| Banaban | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Kiribati |
| Region | Banaba |
| Extinct | after 1890s |
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
Astronaut photo of Banaba | |
Banaban was a little-attested extinct Micronesian language previously spoken on the island of Banaba.
Banaban was spoken by the Banaban people prior to the arrival of Captain Walkup of the American Mission Society in the 1890s. His attempts to promote Kiribati as oppose to Banaban because there existed a Kiribati translation of the Bible resulted in Banaban being replaced by Kiribati on the island.[1][2] The Banaban people now speak a dialect of Kiribati with some words from the original Banaban language, according to Ethnologue.[3]
It was mutually unintelligible with Kiribati.
Remnants
Little sample texts remain from Banaban. The most notable possible remnant is a transcription of a lullaby from the Dalton Family collection, possibly written in Banaban according to Banaban Elders.
Te Karanga, also called the stick dance, is a Banaban war dance. The traditional chants from this dance, which is still practiced, use Banaban words.[4]
References
- ^ "Banaban Lost Language"K. Sigrah, Stacey M. King, Banaban Voice, 2001
- ^ "Navigating the complexities of identity as a Banaban"Hele Christopher-Ikimotu, Pasifika Medical Association Group, July 13, 2023
- ^ https://www.ethnologue.com/language/gil/
- ^ "IMPORTANCE OF BANABAN DANCE TO PRESERVE HISTORY"Stacy M. King, History, February, 2025
Further reading
- Te Rii ni Banaba:backbone of Banaba (2019), Stacey M. King & Raobeia Ken Sigrah