Negerhollands
{{short description|Extinct Dutch creole in the Caribbean}}
{{About|an extinct Creole language|the ethnonym in the United States|Black-Dutch|the Black population of the Netherlands|Afro-Dutch}}
{{Infobox language
| name = Negerhollands
| altname = Creole Dutch
| region = U.S. Virgin Islands
British Virgin Islands
| extinct = 1987, with the death of Alice Stevens
| familycolor = Creole
| fam1 = Dutch Creole
| iso3 = dcr
| glotto = nege1244
| glottorefname = Negerhollands
| script = Latin (Dutch alphabet)
}}
Negerhollands ('Negro-Dutch') was a Dutch-based creole language that was spoken in the Danish West Indies, now known as the U.S. Virgin Islands. Dutch was its superstrate language with Danish, English, French, Spanish, and African elements incorporated. Notwithstanding its name, Negerhollands drew primarily from the Zeelandic rather than the Hollandic dialect of Dutch.
History
Negerhollands emerged around 1700 on the Virgin Islands Saint Thomas and Saint John, then Danish colonies.{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=1}} According to one of the most prevalent theories about its origin, slaves took the embryonic creole language to the island of Saint Thomas when they accompanied the Dutch planters who fled the island of Sint Eustatius after it had been raided by the English in 1666.{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=7}} A census on Saint Thomas from 1688 indeed shows that of the 317 European households on Saint Thomas, 66 (21%) were Dutch, 32 (10%) were English, and 20 (6%) were Danish. This also helps explain the considerable influence English and Danish had on the development of Negerhollands. On Saint John a similar observation can be made, with a 1721 census establishing that 25 (64%) of the 39 planters there were Dutch, and only nine (23%) were Danes.{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=8}} Another theory is that the language was taken to the Caribbean by slaves from the Dutch slave forts in West Africa and Central Africa (e.g. the Dutch Gold Coast or Dutch Loango-Angola).
From 1732 onwards, Moravian missionaries began visiting the Virgin Islands, who introduced an acrolectal version of the language, called Hoch Kreol. From 1765 till 1834, many texts were produced in this language, which gives Negerhollands an almost unparalleled amount of source texts among creole languages.{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=25}} In 1770, Moravian missionaries printed a primer and a small Lutheran catechism, followed in 1781 by a translation of the New Testament into Hoch Kreol.
The language began to decline in the early-mid 19th century as English became the dominant language of the islands.van Sluijs, Robbert. 2013. (via https://apics-online.info/surveys/27) The service in the Lutheran church was held in Hoch Kreol for the native congregation until the 1830s. As younger generations learned English as a native language, use of Hoch Kreol, whose use became limited to church services, was slowly abandoned, having been replaced by the English-based Virgin Islands Creole. It did, however, survive by the Moravian Orphanage at Nyherrenhut near Tutu well into the twentieth century. As older former orphans were volunteers the old Creole dialect persisted around the orphanage with the encouragement of the elders of the denomination. There was a television special on WBNB in the 1970s which had some former orphans who were by that time quite old.
Alice Stevens, likely the last native speaker, died in 1987.{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=33}}
Text samples
{{blockquote|{{lang|dcr|Die hab well twee drie onder die swart Volk, die sender a leer voor verstaan beetje van die hollandisch Taal, as sender woon na die Stadt, en hoor die ider Dag van die Blanko, maar die Plantey-Volk no kan vor verstaan die soo. Doch, die no sal maak een Verhinder, as die lieve Broeer will skriev eenmaal na sender, maski die ben Hollandisch of na die Hoogduytsch, soo die sal maak sender moeschi bli, en ons sal lees die Brief voor sender na Creol. Na St. Croix die hab meer van die Negers, die sender kan verstaan English, as na St. Thomas en St. Jan, maar doch sender English Praat ka mingel ook altoeveel met die Creol- en Guinee-taal... Da Neger-English die ben.|italics=no}}|Moravian missionary Johan Auerbach in 1774{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=8}}}}
Modern Dutch translation: {{blockquote|{{lang|nl|Onder het zwarte volk zijn er wel twee of drie die hebben geleerd om een beetje van de Hollandse taal te verstaan, omdat zij in de stad wonen, en het iedere dag van de blanken horen, maar het plantagevolk kan het niet verstaan. Doch, dit zal hen niet verhinderen, omdat de lieve broeder hun zo nu en dan schrijft, of in het Hollands of in het Hoogduits, wat hen heel erg blij zal maken, en wij zullen die brief aan hen voorlezen in het Creool. Op St. Kruis zijn er meer van die negers, die Engels kunnen verstaan dan op St. Thomas en St. Jan, maar toch is hun Engels veelal gemixt met de Creool- en Guineese talen. Dat is Neger-Engels.}}|Moravian missionary Johan Auerbach in 1774}}
English translation: {{blockquote|There are some among the black people who have learned to understand a bit of the Hollander language, as they live in town, and hear it every day from the whites, but the plantation folk cannot understand it. This should not be an impediment if the dear brethren will write to them sometimes, albeit in Dutch or High German, for this will make them very happy, and we will read the letter for them in Creole. On St. Croix there are more blacks who can understand English than in St. Thomas and St. John, but still their English speech is mixed very much with the Creole and Guinea languages. It is Negro-English.|Moravian missionary Johan Auerbach in 1774{{harvnb|van Rossem|van der Voort|1996|p=9}}}}
{{blockquote|{{lang|dcr|Maer, wanneer ons sa krieg Tee van Dag? Die Waeter no ka kook nogal. Die Boterham sender no ka snie? Ja, maer die no hab Kaes, en Tata no keer voor Botterham soso. Lastaen sender braen van die rook Karang sender. Kassavie sa wees meer suet mit die Karang as Broot. Ju bin een Creol waer-waer.|italics=no}}|from 1770{{harvnb|Magens|1770|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=DjhVAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA66 66]}}}}
Modern Dutch translation: {{blockquote|{{lang|nl|Maar, wanneer zullen wij vandaag thee krijgen? Het water kan niet nogal koken. Kunnen zij de boterham niet snijden? Ja, maar zij hebben geen kaas en blanken geven niet zo zeer om boterhammen zonder. Laat staan dat zij het warm krijgen van het roken van karang. Cassave met de karang zal meer zoet zijn dan brood. Jij bent een ware creool.}}|from 1770}}
{{blockquote|{{lang|italics=no|dcr|Die how cirj bin fol, en sal gaw ha calluf. Die boricka ka marro en caló over die bergi, mi ka stier die jung fo lo fang die. Die farki bin na cot, mi lolo suk bateta-tow fo jeet fo die. Een cuj ka kom over die barcad en ka destroi alga die jung plantsoon; wen mi fang die mi sal drag die na fort, mak die eigenaer betal. Mi lolo na taphus, mi lolo suk stekki sowed gut fo mi goj na pot.}}|from 1881{{harvnb|Pontoppidan|1881|p=[https://digi.evifa.de/viewer/image/1604511403599/150/ 138]}}}}
English translation:
{{Blockquote
|text=The old cow is at full term and will soon have calf. The mule has escaped and gone over the hill; I have sent the youth to catch it. The pig is in the pen; I'm going to look for sweet-potato vine for food for it. A cow has come over the fence and has destroyed all the new plantation; when I catch it, I will bring it to the jail, make the owner pay. I am going to town; I am looking for a bit of salt meat to throw into my pot.|--from Sabino, p 220.}}{{Google books|GKEyiOrI8H0C|Language Contact in the Danish West Indies: Giving Jack His jacket|Sabino, Robin|May 7th, 2012|p=220}}
See also
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
{{refbegin}}
- {{Cite book |last1=van Rossem |first1=C. |url=http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/ross026creo01_01/index.php |title=Die Creol Taal: 250 Years of Negerhollands Texts |last2=van der Voort |first2=H. |date=1996 |publisher=Amsterdam University Press |location=Amsterdam |via=Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren}}
- {{Cite book |last=Hesseling |first=D. C. |url=https://www.dbnl.org/tekst/hess002nege01_01/ |title=Het Negerhollands der Deense Antillen: Bijdrage tot de geschiedenis der Nederlandse taal in Amerika |date=1905 |publisher=A. W. Sijthoff |location=Leiden |language=nl |via=Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren}}
- {{Cite book |last=Magens |first=Joachim Melchior |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DjhVAAAAcAAJ |title=Grammatica over det creolske Sprog: Som bruges paa de trende danske Eilande, St. Croix, St. Thomas og St. Jans i America |date=1770 |publisher=Trykt udi det Kongelige Wäysenhusets Bogtrykkerie, af Gerhard Giese Salikath |location=Kiøbenhavn |language=da |via=Google Books}}
- {{Cite journal |last=Pontoppidan |first=E. |date=1881 |title=Einige Notizen über die Kreolensprache der dänischwestindischen Inseln |url=https://digi.evifa.de/viewer/image/1604511403599/142/ |journal=Zeitschrift für Ethnologie |language=de |volume=13 |pages=130–138 |jstor=23026860 |via=EVIFA}}
- {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ghZUAAAAcAAJ |title=Dr. Martin Luther sie klein Katechismus ka set ower na die Creol Tael van J. J. Prætorius |date=1827 |publisher=Graebe |location=Kopenhagen |via=Google Books}}
- van Sluijs, Robbert. 2013. Negerhollands. In: Michaelis, S., Maurer, P., Haspelmath, M., & Huber, M. (eds.) The Survey of Pidgin and Creole languages. Volume 1: English-based and Dutch-based Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|9780199691401}} (via "APiCS Online - Survey chapter: Negerhollands". The Atlas of Pidgin and Creole Language Structures Online. Retrieved July 25, 2022. https://apics-online.info/surveys/27)
{{refend}}
External links
- [https://apics-online.info/surveys/27 APiCS Online - Survey chapter: Negerhollands]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20180207122340/http://www.auburn.edu/~gramban/pont1881.htm English translation of Pontoppidan (1881) by Anne Gramberg and Robin Sabino hosted on www.auburn.edu]
{{Authority control}}
Category:Dutch-based pidgins and creoles
Category:Dutch language in the Americas
Category:Languages of the United States Virgin Islands
Category:Extinct languages of North America
Category:Languages attested from the 17th century
Category:17th-century establishments in North America
Category:Languages extinct in the 1980s
Category:1980s disestablishments in North America