Middle Saxon (also called Middle Low German) is the descendant of Old Saxon and is the ancestor of modern Low Saxon. It served as the international lingua franca of the Hanseatic League. It was spoken from about 1100 to 1500.
Traces of the importance of Middle Saxon can be seen by the many loans found in the Scandinavian languages and in the Baltic languages, but also in standard German or in English.
In the late Middle Ages, Middle Saxon lost its prestige to Early Modern High German which the elites began to use first as a written language and later as a spoken language. Reasons for the loss of prestige of Low Saxon were the decline of the Hanseatic League that was followed by political heteronomy of Northern Germany, but also the cultural predominance of Middle and Southern Germany for instance through the Protestant Reformation.
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