For three centuries, Faroese existed only in the mouths of its people — in ballads sung across storm-swept islands, in folktales passed from one generation to the next, in the everyday speech of a community that had no written form of its own language. Then, in 1854 C.E., two scholars handed it back to the page.
What the evidence shows
- Faroese orthography: In 1854 C.E., scholar Venceslaus Ulricus Hammershaimb and Icelandic grammarian Jón Sigurðsson published a written standard for Modern Faroese, rooted in the language’s Old Norse origins and closely modeled on Icelandic spelling conventions.
- Written Faroese: The new standard was designed not to reflect any single dialect but to represent the full range of the language’s regional variation equally — a deliberate act of inclusion across the Faroe Islands’ roughly 120 communities.
- Faroese language revival: The standardization reversed a 300-year gap that began when Danish replaced Faroese in administration and education following the Reformation of the early 16th century, leaving the language alive only in oral tradition.
A language that survived by being spoken
The Faroe Islands sit in the North Atlantic between Norway and Iceland, a chain of 18 islands home to a community that has maintained a distinct language and identity across centuries of Danish rule. When the Reformation swept through Denmark and its territories in the early 1500s C.E., Faroese lost its administrative and religious roles almost entirely.
Danish became the language of church, school, and law. Faroese became the language of everything else.
That distinction might have killed the language. Instead, it pushed it into the one place institutions couldn’t easily reach: oral culture. The Faroese kept their language alive through the kvæði — the chain ballad tradition — and through the rhythms of daily life on the islands. When Hammershaimb began his work in the mid-19th century C.E., he was not rescuing a dying language so much as giving a living one a durable new form.
The choice behind the spelling
The orthography Hammershaimb and Sigurðsson created was etymological rather than phonetic. That is, it was designed to reflect the Old Norse roots of words rather than how those words actually sound today. The letter ð, for instance, carries no specific phoneme in modern spoken Faroese — it is present in the spelling as a marker of origin and kinship.
This was a deliberate philosophical choice, and a contested one. A rival, Jakob Jakobsen, argued for a phonetic spelling system that would reflect actual pronunciation. His system never caught on. The speakers chose the etymological standard — and by doing so, aligned written Faroese visually with Icelandic, its closest surviving relative.
The result was a written language that could be read across dialects. A speaker from the northern islands and one from the south might pronounce the same word quite differently — and both would recognize it on the page.
That breadth was the point. The standard was designed, according to the source record, “to represent the diverse dialects of Faroese in equal measure.” It was an act of linguistic democracy as much as grammar.
Roots older than the islands themselves
The story of Faroese is also the story of movement and mixing. When Norse settlers arrived in the Faroes beginning around 825 C.E., they brought Old West Norse with them — but many were not from mainland Scandinavia. They came from Norse communities already settled around the Irish Sea, and the women who accompanied them often came from Norse-occupied Ireland, the Gaelic Isles, Orkney, and Shetland.
The linguistic fingerprints of that contact are still visible. Words like tarvur (bull), traceable to Middle Irish tarbh, and grúkur (head), linked to Middle Irish gruaig, sit inside a language that is classified as North Germanic. Faroese, from its earliest days, was the product of encounter.
That history matters when thinking about what standardization preserved in 1854 C.E. The written standard didn’t just capture a Norse language. It captured a language shaped by centuries of movement, settlement, and exchange across the North Atlantic world — a reminder that even small, remote communities are rarely as isolated as their geography suggests.
Lasting impact
The 1854 C.E. written standard became the foundation for everything that followed. In 1937 C.E., Faroese replaced Danish as the official school language. By 1938 C.E., it was the church language. In 1948 C.E., the Home Rule Act formally established Faroese as the national language — and that same year, the first complete Faroese Bible translation was finished.
Today, the language is spoken by around 69,000 people, roughly 21,000 of whom live outside the islands, primarily in Denmark. It holds official status and is taught in schools, broadcast on radio and television, and used in local newspapers. What began as a scholarly project to fix spelling has become the backbone of a living national identity.
The Faroese case has become a reference point in language revitalization studies globally. When communities seek to restore written forms of suppressed or endangered languages, the Hammershaimb model — root it in history, reach across dialects, let speakers choose it — offers one proven path.
Blindspots and limits
The etymological orthography that made written Faroese visually consistent also made it harder to learn, particularly for speakers whose dialects had drifted furthest from Old Norse roots. The gap between spelling and pronunciation remains wide enough that foreign learners often find the written and spoken languages feel like two separate systems. And the standardization effort was driven by scholars working within 19th-century C.E. European Romantic nationalist frameworks — frameworks that privileged historical purity over the messier, more hybridized realities of how people actually spoke. Jakobsen’s phonetic alternative was not wrong, just politically outmaneuvered.
The survival of Faroese also depended on decades of institutional effort and political autonomy that many endangered languages around the world have not had access to. The Faroese story is remarkable — and not easily replicated. UNESCO estimates that roughly half of the world’s 7,000 languages are at risk of disappearing by the end of the century.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Faroese language
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure land rights over 160 million hectares
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on language
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