Old English: The Viking invasions and their consequences
1. Characterize the nature of Viking raids and Viking settlement in England.[1]
Viking raids (787+)
• Reasons for the Vikings leaving their home:
- over-population
- too few natural resources
- primogeniture system
• Nature of the raids = similar like the Anglo-Saxons'
- pillaging and burning of the coast + returning home with gold, silver, slaves etc.
- Monasteries sacked and manuscripts destroyed in Lindisfarne, Jarrow and Iona (793-795)
Viking settlement (850+)
• Less raids, more settling - Danish Vikings in large parts of North and East England, Norwegian Vikings in Western Scotland + parts of Ireland => farms established => territorial conflict between inhabitants + newcomers, BUT no forced removal of Celts as the Anglo-Saxons have done
• West Saxon kings undertook defense against the Danes, ex. Æthelwulf (recorded as a descendant of Seth, the son of biblical Adam) in 854
• Æthelwulf’s son Alfred the Great of Wessex (initiator of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) stopped the advance of Danish Vikings at battle of Edington in 878
• Peace under Treaty of Wedmore:
1) Stable boundary set between kingdom of Wessex and Danelaw (Northumbria, East Mercia & East Anglia)
2) The defeated Danish king of East Anglia Guthrum became Christian (= step towards assimilation of Viking conquerors)
• Æthelstan (Alfred’s grandson) helped the West Saxons reconquer territories in Danelaw and then in whole England
• Settlements of Danes and Anglo-Saxons = relative proximity, similar ways of life, bilingualism
• Eventual renewed attacks by the Danes => establishment of Danish king over all England: Sweyn Forkbeard
- Æthelstan put into exile
- His son Cnut (= king of Denmark and Norway) ended Danish raids, though not Danish claims to the throne
- Official language at court: English, x Danish
Compare OE borrowings from Latin and ON.
• Latin borrowings = mainly religious (bishop, Saturday etc)
• Borrowings/loan words from ON
- War + maritime: ransaka “ransack”, dreng “warrior”
- Legal + administration: laga “law”, hūsting “tribunal”
- Common verbs: get, want, call
- Bodily features: leg, freckles, skin
- Farm & animal terms: bull, egg, axletree
- Life: birth, slaughter, die
- Relations: sister, husband
• BUT ex. ON taka “take” replaced OE niman, but “nim” = “nimble” (= stealing in PDE)
• Most loan words adopted in OE do not appear in writing until ME
- Reason: lack of a literary tradition in Danelaw
2.Characterize the Scandinavian element of English lexicon on phonological level.[2]
Although the words in OE and ON were identical in many cases, the sound changes have led to distinctions:
a. Proto-Germanic /sk/ remained /sk/ in Norse, but became /ʃ/ in OE. Numerous words in ModE with the consonant cluster /sk/ come ultimately from ON: skirt (vs. native shirt), shrub (vs. scrub), scatter (vs. shatter), but also skin, sky, skill;
b. /g/ for /j/ as in give (OE giefan with in initial /j/) or egg (OE ey);
c. /k/ for OE /tʃ/ as in kid (OE cild) or kirk (OE cirice);
d. Proto-Germanic /ai/ became /ei/ in Norse, but /o:/ in OE in the ModE pairs nay-no, hale-whole, raid-road);
e. Proto-Germanic /au/ remained ON /au/ but became OE /e:a/ as in lauss (> ModE loose) vs. lēas (> ModE –less, e.g. hopeless).
Less frequent pronunciation differences: loss of initial w- (cf. Ulf vs. Wulf) or the so called metathesis (ON brenna vs. OE biernan “burn”).
3. Summarize changes in the system of inflectional morphology (including the pronominal system) in this period.
- loss of grammatical gender;
- simplification of gender, number and case agreement in adjectives, qualifiers, quantifiers and demonstratives;
- the general loss od dative and genetive plural cases.
- introduction of '-es' ending in 3rd person sg, Present Tense
- 3rd person pl pronouns now begin with 'th-'
- feminine sg nominative: hēo > seō, where /s/ was later palatalized into /ʃ/
4. Summarize the main syntactic changes during this period.[3]
- Mainly relative pronouns/particles
- Ϸe (that/who) used in OE for all antecedents regardless of case and number
- ON contributed to the use of relative particle as that came from Norse som
- As in the man as came yesterday (more common in northern English dialects)
- Zero relative appears
- As in the man [zero] I saw yesterday
- Was probably used even before the Viking invasions, but even though it is a rare construction it appears both in English and Danish, which is interesting
- The languages also share “preposition stranding”
- A construction where the preposition can be moved away from the relative
- E.g. a construction in which the relative is fronted X a construction which the relative is fronted in
- The languages also share “preposition stranding”
- Verb phrase
- In OE complex verb forms (such as the perfect, the progressive, the will-future, auxiliary do) were not common, but they are in ME
- It is debatable how much was their appearance in ME influenced by ON
- It might also be caused the disappearance of the West Saxon written standard under the Normans
- In either case it is also possible that it was influenced by the vernacular during the absence of a unified language form (whether in Danelaw or Norman England)
- In OE complex verb forms (such as the perfect, the progressive, the will-future, auxiliary do) were not common, but they are in ME
References
- ↑ Gramley, Stephan. The History of English: An Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2012, xxv, p. 46-52
- ↑ Gramley, Stephan. The History of English: An Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2012, xxv, p. 53-54.
- ↑ Gramley, Stephan. The History of English: An Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2012, xxv, p. 56