What happened The UK government has submitted the Cornish language, Kernewek, for part III status under the European charter for regional or minority languages, placing it on the same legal footing as Welsh, Irish and Scottish Gaelic. The upgrade, the strongest protection available, would require the state to promote the use of Cornish across education, courts, administration, media and cultural life.
Who said what Cornwall Council leader Leigh Frost welcomed the move, calling it “brilliant news” and saying it showed that “Cornish matters”. This is “‘Pur dha’ news for Cornish language speakers”, agreed Samuel Montgomery in The Telegraph. “That’s ‘very good’ in Kernewek,” he explained. It is a “remarkable rise for a language that was once considered dead”, said Lee Trewhela on Cornwall Live.
What next? Cornish has seen a rapid growth in interest, including more than a million online dictionary searches last year, 650 translation requests, annual class enrolments above 200 and nearly 6,000 children learning through Go Cornish. Cornwall Council estimates that 2,000 to 5,000 people now speak basic Cornish. Campaigners hope that the new protections will expand teaching and embed the language more widely. |