Astur CF was created in 1923.
Astur-Leonese dialects are spoken in Spain, in the regions of León, Zamora, and Salamanca
Spanish, officially recognized as Castilian is the official language of the entire country.Basque (Basque country and NavarreCatalan (Catalonia, Balearic Islands, Valencia Community (Valencian)Galician ( Galicia)In Catalonia, Aranese, a local variety of the Occitan language, has been declared co-official along with Catalan and Spanish since 2006. It is spoken only in the comarca of Val d'Aran by roughly 6,700 people. Other Romance minority languages, though not official, have special recognition, such as the Astur-Leonese group (Asturian, also called "Bable" in Asturias[141] and Leonese in Castile and León) and Aragonese in Aragon. (source: Wikipedia-en)In the North African Spanish autonomous city of Melilla, Riff Berber is spoken by a significant part of the population. In the tourist areas of the Mediterranean coast and the islands, English and German are widely spoken by tourists, foreign residents, and tourism workers.(source: Wilipedia-en)Basque (co-official)Catalan,Valencian ( co-official)Galician (co-official)Aranese (co-official)Asturian ) recognizedAragonese (recognized)Leonese (unofficial)Extremaduran (unofficial)Fala (unofficial)
The name Romance Language refers to languages spoken in the Romania, a historic cultural zone in Europe in which Latin and its dialects were spoken during the Roman empire and afterwards. At the time of the empires after the sixteenth century, these languages went global: French is spoken in France, Canada, some Caribbean nations; Spanish is spoken in Spain, Latin America, Africa; the same happens with Portugese, spoken in Portugal, Angola, Brazil, and Mozambique. Irrespective of where these langauges are spoken today, all languages originating in Latin and its dialects are considered Romance Languages. As members of the same family these languages share common morphological and syntactic features. SOME of these languages are Romanian, Italian, Sicilian, Romanic or Rhetic, French, Catalan, Aranés, Occitan, Galego-Portuguese, Spanish, Astur-Leones. In some instances it is difficult to determine whether we are facing a different language or a dialect variation (i.e., Catalan, Valenciano, and Mallorquí are considered the same language by some, but different languages by others).