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    The formation of Iberian Romance languages followed more or less this process:
      A common Romance language with dialectal differences was spoken throughout the ancient Roman Empire. During this stage, we can speak of the Romance language, although, probably, it was quite different from one region to another. It can still be called Popular or Vulgar Latin.

      From this point on, the Romance languages on the Iberian Peninsula followed a distinct path:

      Separation into Catalan on one side of the peninsula from West Iberian Romance on the other. During this stage a group of Romance dialects collectively known as Mozarabic were spoken in the Moorish areas of Iberia. Catalan is regarded as a transition language between Iberian Romance and Gallo-Romance languages.
      Galician-Portuguese later split into Galician and Portuguese (some linguists still consider them dialects of the same language, although this is controversial).

    It is important to note that power structures enormously influenced the formation of the Iberian languages. If kingdoms and states had formed in a different fashion, there could now be a single Galician-Portuguese language, or a multiplicity of languages. This political aspect was important in the development of every language.

      Portuguese and Galician: Because Portugal became independent in the 12th century and Galicia remained a province of Spain, political and sociolinguistic factors have made them be considered separate languages.
      Spanish: The Castilian Crown pushed for Castilian to be considered the Spanish language, which it is today. However, it did not abolish other languages within Spain.
      Catalán: The political structure and strength of the Crown of Aragon made Catalán a language of culture, science, literature, etc. Its importance diminished for some centuries, but the desire for more autonomy for Catalonia gave it renewed importance (it never ceased to be the language of a majority of the Catalan population up to the 20th century). It is now the official language of three of the four main regions of the Crown of Aragon and of the country of (Andorra). It is also still spoken in other enclaves.
      The fact that Galicia and Catalonia are in Spain makes their languages prone to Castilian influences, especially in large urban centers such as Barcelona in Catalonia and Santiago de Campoestela in Galicia.
      Minor languages, like Astur-Leonese, Aragonese, etc., became regarded as mere dialects by most people, but they are Romance variants with enough distinct features to rank them as separate languages.

    Thus, there are four major Romance languages in Iberia today, and three main groups of minor Romance languages, Astur-Leonese, Aragonese, and Occitan.

      Portuguese originated from a common Galician-Portuguese language, which itself originated from West Iberian Romance, along with Castilian (but not with Catalan), with influences from Mozarabic. It is currently the sixth most widely spoken language in the world, with more than two hundred million speakers.

      Galician originated from the medieval Galician-Portuguese language, which itself originated from West Iberian Romance, along with Castilian (but not with Catalan). It has had a strong influence of Castilian.

      Spanish (also called Castilian) originated from the common West Iberian Romance along with Galician-Portuguese, with some influence from Mozarabic and Basque. It is now spoken by an estimated 392 million people throughout the world.

      Catalán originated from East Iberian Romance, which separated from West Iberian at an early stage in the development of the Iberian Romance languages. Closely related to Occitan, it has many dialects and is spoken by about 7 million people, mostly in four variants: catalán, valencian, balearic catalán and andorran.

    Portuguese, Spanish and Catalán have the status of international languages, being officially spoken in more than one state:
      Catalán: Andorra and Spain (it is also spoken by about 100,000 people in France and members of the older generations of one town in Sardinia, Alghero);
      Portuguese: Portugal, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and East Timor;
      Spanish: many countries throughout the world.

    Occitan is also an international language, as it is official in small regions of Spain and Italy.


        Iberian Romance languages
     
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