Serovitic language

The Serovitic language is a classical language belonging to the Serododaric branch of the Medianic languages. Serovitic was originally spoken from the end of the second millennium BCE in the region known as Serovia, on the eastern side of the Bay of Hawea in modern Adorac. Its usage was standardised under the Serovite Empire, whose influence at its height c. 300 BCE extended across the central part of the Ascesian continent north from Serovia proper as far as the southeast of modern Pemasura. Compounding its prevalence in administration, literature, and poetry, the origins of Bhramavada in this period lent Serovitic additional importance as a language of ritual and liturgical significance, particularly as the language in which Bhramavadic oneiromancy was conducted. Though its usage diminished over the following centuries, Serovitic experienced substantial revivals in the north through the archaising Upasagari literature of the Sabhian Unity from the 11th century, and in the south during the Sharadpuri revival of the 12th century and, from 1249, under the Combination of Dreams. Serovitic was used as the principal language of administration of the Combination through to its fall in 1796, and remains in limited currency as a ritual language in modern Adorac.