Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 1
Started conversation Mar 7, 2002
Very interesting.
I wonder whether places and regions on the continent where Anglo-Saxon languages/dialects came from could be described more precisely.
What is the oldest text written in Anglo-Saxon? Where is it found?
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 2
Posted Mar 7, 2002
The Angles and Saxons appear to have come from the area in modern Germany called Schleswig. This is just south of Denmark. The Jutes probably came from Jutland which is the mainland part of Denmark. So all three tribes came from a very small area on the Danish/German border.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 3
Posted Mar 8, 2002
I think the oldest prose text is something written for King Alfred, who collected a lot of manuscripts in Latin and Greek. This is the first line of something called "Otheres voyages" which was an account of the journeys round the north by a seaman called (?) Arthur: "Othere taelde his hlaforde Aelfred kyning thaet he of ealle menne tha northmost bude" The only word not existing in modern English is the last - the past tense of bide (to live).
Some poetry is supposedly older. (?) The tale of Cadmon, and I much prefer The Battle of Maldon to Beowulf.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 4
Posted Mar 8, 2002
It was Star's inclusion of that sentence in a conversation we were having that persuaded me to study Anglo-Saxon and to write this entry.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 5
Posted Apr 8, 2003
I love languages and I think it's great that people keep these old languages going. I like to understand how words are made up, what their origins are, etc. and it helps to learn other languages as well.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 6
Posted Mar 13, 2004
I have the 'Riming Poem' in Old English,
I would very much like to find a translation
in Modern English. Can anyone help, please.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 7
Posted Mar 14, 2004
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 8
Posted May 12, 2007
It is possibly that the Angles also reached up into southern Sweden as the Danes are newer tribe comprised of older tribes.
Reference: 'Barbarian Europe' by Philip Dixon. Brilliant book.
Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
Post 9
Posted May 12, 2007
"Me lifes onlah
ond þæt torhte geteoh,
Glæd wæs ic gliwum,
blissa bleoum,
se þis leoht onwrah,
tillice onwrah.
glenged hiwum, blostma hiwum."
Best I can do is:
"My(?) life permit(?)
and that bright matter,
Glad was I playing (? Gliw = play, gliwian = make merry),
bliss (happiness) forms,
this light onwrah(?),
lice (tillic - lice) onwrah.
Splended forms, blossom forms."
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