The Earliest Period of Germanic History
The history of the Germanic group begins with the appearance of what is known as the Proto-Germanic (PG) language (also termed Common or Primitive Germanic, Primitive Teutonic and simply Germanic). PG is the linguistic ancestor or the parent-language of the Germanic group. It is supposed to have split from related lE tongues sometime between the 15th and 10th c. B.C. The would-be Germanic tribes belonged to the western division of the lE speech community.
As the Indo-Europeans extended over a larger territory, the ancient Germans or Teutons moved further north than other tribes and settled on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea in the region of the Elbe. This place is regarded as the most probable original home of the Teutons. It is here that they developed their first specifically Germanic linguistic features which made them a separate group in the lE family.
PG is an entirely pre-historicallanguage: it was never recorded in written form. In the 19th c. it was reconstructed by methods of comparative linguistics from written evidence in descendant languages. Hypothetical reconstructed PG forms will sometimes be quoted below, to explain the origin of English forms.
It is believed that at the earliest stages of history PG was fundamentally one language, though dialectally coloured. In its later stages dialectal differences grew, so that towards the beginning of our era Germanic appears divided into dialectal groups and tribal dialects. Dialectal differentiation increased with the migrations and geographical expansion of the Teutons caused by overpopulation, poor agricultural technique and scanty natural resources in the areas of their original settlement.
- Lecture #1 The Subject of History of English
- The Earliest Period of Germanic History
- Lecture #2-3 The Old English period. The main historical events in oe period.
- Lecture #4 Germanic Settlement of Britain. Beginning of English
- Lecture #5 The Periods of the History of English
- Lecture #6 Middle English Period, the main historical events in me period. Norman conquest.
- Lecture #7-8 The Formation of National Language. Me dialect. London dialect.
- Lecture #9 English Vocabulary in me period. Loan words in English.
- Lecture #10 The main historical events of Middle English period
- Lecture #11-12 English around the world. American English. Black English
- Lecture #13 English in Canada. Canadian English
- Lecture #14-15 English Language in Australia and New Zealand. Australian and New Zealand English