Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lesson 3. The Anglo-Saxon Civilization
- The Germanic Invasions
- Year 449. Beginning of the invasion
of Britain by Germanic tribes.
- For more than a 100 years: from the region of
Denmark and the Low Countries. They established in
the south and east of the island and occupied all the
area except the highlands in the west and north.
- Account of Germanic invasions: Bede's
Ecclesiastical History of the English People
(completed in 731) and the A-S Chronicle.
- (Bede) Germanic tribes were the
Jutes, Angles and Saxons.
- Jutes came from the Danish
peninsula, the northern half, in
Jutland.
- At the time of the invasions, they were in
contact with both Frisians and Saxons.
- Angles came from the Danish peninsula,
southern half, in Schleswig-Holstein.
- Saxons came from the south and west of the
Angles, between the Elbe and the Ems, maybe as
far as the Rhine.
- Frisians (some went to England) came from a
narrow strip along the coast from the Weser to the
Rhine together with the islands opposite.
- Britain had been exposed to attacks
from as early as the 4th century.
- Saxons' attacks: Romans necessitated the appointment of an officer, known
as the Count of the Saxon Shore, to police the south-eastern coast.
- Picts and Scots (not Germanic) from the north of the island.
- Also Celts had come to depend on Roman arms
for this protection and lead a more peaceful life.
- When Romans withdrew in 410, the
Celts were no longer able to keep out
the Picst and Scots.
- Vortigern, a Celtic leader, entered into an
agreement with the Jutes in order to drive out
Picts and Scots in exchange for the Isle of
Thanet on the northeastern tip of Kent.
- However, Jutes also decided to stay in the island
and settled in the southeast, in Kent.
- Then, they came in numbers and settled on the
lands of the Celts, meeting their resistance by
driving them out.
- (A-S Chronicle) Other continental tribes
followed the examble.
- In 547, Angles established an Anglian
kingdom north of the Humber.
- Saxons in 447 established in Sussex. Then, in 495
more Saxons settled in Wessex.
- By the end of the 5th century
- Saxons were north of the Thames, as the
names Essex and Middlesex indicate (East
Saxons and Middle Saxons).
- Angles had begun to
settle in East Anglia.
- Periods in the history of English
- Old English. 450-1150. The period of full inflections
because the endings of the noun, adjective and
verb are preserved more or less unimpaired.
- Middle English. 1150-1500. The period of leveled
inflections because inflections become greatly
reduced.
- Modern English. Since 1500. The period of lost
inflections because a large part of the original
inflectional system has disappeared entirely.
- Dialects and characteristics of OE
- The Dialects of OE
- Earliest written records (about A. D. 700)
- West Saxon. Dialect of the West Saxon kingdom in
the southwest. An extensive collection of texts.
- The ascendancy of the West Saxon kingdom made
the dialect a sort of literary standard. The abundance
of the materials has made the basis of OE.
- Finally, the Norman Conquest reduced all
dialects to a common level of unimportance.
- In the late Middle English period, a standard
English once more began to arise but it was
on the basis of the East Midlands.
- Kentish. Dialect of the
Jutes in the southeast.
- Northumbrian and Mercian are sometimes known as Anglian. Found in the region north of
the Thames settled by the Angles. They possess certain features in common. Preserved in
runic inscriptions, fragments of verse, and some interlinear translations of the Bible.
- Northumbrian. Spoken
north of the Humber.
- Mercian. Spoken between the
Humber and the Thames.
- OE pronunciation
- Linguistic changes that mark the transition
from one stage to the next often comprise a
mix of phonological, morphological, lexical,
and syntactic features.
- By contrast, the transition from Indo-European to Germanic
(described by Grimm's Law) was purely phonological. And
then we have: Germanic, West Germanic, OE.
- The pronunciation of OE words (See personal notes).
- OE Vocabulary
- Rarity of words derived from Latin
and absence of those from French.
- Almost purely Germanic. However, a large part disappeared
progressively when the Norman Conquest brought French
into England as the language of the higher classes.
- (See examples in personal notes)
- OE Grammar
- Inflectional languages fall into 2
categories: Synthetic and Analytic.
- A synthetic language indicates the relation of words in a sentence by means
of inflections. In the Indo-European languages, inflections take the form of
endings on the noun and the pronoun, the adjective and the verb. OE is relatively synthetic.
- Example: in Latin, the nominative "murus" (wall) is
distinguished from the genitive "muri" (of the wall), dative
"muro" (to the wall), accusative "murum", and so forth.
- A single verb like "laudaverunt" (they have
praised) conveys person, number and tense
along with the meaning of the root.
- "Nero interfecit Agrippinam" means "Nero killed Agrippina", and it would mean the same thing
if the words were arranged in a different order like "Agrippinam interfecit Nero". That is
because "Nero" is the form of the nominative case, and the "-am" ending of "Agrippinam"
marks the noun as accusative. It does not matter where they stand.
- Analytic languages make extensive use of prepositions and
auxiliary verbs and depend upon word order to show other
relationships. Modern English is relatively analytic.
- The Origin of English
- A-S Civilization
- Population used to life in the
open, hunting and agriculture.
- Organization of society: by families and clans
with a sharp distinction between eorls
(hereditary aristocracy), and the ceorls (simple
freemen).
- Business transacted in local assemblies or moots.
- Justice administered through fines (wergild) according to
the nature of the crime and the rank of the injured party.
Guilt determined by ordeal or by compurgation.
- Some tribes combined for greater
strength or to produce small kingdoms.
- 7 kingdoms are recognized and known as
the A-S Heptarchy: East Anglia, Essex, Kent,
Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex and Wessex.
- Sometimes 2 or more were united under one
king, at other times they were divided.
- Early 7th century, Northumbria
gained political supremacy.
- In the 8th century, Mercia gained leadership.
- In the 9th century, Wessex (under Egbert) extended its
influence until in 830 all England (including the chieftains
of Wales), acknowledge Egbert's overlordship.
- Not a United Kingdom but West Saxon kings
claimed they were kings of all the English.
- The Names "England" and "English"
- The term Angli and Anglia soon occur beside
Saxones and refer not the Angles individually but
to the West Germanic tribes generally.
- In time, Angli and Anglia
became the usual terms in
Latin texts.
- The word is derived from the
name of the Angles (OE Engle)
- The land and its people are called
Angelcynn (Anglekin or race of the Angles)
- Around the year 1000, Englaland
(land of the Angles) takes place.
- Possibly, England took its name from the Angles
due to a desire to avoid confusion with the
Saxons, and the early supremacy of the Anglian
kingdoms was a factor determining usage.
- The Origin and Position of English
- The English language of today resulted from
the history of the dialects spoken by the
Germanic tribes who came to England.
- It is impossible to say how much the
speech of the Angles differed from that
of the Saxons and that of the Jutes.
- English belongs to the Low West
Germanic branch of the
Indo-European family.
- Then, it shares certain characteristics with all Germanic languages:
shifting of some consonants under Grimm's Law, "weak" and "strong"
declension of the adjective, a distinctive type of conjugation of the verb...
- It shares certain characteristics with West Germanic languages as contrasted
with the Scandinavian languages (North Germanic) and Gothic (East Germanic):
certain phonetic changes, especially the gemination or doubling of consonants.
- Then, English did not participate in the further modification of
certain consonants, known as the Second or High German
Sound Shift.