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Version PvdL13754
Old English, Anglo-Saxon Period
(450-1100 A.D.)
Historical Background:
- Neolithic period, c. 4000 BC, agriculture, mound tombs
- Bronze Age, Indo-European language, burial with drinking vessels, flint,
metal, Stonehenge III, 2300 BC
- farms, circular huts, oblong fields 1200 BC
- Celtic inhabitants arrived around 750 BC, hill forts
- Iron Age, population growth, 650 BC
- Belgian Gaul migrations, coins, potter's wheel, cremation 100 BC
- Julius Caesar invades Britain, 55 BC
- 43/50 AD Claudius, Roman conquest; Romanization/Christianization, Latin
- conquest of Wales completed 78 AD
- Hadrian's Wall, 122-130 AD
- Roman departure 410 AD, Britain besieged by Picts, Scots and Saxons
- British leader Vortigern invites Saxons (Angles, Saxons, Jutes) into
alliance against Picts, Scots and Roman Catholic factions
- Saxons rebel against Britons 442
- Large-scale Germanic invasions (Angles, Saxons, Jutes), 449; British
resistance, King Arthur, Mt. Badon British victory 500; but Anglo-Saxons
in control by sixth century
- Gildas, De Excidio Britanniae, 540, historical account of the
fall of Britain
- Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy: Northumberland, East Anglia, Mercia, Essex,
Kent, Sussex, Wessex; seventh century Northumbrian dominance, eighth century
Mercian dominance, ninth/tenth century West Saxon dominance
- Pope Gregory sends St. Augustine to Kent 597; Aethelbert I of Kent,
converted to Christianity by Augustine, first Christian king of Anglo-Saxon
England, also compiled law code (definitions and rules of kinship, wergild,
slaves and freemen/ceorl, nobles); Christianization of Anglo-Saxons by
Roman and Irish missionaries
- cenotaph of East-Anglian Raedwald at Sutton Hoo, 625
- Caedmon, oldest poetic vernacular work ("Hymn of Creation",
c. 670)
- Lindisfarne Gospels, 698, Latin Vulgate text with interlined Old English
paraphrase
- Venerable Bede (673-735), Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum
- Mercian King Offa (757-796); Alcuin of York (732-804), high level of
scholarship
- first Viking attacks 787, sack of Lindisfarne Priory 793
- King Alfred (849-899), revival of learning, Anglo Saxon Chronicle,
victories over Vikings at Ashdown 871, Edington 878, Treaty of Wedmore
878, Danish king Guthrum forced to accept Christianity and retreat to Danelaw
- second half of tenth century: Dunstan, Ethelwold, Oswald, monastic
reform, copying of manuscripts
- Battle of Maldon 991
- Aethelred II Unraed (978-1016); peak of monastic and literary revival:
Aelfric (955-1020), Catholic Homilies, Lives of the Saints; Wulfstan d.
1023, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos
- early eleventh century renewed Norse invasions
- Danish King Cnut r. 1016-1035
- Edward the Confessor r. 1042-1066
- William the Conqueror, Battle of Hastings 1066, end of Anglo-Saxon
Period
�
Old English
West Saxon literary dialect
Phonology
Old English consonants (p. 83)
Old English consonant changes from Common Germanic /k/ and /sk/. Examples:
- claene, crypel, corn (before a consonant or back vowel)
- ceap, cild, dic (next to a front vowel) (new sound)
- fisc, wascan, scearp (from Germanic /sk/; in all environments) (new
sound)
Old English consonant changes from Common Germanic /g/ and /gg/. Examples
- graes, god, gyltig (before consonants, back vowels, and mutated front
vowels)
- sagu, beorg, fylgan (between back vowels or after /l/ or /r/)
- gear, giet, gellan (before or between front vowels and in final position
after a front vowel)
- brycg, secg, mycg (from Germanic /gg/; in medial or final position)
(new sound)
no phonemic voiced fricatives as in PDE (/v/, /z/, etc)
OE /h/. Examples:
- hraefn, hand (similar to PDE, in initial position before vowels and
l, r, n, w)
- sihp (palatal fricative after front vowels)
- eahta, heah, purh (elsewhere, velar fricative)
loss of OE consonant clusters (/hr/, /hl/, /hn/, /hw/, /kn/, /gn/) in
PDE (Examples: OE hraefn, PDE raven, OE hlud, PDE loud; sometimes still
spelled: what, whale, whistle, knee, gnat)
unstressed final m, n > n
relative stability of English consonant system for past 1200 years
Old English Vowels (p. 88)
Some changes from Common Germanic:
- breaking or fracture (a kind of diphthongization involving the insertion
of a glide after front vowels and before velar consonants. Examples: fehtan>feohtan,
h�rd>heard)
- back mutation (diphthongization of stressed short vowels when followed
by back vowel in next syllable, e.g. hefon>heofon)
- palatal diphthongization (e > ie and ae > ea after palatal consonants,
e.g. giefan, gieldan, giet, sceaft, gear)
- front mutation (i-umlaut, i/j mutation) (if stressed syllable followed
by unstressed syllable containing i or j, the vowel of stressed syllable
was fronted or raised, e.g. OE dom/deman, Gothic doms/domjan; OE plural
endings with i resulted in foot/feet, other plurals men, teeth, geese,
lice; in comparatives/superlatives: old/elder; derived weak verbs, sit/set,
lie/lay, fall/fell, whole/heal, doom/deem; 2nd and 3rd person singular
present indicatives of strong verbs had i in endings, cuman/cymp, feohtan/fyht,
standan/stent
reduction of vowels in unstressed inflectional endings
Prosody
OE verse, alliteration, stress-timed line, root syllable took major stress;
compounds stressed on first element
Graphics
beginning of Christian era, Germanic alphabet, Futhorc or runic alphabet
(p. 90), derived from Greek/Latin alphabets, 24 symbols; Ruthwell Cross,
8th c. inscribed in runes with portion of "Dream of the Rood";
sixth c. Christianization of England led to adoption of Latin alphabet;
influence of Irish practice, Insular alphabet, special characters for f,
g, r, s (p. 91).
Punctuation: raised point to indicate pause; semicolon and inverted semicolon
(punctus elevatus) also indicated pause; no capitals/lowercase distinction
Morphology
loss of inflections: reduction of vowels in inflectional endings, need
for syntactical support, adaptation of imported words, inflections in form
of suffixes
Old English noun declensions (p. 97)
Adjective declensions: definite/weak declension (needing demonstrative,
numeral, or possessive pronoun), indefinite/strong declension ( p. 99)
Personal pronouns (p. 100)
Demonstrative pronouns (p. 101)
Interrogative pronouns (p. 101)
Other pronouns (indeclinable pe, indefinite pronouns: aelc, hwilc, aenig,
eall, nan, swilc, sum, man)
Verbs
- inflected for tense, person, number, and mood; two tenses: present
and preterite
- Strong verbs: seven subclasses, ablaut system, four principal parts
(infinitive, past sing., past plural, past participle)(p. 103, 104)
- Weak verbs: Germanic innovation (dental preterite), led to regular
verbs in PDE (p. 104)
- Other verbs: irregular, beon/wesan, don, willan, gan; preterite-present
verbs (sculan, cunnan, magan, agan, ic dearr, durfan), ancestors of Present
Day English modal auxiliaries (shall, can, may, ought, dare, must)
Uninflected words
prepositions (to, for, be, in, under, ofer, mid, wip, fram, geond, purh,
ymbe, of)
conjunctions (and, ac, gif, peah, forp�m, see also correlative
conjunctions, p. 105)
adverbs (ofer, under, on, purh, �fter, ne, eac, n�fre, hider,
to)
- formed by addition of -an to other words (innan, feorran, sippan)
- formed through inflection in genitive/dative of other words (ealles,
geara, hwilum)
- formed by adding -e or -lice to adjective (rihte, rihtlice),
interjections (la, eala, wh�t)
Syntax
modifiers close to modified word
prepositions preceded objects
interrogative formed by inverting the subject and the verb
SVO order in main declarative clauses, SOV in dependent clauses, VSO
in interrogative and imperative clauses;
parataxis vs hypotaxis: less subordination than in PDE (hypotaxis) ,
simple links with conjunctions (parataxis) and, pa, some subordination with
pa, gif, forpan
use of apposition/variation in poetry
idioms: correlative comparative ("the bigger, the better"),
genitive with numerals (twentig geara), some Latinisms
Lexicon
Indo-European or Germanic, IE: basic words, 1-10 numerals, kinship terms;
some words found only in Germanic/West Germanic languages: baec, ban, folc,
grund, rotian, seoc, swellan, werig, wif, broc, crafian, idel, cniht, sona,
weod)
few Celtic borrowings, some place names (Thames, Dover, London, Cornwall,
Carlisle)
some Scandinavian influence
major Latin influence (words for religious, intellectual concepts/activities,
plants, calques or loan translations)
formation of new words:
- compounding: noun+noun (sunbeam), adjective+noun (yfelweorc), adverb+noun
(innefeoh), compound adjectives (isceald, wishydig), some compound adverbs
(neafre, eallmaest), compound verbs (goldhordian)
- prefixing, ge-: past participles, perfective sense, association in
nouns, derivation from verb
- abstract nouns with -nes, -ung, -dom, -scipe, etc.
- agent nouns with -end, -a, -bora, -ere, -estre
- adjective suffixes: -ig, -lic, -ful, -leas, -ed, -isc, -sum, etc.
- prefixes: un-, in-, ofer-, �fter-, fore-, mis-, under-, etc.
loss in PDE of large part of OE vocabulary due to sound changes, reductions,
confusions with other words, cultural and technological change, taboo, chain
reactions in semantic changes, dialectal differences, fashion
Semantics
relation to culture and ways of interpreting the world
terms for kinship (OE ego-oriented, nuclear family, little distinction
beyond nuclear family, no separate terms for marriage relationship, distinction
between paternal and maternal relatives)
color (infrequent use of terms for hue, frenquent reference saturation,
lightness, luster, scintillation)
semantic change: generalization and narrowing, amelioration and pejoration,
strengthening and weakening, shift in stylistic level, shift in denotation
Dialects
Northumbrian, Mercian, West Saxon, Kentish; phonological differences;
north lost inflectional endings earlier than the south; heavier use of diphthongs
and extensive palatalization of velar consonants in West Saxon areas
Literature
literacy among the clergy, use of vellum, hand copying, command of Latin,
English and Irish/Gaelic by the literate, anonymity of texts, religious
literature, translations from Latin; prose: King Alfred's translations of
Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People, Pope Gregory's
Pastoral Care, Boethius's Consolations of Philosophy, biblical
translations, compilation of Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; Aelfric (955-1020):
sermons, homilies, saints' lives; Wulfstan (d. 1023): Sermon to the English;
verse, four-stress alliterative line with caesura (alliteration determined
by first stressed word in second half-line, formulaic style, recurring images
(eagle, wolf, ice, snow), kennings (e.g. swan-road); earliest verse: Caedmon's
hymn late 7th c., epic: Beowulf, elegies: The Wanderer, The
Seafarer.
Source: http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/
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