Spoken and Written Language (Sammelband)

Relations between Latin and the Vernacular Languages in the Earlier Middle Ages


Allgemeine Angaben

Herausgeber

Mary GarrisonMarco MostertArpad P. Orbán

Verlag
Brepols
Stadt
Turnhout
Publikationsdatum
2013
Reihe
Utrecht Studies in Medieval Literacy 24
Weiterführender Link
http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503507705-1
ISBN
978-2-503-50770-5 ( im KVK suchen )
Thematik nach Sprachen
Sprachübergreifend
Disziplin(en)
Literaturwissenschaft, Sprachwissenschaft
Schlagwörter
Mittelalter, Mündlichkeit, Philologie, Schriftlichkeit, Textedition, Diglossie, Mittellatein

Exposé

The linguistic situation of medieval Europe has sometimes been characterized as one of diglossia: one learned language, Latin, was used for religion, law, and documents, while the various vernaculars were used in other linguistic registers. Informing the relationship between Latin and the vernaculars was the choice of Latin as the language of the Western Roman Empire and the Roman Church. This choice entailed the possibility of a shared literary culture and heritage across Europe, but also had consequences for access to that heritage. Scholarship on the Romance languages has contested the relevance of the term diglossia, and the divergence between written or spoken Latin and Romance is a subject of energetic debate. In other linguistic areas, too, questions have been voiced. How can one characterize the interaction between Latin and the various vernaculars, and between the various vernaculars themselves? To what extent could speakers from separate linguistic worlds communicate? These questions are fundamental for anyone concerned with communication, the transmission of learning, literary history, and cultural interaction in the Middle Ages. This volume contains contributions by historians, cultural historians, and students of texts, language, and linguistics, addressing the subject from their various perspectives but at the same time trying to overcome familiar disciplinary divisions.

Inhalt

Preface
Abbreviations
Michael Richter: Trace Elements of Obliterated Vernacular Languages in Latin Texts
A. Demyttenaere Qu’une femme ne peut pas être appelée homme: Questions de langue et d’anthropologie autour du concile de Mâcon (585)
Arpád Orbán Wie groß war der Einfluß des Griechischen auf die Sprache der (ersten) lateinischen Christen?
Walter Berschin Die Figur des Dolmetschers in der biographischen Literatur des westlichen Mittelalters (IV.-XII. Jh.)
Inger Larsson Nordic Digraphia and Diglossia
Anthony Harvey The Non-Classical Vocabulary of Celtic Latin Literature: An Overview
Michael W. Herren The Cena Adamnani or Seventh-Century Table Talk
Nicholas Brooks Latin and Old English in Ninth-Century Canterbury
Roger Wright A Sociophilological Study of the Change to Official Romance Documentation in Castile
Marc van Uytfanghe L’ancien français (archaïque) et le fonctionnement de la communication verticale latine en Gaule (VIIe-VIIIe siècles)
Michel Banniard Quelques exemples de compromis morphologiques au VIIIe siècle en Francia
Rijcklof Hofman Latin Grammars and the Structure of the Vernacular Old Irish Auraicept na nÉces
Charles D. Wright From Monks’ Jokes to Sages’ Wisdom: The Joca Monachorum Tradition and the Irish Immacallam in dáThúarad
Dennis Green Writing in Latin and the Vernacular: The Case of Old High German
Rolf Bergmann Volkssprachige Glossen für lateinkundige Leser?
Arend Quak Rustice vel Teodisce appellatur oder: Warum schreibt man Glossen?
Elvira Glaser Typen und Funktionen volkssprachiger (althochdeutschen) Eintragungen im lateinischen Kontext
Els Rose Liturgical Latin in Early Medieval Gaul
Dieter Geuenich Sprach Ludwig der Deutsche deutsch?
Anna Adamska Latin and Three Vernaculars in East Central Europe from the Point of View of the History of Social Communication


Anmerkungen

Papers from the Second Utrecht Symposium on Medieval Literacy, 24-26 June 1999

Ersteller des Eintrags
Redaktion romanistik.de
Erstellungsdatum
Donnerstag, 09. Mai 2013, 13:41 Uhr
Letzte Änderung
Donnerstag, 09. Mai 2013, 13:41 Uhr