Uerdingen line
The
Uerdingen Line is the
isogloss within
West Germanic languages, that separates the linguistic forms that use the word
ich or similar words rather than
ik as the word for
I. The Uerdingen line is presently in
Belgium, the
Netherlands and
Germany. The Uerdingen line starts at
Bierbeek in
Flemish Brabant in
Belgium. Hence it stretches further North into Belgian
Limburg. North of the capital of Belgian Limburg,
Hasselt, it crosses the Dutch-Belgian border. Thence it goes straight East, South of the town of
Venlo into
Germany. Further East its Northern limits are
Kempen,
Hüls and other places within the
Rhineland until it crosses the
Rhine at
Uerdingen, which now belongs to the city of
Krefeld. In the part of the Rhineland, East of the Rhine the places North of the UerdingenLine include
Saarn, which belongs to
Mülheim an der Ruhr,
Kettwig, which belongs to
Essen,
Elberfeld, which belongs to
Wuppertal,
Gummersbach and
Wiedenest, which belongs to
Bergneustadt. To the South of this line, in
Belgium, the
Netherlands and also
Germany the
Limburgish dialect of the
Dutch language is spoken, in the former countries in Brabant and Limburg only, in the latter in the
Rhineland in
North Rhine-Westphalia only. In all three countries
Limburgish is spoken. The Uerdingen line runs further East at
Halbe,
Hermsdorf,
Freidorf and
Stoki in Southern
Brandenburg in Eastern
Germany.
NB: Some of this information might be outdated, as several dialects involved are rarely used.
See also:
High German consonant shift