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2 - The origins of Northern English

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Katie Wales
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
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Summary

Northern dialects and ‘boundaries’ in the Old English period

Many of the present-day images of Northern English and the North discussed in the first chapter are deeply rooted in history. Much of the North, especially the North-west and Scotland also, has remained ‘alien’ and inaccessible till modern times. Indeed, until the advent of the railways the easiest route to Scotland via the North-west was by boat from Fleetwood in Lancashire to Ardrossan on the Clyde coast (Hannavy 2003: 58). Lancashire until the eighteenth century remained hemmed in between the Mersey marshes, the Pennines and the Lake District, although accessible to Ireland. According to a seventeenth-century poem Iter Lancastrense the sparse roads were ‘gulphes of dust and mire’ (cited Langton 1998: 83) since the main roads north and south across Britain lay east of the Pennines. There was Ermine Street, for example, built by the Romans, part of the present-day Great North Road or A1, and implied on an early map of Britain by Matthew Paris of St Albans (c.1250). But even as late as 1740 there was no turnpike north of Grantham (see further chapter 3). The Norman bishop Geoffrey of Monmouth in his History of the Kings of Britain said of the land across the Humber that, for the invading Saxons, it was ‘a frightful land to live in, more or less uninhabited’, and that it therefore offered a safe hiding-place for foreigners (cited Jewell 1994: 187).

Type
Chapter
Information
Northern English
A Social and Cultural History
, pp. 32 - 63
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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