At 8:47 AM -0500 3/27/02, Alain LaBont�� wrote:

[Alain]  French (with a totally different spelling [and many more 
differences] compared to now: you have to pronounce letters like when 
you read Latin to *begin* to understand even if you're 
French-speaking) and "modern" German (well a form of it, perhaps with 
a remark very similar for reading the text as for French) were 
*officially* born the same day, on the 14th of February, 842 A.D. (is 
it one of the origins of Valentine Day?), in a bilingual peace 
treaty(*) between two grandsons of Charlemagne...


Of course, this assumes that the year 842 and Charlemagne actually 
existed, which turns out to be not nearly as self-evident a 
proposition as it seems at first glance. See, for example, 
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/volatile/Niemitz-1997.pdf or at Google 
in HTML: 
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:8VRf94MWzUgC:www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/volatile/Niemitz-1997.pdf+did+Charlemagne+exist&hl=en
-- 

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