Language evolution

Chaucer can still be read today despite the fact that he wrote 700 years ago. His words are even more understandable for someone who knows Dutch. In fact, the spoken language has changed relatively little over the last 800 years. The very same can be said about most other local tongues in Europe. A major change since the Middle Ages was the introduction of the ‘general’ or national languages in Europe.

Officially, England is a notorious exception to the known fact that local populations are very reluctant to change their language because it allegedly changed its language from Brythonic to English at a record breaking speed.

Suppose that 2000 years ago all Britons spoke a Brythonic language (proto-Welsh). The Romans conquered their land, and soon the British upper-class assiduously started to learn Latin. During almost 400 years, the British aristocracy would help to introduce Latin as a daily language. The example here is Gaul, but also Spain and Portugal.



In the fifth century, England was allegedly 'conquered' by the Anglo-Saxons, even while the Roman Empire still persisted, albeit in the west less as a military power, more as a traditional role model and as a centre of religious power. Logically, as Latin had been introduced for 400 years, only something like 35% of Britain would have changed its language into Gallo-Roman (Gallo-Roman is defined here as an early mixture of Latin and what remained of the local Brythonic language). After 400 years of Roman occupation, mainly cities and important centres would speak this Gallo-Roman, just like in Gaul. The less developed countryside would have kept its local Brythonic tongue. Cities represented less than 10% of total populations until the 19th century. [1]

According to the CBA (Celtic Britain Assumption), 600 years after the Anglo-Saxon 'invasion', seven different languages were supposed to be present in England [2]:

1- Latin (mainly in writing - the Church).

2 -Gallo-Roman (spoken by the old upper class).

3- Welsh supposedly to be the original language (spoken by isolated farmers in eastern England).

4- English ( by the new upper class).

5- Danish, where they took over parts of the country from the Anglo-Saxons (aristocracy + army).

6- Norwegian (i.e. Viking/Irish mixture down the west coast).

7- French. The Normans came in 1066, conquered the whole of England, and imposed their idiom (spoken by the aristocracy and clergy).



Pockets of each language should be traceable in local place-names, all over Britain. Logically, in 1166, 100 years after William the Conqueror, a patchwork of languages would have existed. Indications of that situation should have been reported since the early Middle Ages [3].

Despite this deductive evidence, all the mentioned languages managed to merge in 1366, only 300 years after the conquest by the Normans, into the very recognizable language of Chaucer. Moreover, all traces of languages other than English had disappeared in England [2] except for Latin in writing and many French words that had been freshly introduced. The very presence of those words in English can be understood as a proof that the language was indeed greatly influenced by Latin and French. But where are the typical Welsh words? They should have been more present if we compare this with the number of Brythonic words in modern French (although there too, the number has been greatly overestimated). More words of colonial origin were introduced in the English language than words of Brythonic origin. Australia gave words like boomerang, kangaroo. America gave words like tomahawk, etc.. English always had the capacity to absorb foreign words.



However, linguists now claim that traces of Brythonic survive in grammatical constructions. This is possible: we know that it was the language of Mercia that influenced the most Middle English and we know that a part of Mercia consisted out of former Welsh territory.



By contrast , the original Welsh language remained in Wales, parts of Scotland and Cornwall and is still well traceable there. Why is there no trace of all other languages in the east of Britain? [4]



Evolution of English

Theis presented as if everything started with the oldest texts like Beowulf and then evolved in a straight line into modern English. That is not true. There is a major distance between the language used in the Beowulf poem and Chaucer's English. There were many Old English dialects. There was no such thing as standard Old English. Modern English is a mixture of those ancient local dialects. The question is even whether in those days someone from Wessex could understand someone from Kent.

The version of Beowulf we have is a West Saxon translation of what was probably an original East Anglian poem [5]. West Saxonia or Wessex is the modern region near Oxford. East Anglia is near Cambridge. Apart from that, the writing standard of Beowulf is different from later Wessex texts. The language in Beowulf was a local dialect. It was the language of Mercia (central England) that had the most influence upon later standard English, not the Wessex language. Therefore, Beowulf cannot be considered to be the precursor of English. Beowulf is interesting because it illustrates that proto-English was not a single language but a language group.



In Middle English, some ancient Old English sounds had disappeared. For instance: the character 'y' in Old English should be read 'ü' like in the German word Frühstück (breakfast). Or like in déjà vu, wrongly pronounced 'dayzha voo', which is French for 'already seen'. The sound that comes close in English is the 'u' like in 'butter', but much more emphasized or like 'oo' in football as spoke by a Scotsman. This 'u'-sound is present in Brythonic, French and in other Germanic languages. It is absent in Spanish, Italian and Latin. Pronouncing 'y' as it used to be makes Old English sound much more like West Flemish, Frisian and other low Germanic languages. For instance, 'yfel' is 'evil' and was pronounced like 'uffel' but with a more emphasized 'u'. This 'u'-sound is completely absent in modern English.



To understand Beowulf better, the poem should be re-written using modern writing standards.



The gap between Old English and Middle English can be understood only when you take into account the absolutely dominant position of French at the English court in the Middle Ages. Between Old and Middle English stands French. French was the language of William the Conqueror and soon after the conquest, 75% of the English aristocracy spoke Norman-French.



Before then, English was the language of the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy, the clergy, the king and the intellectuals. Before, foreign words were not introduced 'as is', but translated into (old) English by composing new compound words. The language was protected against intrusive foreign words.



The writers of Old English maintained a conservative writing standard for centuries. I think that the very first versions of written Old English were deliberately hugely old fashioned. The plausible culprits were monks who could have taken Old English as spoken during the Roman times as a standard for all of England. The very oldest of Old English was therefore felt by contemporaries as a language which belonged to the past. It must have come over as classic English, from the same period as classic Latin which was already no longer spoken at the beginning of the Roman Empire. This is similar to modern written English, which differs a lot from the spoken version. Modern written English is as English was spoken at the time of Shakespeare. There is little difference between early Old English and late Old English. At the beginning of the eleventh century, spoken English already differed significantly from how it was written. The writing standard was completely renewed in Chaucer's time (1340) when speaking English slowly regained some prestige.



Language protection is also what happened in Flanders and Germany when they had to accept new concepts of French origin (and the French often got it from the Italians..). Similarly in modern France, when they too have to accept new words coming from England or America. For instance, the French rejected the words computer and byte and proposed 'ordinateur' and 'octet'. And yes, they do have a word for entrepreneur. It is entrepreneur. Recently a German minister declared war against English words in the German language. It was in a similar way that Old English shielded itself from foreign influences.

But after French had become the language par excellence of the English aristocracy, this sort of protection fell away. The English barons spoke French with a Norman accent in Parliament and only French. English had become something of the commoners and not worth any attention [6].



Between 1066 and about 1466, four centuries, English was considered to be a peasant language in England. [7] This attitude changed abruptly during the fifteenth century partly because of the Hundred Years' War with France, and partly because the Black Death tilted the balance of power towards the surviving peasantry, whose labour became more valuable. So, English became fashionable again, but sadly, the old protection reflex was gone. From then on, the English intellectuals no longer protected their language, failed to build new compound words and English evolved into a strange mix of a Germanic foundation and background with a French foreground, mixed with a bunch of other words, many of Dutch origin. For instance, landscape is such a Dutch word. Without the war with France, the chances are great that all of England would have spoken a sort of French today. So, all of America would have spoken this French also.



Eventually, the English aristocracy tried to pick up English again and to give it some high ranking status again. The result was the birth of an aristocratic sort of English also called 'received pronunciation'. Remember the musical & film "My fair lady"? Remember "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain"? That is what the upper-class usually does: build a new divergent language that will distinguish them from low-ranking commoners. That upper-class language was Old English at first, then it was French, later it was stiff-upper-lip English. The first and the last are artificial to some degree.

