Paduan dialect

Paduan
pavano
Native to Republic of Venice
Region Padua and surrounding areas
EthnicityPaduans
Era14–17th centuries
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

Paduan is an extinct variant of Venetian that was once spoken in the countryside of Padua from about the 14th to the 17th centuries AD.

The present-day Central Venetian dialects, influenced by Venetian proper, retain very few traces of Paduan. However, it played a fundamental role in the flourishing of Paduan literature comprising numerous works with humorous themes, both in verse and prose, composed between the 14th and 17th centuries. The first authors to write in Paduan were Nicolò de' Rossi (1308–1309) and Marsilio da Carrara, but the greatest exponent of this current was Angelo Beolco, better known as Ruzante (16th century), who was followed throughout the 17th century by a series of his imitators. Galileo Galilei also wrote, in whole or in part and under a pseudonym, a pamphlet in Paduan named the Dialogo de Cecco di Ronchitti da Bruzene in perpuosito de la stella Nuova.