Middle Low German language
Middle Low German | ||
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Period | 1150 or 1200 - 1600 | |
Linguistic classification |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639-3 |
gml (from English German Middle Low ) |
The Middle Low German language is a developmental stage of Low German . It developed from the Old Saxon language in the Middle Ages and has been documented in writing since around 1225/34 ( Sachsenspiegel ).
Term "Middle Low German"
The term Middle Low German is ambiguous:
- The Middle Low German in the strict sense includes northern Germany and (only) to the northeast of the modern Netherlands, east of the IJssel .
- The Middle Low German in the broader sense includes North Germany and the entire Middle Dutch language area.
The larger representations of Middle Low German (such as Lübben and Lasch ) treat Middle Low German exclusively in the narrower sense.
distribution
The Middle Low German language was the leading written language in northern Central Europe during the Hanseatic period from around 1300 to around 1600 AD and served as the lingua franca in the northern half of Europe. It was used in parallel to Latin for diplomacy and documents . Most of the Hanseatic League's correspondence in Central and Northern Europe was carried out in Central Low German. There are Middle Low German documents from London in the west to Novgorod in the east and Bergen in the north to Westphalia in the south. Middle Low German was also communicated in Visby on Gotland, Riga , Reval and Dorpat . There is still a handwritten dictionary of Middle Low German-Russian by Tönnies Fonne from 1607 in the Danish Royal Library in Copenhagen. During this period in particular, Low German had a considerable influence on the Scandinavian languages Norwegian , Danish and Swedish , which is characterized by numerous loan words. Some Scandinavians believe that around half or even more of the Swedish vocabulary goes back to Low German. It should be noted, however, that these are less the most common words (pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, etc.) and more rather rare nouns (job titles, etc.).
Regional expressions of the written language
The early Middle Low German texts were still clearly influenced by the spoken language. There were shortened, oral forms such as semme (instead of sineme , "his"), sir (instead of siner , "his"), eyr (instead of one , "one"). These texts were shaped by the landscape, but did not reproduce any dialect. In the later written language , the scribes tried to avoid these shortened forms and to use etymologically correct forms.
In the 15th and early 16th centuries, through the Devotio moderna, Eastern Middle Dutch exerted an influence on the Münsterland written Middle Low German.
In the Westphalian and in the East Westphalian there were central German influences, especially in the Elbe-East Westphalian. Standard German must have been familiar to the writers there.
Some linguists assume that southern Ostfälisch influenced the rest of the Ostfalen with written language influences . Southern Ostfalen is considered to be the strongest intellectual center of early Middle Low German.
From the second half of the 14th century, written Middle Low German became increasingly uniform. This Middle Low German written language arose from what was then East Low German and was particularly shaped by Lübeck. This supraregional written language requires a supraregional verbal lingua franca that has not been preserved but must be accepted.
grammar
Linguistic monuments
In addition to the Middle Low German documents, the following works in particular represent important linguistic monuments of the Middle Low German language:
- The Sachsenspiegel , a collection under Saxon law around 1225, which had a significant influence on jurisprudence in Europe until the 19th century,
- the Saxon World Chronicle , a prose chronicle from the 13th century,
- Magdeburg Schöppenchronik , 1350–1516,
- the Berlin City Book , around 1380–1498,
- the Chronica novella by Hermann Korner , Lübeck, from 1416 (also in Latin),
- the Redentiner Easter play , a mystery play from 1464,
- the Lübeck Bible (1494) , incunabulum printed by Steffen Arndes in Lübeck, 1494,
- Reynke de vos , printed in the Mohnkopf- Offizin of Hans van Ghetelen in Lübeck, 1498, an animal poem that was translated into many languages and edited, for example, as Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ,
- the Lübeck Bible (1533/34) or the Bugenhagen Bible ,
- De düdesche Schlömer , a spiritual drama on the Everyman theme, by Johannes Stricker (1584),
- Nathan Chyträus Der Alte Todtendantz Sächsisch (1597), the oldest philological edition of a Low German text,
- Tönnies Fonnes Handbook of the Russian Language (1607).
Later language level
Modern Low German emerged from Middle Low German .
Dictionaries
The vocabulary of Middle Low German is described in the Middle Low German Dictionary by Karl Schiller and August Lübben, in the Middle Low German Concise Dictionary by August Lübben and Christoph Walther and in another Middle Low German Concise Dictionary .
See also
swell
- ↑ Jan Goossens: Low German Language: Attempting a Definition . In: Jan Goossens (Ed.): Low German: Language and Literature . Karl Wachholtz, Neumünster 1973, p. 9-27 .
- ↑ a b c d e Karl Bischoff : Middle Low German . In: Gerhard Cordes, Dieter Möhn (Hrsg.): Handbook for Low German Linguistics and Literature Studies . Erich Schmidt Verlag, Berlin 1983, ISBN 3-503-01645-7 , p. 98-118 (§ 3.2) .
literature
- Agathe Lasch : Middle Low German grammar . Niemeyer, Halle 1914. (2nd unchanged edition: Niemeyer, Tübingen 1974. ISBN 3-484-10183-0 ). First edition digitized
- Robert Peters: Middle Low German Language . In: Jan Goossens (Ed.): Low German. Language and literature. An introduction. Volume 1: Language. Wachholtz, Neumünster 1973, pp. 66–115.
Web links
- Schiller-Lübben : The Middle Low German Dictionary by Schiller / Lübben as a facsimile edition as part of Mediaevum.de
- wikiling dictionary , Middle Low German (and other ancient languages)
- Low German incunabula in the complete catalog of incunabula , z. B. the Low German Ship of Fools , the nd. Dance of Death and the novel Paris and Vienne
- Project TITUS , also with Middle Low German texts
- Middle Low German (1150–1650) , Russian textbook on the history of the German language
- The Virtual Hamburg Document Book
- Middle Low German written language in comparison with modern Low German
- Reynke de vos ( Memento of July 10, 1998 in the Internet Archive )
- Middle Low German loanwords in the Scandinavian languages