Category
page 2Medieval languages
Old Swedish
North Germanic language
Khorezmian Turkic
literary Turkic language of the medieval Golden Horde of Central Asia and Eastern Europe
Old Anatolian Turkish
form of the Turkish language spoken in Anatolia from the 11th to 15th centuries
Late Middle Japanese
Form of Japanese spoken from the 12th century through the 16th century
Karamanli Turkish
Dialect of Turkish language
Middle Indo-Aryan
historical group of Indo-Aryan languages which developed from 600 BCE to 1000 CE, and used in literature until about 1500 CE
Medieval Hebrew
literary and liturgical language that temporarily stopped being spoken, from the 2nd century to the 19th century; where the revival of this language in the form of Modern Hebrew has emerged
Navarro-Aragonese
Navarro-Aragonese was a Romance language once spoken in a large part of the Ebro River basin, south of the middle Pyrenees; the dialects of the modern Aragonese language, spoken in a small portion of that territory, can be seen as its last remaining forms. The areas where Navarro-Aragonese was spoken might have included most of Aragon, southern Navarre, and La Rioja. It was also spoken across several towns of central Navarre in a multilingual environment with Occitan, where Basque was the native language.
renaissance Latin
Latin as spoken and written in the Renaissance

Fingalian
Fingallian or the Fingal dialect is an extinct dialect of Middle English formerly spoken in Fingal, Ireland. It is thought to have been an offshoot of Middle English, which was brought to Ireland during the Norman invasion, Although little is known of Fingallian, it is thought to have been similar to the Yola dialect of County Wexford.
Q5128314
common form of the Tibetan language written between the 10th and 12th centuries
Old Polish
extinct West Slavic language
Rouran
extinct Mongolic language of 4th–6th-century Mongolia and northern China
Old Norman
historical language spoken in northern France
Old Catalan
medieval Romance language
Mamluk-Kipchak
Turkic language used during reign of the Mamluks in Egypt and Levant (Mamluk Sultanate) in the 13th-15th centuries
Judaeo-Aragonese
Judaeo-Aragonese (Aragonese: Chodigo-Aragonés) was a Judaeo-Romance language, a Jewish language that was derived from Aragonese. It was used by Spanish Jews in north-central Spain from the mid-8th century to the 1492 Alhambra Decree, which expelled Jews from Spain. Later, it either merged with the various Judaeo-Spanish dialects or fell out of use because of the far more influential Judaeo-Spanish.
Navarrese Romance
romance language of the kingdom of Navarre
Tuyuhun
extinct 5th-century language of northern China
Tuoba
extinct language once spoken in China
Old East Norse
dialect of Old Norse
Middle Scots
West Germanic language of Lowland Scotland (1450–1700)
Eastern Galindian
Dnieper-Oka language
Old Romanian
earliest historical form of Romanian, XVI-XVIII centuries
Dnieper-Oka
extinct Baltic language group
Old Tagalog
earliest form of Tagalog spoken during the pre-colonial times in what is now Central and Southern Luzon
Galwegian Gaelic
extinct dialect of the Gaelic language
Old Burmese
early form of the Burmese language
Early Scots
language of Northern Britain descended from Middle English
Old Riojan
extinct variety of Navarro-Aragonese of medieval La Rioja