Lojban timeline

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See also: Loglan

Loglan prehistory

Seventeenth Century

1652

  • Francis Lodwick publishes The Groundwork or Foundation laid (or So Intended) for the Framing of a New Perfect Language and a Universal Common Writing, a follow-up to his 1647 book, A Common Writing, and one of the first elaborated proposals for an a priori or "philosophical" language. Lodwick's efforts influenced the work of fellow Royal Society member, John Wilkins.

1660

  • La Grammaire générale et raisonnée de Port-Royal ("The General and Rational Grammar of Port-Royal") is published by Antoine Arnauld and Claude Lancelot. It proposes a notion of universal grammar shared by all languages and determined by the nature of rational thought as exemplified by term logic. In 1662, it was followed by La Logique ou l'art de penser ("Logic, or the Art of Thinking") by Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole.

1676

  • May: German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz proposes a "characteristica universalis", described as an "alphabet of human thought" that would span domains including science and metaphysics, the expressions of which could be evaluated like mathematical formulae.

Eighteenth Century

1798

  • An unfinished work by Étienne Bonnot, abbé de Condillac is published posthumously: La langue des calculs ("The language of calculus"), wherein the author proposes the design of a language, inspired by algebra, in order to recover the sciences from "the chaos into which the abuses and vices of language" had submerged them.

Nineteenth Century

1827

  • Botanist George Bentham coins the term "quantifier" in his Outline of a new system of logic. The use of that term in logic, along with "quantify" and "quantification" would later be clarified and popularized by Scottish philosopher William Hamilton and British mathematician Augustus De Morgan, who feuded over priority.

1854

1860

  • British mathematician Augustus De Morgan's Syllabus of a Proposed System of Logic is published. Together with Formal Logic (1847), this book helped to define mathematical logic and introduced De Morgan's Laws. De Morgan also explored the distinction between distributive ("exemplar") and collective ("cumular") predicates.

1879

  • German philosopher and mathematician Gottlob Frege publishes Begriffsschrift ("Concept-script"), a book which expands on Leibniz's project to create a "lingua characterica", expressing "content through written signs in a more precise and clear way than it is possible to do through words."
  • Johann Schleyer introduces Volapük, a constructed language which drew vocabulary and structure from German, French, and English. It attracted adherents for a decade before a schism broke out between Schleyer and Auguste Kerckhoffs, a popularizer of the language who headed the International Academy of Volapük and published a journal, Le Volapük. Schleyer's rejection of Kerckhoffs' reforms and desire to maintain control of the language culminated in the dismissal of the Academy. Volapük lost momentum, and speakers drifted to other international auxiliary languages, especially Esperanto.

1887

1892

  • Frege publishes Sense and Reference, a paper introducing a conceptual distinction between what he called "sense" ("Sinn") and "reference" ("Bedeutung") in linguistic expression. Frege argued that a proposition refers to its truth value, and that a proposition with terms that have no reference (i.e. "empty names") cannot itself have a reference, i.e. cannot be considered true or false.

Twentieth Century

1923

  • The Meaning of Meaning: A Study of the Influence of Language upon Thought and of the Science of Symbolism by C. K. Ogden and I. A. Richards is published, drawing the sustained attention of Prussian-American anthropologist and linguist Edward Sapir. JCB said that this book provided "one of the cornerstones on which to rest the structure of primitives in Loglan." More specifically, he attributes the separation of the "cognitive" and the "emotive" components of meaning facilitated by attitudinals to this work. The book included a supplemental essay by anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski, The Problem of Meaning in Primitive Languages, in which he discussed challenges of interpreting the language of the Trobrianders given the fusion of cultural assumptions and grammatical notions.

1932

  • C. K. Ogden publishes The Basic Words, an 850-entry dictionary for his auxlang, Basic English. JCB cited this book in the bibliography of Loglan 1 and it may have influenced the size of the set of original Loglan composite primitives, which is given as 860.

1934

  • German-American philosopher Rudolf Carnap publishes The Logical Syntax of Language, proposing a formalization of the rules which govern the syntax of language, setting aside the reference of the symbols which comprise language. He suggested that a syntactic approach to logical consequence could replace philosophy, at least in its metaphysical vein, with "the logical analysis of the concepts and sentences of the sciences." JCB wrote that "Carnap's view of the possibility of logical languages" shaped his own. Carnap, incidentally, was an enthusiastic proponent of Esperanto, having attended several World Congresses after learning to speak the language as a teenager.

1935

  • American linguist George Zipf publishes The Psychobiology of Language: An Introduction to Dynamic Philology, wherein he observed, "It seems reasonably clear that shorter words are distinctly more favoured in language than longer words." This observation evolved into what became known as "Zipf's Law".

1937

  • Analytic Syntax by Danish linguist Otto Jespersen introduces a formalism to represent the grammatical structures of natural language. This book convinced JCB that "a human grammar could be written in the predicate calculus." Brown writes that a 1956 specification of Loglan resulted from his efforts to render Jespersen's catalog of "grammatical curiosities" from that book into the predicate calculus. Jespersen was the creator of the auxlang Novial, which he had introduced nine years earlier in An International Language.

1938

  • American philosopher and semiotician Charles W. Morris publishes Foundations of the Theory of Signs, which introduced the analysis of the study of the use of symbols into syntactics ("relations of signs to one another"), semantics ("relations of signs to the objects to which the signs are applicable"), and pragmatics ("the relation of signs to interpreters"). This division would later take hold in linguistics and philosophy of language. JCB credited Morris' work as contributing to Loglan's semantics, especially in so far as it analyzed the language act into "predication" and "designation".

1940

  • Culminating more than ten years of work, Helen S. Eaton, Linguistic Research Associate at the International Auxiliary Language Association (IALA, founded in 1924 to conduct neutral research on auxiliary languages) publishes Semantic Frequency List for English, French, German and Spanish: A Correlation of the First Six Thousand Words in Four Single-Language Frequency Lists. In her time at the association, Eaton worked with Edward Sapir, who helped IALA co-founder Alice Vanderbilt Morris to develop a research program. Sapir served as director of the program from 1930-1931. Otto Jespersen sat on the advisory board.

1941

  • Language, culture and personality: Essays in memory of Edward Sapir is published, including an article written in 1939 by American linguist Benjamin Whorf, The Relation of Habitual Thought And Behavior to Language. Whorf, a student of Edward Sapir (who died in 1939), coined the term "Standard Average European" (SAE) to call attention to similarities in the structure of European languages, and proposed that linguistic habits implicit in the structures of these and other languages condition the understanding of concepts such as "space", "time," "matter", and "number", and influence the cultural and behavioral norms of the communities that speak them. Loglan 1 is dedicated to Whorf.

1947

  • Philosopher Hans Reichenbach publishes Elements of Symbolic Logic, a formalization of the logical structures of natural languages, drawing on the author's familiarity with German, English, French, and Turkish.

1951

  • American linguist Zellig Harris publishes Methods in Structural Linguistics, outlining a definitive approach to descriptive linguistics using the "distributional" methods advanced by Leonard Bloomfield (whom Harris had studied under) and Edward Sapir. JCB wrote that Harris' work provided "the descriptive machinery which was to serve as a test of the structural completeness of the language."
  • American mathematician Alonzo Church, who in a 1936 paper had invented lambda calculus, published A formulation of the logic of sense and denotation: A paper developing Frege's notion of "sense" into what Church called a "concept". Church's intensional calculus provided a basis for later developments intensional semantics.

1952

  • In Discourse Analysis (included in the L1 bibliography), Zellig Harris applied the mathematical notion of a transformation to linguistics, setting the stage for generative grammar as developed by his student, Noam Chomsky.

1953

  • March: Harry Hoijer, an American anthropologist and linguist who had been a friend of Whorf (who died in 1941) and a student of Sapir, coins the term "Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis" in a paper bearing that name and presented at Language in Culture: Conference on the Interrelations of Language and Other Aspects of Culture, a conference sponsored by the Department of Anthropology of the University of Chicago.

Loglan and related developments (1955-1987)

1955-1959: Before Scientific American

  • The details of the progression here are hazy, but this period most of the basic guidelines of the language were developed as well as some of the details:
    • The shape of predicates, names, and little words, little word vocabulary and some predicate vocabulary were developed.
    • Speech stream uniquely segmented into words, word stream uniquely parsed into sentences (from the language of logic).
    • Metaphysically neutral (for the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis).
    • Grammatically simple, for easy learning (practical).
    • Vocabulary derived from major languages for easy learning (practical)
    • The technique for deriving predicates was also at least outlined and some predicates derived by hand.

1955

  • James Cooke Brown invented the board game Careers, which was marketed by Milton Bradley Co. and eventually provided Brown with a decent living, independent of the usual academic jobs.
  • Brown, Assistant Professor of Sociology at University of Florida, Gainesville, begins developing Loglan in order to test the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis. Brown, a social psychologist with a degree from U/Minnesota, was well trained by second generation Logical Positivists (e.g. May Brodbeck) and so thought to use something like a logically perfect language, that is the First Order Predicate Logic, for the test.

1956

  • September: American linguist Noam Chomsky publishes Three models for the description of language, a paper which introduced the "Chomsky hierarchy" of formal grammars, including context-free grammars. Together with his book Sytactic Structures, completed in August 1956 but published in February 1957, Chomsky invented transformational generational grammar, drawing on Carnap's formalization of language in its purely syntactic aspect. Syntactic Structures introduced the syntactically-correct but semantically-impossible sentence, "Colorless green ideas sleep furiously."
  • Arithmetical extensions of relational systems, a paper published by Alfred Tarski and Robert L. Vaught, develops Tarski's semantic theory of truth, which had been formulated in the 1930s, into model-theoretic semantics.

1958

  • Mathematician Hans Freudenthal introduces "Lincos", a language he had begun designing "for communication with rational beings who do not know any of the languages of our planet" in Lincos: Towards a Cosmic Language, an article published in the Summer 1958 issue of Delta – A Review of Arts, Life and Thought in the Netherlands. "Designing a cosmic language has been made much easier by the work of the modern logisticians," he wrote. "The skeleton of the structure–the syntax–is ready. It is now the task of the workmen to pour the concrete and to lay the bricks–that is to say to create a vocabulary."

1959

  • June: Computer scientist John Backus presents The Syntax and Semantics of the Proposed International Algebraic Language of Zürich ACM-GAMM Conference at the International Conference on Information Processing, UNESCO. Backus, who served on the committee that created the programming language ALGOL 58, developed a notation, Backus-Naur Form (BNF) for context-free grammars to describe the syntax of the language.

1960-1961: Scientific American and NIMH grant

  • There was apparently a group of people around Brown who worked on the language: learning it, using it, discussing it and revisions. It is not clear who all was involved, though some names have turned up in various contexts. For them, at some time, was written the first draft of Loglan 1 (L1), the general description of the language. Also during this time or shortly thereafter a longer version of L1, the only finished versions of L2, the explanation of the language, and L3 a (very restricted) primer were written and “published” by University Microfilms.

1960

  • Philosopher Willard Van Orman Quine publishes Word and Object. JCB later describes this as "an epochal event in the development of Loglan". It would also become the second book listed (after Loglan 1) in the informal bibliography of The Complete Lojban Language.
  • June: Loglan "goes public" for the first time as James Cooke Brown publishes an eponymous article describing Loglan in Scientific American Volume 202, Number 6. The article presents Loglan in the context of Gottlob Leibniz's project to extend the rational powers of humankind through the development of a language of "universal symboloism" as well as the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.
  • There was a flurry of responses to this article from a range of people: linguists, philosophers, logicians, artificial language buffs. The mail was largely unanswered, though a few letters, e.g. from Quine, were saved for later use. A later examination of those letters shows that many people who later played some role in Loglan were already inquiring about it (John Clifford sent from RAND Corp. asking about the use of Loglan as an intermediate language in machine translation, for example).
  • Hans Freudenthal publishes Lincos: Design of a Language for Cosmic Intercourse, expanding on his 1958 introduction of Lincos.

1961

  • JCB gets small grant for developing Loglan materials from the United States National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH grant M-4980), which then funded linguistics research. The grant covered the computer time to develop the primitive predicates according to his algorithm (with some handwork at the end). This resulted in the first edition of Loglan 4 & 5, the dictionaries between Loglan and English, work done with his wife Lujoye Fuller Brown.

1962-1975: Loglan 1, editions 1-3

  • A dark period. Brown’s (second?) marriage ended in divorce and he fled with his infant daughter (?) to Europe, first England and eventually Ibiza. Apparently various people managed to track him down in these places and discuss Loglan with him. He worked on it some, eventually producing the (third edition of) L1 and getting it published just prior to his return to the US.
  • In the US before his return (exact date unclear) some friends of Brown set up an organization, The Loglan Institute, to deal with Loglan related matters. This was not a non-profit organization and was, in fact, a DBA for Brown, though his friends were listed as officers of the organization. (I am unsure whether the organization was even incorporated at that time.)

1963

  • The first Loglan dictionaries are compiled, evaluating the established set of primitives against Helen S. Eaton's 1940 "English-French-German-Spanish Word Frequency Dictionary" and compiling new "compound primitives" and "complex predicates" as needed. The resulting expanded word list was referred to as the "Eaton Interface".
  • American philosopher Saul Kripke publishes several papers on modal logic, drawing on Tarski to develop a model-theoretic approach to possible world semantics which became known as Kripke semantics. Kripke's work is a milestone in the formalization of intensional semantics.

1964

  • Loglan is mentioned by name in Robert Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress but there are no samples, indeed no evidence that Heinlein knew anything about it other than the name.

1965

  • Date of First Edition of Loglan 3: Speaking Loglan, subtitled "Programmed textbook on the phonology, basic vocabulary, and grammar of the simple Loglan sentence".

1966

  • First Edition of Loglan 1 is published as a "preprint" edition for limited circulation among reviewers.

1968

1969

  • June: Linguist Arnold M. Zwicky reviews Loglan 1 in Language Volume 45, Number 2.
  • Second Edition of Loglan 1 is published in microfilm.

1970

  • Loglan 2: Methods of Construction is published.
  • Date of Second Edition of Loglan 3.
  • JCB publishes The Troika Incident, which Lyman Sargeant called the best utopian novel of the period. In it Loglan is talked about under the name Panlan, but the samples, e.g. ai mi betgo, are recognizable as the Loglan of the period. The novel also contains a description of another of JCB’s projects, the Jobs Market (seen by some as a practical application of Careers), on which he worked for many years.

1972

  • Spring: The first Loglan users group ("Loglan Sogrun") meets at JCB's lake house in Gainesville Florida. Members include Vivian Adkins, James A. Bush, Rush Elkins, J. Michael Gilmer, Tad Hanna, Carolyn Marshall, Michael Pique, Stephen Simmons, Frances Stein and G. Thomas Wells.

1973

  • Richard Montague's The Proper Treatment of Quantification in Ordinary English (PTQ) is postthumously published. PTQ builds on papers published in 1970 to provide a formalization of English semantics using a possible-worlds model-theoretic approach which builds on the work of Tarski and Kripke. A notable passage from PTQ describes the ambiguity of "John seeks a unicorn" as consisting of a de dicto ("nonreferential") and de re ("referential") reading. This would be raised twenty years later in discussions of sisku and opacity on the lojban mailing list, and also popularize the philosophical sport of "unicorn hunting".

1975

  • Loglan "goes public again" with the release of the Third Edition of Loglan 1, as well as the Second Edition of Loglan 4 & 5. These publications were announced with fanfare ("Loglan is FINALLY ready!") in ads that ran in the August 1975 issue of Scientific American and in a December issue of Computerworld. The addresses given for the orders was not quite correct and so there was some delay in shipping.
  • In the fall of 1975, Brown visited John Parks-Clifford in St. Louis (a letter had gotten through to him and he had replied, with a dialog ensuing). In the course of the visit or soon thereafter, John was asked to edit a journal of Loglan and accepted.
  • Stephen C. Johnson of Bell Labs publishes YACC: Yet Another Compiler-Compiler documenting his parser generator, YACC.
  • Paul Grice introduces the "cooperative principle" in Logic and conversation, building upon the concept of "implicature" (developed in 1961) to describe how participants in a conversation negotiate meaning.

1976-1981: Loglan's "Years of Invention"

  • JCB referred to the period from 1976-1981 as the "Years of Invention".
  • Along with the discussion of the issues there developed of course people who held different opinions about how things should be done from those that were the official choice. For the most part this was confined to constantly raising the issues, though at least one regular discussant also set up his own alternate language (not directly in competition with Loglan, however).
  • Three larger issues had come in for discussion and had moved JCB into action during this period: unambiguous grammar, creating compound words, and the organization of The Institute. The grammar had always been said to be unambiguous, but that claimed had never been proven and the first few attempts to prove it showed it not to be true as matters stood. This was partly due to the fact that the grammar given was not well formalized beyond the pieces that were directly borrowed from the (demonstrably unambiguous) grammar of the language of logic. JCB, guided by Jeff Prothero and others, set about to write a formal grammar. The target was to get a parser by using YACC, since that would guarantee the language was LALR1 and so (from other considerations) unambiguous. This project continued for several years, with various successes being announced along the way but each failing to be a complete grammar.
  • The issue of compound predicates, built up from the primitive predicates of the language became pressing as more text was developed and new words were needed. Loglan 1 had left the method of forming such words up in the air and, as a result, several techniques had been used, mainly just ramming (what were taken to be significant or easily identifiable) parts of two (or more) primitives together in a way that seemed likely to be recognizable. So, in the example above, betgo for an English speaker in the context of use pretty clearly means, “go to bed” and is derived from betpu, “bed,” and gotso, “go.” Other cases – particularly those by speakers of languages other than English – were less clear to the usual audience. And some cases were just perverse: the Jenny method, for example. And people were also coining words from non-Loglan sources but also fitting as closely as possible into the CVCCV and CCVCV formats. JCB became convinced that this could not continue and so reworked the whole morphology of the predicates, giving many of them special reduced forms to be used in constructing compounds and insisting that all compounds be made using these forms where possible and full forms where not. This project took a while, being announced finally in 1983.

1976

  • August - The Loglanist first published. The first issue of bore the nominal date of 1976 (when the editing was mostly done) but actually appeared early the next year. The first issue was largely pc and Brown though there were already some reader- supplied pieces, with responses from JCB and pc. In The Loglanist there was a considerable amount of discussion of a sort (and indeed on topics) that are familiar from the Lojban List and wiki of the present. In some cases these convinced JCB to make changes in the language, mainly adding new words or, in one case, a new letter, h, and then reconstruct a few words as a result. There were also a number of translations of short passages. The changes were summed up in a special issue of The Loglanist in the fall of 1980.

1977

  • The United States National Science Foundation (NSF) rejects a research grant proposal to use Loglan to test the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.
  • First partial machine grammar of Loglan using YACC by Doug Landauer.
  • An apprenticeship program where four subjects lived with JCB while receiving Loglan tutoring from him results in the first extended Loglan "conversation" (mostly pauses while people looked up words). The apprentices were Robert K. Jenner, Patrick Mears, Scott Layson, and John Parks-Clifford.
  • Anthropologist Conrad Arensberg, who is reading Loglan 1 writes Quine about it. Quine, replying, writes, "I am impressed with Loglan. Linguistically, logically, and philosophically it is very sophisticated." Quine forwarded his letter to JCB. An excerpt appears on the back cover of the Fourth Edition (1989) of L1.

1979

  • JCB wanted to make the Institute tax-exempt and most of the participants in the Loglanist wanted it to be a membership organization. In 1979, then, the Institute was reorganized as a membership organization and tax-exempt status as a research organization was applied for. Once the Institute became a membership organization, the board urged JCB to copyright (or whatever turned out to be the appropriate protection) the material: name, lists, examples and so on. He refused to do so at the time (though he did eventually do a part of it).
  • Nora Tansky (now Nora LeChevalier) becomes first "member" of TLI. By 1981, there were several members and TLI became nominally a "member-controlled corporation".
  • Great Morphological Revolution work starts. Completed in 1982

1980

  • The first election by the members of the board of The Loglan Institute was held in 1980, JCB still as President but the rest of the board being drawn from the members.
  • Gathering of New England Loglanists with JCB visiting - this was the first Logfest. During this period interested people met in informal Logfests, at various places in New England, usually in July (pc was in Maine for estivation, Jenner and several other participants lived in ME, MA or close enough). Some proposals, both about the language and about the Institute arose from these meetings.

1981

  • The Loglanist was slow to appear usually and so a new publication, Lognet was started as a communications vehicle for the membership of TLI, carrying intermediate news, including social events, personal information, and business of the Institute that needed membership input. It soon came to also include some discussion of issues.

1982-1985: Political turmoil after the Great Morphological Revolution

1982

  • In 1982, for the second TLI election, JCB stepped down as President but took the office, Chairman of the Board – ultimate control but freedom from day-to-day matters; pc was President.
  • By 1982, JCB's "engineering interventions" have resulted in the "temporary dismantling" of Loglan, with usage coming to a "near halt", as JCB noted in the foreword to 1989's Fourth Edition of Loglan 1.
  • First "complete" machine grammar of Loglan completed by Scott Layson after significant contributions from Jeff Prothero
  • Jim Carter publishes "la metflidjimao vedsia" ("The Welding Shop"), the first original short story in Loglan.
  • Suzette Haden Elgin begins the construction of Láadan, building a vocabulary based on the Swadesh list and publishing an original story written in the language in the fall issue of Women and Language News. Láadan would later lend its evidentials to Lojban.

1983

  • JCB turned to completing the Great Morphological Revolution – already pretty much done – of getting all primitives equipped with affixes to build compound word and of fixing the form for such compounds as well as some rules about borrowings.
  • Dissent within the TLI membership over GMR and other technical issues causes JCB to reassert full control of TLI
  • Jim Carter publishes several variant Loglan materials independently of TLI; this work is labeled Nalgol by pc because "it got everything in Loglan backwards". Debates over Carter's work turn JCB's reassertion of control into a major political fight. Most active Loglanists beome inactive over the next year, and The Loglanist ceases publication.

1984

  • The third TLI election was 1984. For whatever reasons (apparent loss of control?) JCB decided to return to a Board of cronies, but was late in getting his slate out and did not inform the rest of the board that he was preparing one. The board cobbled together a slate drawn entirely from members and presented it simultaneously with JCB presenting his slate. JCB persuaded the membership slate to withdraw and declared that the slate had been presented too late under the bylaws. His slate was elected. He then attacked the people who had put together the other slate in a variety of ways (though never actually accusing them of betrayal). They quit the organization.
  • Loglan 3 is reissued via University Microfilms.

Lojban (1986-1997): From the fork to CLL

1986-1993: LLG's foundation, Lojban's legal defense

Lojban is forked from Loglan. The Logical Language Group (LLG) is formed. The mailing list is founded. Sixteen issues of "ju'i lobypli" are published. The Great Rafsi Reallocation. Loglan's trademark is canceled.

1986

  • Sometime around 1986, Robert LeChevalier came to aid JCB with computer related projects, tidying up the YACC grammar and computerizing the very haphazard membership and book-order files of the Institute. When LeChevalier moved to the Washington DC area, he took some of the membership data with him to continue trying to bring some order out of it. In Washington LeChevalier started a local Loglan group, which produced some discussion, and eventually a newsletter, which was sent to all the Loglanists in LeChevalier’s database (The Loglanist was still being published with a new editor and joined with the old Institute newsletter to offer a more regular – though less meaty – periodical).
  • July - me la uacintyn loglytuan (the future ju'i lobypli) #1 published as an attempt to create a Washington DC area Loglan Users group and reactivate the membership. The concept of the "baseline" is introduced.
  • August - me la uacintyn loglytuan #2 published.
  • September - Joel Shprentz creates a Loglan area on a BBS, with downloadable Logflash and Loglan wordlists. Bob LeChevalier restarts the annual gathering of Loglanists at Logfest. JCB perceives lojbab's efforts as an attempt to take over TLI, threatening legal action when lojbab refuses JCB's authority and TLI claims of ownership of his and Nora's work, particularly Logflash, a computerized version of lojbab's flashcard routine which had been created by Nora Tansky and never given to the Institute. JCB sought legal protection for all of the elements of the language: the YACC grammar, the whole vocabulary and many of the other programs which were used. Though the members of the Washington group were for the most part also member of the Institute, JCB took the position that the group was unauthorized and was trespassing on Institute business (though the Institute had no other local groups, even in San Diego). He further held that mere membership in the Institute did not entitle a person to make use Loglan material – all under copyright – and so even citing Loglan words was forbidden as were definitely writing Loglan sentences or citing bits of the grammar.
  • September 12-14 - Eight loglanists, including lojbab, Nora, Art Wiener and Jack Waugh attend LogFest 3, which had been announced in Me la Uacintyn Loglytuan #2, and was later reported in Hoi loglypli #3. Loglan notebook #3 (NB3) was reviewed and computer speech generation programs were tested.
  • October - Bob LeChevalier meets John Clifford during a business trip to St. Louis.

1987

  • In response to JCB's hostility as well as the accumulated suggested additions and “corrections” to the Institute’s language, the Washington group – with some remote adherents – decided to create a new version of Loglan from scratch. The outlines were thrashed out in a series of Logfests at LeChevalier’s house in Fairfax VA; the details – the derivation of new primitives from a revised list of the most widely used languages, the reorganization of the phonology and morphology, the revision of the grammar were done by LeChevalier and John Cowan with a variety of helpers in one area and another. The result was launched in 1987 as “Lojban, a realization of Loglan.”
  • March - Bob LeChevalier offers a loglan class in Washington, D.C.
  • April - "me la uacintyn loglytuan" became "hoi loglypli" with the publication of issue #3.
  • May - on Memorial Day weekend, Lojban (then called Loglan-88) is started by Bob LeChevalier, Nora LeChevalier (still Tansky at that point), Gary Burgess, and Tommy Whitlock. At this point, it is intended merely as an alternative gismu list and phonology to evade copyright claims by JCB.
  • June - The process of gismu creation begins.
  • July - The Logical Language Group founded.
  • August 1 - "Lojban - A Realization of Loglan" adopted as the name of the language at LogFest 4.
  • October 23 - lojbab and Nora married in a ceremony with vows in primitive Lojban.
  • December - initial gismu list completed

1988

  • January - Lojban publicly announced as Loglan-88 at Evecon science fiction convention
  • February - "hoi loglypli" became ju'i lobypli with the publication of issue #4.
  • February - JCB registers trademark for Loglan, threatens to sue lojbab and Nora. The Logical Language Group sues for cancellation of the trademark a year later after negotiations have failed.
  • May - Issue #5 of "ju'i lobypli" is published. The Logical Language Group incorporated as a non-profit organization.
  • May 10 - lojban mentioned in NL-KR (Natural Language and Knowledge Representation) mailing list.
  • June - Attendees at an organizational meeting vote to incorporate LLG, approving a draft set of Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, and registering a determination to seek 501(c)(3) status. Work on Lojban machine grammar starts.
  • August - Issue #6 of "ju'i lobypli" is published. It includes "A Long Walk on a Short Whorf" essay by Don Simpson which argued for the introduction of observationals and evidentials (such as used in Láadan) into lojban.
  • October - earliest complete cmavo list and machine grammar; Grammar Synopsis written for review intending eventual publication. After severe criticism (e.g. from Dave Cortesi, who said it didn't work as a tutorial), shelved in favor of a textbook and dictionary as higher priorities. The Complete Lojban Language by John Cowan (1997) was the completion of the Grammar Synopsis.
  • 25 October - lojban mentioned in "comp.lang.misc" usenet news group.
  • 3 November - LLG formally incorporated in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
  • November-December - Issue #7 of "ju'i lobypli" is published.

1989

1990

  • March - Issue #11 of "ju'i lobypli" is published.
  • May - Issue #12 of "ju'i lobypli" is published.
  • May 9 - Jeff Prothero submits his article Design and Implementation of a Near-optimal Loglan Syntax.
  • May 12 - Mark Shoulson and Jerry Altzman announce the "Planned Language Server", a file server by email, which becomes an important and early repository for Lojban materials.
  • May 22 - A posting to the sci.lang Usenet newsgroup on various readings of "John seeks a bike or a fish" draws the attention of John Cowan. Lojbab has described this as when lojban first began to confront the problem of opacity. Four years later, la xorxes would raise similar issues on the mailing list about a "a box or a bag".
  • June 15-18 - Logfest draws about 18 attendees. Athelstan introduces the "mini-lesson".
  • June 17 - Second annual members meeting of LLG. A preliminary grammar baseline is approved. "Amicable Settlement Offer" from James Cooke Browne which would require handover of mailing list is rejected.
  • August - Issue #13 of "ju'i lobypli" (and lojbo karni #13) published, including preliminary grammar baseline and machine grammar.

1991

  • Beginning of the 'Tweeners generation of Lojbanists, and of substantial growth of community online.
  • February 4 - Loglan trademark cancelled. The Loglan Institute appeals.
  • February 27 - lojbab posts sample gismu etymologies to "sci.lang" usenet newsgroup, later summarized in ju'i lobypli #14.
  • March - Issue #14 of "ju'i lobypli" published. Guy Garnett's design is announced as having received the most votes and is adopted as The Lojban Logo. Announcement of weekly Washington DC Tuesday night discussion group including Bob, Nora, Athelstan, Sylvia Rutiser, Darren Stalder and Keith Lynch.
  • March 20 - lojbab composes an "ode to Lojban", which later gains recognition as the Lojban Anthem.
  • June 10 - lojbab posts the official gismu list to the Planned Languages Server.
  • June 21-24 - 17 people attend LogFest.
  • June 23 - Third annual LLG members meeting passes motion to prioritize the production of a "reference-manual/dictionary". Also moved and passed was a resolution discouraging the expenditure of resources towards reconciling with The Loglan Institute.
  • July - Publication of "ziryroi" (or "ziryro'i" in post-rafsi-reallocation lojban), an original book of poetry by Michael Helsem. It has been called "the first lojban book".
  • August - Lojban mailing list outgrows snark!cbmvax reflector and moves to a Columbia University LISTSERV
  • August-September - Issue #15 of "ju'i lobypli" published.
  • October 10 - Nick Nicholas translates the text of the "Colossal Cave" text adventure game. In 2002, this translation would be updated and used to complete a working lojban translation of the game.
  • December - Perry Smith reviews Loglan 1 in the Journal of Symbolic Logic, Volume 56, Issue 4.

1992

  • ckafybarja project initiated.
  • February: Athelstan injured.
  • April 28: United States Court of Appeals upholds trademark cancellation in "Loglan Institute v. Logical Language Group".
  • May 19: The White Knight's Song translated into lojban by DC Tuesday night group.
  • June: First baselining of the gismu list. Issue #16 of "ju'i lobypli" announces place structure changes.
  • July: Loglanists mailing list started
  • August: On the Loglanists mailing list, Gary Rector raises the question of how to say "I am waiting for a taxi" in Loglan when the awaited taxi is not specific, initiating a discussion on how best to describe intensional objects. Richard Kennaway suggests using the "mass descriptor", "lo" (analogous to "loi" in lojban). JCB endorses this solution with reference to the "Trobrianders". Lojban would also adopt mass description for this case until the development of xorlo.
  • August 16: Fourth annual members meeting of LLG.
  • October 2-18: lojbab promotes Lojban in Russia while visiting Moscow. First international promotion of the language.

1993

  • January - Issue #17 of "ju'i lobypli" is published, including a mention of the use of "a software system called 'IRC' (Internet Relay Chat)" for lojban conversation.
  • May - Issue #18 of "ju'i lobypli" is published. Although there have been attempts to resume publication, this is currently (2014) the last issue to date. (le terpra cu denpa da poi balvi)
  • June 1 - The Great Rafsi Reallocation goes into effect.
  • July 11 - Fifth annual LLG members meeting.
  • August - Erik Rauch announces a lojban FTP archive.

1994-1997: Lojban on the Web and in print

Lojban expands on the Internet while John Cowan completes the reference grammar. "The Complete Lojban Language" (CLL) is published and the language design is baselined and frozen for five years.

1994

  • First baselining of the machine grammar.
  • May 30 - Veijo Vilva publishes the Lojban WWW server, which eventually became www.lojban.org.
  • July 7 - Issue #18/19 of "lojbo karni" (dated May 1994) is announced.
  • July 15-17 - LogFest
  • July 17 - Sixth annual LLG members meeting
  • July 26 - Announcement that lojban mailing list surpassed 100 subscribers.
  • September - la xorxes asks how to say "I need either a box or a bag", initiating a discussion of opaque reference. At some point in the discussion, he proposes xe'e as a quantifier to mean "any".

1995

  • August - First reported fluent Lojban conversation, "The Glasgow Conversation"
  • August 18-20 - LogFest
  • August 20 - Seventh annual meeting of the LLG.
  • December 7 - lojbab, responding to a debate on the conlang listserv, posts the "finprims" document, detailing the etymology of gismu. Chris Bogart drafts the first version (numbered 0.5) of the Lojban list FAQ.
  • December 28 - xorxes and Jose Ramon Gallo Vazquez translate the gismu list into Spanish.

1996

  • la nitcion publishes an article Lojban as a Machine Translation Interlanguage in the Pacific.
  • The Loglan Academy (La Keugru) of TLI publishes Loglan Updater 1 on the internet. The Updater is a compilation of modifications to Loglan endorsed by the Loglan Academy since the 1989 publication of the Fourth Edition of Loglan 1, including the reassignment of me as the "extensional predifier", a 1994 refinement proposed by Randall Holmes. A new word, mea was introduced to take over the role of "metaphorical predifier".
  • February 15 - Veijo Vilva sets up European mirror of lojban FTP archives.
  • August - Wired magazine publishes an article about artificial languages that makes prominent reference to lojban.
  • August 10-11 - LogFest
  • August 11 - Eight annual meeting of the LLG. With the news that John Cowan had completed writing the reference grammar, a motion is passed to "baseline the contents of the Reference Grammar as of December 31, 1996, and all else as of June 30, 1997".

1997

  • January 10 - Electronic publication of the reference grammar is announced: "The Lojban language design is baselined and frozen for a minimum period in excess of 5 years".
  • July 3 - Announcement that the lexicon baseline, which had been schedule for release on June 30 per the January announcement, had been postponed.
  • November 28 - Publication of The Complete Lojban Language by John Cowan announced.

Lojban (1998-Present): Since CLL

1998-2000: Lojbanistan debates a sequel

Publication of an official guide to the language did not stop discussion of what the language should be, starting with disputes about what the official text actually meant and then what it should have meant – or said. The popular albeit unofficial parser, "jbofihe", is developed. JCB passes away.

1998

  • July 11-12 - LogFest
  • October 5 - John Cowan posts machine grammar version .300.
  • December 3 - lojbab announces acquisition of the "lojban.org" domain.

1999

  • luryri'e published (online only edition).
  • A revised web edition ("Revised Fourth Edition") of Loglan 1 is published, integrating material from Loglan Updater 1.
  • Jan 12 - Lojban WWW server moves to www.lojban.org.
  • Feb-Nov lapoi pelxu ku'o trajynobli serialized on la jboste.
  • March 9 - lojbab publishes revised gismu source language weights.
  • May 7 - YACC parser .300 and Nora's glosser released as beta software.
  • June - Richard Curnow begins work on "jbofihe", a parser which came to replace the YACC grammar as a de facto standard, and which, in 2003, was recognized as an official project.
  • July - A review of "The Complete Lojban Language" by Geoffrey Sampson is published in the Cambridge "Journal of Linguistics", Vol. 35, Issue 2.
  • July 16-18 - LogFest
  • mi terpa by Steve Furlong. First children's book in Lojban.

2000

  • The "Elephant" is proposed by John Cowan: An IBIS (Issue-Based Information System) implementation to manage the documentation of discussion around points of contention in lojban. Although never implemented, it would continue to be discussed through 2006.
  • February 13 - James Cooke Brown died. Dr. James Cooke Brown, inventor of Loglan and founder of the Loglan Project, died in February while on a cruise around South America. He was 78. On behalf of LLG, Bob LeChevalier expressed personal and official sorrow at his passing. While Lojban and LLG were founded as a result of substantive disagreement with JCB over several issues, he was a creative genius who will be greatly missed. There have been some soundings taken as to the possibility of rapprochement between the TLI Loglan and LLG communities. Both communities seem strongly in favor of the idea, though it is uncertain what types of moves could be made. Discussions will continue over a longer period of time.
  • The last issue of Lognet is published by Alex Leith. It included an essay on "The Future of Loglan" by Leith which was written before JCB's passing, and a number of letters looking back on JCB's life and work and the conflict between TLI and LLG, including submissions by Robert McIvor, Randall Holmes, Robert LeChevalier, John Clifford, Steven Belknap, and Jorge Llambías. Leith passed away in 2001.
  • April 29 - Lojban attracts Attention - Lojban was mentioned as a discussion item on Slashdot. The result was an enormous volume of hits on the Lojban website: More traffic than had been seen in two years in the course of a single day, comprising about 1 gigabyte of bandwidth. But the web host CAIS Internet (www.cais.net) stayed up and presumably a lot more people now know about Lojban. After the first week, traffic died down somewhat, but ran for a time at about double the traditional levels.
  • May 9 - first Russian Lojban web page created by Evgenii Sklyanin
  • August 5-6 - LogFest 2000: The annual meeting celebrating Lojban, as well as the annual meeting of The Logical Language Group, was held at lojbab's house.

2001-2002: Sustained lojban production

"jbovlaste" and the Lojban wiki are started. Large-scale translations: xorxes did Alice and The Little Prince and a number of other works, including game scripts were made. There was also a serious and growing amount of spontaneous communication in Lojban over IRC, generating another large corpus of usage. The LLG Baseline Policy is proposed and ratified.

2001

  • "tremendous apparent growth" - Peak traffic on "lojban" email list. Many Lojbanists create web pages.
  • April - Jay Kominek (jez) announces the development of a web dictionary, "jbovlaste"
  • May 6 - lojban-common debian package created, including lojban word lists.
  • June 13(?) - the first lojban wiki based on phpwiki engine started by jez
  • August 2001 - And Rosta creates jboske ("lojbanology") group to support the discussion of technical language issues.
  • August 7 - John Cowan registers "art-lojban" as ISO 639-2 code with IANA.
  • August 24 - Jay Kominek starts the lojban-beginners email mailing list. Initially housed on yahoo groups, it later is moved to google groups.
  • August 29 - Nick Nicholas releases an arrangement and recording of the Lojban Anthem.
  • October 3 - A "Lojban" article is created on Wikipedia.
  • alt.language.artificial.lojban (?) created.

2002

  • 4 January 2002 - jezrax started this timeline, little realizing what it would become...
  • 10 January 2002 - The minimum freeze period for the original 1997 language design baseline expires.
  • 18 April 2002 - The first draft of the Alice In Wonderland translation was completed, or nearly so.
  • 1 July 2002 - There was a major (several day) downtime of the Lojban web site, due to bad RAM, which in turn caused file system corruption. The server was upgraded with a much faster processor, a new, larger hard drive, as well as a completely new operating system (NetBSD 1.5.2), and moved into a co-location facility with a connection to the internet that is close to 300Mb/s.
  • 26-29 July 2002 - LogFest, the annual gathering of lojbanists, was held at lojbab's house in Fairfax, VA, USA, including the 2002 Annual Meeting of the Members of the LLG, at 1030AM EDT on Sunday July 28, 2002. The membership passed a motion raised by John Cowan providing guidelines for the recognition and maintenance of official LLG projects.
  • 15 August 2002 - lojbanic livejournal community is founded.
  • September 2002 - Official LLG Projects and Committees web pages posted.
  • October 2002 - Discussion heats up on jboske ("lojbanology") mailing list, peaking in December. Much of the discussion concerned practical problems that turned up in translation and chat. Some discussion threads will eventually contribute to the definition of xorlo and the formation of BPFK (baupla fuzykamni – the committee responsible for a language plan) to amend CLL to remove doubts or uncertainties, to fill gaps and, if need be, to alter bits to deal better with perceived problems.
  • 21 October 2002 - The Lojban FAQ was updated and moved and revamped and such, mostly by Dalton Graham.
  • 1 November 2002 - Release of a lojban version of the "Colossal Cave" text adventure game, "nuntalyli'u" on the Inform platform.
  • 26 November 2002 - The Baseline Statement, as drafted by the LLG Board was submitted to the lojban community for ratification.
  • 9 December 2002 - Results of the successful ratification of the Baseline Statement were posted.
  • 30 December 2002 - An IRC logging system was set up. See The Lojbanic Forums page.

2003-2006: Xorlo and BPFK 1.0

BPFK begins work. The Camxes parser is implemented. BPFK adopts xorlo. XKCD name checks Lojban.

2003

  • Robin Lee Powell started creating camxes, a new parser for Lojban which will eventually become a new standard.
  • February 2003 - Pierre Abbat releases "valfendi", a lexer implementatibg the baseline Lojban morphology algorithm.
  • 21 February 2003 - lojban-fr, a French mailing list, is started.
  • 3 March 2003 - phpBB forum installed to capture BPFK discussions and record polls.
  • 4 March 2003 - Request Tracker installed to track jbovlaste issues. It was later used for other lojban projects as well.
  • 29 March 2003 - BPFK opened for business.
  • 7 April 2003 - The Level 0 book was added to the web site and a Request Tracker was set up to help manage future changes to the site.
  • 11 May 2003 - Some bylaw changes from 1992 were incorporated. Split off of Old Projects into a seperate page, many changes (mostly minor) to the projects and committees pages. Markup changes all over the place. The full changes list can be found at the Aegis change page for change number 144.
  • 15 May 2003 - Original deadline for completion of cmavo definitions per 2002 baseline statement. To date (2014), the definitions have not been deemed as completed.
  • June 15, 2003 - Annual meeting of LLG. The Baseline Statement, as drafted by the Board and ratified by the community, is adopted as LLG policy. After fourteen years, lojbab steps down as LLG president. John Cowan, elected by the Board of Directors, becomes president. Nora also resigns her position as secretary/treasurer, and is succeeded by Robin Lee Powell. The Board also appoints Robin as Webmaster. Bob remains on the Board to satisfy requirements of the State of Virginia. LLG membership grows to peak of 36 members.
  • 11 August, 2003 - Nick Nicholas posts "Quine vs Montague, the deathmatch" to jboske, declaring that he counts the extensional interpretation of gadri as a cornerstone of the definition of lojban and a non-negotiable "axiom".
  • September 2003 - Robin Lee Powell installs tiki wiki, replacing phpwiki and phpBB
  • 2 September 2003 - John Cowan registers "jbo" as ISO 639 alpha-3 code, deprecating "art-lojban".
  • 10 September 2003 - "What is Lojban?" was published.
  • 20 October 2003 - Nick Nicholas (nitcion) resigns his position as chair of BPFK in email to LLG Board of Directors.
  • 27 October 2003 - LLG Board of Directors accepts Nick's resignation and announces appointment of Robin Lee Powell to chair BPFK.

2004

2005

2006

2007-2012: A Temporary Baseline in The Land of Invented Languages

LLG passes zasni gafyfantymanri (ZG, "temporary baseline") policy. Japanese lojban community grows. In the Land of Invented Languages is published. Teaching and reference materials developed in multiple languages. Birth of the "jbocifnu".

2007

2008

  • Jan - Feb 2008 - Matt Arnold is elected by the LLG Board of Directors as the fourth president of LLG, succeeding Arnt Richard Johansen.
  • Mar 2008 - mublin reconstructs the Chinese etymology of gismu.
  • Apr 2008 - mublin reconstructs the English, Spanish (with the assistance of xorxes and Pierre Abbat), and Russian (with Evgeny Sklyanin, Cyril Slobin, Pierre Abbat, Dmitry Shintyakov, and Bob LeChevalier) etymology of gismu.
  • May 2008 - mublin reconstructs the Hindi etymology of gismu.
  • Jun - Jul - Lina Persson, a Swedish artist, releases «fanmo jimte», a film narrated in lojban about a fictional farmer named Nora in the town of Vulcan in Alberta, Canada. (Parts I, II, III, IV)
  • 4 Jul 2008 - gejyspa publishes a translation of the book of Esther on the lojban tiki.
  • 22 Aug 2008 - xorxes translates Franz Kafka's, "The Metamorphosis (Die Verwandlung)": lo nu binxo
  • 29 Oct 2008 - The 2008 annual meeting of the membership of LLG is called to order. It was adjourned December 21.
  • la tijlan starts to promote lojban in Japanese language forums

2009

  • 8 Feb 2009 - kamymecraijun announces jvozba, a web application for constructing lujvo.
  • 1-3 May 2009 - jbonunsla at Penguicon in Detroit, MI.
  • 19 May 2009 - "In the Land of Invented Languages", a book by Arika Okrent, details Lojban and its history
  • July 2 2009 - la pycyn publishes an article about LoCCan, an imaginary logical language.
  • 1 Aug 2009 - jbotcan, the lojbanic "channel", featuring anonymous imageboards, an rss feed that collects news from all over, was brought back on line.
  • 8 Aug 2009 - The 2009 annual meeting of LLG is called to order.
  • 30 Nov 2009 - The Complete Lojban Language by John Woldemar Cowan was made available to buy from Amazon.com. Sales of CLL rise from about 25 copies per year to about 125 per year.
  • Knowledge Representation presentation written by Franz J. Kurfess.

2010

  • 5 Jan 2010 - BBC Radio 4 aired an episode of its Word of Mouth program discussing Lojban and other constructed languages.
  • 3 Feb 2010 - Work started on making Smart.fm, an adaptive flashcard learning tool, available to students of Lojban vocabulary. A review can be found here. If you already have a basic knowledge of lojban pronunciation and know how gismu work, and would like to contribute to this project, contact Jon "Top Hat" Jones.
  • 19 Feb 2010 - An invitation was posted to The Sporum, the official Spore forum, to discuss Lojban. Spore is a popular multi-genre single-player metaverse god game published by Electronic Arts.
  • 2 Mar 2010 - "lo do ckiku ma zvati", a "Where are your Keys?" web site focused specifically toward learning Lojban, was unveiled. "Where are your Keys?" is a language game that rapidly builds fluency in a language by making the techniques used to teach language transparent. Contact Alan Post for more information.
  • 10 Mar 2010 - Students at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland started a Lojban Society. Hosting weekly meetings in a local pub, the group had 12 members after its first month.
  • 23 Mar 2010 - All of Lojban's root words ('gismu') were added to smart.fm, alongside 3,500 derived words ('gismu sumti') in three lessons. Development continued on lessons for learning over 600 structure words ('cmavo').
  • 25 Mar 2010 - "lojban-soudan" (ロジバン相談室, "lojban counseling room"), a Japanese language Google Group, is initiated.
  • Apr 2010 - James Royston (.djeims.) develops the Lojban corpus web application.
  • 8 Apr 2010 - a teaser to the movie "Conlang" is published with a poem in Lojban.
  • 11 Apr 2010 - Matt Arnold resigns as president of LLG and from the LLG Board of Directors. The Board elects lojbab to a second, non-consecutive term as president.
  • 18 Apr 2010 - Dag Odenhall begins work on vlasisku, a new web-based dictionary application.
  • 30 Apr - 2 May 2010 - The Lojban community's annual convention, Logfest (known in Lojban as jbonunsla) was held at Penguicon 2010 in Troy, Michigan in the USA. Nine serious Lojbanists attended, and we attracted 3 or 4 newbies.
  • 3 May 2010 - The popular children's story book The Berenstain Bears Get in a Fight was translated into Lojban by Andrew Piekarski and reviewed by Michael Turiansky. An audio recording was made, as well as a Tengwar script edition. Michael Turiansky also did the first translation of "The Berenstain Bears and the Prize Pumpkin".
  • 22 June 2010 - All of Lojban's approximately 1300 'gismu' (root-words), along with their 'rafsi' (short versions of the root-words) were added to the Quizlet flashcard memorization website.
  • 4 July 2010 - Lojbanists Jorge Llambias and Leo Molas proposed complete sets of Lojban words for all countries, languages and currencies based on ISO codes. A systematic approach to the use of the codes enabled a virtually automatic process for producing such words.
  • 19 July 2010 - Over 600 of Lojban's structure words ('cmavo') were added to smart.fm.
  • 27 July 2010 - Lojban enthusiasts in the San Francisco area of the USA began meeting together in the home of Stephen Weeks in Mountainview to communicate in and about Lojban.
  • August 2010 - timo forms Lojban Coder's Group on Github.
  • 16 August 2010 - Leo Molas gave a presentation on Lojban at the "Jornadas del Sur" convention on Monday, August 16, in Bahia Blanca, Argentina. The subject of the convention was free software and free culture. Leo's presentation covered: -What is Lojban? -History -Sapir-Whorf Hyphothesis -Why learn Lojban? -Basic grammar.
  • 21 August - 12 October 2010 - The 2010 Annual Meeting of the Logical Language Group Inc was held on the llg-members list. Bob LeChevalier (USA), Arnt Johansen (Norway) and Robin Powell (USA) were re-elected to the LLG Members board, and joined by two new board members: Timo Paulssen (Germany) and Veijo Vilva (Finland). To get access privileges to the llg-members list, non-members should contact LLG Secretary Robin Powell, preferably on IRC Chat.
  • 9 September 2010 - le lunra jo'u le mapku, a translation by Remo Dentato of The Moon and the Cap, an Indian children's book, was published on-line.
  • 1 October 2010 - Polish lojbanists, including Marek Rogalski, started a mailing list, lojban-pl.
  • 5 October 2010 - Alan Post announced support for play-by-email in "lo do ckiku ma zvati" ("Where are your Keys?"), making it easier for students in different time zones to participate. A google group was also formed to discuss the game. Willem Larsen, one of the creators, published a blog entry called "The Playful World of Conlangs" to the "Where are your Keys? blog, making special reference to Lojban.
  • October 19 2010 - la pycyn publishes an article about gadri in Loglan and Lojban.
  • 30 October 2010 - .alyn.post. releases initial version of genturfahi, a lojban packrat parser implemented in scheme.
  • November - lojban support is added to tatoeba.
  • 18 November 2010 - A mind map of Lojban word types was published on the cheat sheet page of the Lojban website.
  • 25 November 2010 - Jan Szejko (ianek) gave a short presentation on Lojban to students at the renowned Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Mechanics of the University of Warsaw in Poland.
  • December 2010 - Masato Hagiwara, Hattin, and la guskant meet in Tokyo and begin a Japanese translation of "The Complete Lojban Language"
  • 18 December 2010 - "If I had a Pet Dinosaur" by Gil Robles was translated by Remo Dentato.

2011

  • 6 January 2011 - All four Lojban Wave lessons were translated into Polish.
  • 20 January 2011 - In an effort to broaden the appeal of Lojban in India, home pages in the Hindi and Kannada languages were added to the Lojban web site. Hindi is one of two official languages of India and is spoken by close to 200M people worldwide. Kannada is the official language of the state of Karnataka which is the location of Bangalore and the centre of India's burgeoning IT industry.
  • 3 February 2011 - A funny story with wrong mailing happened on Haskell beginners mailing list.
  • 5 February 2011 - A French-language home page was added to the Lojban web site.
  • 12 February 2011 - A Finnish version of the home page was added to the Lojban web site.
  • 5 March 2011 - The first anniversary of the inauguration of the Japanese-language Google Group "lojban-soudan". At the end of its first year, it had about fifteen members. There is also a Lojban Club at Osaka University, one of whose members updated the Japanese pages of the Lojban wiki.
  • 12 April 2011 - An Arabic version of the home page was added to the Lojban web site. This was the last of the world's major languages (the six used for creating "gismu" - Lojban's root words) in which the home page was translated.
  • July 2-3 2011 - The Lojban community's annual convention, Logfest (known in Lojban as jbonunsla), was held on Saturday July 2 and Sunday July 3 at the Holiday Inn in San Mateo, California, USA. Lojbanists from all around the country conversed and gamed in Lojban.
  • 23 August 2011 - "Introductory Lojban" was offered by Joe Anderson (djandus) at Rice University in Houston, USA as a student-run, 14 week course. Each lesson lasted 1 hour.
  • 9 October 2011 - The 2011 annual meeting of LLG was called to order. It was adjourned November 14.
  • 1 November 2011 - Robin Lee Powell announces the birth of the "jbocifnu" twins.
  • 24 November 2011 - Martin Bays announces the first release of tersmu, a "semantic parser" implemented in Haskell, for translating lojban to first order logic.
  • The first working draft of the new textbook for newbies Lojban Wave Lessons Continued was presented.

2012-Present

IRC usage grows. la guskant and la selpa'i sing and rap in lojban. Lojban software proliferates on github. BPFK reauthorized with new charter. CLL republished in print and as e-book.

2012

2013

2014

2015

  • January - More versions of la sutsis are rolled out: for purely Lojban dictionary, for Japanese dictionary, for Facile French, for Esperanto.
  • January 10 - Arkadii Balandin, Craig B. Daniel, Ali Sajid Imani, Riley Martinez-Lynch, and And Rosta were elected to the LLG Board of Directors. Robert LeChevalier and Timo Paulssen were re-elected.
  • January 13 - John Cowan was awarded the honorary title of "Archgrammarian" or "balgenpre" in recognition of the magnitude of his contributions to Lojban, and his many years as a member, director and officer of LLG.
  • February 21 - Dutch animator Benimation releases a cover of «crisa ditcu», a song by la guskant. The vocals are software-generated.
  • February 24 - LLG Members at the 2014 Annual Meeting approved a reauthorization of BPFK.
  • March 16 - Lojban becomes the first constructed language fully supported by Vivaldi web browser.
  • March 30 - The Lojbanic MediaWiki is promoted to become new main lojban.org web site.
  • April 23 - La Muplis.png La Muplis, a modified version of la sutsis for Tatoeba.org database is published by la gleki. The advantage over pure search on tatoeba.org is speed and that it's bound to Lojban only.
  • June 1 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing whether Loglan and Lojban are spoken logic.
  • June 4 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing how prenex is constructed in Lojban and how sentences with it are related to formal logic.
  • June 6 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing how in Loglan and Lojban conjunctions are construted and how they reflect formal logic.
  • June 9 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing how Loglan and Lojban were designed to test the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.
  • June 9 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing whether Loglan and Lojban are culturally neutral.
  • June 17 - la pycyn publishes an article discussing whether Loglan and Lojban increase rationality.
  • June 21 - la djemynai publishes «ZA'O», a full-length rap album of songs in lojban.
  • June 28 - The LLG Board of Directors re-elected Robert Lechavalier as President, electing And Rosta as Vice President and Riley Martinez-Lynch as Secretary/Treasurer.
  • August 28 - la pycyn publishes an article "Maxim 4: Loglans are unambiguous." arguing that Lojban and Loglan are not derived systematically from FOPL and its extensions.
  • August 28-30 - jbonunsla 2015 is celebrated in Princeton, New Jersey.
  • October 4 - John Cowan reads an extract from Alice in Wonderland for Wikitongues.
  • October 8 - la epkat makes a new instant messaging place, https://lojban.slack.com
  • October 9 - https://lojban.slack.com becomes fully synchronized with Lojban IRC chat thus solving a long standing issue of IRC not being user friendly to many people and not saving history of messages.
  • October 10 - Benjamin Gregory Carlisle prepares a cheatsheet of Lojban logical connectives illustrated with Venn diagrams.
  • December 13 - la gleki installs a Lojban IRC <=> "Telegram instant messenger" gateway (after enabling a gateway to/from Slack messenger earlier) and in the light of these technically easy but important for the Lojban community achievements declares the end of The Era of Lojban IRC Detachment.
  • December 26 - Masato Hagiwara announces a statistical based machine translation from English into Lojban and vice versa.

2016

2018

  • September - la gleki adds Mattermost, Facebook messenger and vk.com board integration to the live chat that is synchronized between those messengers as well as to Telegram, Slack and IRC (synchronization of which was deployed in 2015).

2020

  • June - la zbalermorna orthography gets into the unofficial release of the 'Complete Lojban Language' book.
  • June - la sutysisku app now has playable audio for definitions of many words and has visual clues to the structure of lujvo and words having 'property' places.