If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

Secret History of the English

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

They Probably Always Talked Like That

One of the startling revelations by Stephen Oppenheimer is that a form of English was probably spoken from the beginning of the colonization of the British Isles. Just as genetic bedrock was laid down by the earliest inhabitants, to persist relatively unchanged through subsequent invasions by other peoples like the Romans, the English tongue has been dominant as the language of the land, admitting little admixture with Anglo-Saxon and Celtic. (See Stephen Oppenheimer, The Origins of the British, pp. 303ff.)

Pretty heady stuff, but Mick Harper, author of The Secret History of the English Language (Hoboken:  Melville 2008), goes Oppenheimer one better by proposing that it was not proto-Anglo Saxon that the Ice Age inhabitants of Britain spoke but something very like Chaucer’s pilgrims, only lacking, clearly, later invasive elements due to the Celts, Belgae, Romans and Normans.

Harper compares a sample of Old English (which we are taught is the same as “Anglo-Saxon”) with Middle English and Modern English to show that Anglo-Saxon does not appear to be the same language as English—something all English graduate students suspect from the moment they are forced to read Beowulf for their comps. In the Anglo-Saxon epic (which survives in a single copy turning up in suspicious circumstances in Tudor England and is set in Sweden and never mentions England), “virtually every single word is incomprehensible except by translation,” while in “the early English poetry of Chaucer and Piers Plowman…virtually every single word is comprehensible except for spelling.”

In case you do not believe it, here are the samples:

Nu scylun hergan hefaenricaes uard,

Metudaes maeti end his modgidanc,

Uerc uuldurfadur, sue he uundra gihuaes,

Eci dryctin, or astelidae.

(Caedmon, ca. 8th cent.)

A swerd and bokeler bar he by his side…

A whit cote and a blew hood wered he.

A bagpipe wel koude he blow and sowne,

And therwithal he brought us out of towne.

(Chaucer, The Prologue, 14th cent.)

You cannot say, or guess, for you know only

A heap of broken images, where the sun beats,

And the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,

And the dry stone no sound of water.

(T. S. Eliot, 20th cent.)

Harper’s comment is:  “If Anglo-Saxon/English is one language, it’s unique in the entire annals of languages on this our Earth, since it changes every goddamn word of itself” (p. 44). (Yes, he writes like that, too.)

The Anglo-Saxons were a small, obscure and illiterate tribe from, well, no one is quite sure, but perhaps northeast Germany, who arrived in waves after the Romans abandoned Britain in the fifth century, and who conquered most of the land and held it until the Danes and Norse (ca. 900) and Normans (1066) replaced them as rulers. In Harper’s view, they were just like the previous invaders, the Romans, Belgae and Celts, in having little effect on the language and customs of the populace. Just as there are only a handful of Celtic words in the English language, there was little impact on the linguistic bedrock of the kingdom the Anglo-Saxons carved out before they too had had their day. The fact that they left few monuments is unsurprising.

Which brings us to questions about the depth and breadth of Celtic heritage in Britain. If you are a Celtic fan (I’m not referring to the basketball team) you will not want to read The Secret History of the English Language. This book will disabuse you of many cherished notions. In Harper’s view, the Celts were just one of the alternating foreign conquerors of the long-suffering English-speaking peoples. Their numbers were few, even on the Continent, and they left little genetic or cultural footprint except on the “Celtic fringe” where they were squeezed in their final days.  

England has always been England. It’s always spoken English. And France has always spoken French. "But that was in another country, and besides, the wench is dead."We will have to save the French linguistic heresy for another post.

If you like the unusual and provocative ideas of M. J. Harper, who lives in London, check out the community of people who have bid farewell to the dunciad of academic research and unleashed their own personal pursuit of truth on a variety of intellectual topics at The Applied Epistemology Library. You can browse on the sly but must register (for free) to post your own comments and questions on threads.

Comments

Anonymous commented on 10-Jan-2011 03:47 PM

Here is an interesting assortment of Latin words in English without counterparts in other "Latinate" or Romance languages, from Eupedia.com

http://www.eupedia.com/europe/words_with_latin_roots_unique_english.shtml


Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

Recent Posts


Tags

Ashkenazi Jews Phyllis Starnes Stone Age Melanesians Europe rock art FOX News human leukocyte antigens Turkic DNA Panther's Lodge Iran Algonquian Indians DNA testing companies ethics Cohen Modal Haplotype Cherokee DNA news Micmac Indians Pima Indians Belgium American history Anasazi Irish history Melungeons DNA Fingerprint Test Teresa Panther-Yates Population genetics Barack Obama Sorbs EURO DNA Fingerprint Test archeology Marija Gimbutas Hohokam Indians Abenaki Indians Jews Italy Russia mitochondrial DNA Freemont Indians Indo-Europeans genetics China Peter Parham evolution Applied Epistemology African DNA occipital bun Maya Y chromosomal haplogroups Middle Ages health and medicine Acadians education Gravettian culture haplogroup B Khazars corn Abraham Lincoln Telltown Hopi Indians Helladic art French Canadians BBCNews Joseph Jacobs haplogroup J personal genomics England Gunnar Thompson Gypsies Great Goddess genealogy N. Brent Kennedy M. J. Harper haplogroup U ancient DNA Sea Peoples Etruscans Nikola Tesla population genetics population isolates Bradshaw Foundation Greeks DNA Fingerprint Test Britain genomics labs surnames INORA Anne Marie Fine Cleopatra history of science ethnicity Neanderthals Melungeon Heritage Association Jone Entine Middle Eastern DNA religion Wendy Roth Paleolithic Age Arizona State University Akhenaten climate change Maronites Elizabeth C. Hirschman Magdalenian culture mental foramen India Michael Grant Kentucky Finnish people North African DNA Choctaw Indians prehistory Y chromosome DNA haplogroup X Cajuns Neolithic Revolution Chris Stringer French DNA seafaring Melungeon Union Denisovans Celts Egyptians Stacy Schiff haplogroup T Native American DNA Test Jewish genetics Native American DNA HapMap Tifaneg Kurgan Culture BATWING George Starr-Bresette anthropology Stephen Oppenheimer Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid autosomal DNA Phoenicians Riane Eisler Havasupai Indians Colin Renfrew Zuni Indians clan symbols ethnic markers Alabama Basques Theodore Steinberg cannibalism Pueblo Indians human migrations Shlomo Sand Current Anthropology linguistics Donald N. Yates Normans Caucasian myths Plato Ireland medicine European DNA Anglo-Saxons Keros Tutankamun Arabia Lebanon Nova Scotia Mary Settegast immunology Asian DNA Roma People

Archive