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Competing Archives, Competing Histories: French and Its Cultural Locations in Late-Medieval England

Authors :
Jocelyn Wogan-Browne
Source :
Speculum. 90:653-673
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
University of Chicago Press, 2015.

Abstract

Apart from Latin, French was Britain and England's only medieval supraregional language: English remained a regional language of the British Isles until well into the early modern period, with, for example, almost no translations of major English-language works until then. Although insular French differed over time from the various Frenches of Continental regions, French retained a high degree of mutual intelligibility throughout Europe and on both sides of the Channel, and exchanges between England and Continental regions in both directions continued throughout the Middle Ages. The importance of England as the location of the earliest French-language literary culture early in the twelfth century is now widely recognized, and England's influence on the development of French-language literary writing in Europe becoming more so: interchange, exchange, and mutual influence continued in the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries, though in shifting proportions. French also remained indispensable to external contac...

Details

ISSN :
20408072 and 00387134
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Speculum
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bc7960b61529f6da65d060659dfbcf85