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Middle English
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Edward the Confessor’s Heirs n Godwin, Earl of Wessex, and his son Harold n William, Duke of Normandy n Harald III (Sigurdsson) Hårdråde, King of Norway
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Norman Conquest (1066) n January -- Death of Edward the Confessor n Harold Godwinson’s election as King n Sept. 25 -- King Harold III of Norway’s attack at Stamford Bridge n Oct. 14 -- William of Normandy’s attack at Hastings n Christmas 1066 -- William’s coronation in London
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The Normans n Viking extraction n French language n French loyalties n French customs
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Norman Settlement n New nobility n New bishops n New systems of inheritance n New conventions of spelling
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The Norman Conquest and French Scribes n ch ( = Old English “c”) n th ( = Old English “þ” and “ð”) n sh ( = Old English “sc”) n gh ( = Old English “h”) n wh ( = Old English “hw”) n c ( = Old English “k”) n ou ( = Old English “u”)
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British Colonial Experience n Pidgins n Creoles
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Middle English as Creole n cow/beef n hog/pork n wheat/flour n deer/venison
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Middle English (Pyles and Algeo, p. 164) n Loss of most Old English inflections n Loss of grammatical gender of Old English n Loss of native Old English words n Influx of Norman French words
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Threat of French Dominance n William of Normandy’s attachment to France (Normandy to his eldest son) n Increasing number of royal possessions in France (Anjou, Aquitaine, etc.) n Royal wives from France (Poitou, Provence, etc.)
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Norman French Influence n Law courts (judge, jury, plea, plaintiff, attorney, guilty, bar, etc.) n Schools (art, music, image, column, poet, title, volume, chapter, study, logic, etc.) n Medicine (surgeon, physician, malady, pain, stomach, ointment, plague, poison, etc.)
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Norman French Influence (cont.) n Government (crown, state, empire, realm, royal, prince, scepter, majesty, etc.) n Church (religion, theology, sermon, prayer, clergy, chaplain, pastor, friar, hermit, etc.) n Military (army, navy, peace, enemy, battle, combat, siege, defense, retreat, etc.) n Fashion (garment, cape, coat, boots, blue, brown, jewel, feast, cream, spice, etc.)
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End of French Influence n 1204 -- John Lackland’s loss of Normandy n separation of English and French nobility n influx of foreigners at English court with French wives of John Lackland and Henry III n Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453) n 1362 -- Statute of Pleading n by 1385 -- English in schools again
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Flowering of Middle English n Chaucer n Gower n Pearl poet n Cycle plays
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