| Early Modern High German |
Article Index for Early Modern |
Limousines in Early |
Website Links For Early |
Information AboutEarly Modern High German |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT EARLY NEW HIGH GERMAN | |
| german language | |
| high german languages | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
PERIODISATION The start and end dates of ENHG are, like all linguistic Periodisation s, somewhat arbitrary. One standard definition takes it to last from 1350 to 1650, with the merit of coinciding with two major demographic catastrophes, the Black Death , and the end of the Thirty Years' War . Arguably, the Peace Of Westphalia in 1648, by ending religious wars and creating a Germany of many small sovereign states, brought about the essential ''political'' conditions for the final development of a universally acceptable standard language in the subsequent New High German period. CLASSIFICATION There was no standard Early New High German, but the period saw the gradual development of forms of German, in writing at least, which were not simply reflections of local Dialect . Two supra-regional ''Schriftsprachen'' ("written languages") rose to prominence, influencing all dialects, and each other:
PHONOLOGY AND GRAMMAR In Phonology and Morphology , the main linguistic developments of the period are:
These changes did not affect all dialects equally, and led to greater divergence between the Dialects than in Middle High German . LITERATURE The period saw the invention of Printing with moveable type (c.1455) and the Reformation (from 1517). Both of these were signficant contributors to the development of the Modern German Standard language, as they further promoted the development of non-local forms of language and exposed all speakers to forms of German from outside their own area — even the illiterate, who were read ''to''. The most important single text of the period was Luther 's Bible Translation , the first part of which was published in 1522 , though this not is now credited with the central role in creating the standard that was once attributed to it. This is also the first period in which Prose works, both literary and discursive, became more numerous and more important than Verse . Example Text
SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
SOURCES
|
||||||||