecclesiastical letters
late Roman law codes
sermons
usedBy Christian authors
Church Fathers
Roman administration
late Roman historians
usedFor Christian theology
administrative documents
historiography
legal texts
usedInCentury 3rd century AD
4th century AD
5th century AD
6th century AD
writingSystem Latin alphabet

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (5)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Medieval Latin follows Late Latin
Medieval Latin developedFrom Late Latin
Council of Elvira language Late Latin
this entity surface form: Latin
Classical Latin contrastedWith Late Latin