Latvia’s cultural map is more than Riga and the seaside — it’s a patchwork of regional identities and speech communities that trace back centuries. In towns and coastal areas you can still see place names, folklore and family histories shaped by languages no longer in everyday use.
There are 6 Indigenous Languages in Latvia, ranging from Curonian, Semigallian (Zemgalian). For each entry you’ll find below concise details organized by Status, Speakers, Region so you can quickly see which are extinct, endangered or still living and where they’re or were spoken; you’ll find these summaries below.
Are any of these languages still used by communities today?
Some survive only in place names and historical records, while a few have small speaker communities or revitalization projects. The Status and Speakers columns below indicate current vitality, and the Region column shows where efforts or remnants are concentrated.
How can I learn more or support preservation efforts?
Start with regional cultural centers, university programs in Baltic studies, and community language courses; many preservation initiatives accept volunteers or donations, and the table below points to regions where local efforts are active.
Indigenous Languages in Latvia
| Language | Status | Speakers | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| Latvian | Living | 1,200,000 | Nationwide, especially Vidzeme, Kurzeme, Latgale, Zemgale |
| Latgalian | Endangered | 150,000 | Latgale (eastern Latvia) |
| Livonian | Dormant | 0 | Livonian Coast (Gulf of Riga), northern Courland |
| Curonian | Extinct | 0 | Courland (Kurzeme) coast, Curonian Spit and hinterland |
| Semigallian (Zemgalian) | Extinct | 0 | Zemgale (central-southern Latvia) |
| Selonian (Selian) | Extinct | 0 | Southeastern Latvia (Selonia) and adjacent Lithuania |
Images and Descriptions

Latvian
Latvian is an Eastern Baltic language native to Latvia, arising from Latgalian and other Baltic dialects. Notable for conservative archaic features among Indo-European languages. It is the state language, spoken by over a million people, central to national identity and modern media.

Latgalian
Latgalian is an Eastern Latvian variety with its own literary tradition, spoken mainly in Latgale. Around 150,000 speakers in Latvia; scholars debate whether it’s a distinct language or a Latvian dialect. It preserves archaic vocabulary and a separate orthography and cultural identity.

Livonian
Livonian is a Finno-Ugric language once spoken by the Livs along Latvia’s Gulf of Riga coast. Native speaker community disappeared in the 20th–21st century; revivalists teach and study it. It is notable for non-Indo-European roots and unique Finnic features.

Curonian
Curonian was a Western Baltic language spoken by the Curonians in western Latvia and the Curonian Spit. It became extinct through assimilation into Latvian and Lithuanian by the late medieval to early modern period; known from place names and fragmentary records.

Semigallian (Zemgalian)
Semigallian (Zemgalian) was an Eastern Baltic tongue of the Semigallian tribe in central-southern Latvia. It died out after medieval assimilation into developing Latvian; surviving traces are toponyms and a few loanwords in regional speech.

Selonian (Selian)
Selonian was an Eastern Baltic language once spoken in southeastern Latvia and neighboring Lithuania. It vanished through assimilation into Latvian and Lithuanian during the Middle Ages; knowledge comes from historical records and place-name evidence.


