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Title: OLD ENGLISH (Englisc) (500


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OLD ENGLISH (Englisc)(500 1100 A.D)
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OLD ENGLISH / ANGLO SAXON
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ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF ENGLISH
  • The history of the English language really
    started with the arrival of three Germanic tribes
    who invaded Britain during the 5th century AD.
  • These tribes, the Angles, the Saxons and the
    Jutes, crossed the North Sea from what today is
    Denmark and northern Germany.

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  • At that time the inhabitants of Britain spoke a
    Celtic language. But most of the Celtic speakers
    were pushed west and north by the invaders -
    mainly into what is now Wales, Scotland and
    Ireland.
  • The Angles came from Englaland and their language
    was called Englisc - from which the words England
    and English are derived.

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  • Speakers of Old English called their language
    Englisc, themselves Angle, Angelcynn or Angelfolc
    and their home Angelcynn or Englaland.
  • Old English began to appear in writing during the
    early 8th century. Most texts were written in
    West Saxon, one of the four main dialects. The
    other dialects were Mercian, Northumbrian and
    Kentish.

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MAIN DIALECTS OF OLD ENGLISH
  • Saxon
  • Northumbrian
  • Mercian
  • Kentish

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  • The Anglo-Saxons adopted the styles of script
    used by Irish missionaries, such as Insular
    half-uncial, which was used for books in Latin.
  • A less formal version of minuscule was used for
    to write both Latin and Old English.
  • From the 10th century Anglo-Saxon scribes began
    to use Caroline Minuscule for Latin while
    continuing to write Old English in Insular
    minuscule. Thereafter Old English script was
    increasingly influenced by Caroline Minuscule
    even though it retained a number of distinctive
    Insular letter-forms.

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OLD ENGLISH ALPHABETS
  • Old English / Anglo-Saxon was sometimes written
    with a version of the Runic alphabet, brought to
    Britain by the Anglo-Saxons until about the 11th
    century.
  • Runic inscriptions are mostly found on jewellery,
    weapons, stones and other objects. Very few
    examples of Runic writing on manuscripts have
    survived.

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RUNIC INSCRIPTIONS
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OLD ENGLISH ALPHABETS
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OLD ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION
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SAMPLE TEXT IN OLD ENGLISH (PROLOGUE FROM BEOWULF)
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  • Venerable Bede was one of the important writers
    of this period.
  • He wrote Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum
    Ecclesiastical History of the English People,
    completed in the year 731.
  • It is the most important source for the early
    history of England.

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WHO ARE THEY? 
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  • The land of Britain had been inhabited by Celtic
    peoples the Scots and Picts in the north, and
    various groups in the south
  • Then, the Roman invaded them and they were ruled
    by King Claudius until 43 A.D
  • In 410 A.D, they were invaded by Germanic tribes
  • The Celts called the invaders Anglo-Saxon

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  • The Anglo-Saxon kingdoms converted to
    Christianity in the late sixth and seventh
    centuries
  • By the late seventh and early eighth centuries
    had already produced two major authors
  • Aldhelm, who composed his most important work,
    De Virginitate (On Virginity)
  • Venerable Bede, whose vast output includes
    biblical commentaries, homilies, textbooks on
    orthography, meter, rhetoric, nature and time,
    and of course the Historia Ecclesiastica,

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  • The seventh and eighth century saw the production
    vast vernacular literature works written in Latin
  • Some of the famous literary works include
  • Beowulf The Seafarer
  • The Dream of the The Battle of
    Road Maldon
  • The Wanderer

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  • King Alfred (871-899) who was noted for his
    strength and far-sightedness encouraged education
  • He documented many literary works and translation
    works from OE
  • Two reputable scholars during his time were
    Ælfric and Wulfstan
  •  
  • Many biblical translations and adaptations, The
    Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and other historical
    writings, law codes, handbooks of medicine and
    magic, and much more were preserved

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  • Most of the manuscripts that preserve vernacular
    works date from the late ninth, tenth and
    eleventh centuries,
  • The Anglo-Saxons were producing written work in
    their own language by the early seventh century,
    and many scholars believe that Beowulf and
    several other important poems date from the
    eighth century.
  • Thus, we are in possession of five centuries of
    Anglo-Saxon vernacular literature.

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WHERE DID THEIR LANGUAGE COME FROM?
  • Bede tells us that the Anglo-Saxons came from
    Germania
  • Germania is one of the IE languages that
    originate from one source language (proto
    language)
  • From this ancient language come most of the
    language groups of present-day Europe and some
    important languages of South Asia

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  1. The Celtic languages (such as Irish, Welsh and
    Scottish Gaelic), the Italic languages (such as
    French, Italian, Spanish and Romanian, descended
    from dialects of Latin), the Germanic languages,
    the Slavic languages (such as Russian and Polish)
  2. The Baltic languages (Lithuanian and Latvian),
    the Indo-Iranian languages (such as Persian and
    Hindi), and individual languages that do not
    belong to these groups Albanian, Greek, and
    Armenian

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  • 3. The biblical Hittites spoke an Indo-European
    language, or a language closely related to the
    Indo-European family
  • 4. A number of other extinct languages (some of
    them poorly attested) were probably or certainly
    Indo-European Phrygian, Lycian, Thracian,
    Illyrian, Macedonian, Tocharian and others.

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  • The Germanic branch of the Indo-European family
    is usually divided into three groups
  • North Germanic,
  • that is, the Scandinavian languages, Swedish,
    Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic and Faroese

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  • East Germanic,
  • that is, Gothic, now extinct but preserved in a
    fragmentary biblical translation from the fourth
    century
  • West Germanic,
  • which includes High German, English, Dutch,
    Flemish and Frisian.

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WHAT WAS OLD ENGLISH LIKE?
  • The following point shows what makes Old English
    an Indo-European language, a Germanic language, a
    West Germanic and a Low German language and also
    how Old and Modern English are related

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Old English is an Indo-European language 
  • Proof One
  • All of the Indo-European languages handle the job
    of signalling the functions of words in similar
    ways. For example, all add endings to words.
    Example
  • Greek Sanskrit Latin
  • pl.form of foot pódes pádas pedes
  •  

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  • Proof Two
  •  
  • OE is a Germanic language, for example
  •  
  • Latin OE Mod.E
  • pater fæder father

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  • Proof Three
  • OE has similar consonants as Latin
  •  
  • Unvoiced stops
  • (p, t, k) became unvoiced spirants (f,
    ?, x), so that
  • Old English fæder corresponds to Latin
    pater father
  • Old English þreo correspond to Latin tres
    three
  • Old English habban have correspond to Latin
    capere 'take'.

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  • Voiced stops
  • (b, d, g) became unvoiced stops (p, t,
    k), so
  • Old English deop 'deep' corresponds to
    Lithuanian dubùs,
  • twa 'two' corresponds to Latin duo
  • Old English æcer 'field' to Latin ager.

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The Germanic Family of Languages
The family of languages that shows genetic link
between OE and other languages in the
Indo-European tree
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Old and Modern English
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  • During Old English Period, Britain was invaded
    by
  • Romans
  • Germanic
  • Scandinavian

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  • It is a period that lasted for 700 years.
  • Every invasion brought socio-cultural and
    linguistic change

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ANGLO-SAXON INFLUENCE
  • A large percentage of the educated and literate
    population of the time were competent in Latin
  • Latin became the lingua franca of Europe at the
    time.
  • As a result, there was influx of Latin words in
    OE.

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  • There were at least three notable periods of
    Latin influence.
  • The first occurred before the ancestral Saxons
    left continental Europe for Britain.
  • The second began when the Anglo-Saxons were
    converted to Christianity
  • Latin speaking priests became widespread.

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  • The orthograpy changed from runic alphabet (also
    known as futhorc or fuþorc) to the Latin alphabet
  • This became a significant factor in the
    developmental of Latin during OE period. Old
    English words were spelt as they were pronounced.
    The "silent" letters in many Modern English words
    were pronounced in Old English for example, the
    c in cniht, the Old English ancestor of the
    modern knight, was pronounced.

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  • Another side-effect of spelling words
    phonetically was that spelling was extremely
    variable.
  • A word's spelling reflected differences in
    phonetics of the writer's regional dialect.
  • Words also endured idiosyncratic spelling choices
    of individual authors, some of whom varied
    spellings between works. Thus, for example, the
    word and could be spelt either and or ond.

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SCANDINAVIAN INFLUENCE
  • The Scandinavian (the Vikings) invaded Britain in
    787 CE
  • They spoke Old Norse. Along, they spread their
    influence on the English people

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  • The second major source of loanwords to Old
    English was the Scandinavian words
  • In addition to a great many place names, these
    consist mainly of items of basic vocabulary, and
    words concerned with particular administrative
    aspects of the Danelaw (that is, the area of land
    under Viking control, which included extensive
    holdings all along the eastern coast of England
    and Scotland).

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  • Many places in England has its names originated
    from Scandinavia
  • The influence of Old Norse on the English
    language has been profound responsible for such
    basic vocabulary items as sky, leg, the pronoun
    they, the verb form are, and hundreds of other
    words

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CELTIC INFLUENCE
  • The influence of Celtic on English has been
    small, citing the small number of Celtic
    loanwords taken into the language. The number of
    Celtic loanwords is of a lower order than either
    Latin or Scandinavian.
  • Celtic traits were more significant on English
    syntax during post-Old English period

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  • Old English should not be regarded as a single
    monolithic entity similar to Mod.E
  • It consists of wide variation of languages
  • However, the bulk of it was written in dialect of
    Wessex, Alfred's kingdom.
  • Possibly, because he was in power and he was the
    one who made the compilation effort
  • He brought many scribes to his region from Mercia
    to record previously unwritten texts.

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  • The Church was affected likewise, especially
    since Alfred initiated an ambitious programme to
    translate religious materials into English.
  • To retain his patronage and ensure the widest
    circulation of the translated materials, the
    monks and priests engaged in the programme worked
    in his dialect.
  • Alfred himself seems to have translated books out
    of Latin and into English, notably Pope Gregory
    I's treatise on administration, Pastoral Care.

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DICTIONARY OF OLD ENGLISH (DOE)
  • The Dictionary of Old English (DOE) is a
    dictionary published by the Centre for Medieval
    Studies, University of Toronto under the
    direction of Angus Cameron (1941-1983), Ashley
    Crandell Amos (1951-1989), and Antonette diPaolo
    Healey.

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  • It "defines the vocabulary of the first six
    centuries (600-1150 A.D.) of the English
    language, using today's most advanced technology.
  • The DOE complements the Middle English
    Dictionary (which covers the period 1100-1500
    A.D.) and the Oxford English Dictionary, the
    three together providing a full description of
    the vocabulary of English."

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  • An example of a page from DOE

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SYNTAX
  • WORD ORDER
  • The word order of Old English is widely believed
    to be subject-verb-object (SVO) as in modern
    English and most Germanic languages.
  • The word order of Old English, however, was not
    overly important because of the aforementioned
    morphology of the language.
  • As long as declension was correct, it did not
    matter whether you said, "My name is..." as "Min
    nama is..." or "Nama min is..."
  •  

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  • QUESTIONS
  • Because of its similarity with Old Norse, it is
    believed that the word order of Old English
    changed when asking a question, from SVO to VSO
    i.e. swapping the verb and the subject.
  • "I am..." becomes "Am I...?"
  • "Ic eom..." becomes "Eom ic...?"

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Morphology
  • Unlike modern English, Old English is a language
    rich with morphological diversity.
  • It maintains several distinct cases the
    nominative, accusative, genitive, dative and
    (vestigially) instrumental, remnants of which
    survive only in a few pronouns in modern English.

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LITERATURE
  • Old English was one of the first vernacular
    languages to be written down.
  • Some of the most important surviving works of
    Old English literature are Beowulf, an epic poem
    the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a record of early
    English history the Franks Casket, an early
    whalebone artifact and Caedmon's Hymn, a
    Christian religious poem.

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  • There are also a number of extant prose works,
    such as sermons and saints' lives, biblical
    translations, and translated Latin works of the
    early Church Fathers, legal documents, such as
    laws and wills, and practical works on grammar,
    medicine, and geography.
  • Still, poetry is considered the heart of Old
    English literature. Nearly all Anglo-Saxon
    authors are anonymous, with a few exceptions,
    such as Bede and Caedmon.

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THE END
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