1 / 12

History of English

History of English . Part I: Britons and Anglo-Saxon Period. The English language. Romans Invade: 43 A.D. 40,000 troops 4 years to consolidate power Never conquered Scottish Highlands Hadrian’s Wall – demarcation line Latin present but did not take root except in names ending in:

donkor
Download Presentation

History of English

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. History of English Part I: Britons and Anglo-Saxon Period

  2. The English language

  3. Romans Invade: 43 A.D. • 40,000 troops • 4 years to consolidate power • Never conquered Scottish Highlands • Hadrian’s Wall – demarcation line • Latin present but did not take root except in names ending in: • - chester, - cester, + caster • (castra = camp) • - Doncaster and Winchester

  4. Romans + britons(celts) • CELTIC LEGACY • Landscape Features • Place Names • - London, Thames, Avon, Tor (hill), combe or cwm (hollow/valley) • - Devon resort – Salcombe • - Welsh town – Cwmbran • Our word: SLOGAN: • SLUAGH (army or host) + GAIRM (cry) = war cry • Irish = Celtic language

  5. Roman legacy (left by 410 A.D.) Latin: family - familia library – liber millennium – mille school - schola Hadrian’s Wall Architecture Christianity: Celts (through Romans), Anglo-Saxons (through St. Augustine + King Aethelbert’s wife Bertha in 601 A.D.) Roman arch in Lincoln– once a fort, now a city

  6. Anglo-saxon legacy (to 1066) • Beowulf – 750-900 A.D. by Anonymous • Lindisfarne Gospels - 700 A.D. by Eadfrith, bishop • Sutton Hoo (Saxon ship burial) – 7th century • Language:Tiw- TuesdayThor - (Thors-day) ThursdayFriya – Friday • Place Names: Towns that end in: -ton, -wick, -worth, -burn, -hurst, -den or -ham • Framingham and Warwick – for example

  7. Anglo-saxon language • LEGACY • OUR SYNTAX: (or arrangement of words in a sentence) • PREFERENCE AND EASE WITH NOUNS • TENDENCY TO SIMPLIFY GRAMMAR & SHORTEN WORDS • “LAW OF RECESSIVE ACCENT”: tendency to place accent on first syllable and slur over rest like “quantity” and “contrary” • USE OF METAPHOR/KENNING/ALLITERATION/LITOTES • ORAL TRADITION: scops

  8. Beowulf – bee-hunter (bear) • Heroic values: • recklessness, bravery, loyalty, ruthlessness • War band (comitatus): chief + troop of warriors sworn to protect him with their lives • King or chief: generous (ring-giver) • Kinship: wergild: blood price • Religion: • comingling of Christian and pagan beliefs • Pagan: emphasis on material wealth and results and fate • Willing to try Christianity because their religion wasn’t working so well

  9. Beowulf • Example: Saxon view of God as chief of a war band • In Hrothgar's speech to thank Beowulf, he offers him everything he has as a reward. God is conceived of as the biggest and most generous war band leader: • ..you have done such a deed that your fame is assured, will live forever. May Almighty Godreward you with good, as he has today(Chickering p55)

  10. Beowulf • ALLITERATION • ~ repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words in a line of verse • LO, praise of the prowess of people-kingsof spear-armed Danes, in days long sped,we have heard, and whathonor the athelings won!Oft Scyldthe Scefing from squadroned foes, • KENNING • ~ compound expressions, representing a single noun • Whale-road: sea • Battle-sweat: blood • Sea-wood: ship • Shield-bearer: warrior

  11. Good vs. evil Heroes Villains • Beowulf: hero/protagonist • King Hrothgar: also victim • Wiglaf: Geat warrior • All warriors fighting demons • God • Grendel: monster/demon • Grendel’s mother/demon • Dragon: monster • Unferth: minor loser • Satan

  12. Beowulf Themes • Legacy: concern with fame after death • Good vs. Evil: heroes vs. monsters – God vs. Evil (mix of religions) • Importance of skill and strength: battle • Acquisition of Wealth: generosity and fame (promotion) • Fate and courage: meet death with honor • Importance of tradition and custom in preserving culture (giving of wealth, wergild, loyalty, boasting)

More Related