Special English Explorations
- History of English Language, Part 1 -
This is Steve Ember. And this is Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special
English program Explorations. Today we present the first of two programs
about the history of the English Language.
More people are trying to learn English than any other language in the
world. English is the language of political negotiations and international
business. It has become the international language of science and medicine.
International treaties say passenger airplane pilots must speak English.
English is the major foreign language taught in most schools in South
America and Europe. School children in the Philippines and Japan begin
learning English at an early age. English is the official language of
more than seventy-five countries including Britain, Canada, the United
States, Australia, and South Africa.
In countries where many different languages are spoken, English is often
used as an official language to help people communicate. India is good
example. English is the common language in this country where at least
twenty-four languages are spoken by more than one-million people.
Where did the English language come from? Why has it become so popular?
To answer these questions we must travel back in time about five-thousand
years to an area north of the Black Sea in southeastern Europe.
Experts say the people in that area spoke a language called Proto-Indo
-European. That language is no longer spoken. Researchers do not really
know what it sounded like. Yet, Proto-Indo-European is believed to be the
ancestor of most European languages. These include the languages that
became ancient Greek, ancient German and the ancient Latin.
Latin disappeared as a spoken language. Yet it left behind three great
languages that became modern Spanish, French and Italian. Ancient German
became Dutch, Danish, German, Norwegian, Swedish and one of the languages
that developed into English.
The English language is a result of the invasions of the island of Britain
over many hundreds of years. The invaders lived along the northern coast
of Europe.
The first invasions were by a people called Angles about one-thousand-five
hundred years ago. The Angles were a German tribe who crossed the English
Channel. Later two more groups crossed to Britain. They were the Saxons
and the Jutes.
These groups found a people called the Celts, who had lived in Britain for
many thousands of years. The Celts and the invaders fought. After a while,
most of the Celts were killed, or made slaves. Some escaped to live in the
area that became Wales. Through the years, the Saxons, Angles and Jutes
mixed their different languages. The result is what is called Anglo-Saxon
or Old English.
Old English is extremely difficult to understand. Only a few experts can
read this earliest form of English.
Several written works have survived from the Old English period. Perhaps
the most famous is called Beowulf. It is the oldest known English poem.
Experts say it was written in Britain more than one-thousand years ago.
The name of the person who wrote it is not known.
Beowulf is the story of a great king who fought against monsters. He was
a good king, well liked by his people. A new book by Seamus Heaney tells
this ancient story in modern English.
Listen as Warren Scheer reads the beginning of this ancient story.
The next great invasion of Britain came from the far north beginning about
one-thousand-one-hundred years ago. Fierce people called Vikings raided
the coast areas of Britain. The Vikings came from Denmark, Norway and
other northern countries. They were looking to capture trade goods and
slaves and take away anything of value.
In some areas, the Vikings became so powerful they built temporary bases.
These temporary bases sometimes became permanent. Later, many Vikings stayed
in Britain. Many English words used today come from these ancient Vikings.
Words like “sky,” “leg,” “skull,” “egg,” “crawl,” “ lift” and
“take” are from the old languages of the far northern countries.
The next invasion of Britain took place more than nine-hundred years ago,
in Ten-Sixty-Six. History experts call this invasion the Norman Conquest.
William the Conqueror led it.
The Normans were a French speaking people from Normandy in the north of
France. They became the new rulers of Britain. These new rulers spoke
only French for several hundred years. It was the most important language
in the world at that time. It was the language of educated people. But
the common people of Britain still spoke Old English.
Old English took many words from the Norman French. Some of these include
“damage,” “prison,” and “marriage.” Most English words that describe
law and government come from Norman French. Words such as “jury,”
“parliament,” and “justice.”
The French language used by the Norman rulers greatly changed the way
English was spoken by eight hundred years ago. English became what
language experts call Middle English. As time passed, the ruling Normans
no longer spoke true French. Their language had become a mix of French
and Middle English.
Middle English sounds like modern English. But it is very difficult to
understand now. Many written works from this period have survived.
Perhaps the most famous was written by Geoffrey Chaucer, a poet who lived
in London and died there in fourteen-hundred. Chaucer's most famous work
is “The Canterbury Tales,” written more than six-hundred years ago.
The Canterbury Tales is a collection of poems about different people
traveling to the town of Canterbury. Listen for a few moments as Warren
Scheer reads the beginning of Chaucer's famous Canterbury Tales.
Now listen as Mr. Scheer reads the same sentences again, but this time
in Modern English.
English language experts say Geoffrey Chaucer was the first important
writer to use the English language. They also agree that Chaucer's great
Middle English poem gives us a clear picture of the people of his time.
Some of the people described in The Canterbury Tales are wise and brave,
some are stupid and foolish. Some believe they are extremely important.
Some are very nice, others are mean. But they all still seem real.
The history of the English language continues as Middle English becomes
Modern English, which is spoken today. That will be our story next time.
This program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Shirley
Griffith. And this is Steve Ember. Join us again next week to hear
the second part of the History of the English Language on the VOA Special
English program, Explorations.