Transcript Document

The Anglo-Saxon and
Medieval Periods 449-1485
English 12
British Literature - Unit One
Language
As Britain's invaders
(Angles, Saxons, and
other Germanic peoples)
united into a nation
called England, their
dialects evolved over
time into a distinct
language called English today usually called Old
English.
Old English was very different from the
English we speak today.
- Harsher sound
-Written phonetically with no silent letters
-Grammatically more complex
The most valuable characteristic was its ability to
change and grow, adopting new words as the need
arose.
Literature
The Anglo-Saxons had an early writing system called
the Runic alphabet - used mainly for inscriptions on
coins and monuments.
Their literature was composed and
transmitted orally rather than in writing.
Oral poets called scops
celebrated the deeds of
heroic warriors in long
epic poems.
They also sang shorter
lyric poems.
Themes of the poems included:
-death or loss
-religious faith
-moral instruction
Riddles reflected a more playful nature;
describing a common object, like a ship or
a bird, in ways that forced the audience to
guess their identity.
In the town I saw a creature
which feeds the cattle. It has many teeth;
its beak is useful as it points down,
gently plunders and turns for home;
it searches for plants along the slopes,
and always finds those not rooted firmly;
it leaves the living ones held by their roots,
quietly standing where they spring from the soil,
brightly gleaming, blowing and growing.
A rake
WYRD
The Anglo-Saxons had a strong belief
in wyrd (fate) and an admiration for
heroic warriors whose wyrd it was to
prevail in battle.
The spread of Christianity in Britain was
accompanied by a spread of literacy and
the introduction of the Roman alphabet.
The only books were manuscripts that scribes
copied by hand. Thus, only a fraction of
Anglo-Saxon poetry has survived (Beowulf).

Most Old English poems are anonymous.
The history of English…in 1 minute
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9Tfbeqyu2U
The Medieval Period
1066-1485
Chivalry: a code of honor intended to
govern knightly behavior. The code
encouraged knights to honor and
protect ladies and to go on holy quests.
This was the time of...
The Crusades, Richard the Lion-Hearted,
Robin Hood, The Hundred Years War, The
Black Death.
The decline of Feudalism
Feudalism, a political and economic system
based on land ownership, declined, leading
to the growth of towns.
As towns became the centers of commerce,
universities were becoming the chief
centers of learning.
Language
The Norman Conquest (1066) led to changes in the
English language.
Norman French became the language of business,
nobility, scholars, and craftspeople in Britain.
Only the peasant population used English.
Middle English
English soon incorporated
thousands of words from
Norman French, leading to
the development of Middle
English.
By the end of The Hundred
Years War between
England and France,
English had once again
become the first language
of the nobility.
Words adopted from
Norman French
clique
garage
critique
collage
prison
suite
felony
damage
restaurant
marriage
justice
chef
govern
jury
Literature
The later Middle Ages saw the
development of mystery and miracle
plays, which dramatized episodes from the
Bible and from saints' lives, and morality
plays, which taught moral lessons.
Religious faith was a vital element of
medieval English life and literature.
Romances
Especially popular in
the Middle Ages were
romances, tales of
chivalric knights (King
Arthur and the knights
of the Round Table)
Chaucer
The most important
writer of the 14th
century was the poet
Geoffrey Chaucer.
He wrote The Canterbury
Tales: a collection of tales
supposedly narrated by a
group of pilgrims traveling
from London to Canterbury
to visit a shrine.