Wave
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1st
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2nd
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3rd
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Tribe
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Jutes or/and Frisians
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Saxons
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Angles
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Kingdoms
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Kent, Isle of Wight
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Sussex
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Essex
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Wessex
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East Anglia
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Mercia
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Northumbria
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The feudal system that the Germanic tribes brought with themselves had led to the isolation of each tribe and political disunity (feudal wars). As a result, this period witnessed a great dialectal diversity. The most important dialects were the dialects of the 4 most powerful kingdoms:
Old English Dialects
Kingdom
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Kent
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Wessex
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Mercia
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Northumbria
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Dialect
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Kentish
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West Saxon
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Mercian
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Northumbrian
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Spoken
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in Kent, Surrey, the Isle of Wight
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along the Thames and the Bristol Channel
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between the Thames and the Humber
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between the Humber and the Forth
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Origin
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from the tongues of Jutes/ Frisians
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a Saxon dialect
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a dialect of north Angles
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a dialect of south Angles
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9th c. – Wessex was the centre of the English culture and politics. West Saxon – the bookish type of language (Alfred the Great – the patron of culture and learning)
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8th c. – Northumbria was the centre of the English culture
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The first historian who started to record the history of the Germanic tribes on the British Isles and is considered to be the first English historian is Bede the Venerable, an English monk, who wrote “The Ecclesiastical History of the English People”.
The most important dialect in the Old English period was the WEST SAXON DIALECT.
8. Christianity – 597 (6th c.)
There were 2 forces that worked together to spread Christianity in Britain:
missioners from Rome (founded the religious centre in Canterbury);
missioners from Ireland (the Celts were already christened).
Consequences:
centralization of the country;
development of the culture and learning (monasteries, schools, etc.); Latin was the language of the church and learning.
9. In the 8th – 9th c. Britain was raided and attacked by the Danes/Scandinavians/Vikings. The only king who was able to keep them at bay was Alfred the Great of Wessex. In 878 the Treaty of Wedmore was signed and England was divided into Wessex (belonged to Alfred) and Danelaw (belonged to the Danes). But as soon as the Scandinavian dialects also belonged to the Germanic group, the Danes soon linguistically merged into the local Old English dialects leaving some Scandinavian elements in them.
Lecture 6
Old English Written Records
Alphabets
The first Old English written records are considered to be the runic inscriptions. To make these inscriptions people used the Runes/the Runic Alphabet – the first original Germanic Alphabet.
Runes/Runic Alphabet:
appeared in the 3rd – 4th c. A.D.;
it was also called Futhark (after the first 6 letters of this alphabet);
the word “rune” meant “secret, mystery” and was used to denote magic inscriptions on objects made of wood, stone, metal;
each symbol indicated a separate sound (one symbol = one sound);
the symbols were angular due to the fact that they had to be carved on hard materials;
the number of symbols: GB – 28-33; on the continent – 16-24).
See the copy of the alphabet (additional information)
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