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The Spread of Christianity

Like all cultures, that of the Anglo-Saxons changed over time. The early invaders were seafaring wanderers whose lives were bleak, violent, and short. Their pagan religion was marked by a strong belief in wyrd, or fate, and they saved their admiration for heroic warriors whose fate it was to prevail in battle. As the Anglo-Saxons settled into their new land, however, they became an agricultural people—less violent, more secure, more civilized.

Language History Wyrd Wyrd is the ancestor of our modern English word weird. The modern meaning—“of, or relating to, or suggestive of the preternatural or supernatural”—retains some suggestion of the original meaning—”fate.” Before arriving in Modern English, the word traveled through Middle English as werde.
The bleak fatalism of the Anglo-Saxons’ early beliefs may have reflected the reality of their lives, but it offered little hope. Life was harsh, it taught, and the only certainty was that it would end in death. Christianityopened up a bright new possibility: that the suffering of this world was merely a prelude to the eternal happiness of heaven.

No one knows exactly when the first Christian missionaries arrived in Britain, but by AD 300 the number of Christians on the island was significant. Over the next two centuries, Christianity spread to Ireland and Scotland, and from Scotland to the Picts and Angles in the north. In 597, a Roman missionary named Augustinearrived in the kingdom of Kent, where he established a monastery at Canterbury. From there, Christianity spread so rapidly that by 690 all of Britain was at least nominally Christian, though many held on to some pagan traditions and beliefs.

Monasteriesbecame centers of intellectual, literary, artistic, and social activity. At a time when schools and libraries were completely unknown, monasteries offered the only opportunity for education. Monastic scholars imported books from the Continent, which were then painstakingly copied. In addition, original works were written, mostly in scholarly Latin, but later in Old English. The earliest recorded history of the English people came from the clergy at the monasteries. The greatest of these monks was the Venerable Bede(c. 673–735), author of A History of the English Church and People. When Vikings invaded in the late 8th and 9th centuries, they plundered monasteries and threatened to obliterate all traces of cultural refinement. Yet Christianity continued as a dominant cultural force for more than a thousand years to come.

The Development of English: Old English (450-1150)

The English language began as Englisc, the speech of a scattered population of Anglo-Saxon peoples on an island off the European coast. Today, English is a global language spoken by perhaps a billion people around the world. This is largely due to the political power and cultural influence of the British Empire and the United States. However, it is also the result of the simplicity that English grammar has acquired during its long history. Before reaching its modern form, English passed through two major stages, Old English and Middle English.



The Anglo-Saxons spoke various Germanic dialects, a mixture of which are the basis of Old English, the form of the English language used from the mid-400s to the early 1100s. To present-day readers of English, Old English looks like a foreign language, as these lines from the Old English epic poem Beowulf show:

Đa com of more under mist-hleoϸum

Grendel ʒonʒan, Godes yrre bær

(Then out of the marsh, under mist-covered cliffs,

Grendel stalked, bearing God’s wrath)

Old English has had a significant effect on Modern English. Although less than one percent of the words—4,500 out of 500,000—in the Oxford English Dictionary are from Old English, these words form our most basic (man, wife, work, Friday, house) and functional (to, for, but, and) vocabulary. One computer analysis revealed that all of the hundred most commonly used English words are of Anglo-Saxon origin. Grammatically, the language was more complex than modern English, with words changing form to indicate different functions, so that word order was more flexible than it is now.

By the 600s, Christian scribes had further developed English by replacing the ancient Germanic characters known as runes with the Old English alphabet of twenty-four letters. The scribes who transcribed Beowulf around the year 1000 used this alphabet.

The most valuable characteristic of Old English, however, was its ability to change and grow, to adopt new words as the need arose. While Christianity brought Latin words such as cloister, priest, and candle into the Anglo-Saxon vocabulary, encounters with the Vikings brought skull, die, crawl, and rotten. The arrival of the Normans in 1066 would stretch the language even farther, with thousands of words from the French.

 

 


Date: 2016-03-03; view: 922


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