Palenquero

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Palenquero
Spoken in: Colombia 
Region: South America
Total speakers: 2,500
Language family: Creole language
 Spanish Creole
  Palenquero
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2:
ISO 639-3:
Location of the municipality and town of Mahates in the Bolivar Department. San Basilio de Palenque is within this municipality.
Location of the municipality and town of Mahates in the Bolivar Department. San Basilio de Palenque is within this municipality.

Palenquero (also palenque) is a Spanish-based creole language spoken in Colombia. Palenquero is the only Spanish-based creole in Latin America.[1] The ethnic group which speaks this Creole consists only of 3,000 people, as of 2007. Palenquero is spoken in Colombia, in the village of San Basilio de Palenque which is southeast of Cartagena, and in some neighborhoods of Barranquilla.

The village was formed by escaped slaves (Maroons) and sometimes Native Americans. Since many slaves had not been subjected to a lot of contact with people of European descent, the palenqueros spoke Creole languages from Spanish language and their African ones.

Spanish speakers are usually unable to understand Palenquero. There are some influences from Kongo in Democratic Republic of Congo. A 10% of the population of age under 25 years speaks Palenquero, as of 1998. Most common to the elderly. Words like "ngombe" which means cattle is found in several Bantu languages.[2]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

International Herald Tribune: Simon Romero, "A little-known language survives in Colombia", 17 October 2007 - discusses the current decline of the language

[edit] See also

Spanish-based creole languages

In the Americas: Palenquero
In Asia: Chavacano