Welcome!
Lexiark brings language information into one connected, visual place. It is made for curious readers, language learners, linguistics enthusiasts, and anyone who wants to understand how languages relate to one another.
The site is in active development. Its registry and tools already work together, while the depth of individual entries and geographic coverage will continue to improve.
A connected language reference
At the center of Lexiark is a growing registry of natural and constructed languages, including historical stages and reconstructed proto-languages. The language directory makes every registered entry searchable and gives each language a consistent home on the site.
Language pages bring together a language’s native name, classification, writing system, related languages, notes, and geographic information. Links between entries include their flags, making it easier to follow a language through related and ancestral forms without losing context.
Follow language history
The interactive Language Tree shows how registered languages connect across families and historical stages. It can be searched, dragged, and zoomed, and selecting a language reveals its ancestry. Constructed-language branches can be shown when they are useful.
Language pages link back into the tree with the current language already selected, so readers can move directly from an entry to its wider family context.
See where languages are spoken
The Language Map presents mapped language areas on a borderless world map. Political borders are intentionally omitted because languages frequently cross them. Soft, overlapping areas also allow the map to represent places where several languages are spoken.
Readers can search for a language, filter by language family, display all available areas, or click a location to see the mapped languages spoken there. A smaller version of the map appears on language pages when geographic data is available. Mapping is still incomplete, and new areas will be added as they are prepared.
Articles and writing-system resources
Lexiark Articles provides a consistent place for reference material, project information, and announcements. Article pages support images, links, audio, native video, and YouTube embeds when those formats help explain a topic.
Lexiark also hosts a focused Standard Galactic Alphabet font library where visitors can search, preview, and download community-made fonts. Additional writing-system resources can be added as the project expands.
Built to keep growing
Lexiark is an ongoing independent project, not a finished encyclopedia. Some registered language pages currently contain only foundational information, and not every language has a mapped area yet. Those gaps are shown honestly instead of being hidden.
The long-term goal is a clear, reliable, and enjoyable reference where language pages, history, geography, writing systems, and editorial material reinforce one another. The design and publishing tools are built around consistent templates so new material can be added without making the public site harder to navigate.
If you would like to support continued research, mapping, and development, visit the Support Lexiark page.