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Neo-Brittonic

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Neo-Brittonic
RegionGreat Britain, Brittany
EthnicityBritons
Erac. mid-6th century CE to the present day[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3
brit
GlottologNone
Linguasphere50-AB

Neo-Brittonic, also known as ‘’’Neo-Brythonic’’’, is a stage of the Insular Celtic Brittonic languages that emerged by the middle of the sixth century CE. Neo-Brittonic languages include Old, Middle and Modern Welsh, Cornish, and Breton, as well as Cumbric (and potentially Pictish.)

History

Neo-Brittonic emerged out of Late Brittonic around the middle of the sixth century CE.[2] It is marked by the loss of Brittonic final syllables (apocope) and the eventual loss of compositional vowels in compound words (syncope) among other features, such as vowel shift, lenition of internal consonants, and the development of a complex system of grammatical mutations.

The initial stage of the Neo-Brittonic, from around the middle of the sixth century CE to the emergence of Old Welsh, Old Cornish, and Old Breton by the ninth century CE has been termed Common Archaic Neo-Brittonic by Celticist John T. Koch. Documents written in Neo-Brittonic languages (or non-Brittonic documents containing Neo-Brittonic onomastic material, primarily written in Latin or Old English) during this time are scarce, but seem to show a pre-dialectal state in which the Southwestern Brittonic languages (Cornish and Breton) had not yet significantly diverged from Western Brittonic languages (Welsh and Cumbric), though differences may have been masked by scribes across the Neo-Brittonic world using a common orthography dating to an earlier period.

Apocope

One of the most notable changes in the language was the mid-sixth century loss of Brittonic final syllables of words in a process called apocope. Brittonic final syllables, which were used to mark grammatical gender and case, likely began to erode much earlier than the sixth century, judging from the evidence of Brittonic's cousin language, Gaulish, in which the final consonants already began to disappear in writing by the 3rd-4th centuries CE.[3][4][5]

Loss of final syllable in Common Archaic Neo-Brittonic *wiros “man”
Case Common Brittonic Common Archaic Neo-Brittonic Old Welsh Modern Welsh
Nom. Masc. Sg. *wiros *wur *g[u]ur *gwr
Nom. Masc. Pl. *wirī *wīr *guir *gwyr

Notes

References

  1. Neo-Brittonic at MultiTree on the Linguist List
  2. Jackson, Language and History in Early Britain, 1953.
  3. Stifter, David , "Lenition of s in Gaulish?", in: Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead, Thomas Olander, Birgit Anette Olsen, Jens Elmegård Rasmussen (eds), The Sound of Indo-European. Phonetics, Phonemics, and Morphophonemics, Copenhagen: 2012, 523–544.
  4. Stifter, David, "Notes on Châteaubleau (L-93)", Keltische Forschungen 4 (2009), pp. 229–244
  5. Schrijver, Peter, "The Châteaubleau tile as a link between Latin and French and between Gaulish and Brittonic", Études celtiques, Vol. 34, 1998, pp. 135-142

Bibliography

  • Ball, Martin J. and Müller, Nichole [eds.] (2015), The Celtic Languages, 2nd ed., New York: Routledge; ISBN 0-203-88248-2 Search this book on ..
  • Evans, D. Ellis. (1990) Insular Celtic and the emergence of the Welsh language, in: Bammesberger, Alfred, Wollmann, Alfred [eds.], Britain 400-600. Language and History, Heidelberg, C. Winter, pp. 149-177
  • Falileyev, Alexander, and Morfydd E. Owen. (2005). The Leiden leechbook. A study of the earliest Neo-Brittonic medical compilation, Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Kulturwissenschaft, Sonderheft 122, Innsbruck: Institut für Sprachen und Literaturen der Universität Innsbruck.
  • Jackson, Kenneth H. (1953), Language and History in Early Britain, Edinburgh University Press.
  • Koch, John T. (1997), The Gododdin of Aneirin. Text and context from Dark-Age North Britain, Cardiff: University of Wales Press.
  • Koch, John. (1989), Neo-Brittonic Spirants from Old Celtic Geminates, Ériu 40, pp. 119–28.
  • Koch, John T (1985–6), When was Welsh Literature First Written Down?, Studia Celtica 20/21, pp. 43–66.
  • Russell, Paul (2014), An Introduction to the Celtic Languages, Routledge.
  • Schrijver, Peter (1995), Studies in British Celtic Historical Phonology, Rodopi.
  • Sims-Williams, Patrick (2003), The Celtic Inscriptions of Britain: Phonology and Chronology, c. 400–1200; Oxford, Blackwell; ISBN 1-4051-0903-3 Search this book on ..
  • Sims-Williams, Patrick, Sims-Williams, P. (1990). Dating the Transition to Neo-Brittonic: Phonology and History, 400-600. In A. Bammesberger, & A. Wollmann (Eds.), Britain 400-600: Language and History. (Vol. 205, pp. 217-261). (Anglistische Forschungen). Heidelberg: Universitaetsverlag Winter.
  • Ternes, Elmar [ed.] (2011), Brythonic Celtic – Britannisches Keltisch: From Medieval British to Modern Breton; Bremen: Hempen Verlag.

External links


* Category:History of the Welsh language Category:Brythonic Celts Category:Proto-languages


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