Ladin language - Wikipedia A standard variety of Ladin (Ladin Dolomitan) has been developed by the Office for Ladin Language Planning as a common communication tool across the whole Ladin-speaking region
Everything You Need to Know About Ladin, the Secret Language of the . . . But few outside the region will have heard of Ladin, one of the rarest languages in Europe, spoken by around 30,000 people across five Dolomite valleys — Fassa, Gardena, Badia, Ampezzo and Livinallongo — that encircle the jagged Sella massif on the borders of Trentino-Alto Adige and Veneto
The Ancient and Hospitable Ladin People - Dolomite Mountains The Ladin people, who still live in the area, have their own language, their own culture, their own traditions One of the most widespread theories is that people living in Alpine areas in today's Switzerland and the Italian Friuli region once had a single language and culture
Exploring Alta Badia: Who are the Ladin People? - Italy Segreta Around 30,000 people make up the Ladin-speaking community in this mountainous region, spread across five valleys and three provinces: Val Badia valley and Val Gardena valley in South Tyrol, Livinallongo and Ampezzo in Belluno, and the Val di Fassa valley in the province of Trento
Ladins: The Forgotten Alpine Minority - Epochmagazine The Ladin people are an ethnic minority group located on the eastern side of the Dolomite Mountains, principally characterised by their use of a minority common language called Ladin
Ladin - World Culture Encyclopedia The Ladin are a predominantly Catholic, linguistic minority of northeastern alpine Italy They live in the high valleys of Alto Adige and the Dolomites and number approximately 30,000