Category
page 1Languages attested from the 6th century
Welsh
Brittonic language spoken natively in Wales
Telugu
Dravidian language native to South India
Tocharian
extinct Indo-European languages in Asia

Cumbric
Cumbric is an extinct Celtic Brythonic language or dialect that was spoken during the Early Middle Ages in the Hen Ogledd or "Old North", in what is now Northern England and the southern Scottish Lowlands. Place-name evidence suggests Cumbric may also have been spoken as far south as Pendle and the Yorkshire Dales. The prevailing view is that it became extinct in the 12th century, around the incorporation of the Kingdom of Strathclyde into the Kingdom of Scotland.
Apabhraṃśa
Apabhraṃśa (, , Prakrit: ) is a term used by vaiyākaraṇāḥ (native grammarians) since Patañjali to refer to languages spoken in Northern India before the rise of the modern languages. In Indology, it is used as an umbrella term for the dialects forming the transition between the late Middle and the early Modern Indo-Aryan languages, spanning the period between the 6th and 13th centuries CE. However, these dialects are conventionally included in the Middle Indo-Aryan period. wikt:अपभ्रंश#Sanskrit| in Sanskrit literally means "corrupt" or "non-grammatical language", that which deviates from the n
Old Dutch
set of Franconian dialects spoke in the Low Countries during the Early Middle Ages
Caucasian Albanian
language

Proto-Romanian
comparatively reconstructed common ancestor of the Balkan Romance languages

Abahatta
thumb|An excerpt from the 10th century|10th-century Dakarnava (written in Abahattha).
Hiberno-Latin
Hiberno-Latin was a learned style of literary Latin first used and subsequently spread by Irish monks during the period from the sixth century to the twelfth century.