History of English Language
History of English Language
Late 6th century Ethelbert, the King of Kent, is baptized. He is the first English
king to convert to Christianity.
7th century Rise of the Saxon kingdom of Wessex; the Saxon kingdoms of Essex
and Middlesex; the Angle kingdoms of Mercia, East Anglia, and Northumbria. St.
Augustine and Irish missionaries convert Anglo-Saxons to Christianity,
introducing new religious words borrowed from Latin and Greek. Latin speakers
begin referring to the country as Anglia and later as Englaland.
673 Birth of the Venerable Bede, the monk who composed (in Latin) The
Ecclesiastical History of the English People (c. 731), a key source of information
about Anglo Saxon settlement.
Late 8th century Scandinavians begin to settle in Britain and Ireland; Danes
settle in parts of Ireland.
Early 9th century Egbert of Wessex incorporates Cornwall into his kingdom
and is recognized as overlord of the seven kingdoms of the Angles and Saxons
(the Heptarchy): England begins to emerge.
Mid 9th century Danes raid England, occupy Northumbria, and establish a
kingdom at York. Danish begins to influence English.
Late 9th century King Alfred of Wessex (Alfred the Great) leads the Anglo-
Saxons to victory over the Vikings, translates Latin works into English, and
establishes the writing of prose in English.
10th century English and Danes mix fairly peacefully, and many Scandinavian
(or Old Norse) loanwords enter the language, including such common words
as sister, wish, skin, and die.
1000 Approximate date of the only surviving manuscript of the Old English epic
poem Beowulf, composed by an anonymous poet between the 8th century and
the early 11th century.
Early 11th century Danes attack England, and the English king (Ethelred the
Unready) escapes to Normandy. The Battle of Maldon becomes the subject of one
of the few surviving poems in Old English. The Danish king (Canute) rules over
England and encourages the growth of Anglo-Saxon culture and literature.
Mid 11th century Edward the Confessor, King of England who was raised in
Normandy, names William, Duke of Normandy, as his heir.
1066 The Norman Invasion: King Harold is killed at the Battle of Hastings, and
William of Normandy is crowned King of England. Over succeeding decades,
Norman French becomes the language of the courts and of the upper classes;
English remains the language of the majority. Latin is used in churches and
schools. For the next century, English, for all practical purposes, is no longer a
written language.
The Middle English period saw the breakdown of the inflectional system of Old
English and the expansion of vocabulary with many borrowings from French
and Latin.
1204 King John loses control of the Duchy of Normandy and other French lands;
England is now the only home of the Norman French/English.
1215 King John signs the Magna Carta ("Great Charter"), a critical document in
the long historical process leading to the rule of constitutional law in the English-
speaking world.
1258 King Henry III is forced to accept the Provisions of Oxford, which establish
a Privy Council to oversee the administration of the government. These
documents, though annulled a few years later, are generally regarded as
England's first written constitution.
Mid to late 14th century The Hundred Years War between England and
France leads to the loss of almost all of England's French possessions. The Black
Death kills roughly one-third of England's population. Geoffrey Chaucer
composes The Canterbury Tales in Middle English.
English becomes the official language of the law courts and replaces Latin as the
medium of instruction at most schools. John Wycliffe's English translation of the
Latin Bible is published. The Great Vowel Shift begins, marking the loss of the so-
called "pure" vowel sounds (which are still found in many continental languages)
and the loss of the phonetic pairings of most long and short vowel sounds.
1362 The Statute of Pleading makes English the official language in England.
Parliament is opened with its first speech delivered in English.
1399 At his coronation, King Henry IV becomes the first English monarch to
deliver a speech in English.
Late 15th century William Caxton brings to Westminster (from the Rhineland)
the first printing press and publishes Chaucer's The Canterbury
Tales. Literacy rates increase significantly, and printers begin to standardize
English spelling. The monk Galfridus Grammaticus (also known as Geoffrey the
Grammarian) publishes Thesaurus Linguae Romanae et Britannicae, the first
English-to-Latin wordbook.
Distinctions are commonly drawn between the Early Modern Period (1500-
1800) and Late Modern English (1800 to the present).
1549 The first version of the Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England is
published.
1553 Thomas Wilson publishes The Art of Rhetorique, one of the first works
on logicand rhetoric in English.
1588 Elizabeth I begins her 45-year reign as queen of England. The British defeat
the Spanish Armada, boosting national pride and enhancing the legend of Queen
Elizabeth.
1590-1611 William Shakespeare writes his Sonnets and the majority of his plays.
1600 The East India Company is chartered to promote trade with Asia,
eventually leading to the establishment of the British Raj in India.
1603 Queen Elizabeth dies and James I (James VI of Scotland) accedes to the
throne.
1611 The Authorized Version of the English Bible (the "King James" Bible) is
published, greatly influencing the development of the written language.
1619 The first African slaves in North America arrive in Virginia.
1642 Civil War breaks out in England after King Charles I attempts to arrest his
parliamentary critics. The war leads to the execution of Charles I, the dissolution
of parliament, and the replacement of the English monarchy with a Protectorate
(165359) under Oliver Cromwell's rule.
1666 The Great Fire of London destroys most of the City of London inside the
old Roman City Wall.
1670 The Hudson's Bay Company is chartered for promoting trade and
settlement in Canada.
1688 Aphra Behn, the first woman novelist in England, publishes Oroonoko, or
the History of the Royal Slave.
1697 In his Essay Upon Projects, Daniel Defoe calls for the creation of an
Academy of 36 "gentlemen" to dictate English usage.
1702 The Daily Courant, the first regular daily newspaper in English, is
published in London.
1707 The Act of Union unites the Parliaments of England and Scotland, creating
the United Kingdom of Great Britain.
1712 Anglo-Irish satirist and cleric Jonathan Swift proposes the creation of an
English Academy to regulate English usage and "ascertain" the language.
1719 Daniel Defoe publishes Robinson Crusoe, considered by some to be the first
modern English novel.
1760-1795 This period marks the rise of the English grammarians (Joseph
Priestly, Robert Lowth, James Buchanan, John Ash, Thomas Sheridan, George
Campbell, William Ward, and Lindley Murray), whose rule books, primarily
based on prescriptive notions of grammar, become increasingly popular.
See What Is Grammar?
1785 The Daily Universal Register (renamed The Times in 1788) begins
publication in London.
1791 The Observer, the oldest national Sunday newspaper in Britain, begins
publication.
Early 19th century Grimm's Law (discovered by Friedrich von Schlegel and
Rasmus Rask, later elaborated by Jacob Grimm) identifies relationships between
certain consonants in Germanic languages (including English) and their originals
in Indo-European. The formulation of Grimm's Law marks a major advance in
the development of linguistics as a scholarly field of study.
1803 The Act of Union incorporates Ireland into Britain, creating the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
1810 William Hazlitt publishes A New and Improved Grammar of the English
Language.
1840 The native Maori in New Zealand cede sovereignty to the British.
1866 James Russell Lowell champions the use of American regionalisms, helping
to end deference to the Received British Standard.
1876 Alexander Graham Bell invents the telephone, thus modernizing private
communication.
1879 James A.H. Murray begins editing the Philological Society's New English
Dictionary on Historical Principles (later renamed the Oxford English
Dictionary).
1884/1885 Mark Twain's novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn introduces
a colloquial prose style that significantly influences the writing of fiction in the
U.S. (See Mark Twain's Colloquial Prose Style.)
1906 Henry and Francis Fowler publish the first edition of The King's English.
1919 H.L. Mencken publishes the first edition of The American Language, a
pioneer study in the history of a major national version of English.
1921 Ireland achieves Home Rule, and Gaelic is made an official language in
addition to English.
1922 The British Broadcasting Company (later renamed the British Broadcasting
Corporation, or BBC) is established.
1925 The New Yorker magazine is founded by Harold Ross and Jane Grant.
1926 Henry Fowler publishes the first edition of his Dictionary of Modern
English Usage.
1927 The first "speaking motion picture," The Jazz Singer, is released.
1947 India is freed from British control and divided into Pakistan and India. The
constitution provides that English remain the official language for 15 years. New
Zealand gains its independence from the U.K. and joins the Commonwealth.
1949 Hans Kurath publishes A Word Geography of the Eastern United States, a
landmark in the scientific study of American regionalisms.
1950s The number of speakers using English as a second language exceeds the
number of native speakers.
1967 The Welsh Language Act gives the Welsh language equal validity
with English in Wales, and Wales is no longer considered a part of England.
Henry Kucera and Nelson Francis publish Computational Analysis of Present-
Day American English, a landmark in modern corpus linguistics.
1969 Canada officially becomes bilingual (French and English). The first major
English dictionary to use corpus linguisticsThe American Heritage Dictionary
of the English Languageis published.
1993 Mosaic, the web browser credited with popularizing the World Wide Web,
is released. (Netscape Navigator becomes available in 1994, Yahoo! in 1995, and
Google in 1998.)
1994 Text messaging is introduced, and the first modern blogs go online.
2000 The Oxford English Dictionary Online (OED Online) is made available to
subscribers.