History of Anglo Saxon
History of Anglo Saxon
History of Anglo Saxon
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
FACULTY OF ARTS
UDAYANA UNIVERSITY
2016
I. History
The Early Period :
Celtics and Romans (before 450 AD)
After the aboriginal contact, the Germanic tribes speaking one
language spread out across northern and Central Europe. By 500BC
three major dialectal divisions had appeared in Germanic: East (the
Goths), North (the Scandinavians), and West (ancestors of the
English, Germans and Dutch).
The Germanic languages today show many signs of being
closely related:
English: sing, sang, sung;
Dutch: zingen, zong, gezongen;
Swedish: sjunga, sjo:ng, sjungit.
Before the Romans came to England, the British Isles were
inhabited by the Celts (pronounced [kelts]), or Ancient Britons. But
there are few obvious traces of their language in English
today. Some scholars have suggested that the Celtic tongue might
have had an underlying influence on the grammatical development
of English, particularly in some parts of the country, but this is
highly speculative. The number of loanwords known for certain to
have entered Old English from this source is very small. Those which
survive in modern English include brock (badger), and coomb (a
type of valley), plus many place names. Their language - Gaelic lives on to this day in Wales, Cornwall, Scotland and Ireland. It is not
closely related to modern English. Celtic had very little influence on
English and is mostly preserved inplace names.
The Roman Invasion :
In 55 BC, Rome, lead by Julius Caesar, invaded England and
the colony of "Britannia" was established. The Roman invasion of
Britain was arguably the most significant event ever to happen to
the British Isles, although not necessarily linguistically. It would take
a second invasion of Latin - in the form of the spread of Christianity for Latin to truly influence English.
Although it didn't affect language much, this first invasion did
have a profound effect on the culture, religion, geography,
architecture and social behavior of Britain. The island has a Roman
name, its capital is a Roman city and for centuries (even after the
Norman Conquest) the language of England's religion and
administration was a Roman one.
For 400 years, Rome brought a unity and order to Britain that
it had never had before. Prior to the Romans, Britain was a disparate
set of peoples with no sense of national identity beyond that of their
local tribe. In the wake of the Roman occupation, every 'Briton' was
aware of their Britishness. This defined them as something different
II. Dialects
Old English should not be regarded as a single monolithic entity,
just as Modern English is also not monolithic. It emerged over time
out of the manydialects and languages of the colonising tribes, and
it is perhaps only towards the later Anglo-Saxon period that these
can be considered to have constituted a single national language.
Even then, Old English continued to exhibit much local and regional
variation, remnants of which remain in Modern English dialects.
The four main dialectal forms of Old English were Mercian,
Northumbrian, Kentish, and West Saxon. Mercian and
Northumbrian are together referred to as Anglian. In terms of
geography the Northumbrian region lay north of the Humber River;
the Mercian lay north of the Thames and South of the Humber River;
West Saxon lay south and southwest of the Thames; and the
smallest, Kentish region lay southeast of the Thames, a small corner
of England. The Kentish region, settled by the Jutes from Jutland, has
the scantiest literary remains.
Each of these four dialects was associated with an independent
kingdom on the island. Of these, Northumbria south of the Tyne, and
III. Alphabets
Anglo-Saxon runes has its origins in the older Futhark, but enjoys
further in Friesland in the current North-West Germany, where
Saxons lived 400 years before they immigrants and occupied the
British Isles. "Anglo-Saxon runes" is therefore often called the
"Anglo-Frisan runes" in the litteratue. The language of the AngloSaxon inscriptions be both Old Frisian and old-English. The oldest
inscriptions can be heathen, but most of inscriptions that are found,
has Christian content, especially those from the British Isles.
The Celts and the early Anglo-Saxons used an alphabet of runes,
angular characters originally developed for scratching onto wood or
stone. The first known written English sentence, which reads "This
she-wolf is a reward to my kinsman", is an Anglo-Saxon runic
inscription on a gold medallion found in Suffolk, and has been dated
to about 450-480 AD.
Anglo-Saxon runic inscriptions are found along the coast from
today Friesland in North-West Germany to the Netherlands and in
England and Scotland. Anglo-Saxon runes, has been in daily use
from 400-500's to the 900's, when they gradually went out of brug
in line with Viking conquest of England and Scotland, which shows
through the many findings of Nordic inscriptions on British Isles from
the 900s and later.
The Anglo-Saxon runes, is arguably an successor of the 24runens older Futhark, when the Anglo-Saxon runic alphabet gradual
was expanded with several runes, opposite to what happened in the
Nordic countries at the same time. In Scandinavia developed the 24runers older Futhark to a 16-runers Futhark, while the AngloSaxon Fuorc gradually evolved to consist of 33 runes.
In the Nordic / Germanic runic alphabet is the first 5
runes fuark, but the first 5 runes in the Anglo-Saxon runic alphabet
is fuorc . Therefore are the the Anglo-Saxon / Anglo-Frisian runic
alphabeth primarily called aFuorc , after the first 5 runes in the
runic alphabet. The use of runes in England died out around just
before the year 1000, and was among others banned by King Knut
(1017-1036).
Famous Poets:
Most Old English poets are anonymous, and only four names
are known with any certainty: Caedmon, Bede, Alfred the Great, and
Cynewulf.
Caedmon is considered the first Old English poet whose work still
survives. According to the account in Bede's Historia ecclesiastica,
he lived at the abbey of Whitby in Northumbria in the 7th century.
Only his first poem, comprising nine-lines, Cdmons Hymn,
remains, albeit in Northumbrian, West-Saxon and Latin versions that
appear in 19 surviving manuscripts.:
Bede is often thought to be the poet of a five-line poem entitled
Bede's Death Song, on account of its appearance in a letter on his
death by Cuthbert. This poem exists in a Northumbrian and later
version.
Alfred is said to be the author of some of the metrical prefaces
to the Old English translations of Gregory's Pastoral Careand
Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy. Alfred is also thought to be the
author of 50 metrical psalms, but whether the poems were written
by him, under his direction or patronage, or as a general part in his
reform efforts is unknown.
Cynewulf has proven to be a difficult figure to identify, but
recent research suggests he was from the early part of the 9th
century to which a number of poems are attributed including The
Fates of the Apostles and Elene (both found in the Vercelli Book),
and Christ II and Juliana (both found in the Exeter Book).
Although William of Malmesbury claims that Aldhelm, bishop
of Sherborne (d. 709), performed secular songs while accompanied
by a harp, none of these Old English poems survives. Paul G. Remely
has recently proposed that the Old English Exodus may have been
the work of Aldhelm, or someone closely associated with him.
Heroic Poems:
The Old English poetry which has received the most attention
deals with the Germanic heroic past. The longest (3,182 lines), and
most important, is Beowulf, which appears in the damaged Nowell
Codex. The poem tells the story of the legendary Geatish hero
Beowulf, who is the title character. The story is set inScandinavia, in
Sweden and Denmark, and the tale likewise probably is of
Scandinavian origin. The story is biographical and sets the tone for
much of the rest of Old English poetry. It has achieved national epic
status, on the same level as theIliad, and is of interest to historians,
anthropologists, literary critics, and students the world over.
t syan na
ymb brontne ford brimliende lade ne letton.
Leoht eastan com, beorht beacen godes;
Beowulf, lines 562-70a
Crowne drew on examples of the theme's appearance in
twelve Anglo-Saxon texts, including one occurrence in Beowulf. It
was also observed in other works of Germanic origin, Middle English
poetry, and even an Icelandic prose saga. John Richardson held that
the schema was so general as to apply to virtually any character at
some point in the narrative, and thought it an instance of the
"threshold" feature of Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey monomyth.
J.A. Dane, in an article characterised as "polemics without rigour"
claimed that the appearance of the theme in Ancient Greek poetry,
a tradition without known connection to the Germanic, invalidated
the notion of "an autonomous theme in the baggage of an oral
poet." Foley's response was that Dane misunderstood the nature of
oral tradition, and that in fact the appearance of the theme in other
cultures showed that it was a traditional form.
Reception of Old English:
Old English literature did not disappear in 1066 with the
Norman Conquest. Many sermons and works continued to be read
and used in part or whole up through the 14th century, and were
further catalogued and organised. During theReformation, when
monastic libraries were dispersed, the manuscripts were collected
by antiquarians and scholars. These included Laurence Nowell,
Matthew Parker, Robert Bruce Cotton and Humfrey Wanley. In the
17th century there began a tradition of Old English literature
dictionaries and references. The first was William Somner's
Dictionarium Saxonico-Latino-Anglicum (1659). Lexicographer
Joseph Bosworth began a dictionary in the 19th century which was
completed by Thomas Northcote Toller in 1898 called An AngloSaxon Dictionary, which was updated by Alistair Campbell in 1972.
Conslusion
There are 4 periods of early english history, which are PreRoman/Pre-Historical up to 55 B. C, Roman Occupation (55 B. C.
410 A. D), Anglo-Saxon Period (410 787 A. D), Viking Invasions
(787 1066 A. D). On Pre-Historical, The island we know as England
was occupied by a race of people called the Celts. But In 55 BC,
Reference