Anglo-Saxon: Difference between revisions

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(New page: Anglo-Saxon or Old English is the ancestor of Modern English. It is a West Germanic Language and like Dutch and Low Saxon (Low German) it did not go through the High German Consonant Shif...)
 
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=The People=
=The People=
The Saxons were invited to Britain to help fight off the Picts.  A large migration of Saxons then moved from modern Northern Germany and Holland to England.  The next few centuries they expanded westward constantly and gained more land.
The Saxons were invited to Britain to help fight off the Picts.  A large migration of Saxons then moved from modern Northern Germany and Holland to England.  The next few centuries they expanded westward constantly and gained more land.  The people then became mixed with the Romano-British people already living there.
 
In the 9th and 10th centuries, Danish Vikings invaded parts of England.  The Old Norse influence can still be seen today. 
 
=Orthography=
Early forms of Anglo-Saxon writing was in [[Runic]].  It was an expansion of the original 24 rune Fuþark, and had become Fuþorc.  When the Latin Alphabet was introduced, Anglo-Saxon added two symbols to the Latin alphabet from Runic, those would be "þ" /θ/ and "ƿ" /w/ from runic, called Thorn and Wynn respectively.

Revision as of 00:01, 27 May 2008

Anglo-Saxon or Old English is the ancestor of Modern English. It is a West Germanic Language and like Dutch and Low Saxon (Low German) it did not go through the High German Consonant Shift.

The People

The Saxons were invited to Britain to help fight off the Picts. A large migration of Saxons then moved from modern Northern Germany and Holland to England. The next few centuries they expanded westward constantly and gained more land. The people then became mixed with the Romano-British people already living there.

In the 9th and 10th centuries, Danish Vikings invaded parts of England. The Old Norse influence can still be seen today.

Orthography

Early forms of Anglo-Saxon writing was in Runic. It was an expansion of the original 24 rune Fuþark, and had become Fuþorc. When the Latin Alphabet was introduced, Anglo-Saxon added two symbols to the Latin alphabet from Runic, those would be "þ" /θ/ and "ƿ" /w/ from runic, called Thorn and Wynn respectively.