Constantinople has been ka Istanbul, the capital of Turkey, since 1939. Turkish is the language that's spoken there. But many people know English. Ethnic groups of considerable size add other languages to the list of those commonly spoken in Turkey: Arabic, Armenian, Greek, and Kurdish.
The first language (4th century AD) was Latin from Rome, but around 620 AD, this was changed to Greek under the rule of the emperor Heraclius.
Constantinople is now Istanbul, in Turkey, they speak Turkish.
Started as Latin, later became Greek
Greek
Greek
The Roman empire had one official language and that was Latin. However the well educated spoke Greek because the Greek language was the lingua franca of the diplomatic world. For example, an envoy from Parthia may not be fluent in Latin, but he could speak Greek and would use that language to converse with a Roman senator who did not speak Parthian.
The eastern part of the Roman Empire had a variety of language as different conquered people had different languages. Some of them were Egyptian, Yiddish, Syriac, Armenian, Thracian, Dacian and Illyrian. Aramaic was a lingua franca in the Asian Middle East. The elites spoke Greek because the Greeks ruled the eastern Mediterranean (Pergamon in western Turkey, the Seleucid Empire in the Asian Middle east and the Ptolemaic kingdom in Egypt)prior to the Romans and Greek was the language used in the Greek/Eastern Church (which later came to be called Orthodox Church). Latin was the imperial language because the Romans spoke Latin. After the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire Greek became the official language of the eastern part. Historians have coined the term Byzantine Empire to indicate the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part. The Romans did not use this term, they called it Roman Empire or Romania (this referred to this empire and not the country which was later called Romania). The term Byzantine is derived from Byzantium, the Greek city which was redeveloped, turned into the imperial capital of the eastern part of the Roman Empire and renamed Constantinople by the emperor Constantine the Great in 330. It is used to indicate the fact that not long after the fall of the west, this empire became centred on Greece and Greek in character after it lost most of its non-Greek territories. Greek replaced Latin as the official language of this empire in 620, some 150 years after the fall of the west.
"Well, if Italians speak Italian and Greeks speak Greek, then ancient Romans spoke Roman!" Uhhm...not quite. I have no idea what the ancient Romans called their language, but we now call it Latin, not Roman.
Sasha is short for Alexander in Slavonic languages. It was not around in the Roman times. Moreover, the Romans did not speak Roman. They were Latins and spoke Latin. Sasha's spelling in Latin is uncertain
The language spoken by the Romans was Latin.Answer:Initially Latin was the main written and spoken language of the Roman Empire, but Greek came to be the language spoken by well-educated (elite) Romans. This was due to an influx of Greek slaves as teachers and the easier availability of literature written in Greek.In the eastern Roman Empire (later the Byzantine Empire) Latin never replaced Greek as a spoken language. Greek became the official language of this area after the death of Justinian.
The Roman empire had one official language and that was Latin. However the well educated spoke Greek because the Greek language was the lingua franca of the diplomatic world. For example, an envoy from Parthia may not be fluent in Latin, but he could speak Greek and would use that language to converse with a Roman senator who did not speak Parthian.
no
Of course Arabic.
No, the Romans did not speak French. The Romans spoke Latin, which was the official language of the Roman Empire. French is a Romance language that developed from Latin over time.
mostly Latin
The people of Herculaneum spoke a form of Latin known as Vulgar Latin, which was the common spoken language of the Roman Empire.
Cleopatra learned the Roman language, specifically Latin, to communicate with her Roman contemporaries, build alliances with Roman leaders, and navigate the political intricacies of the Roman Empire, which were crucial for maintaining her power and influence as the ruler of Egypt.
Saint Cecilia is believed to have spoken Latin, as she lived in Rome during the 2nd century AD when Latin was the primary language of the Roman Empire.
An empire is a great nation, so to speak, and it controls itself. Italy is the country that once WAS the roman empire, as the capitol of the empire lies in there, if that is what you meant.
The people in the empire predominantly speak Empirean, which is the official language of the empire. This language is used for communication in government, education, and other formal settings. There may be regional dialects or minority languages spoken in specific areas.
The eastern part of the Roman Empire had a variety of language as different conquered people had different languages. Some of them were Egyptian, Yiddish, Syriac, Armenian, Thracian, Dacian and Illyrian. Aramaic was a lingua franca in the Asian Middle East. The elites spoke Greek because the Greeks ruled the eastern Mediterranean (Pergamon in western Turkey, the Seleucid Empire in the Asian Middle east and the Ptolemaic kingdom in Egypt)prior to the Romans and Greek was the language used in the Greek/Eastern Church (which later came to be called Orthodox Church). Latin was the imperial language because the Romans spoke Latin. After the fall of the western part of the Roman Empire Greek became the official language of the eastern part. Historians have coined the term Byzantine Empire to indicate the eastern part of the Roman Empire after the fall of the western part. The Romans did not use this term, they called it Roman Empire or Romania (this referred to this empire and not the country which was later called Romania). The term Byzantine is derived from Byzantium, the Greek city which was redeveloped, turned into the imperial capital of the eastern part of the Roman Empire and renamed Constantinople by the emperor Constantine the Great in 330. It is used to indicate the fact that not long after the fall of the west, this empire became centred on Greece and Greek in character after it lost most of its non-Greek territories. Greek replaced Latin as the official language of this empire in 620, some 150 years after the fall of the west.
Most likely Latin.