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Language Contact in Early Medieval Britain: Settlement, Interaction, and Acculturation

Findell, Martin; Shaw, Philip

Authors

Philip Shaw



Contributors

W. Mark Ormrod
Editor

Joanna Story
Editor

Elizabeth M. Tyler
Editor

Abstract

This chapter explores language contact in early medieval Britain, focusing on the methodological problems involved in studying historical language contact in situations where records of the languages involved are sparse. Two case studies then look at linguistic evidence for contact situations, one addressing the uses of the term wealh in Old English and especially in the Laws of Ine, while the other explores the influence of Latin on the development of Old English spelling. The first case study argues that the term wealh in early Old English (as in Continental Germanic) usage identified groups and individuals as Roman, as distinct from the identification with Celtic languages that developed later in the period. The second case study shows how spellings of the reflex of pre-Old English *[ɡɡj] developed through the engagement of Old English speakers with Latin, demonstrating the interactions between developments in the spoken and written language.

Citation

Findell, M., & Shaw, P. (2020). Language Contact in Early Medieval Britain: Settlement, Interaction, and Acculturation. In W. M. Ormrod, J. Story, & E. M. Tyler (Eds.), Migrants in Medieval England, c.500-c.1500 (62-89). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197266724.003.0003

Publication Date Aug 20, 2020
Deposit Date Sep 13, 2022
Pages 62-89
Series Title Proceedings of the British Academy
Series Number 229
Book Title Migrants in Medieval England, c.500-c.1500
Chapter Number 3
ISBN 9780197266724
DOI https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197266724.003.0003
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4941604
Publisher URL https://academic.oup.com/british-academy-scholarship-online/book/37959/chapter-abstract/332488901?redirectedFrom=fulltext


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