Subject and Aims of the History of English. Chronological divisions in the History of English


The number of people speaking Germanic languages


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Subject and Aims of the History of English. Chronological divisi

The number of people speaking Germanic languages

  • It is difficult to estimate the number of people speaking Germanic languages, especially on account of English, which in many countries is one of two languages in a bilingual community, e.g. in Canada.
  • The estimates for English range from 250 to 300 million people who have it as their mother tongue.
  • The total number of people speaking Germanic languages approaches 440 million.
  • To this rough estimate we could add an indefinite number of bilingual people in the countries where English is used as an official language (over 50 countries).

CHRONOLOGICAL DIVISIONS IN THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH.

  • The historical development of a language is a continuous uninterrupted process without sudden breaks or rapid transformations => any periodisation imposed on language history by linguists, with precise dates, might appear artificial, if not arbitrary.
  • Yet in all language histories divisions into periods and cross-sections of a certain length, are used for teaching and research purposes.

The commonly accepted, traditional periodisation of English history

  • Three periods:
  • Old English (OE), Middle English (ME) and New English (NE), with boundaries attached to definite dates and historical events affecting the language. Each period preserves some infirmity of language.
  • OE begins with the Germanic settlement of Britain (5th c.) or with the beginning of writing (7th c.) and ends with the Norman Conquest (1066);
  • ME begins with the Norman Conquest and ends on the introduction of printing (1475),
  • which is the start of the Modern or New English period (Mod E or NE); the New period lasts to the present day.

A brief chronology of English

  • Local inhabitants speak Celtish (Prewritten OE):
  • BC 55 Roman invasion of Britain by Julius Caesar.
  • BC 43 Roman invasion and occupation. Beginning of Roman rule of Britain.
  • 436 Roman withdrawal from Britain complete.
  • 449 Settlement of Britain by Germanic invaders begins.

450-1066 Old English

  • 450-480 Earliest known Old English inscriptions.
  • 1066 William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, invades and conquers England.

1066 - 1660 Middle English

  • 1150 Earliest surviving manuscripts in Middle English.
  • 1348 English replaces Latin as the language of instruction in most schools.
  • 1362 English replaces French as the language of law. English is used in Parliament for the first time.
  • 1388 Chaucer starts writing The Canterbury Tales.
  • 1400 The Great Vowel Shift begins.

Modern English 1660 -

  • 1604 Table Alphabeticall, the first English dictionary, is published.
  • 1607 The first permanent English settlement in the New World (Jamestown) is established.
  • 1616 Shakespeare dies.
  • 1623 Shakespeare's First Folio is published

1660- 1880 Normalisation Period (also: Age of Correctness)

  • 1755 Samuel Johnson publishes his English dictionary.
  • 1776 Thomas Jefferson writes the American Declaration of Independence.
  • 1782 Britain abandons its American colonies.
  • 1828 Webster publishes his American English dictionary.

Late Modern English 1800 -

  • 1922 The British Broadcasting Corporation is founded.
  • 1928 The Oxford English Dictionary is published.
  • Since 1945 - Present-Day English

SHORT SURVEY OF PERIODS

  • The invading Germanic tribes spoke similar languages, which in Britain developed into what we now call OE.
  • OE did not sound or look like E today.
  • In terms of the general history of Germanic languages OE represents the stage of Old Germanic dialects in the history of English = the initial period of its separated history, when common Germanic features still prevailed over its newly-developed individual characteristics.

Old English (450-1066 AD)

  • The earliest surviving written documents (the 8th century).
  • Native English speakers now would have great difficulty understanding Old English.
  • Nevertheless, about half of the most commonly used words in Modern English have Old English roots. The words be, strong and water, for example, derive from Old English.
  • Old English was spoken until around 1100.

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