Modern geolinguistic tenets and the diffusion of linguistic innovations in late Middle English.ABSTRACT In this paper we intend to reconstruct re·con·struct tr.v. re·con·struct·ed, re·con·struct·ing, re·con·structs 1. To construct again; rebuild. 2. some of the geographical aspects that may have contributed to the diffusion diffusion, in chemistry, the spontaneous migration of substances from regions where their concentration is high to regions where their concentration is low. Diffusion is important in many life processes. of linguistic innovations from London to the rest of the country in the late Middle English Middle English Vernacular spoken and written in England c. 1100–1500, the descendant of Old English and the ancestor of Modern English. It can be divided into three periods: Early, Central, and Late. period. We accept the geolinguistic tenet TENET. Which he holds. There are two ways of stating the tenure in an action of waste. The averment is either in the tenet and the tenuit; it has a reference to the time of the waste done, and not to the time of bringing the action. 2. that interpersonal communicative com·mu·ni·ca·tive adj. 1. Inclined to communicate readily; talkative. 2. Of or relating to communication. com·mu contacts between potential adopters are basic in the diffusion of linguistic innovations and that these are (and possibly were) remarkably facilitated in urban centres. Particularly three factors are of paramount importance in the study of the spatial diffusion of linguistic innovations: a) the population density of the areas involved and its distribution; b) the physical distance between them; and c) the distance or similarity of the linguistic systems peculiar to each area. We believe that the demographic evidence afforded by the Poll tax returns of the 14th century, combined with the specific analysis of geographical communications in late medieval England, may allow us to establish a hypothetical 'gravity model', in the geolinguistic sense, and to speculate on the interurban in·ter·ur·ban adj. Relating to or connecting urban areas: an interurban railroad. courses followed by linguistic innovations from London throughout the rest of the country. 1. Introduction: Standardisation Noun 1. standardisation - the condition in which a standard has been successfully established; "standardization of nuts and bolts had saved industry millions of dollars" standardization and geography Recent approaches to the subject of standardisation tend to question the assumption that a single ancestor ANCESTOR, descents. One who has preceded another in a direct line of descent; an ascendant. In the common law, the word is understood as well of the immediate parents, as, of these that are higher; as may appear by the statute 25 Ed. III. De natis ultra mare, and so in the statute of 6 R. underlies the development of standard English Stan·dard English n. The variety of English that is generally acknowledged as the model for the speech and writing of educated speakers. Usage Note: People who invoke the term Standard English . Instead, it is widely acknowledged, in accordance with variationist methodology, that the process comprises the "selection" and "acceptance" or "diffusion" of features from a range of social and regional varieties -- including those which, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Samuels (1963, 1972: 165-170), were promoted to the status of incipient incipient (insip´ēent), adj beginning, initial, commencing. incipient beginning to exist; coming into existence. standard norms at different localities from the late thirteenth century. As a result, the standardisation of English is no longer seen as a "linear, unidirectional The transfer or transmission of data in a channel in one direction only. development", but as "a set of processes which occur in a set of social spaces, developing at different rates in different registers, in different idiolects..." (Wright 2000: 6; see also: Wright 1996; Hope 2000: 51). As regards the "acceptance" or "diffusion" of historical standard norms, the conclusions of recent sociolinguistic so·ci·o·lin·guis·tics n. (used with a sing. verb) The study of language and linguistic behavior as influenced by social and cultural factors. so studies on the spread of linguistic innovations o ver the social space have proved to be quite useful. In this way, several studies have correlated graphemic, morphological mor·phol·o·gy n. pl. mor·phol·o·gies 1. a. The branch of biology that deals with the form and structure of organisms without consideration of function. b. and syntactic Dealing with language rules (syntax). See syntax. characteristics of late Middle and early Modem standard Englishes with the reconstructed re·con·struct tr.v. re·con·struct·ed, re·con·struct·ing, re·con·structs 1. To construct again; rebuild. 2. pyramid of social ranks and networks in these periods. This process has been related to mobile individuals from the middle echelons of society who could have established loose-knit networks in largely populated pop·u·late tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates 1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people. 2. towns, like London and Calais (Nevalainen and Raumolin-Brunberg 1996; Rissanen 2000; Conde Silvestre and Hernandez Campoy, fc.). Concerning the spatial diffusion of incipient standard variants, the proposals of human geography Human geography, is a branch of geography that focuses on the study of patterns and processes that shape human interaction with the environment, with particular reference to the causes and consequences of the spatial distribution of human activity on the Earth's surface. and geolinguistics may also be considered in connection with historical stages of language development. As Britain has stated "[t]he analysis of spatiality is critically important if we wish to fully understand the processes involved in the diffusion of linguistic innovations" (1991: 25 1-252), and this tenet, in our opinion, should hold for both present and past states. Parallels between the historical conditions in medieval and early renaissance Europe and those of modern underdeveloped un·der·de·vel·oped adj. Not adequately or normally developed; immature. countries are often drawn. This procedure is sometimes adopted in historical geography Historical geography is the study of the human, physical, fictional, theoretical, and "real" geographies of the past. Historical geography studies a wide variety of issues and topics. , which may underestimate the demographic and functional roles of urban nuclei nuclei /nu·clei/ (noo´kle-i) [L.] plural of nucleus. nu·cle·i n. Plural of nucleus. nuclei plural of nucleus. in earlier periods, in view of the existence of demographic distances between a limited number of relatively large concentrations of people and a scattered Scattered Used for listed equity securities. Unconcentrated buy or sell interest. , more or less even, distribution of population in the country. If this is so, the process of "epidemic" or "contagion Contagion The likelihood of significant economic changes in one country spreading to other countries. This can refer to either economic booms or economic crises. Notes: An infamous example is the "Asian Contagion" that occurred in 1997 and started in Thailand. " diffusion, traditionally represented by the wave model, may have been more widespread in earlier times than nowadays, so that linguistic innovations in late Middle English or early Modem English would have radiated ra·di·ate v. ra·di·at·ed, ra·di·at·ing, ra·di·ates v.intr. 1. To send out rays or waves. 2. To issue or emerge in rays or waves: Heat radiated from the stove. from a focal area and reached physically nearby locations before those at greater distances. Nevertheless, the few studies on the geographical diffusion of innovations The study of the diffusion of innovation is the study of how, why, and at what rate new ideas and technology spread through cultures. This research topic began in the 1950s at the University of Chicago with funding from television producers who sought a way to measure the in earlier periods of the history of English do not wholly support this perspecti ve. Though intuitively, Samuels, for instance, had already stated in 1972 that even if "gradual changes best apply to areas where the population is distributed evenly ... in the case of changes leading to a regional or national standard those natural expectations may not be fulfilled" (1972: 90). Samuels' intuition intuition, in philosophy, way of knowing directly; immediate apprehension. The Greeks understood intuition to be the grasp of universal principles by the intelligence (nous), as distinguished from the fleeting impressions of the senses. has been supported by some research which attempts to diversify standardisation into various processes of "supralocalisation", involving linguistic features of different regional and social origins. The perspectivism Please [improve the article] or discuss this issue on the talk page. granted by the adoption of this vantage point allows experts to appreciate diverse changes taking place in particular regions and localities at any given time and eventually helps them to trace the spread of certain features from the area of origin to other ones (Nevalainen 2000: 329-330). For instance, Nevalainen and Raumolin-Brunberg have reconstructed the geographical diffusion from the late 15th century to the 17th of some morphological characteristics from the north of England. Am ong other variables, they track the spread southwards south·ward adv. & adj. Toward, to, or in the south. n. A southward direction, point, or region. south of the verbal form are (vs. be), the third person singular present indicative -es (vs. -eth) and the relative the which (vs. which) across a number of texts from East Anglia East Anglia (ăng`glēə), kingdom of Anglo-Saxon England, comprising the modern counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. It was settled in the late 5th cent. by so-called Angles from northern Germany and Scandinavia. , London and the Court included in the Corpus of Early English Early English Noun a style of architecture used in England in the 12th and 13th centuries, characterized by narrow pointed arches and ornamental intersecting stonework in windows Correspondence for the period 1460-1680. They conclude that are reached East Anglia earlier than London, whence whence adv. 1. From where; from what place: Whence came this traveler? 2. From what origin or source: Whence comes this splendid feast? conj. it finally extended to the Court, following the expected pattern of regular wave-like diffusion (Nevalainen 2000: 348). However, Londoners seem to have accepted -es and the which earlier than East Anglians in a kind of "dialect dialect, variety of a language used by a group of speakers within a particular speech community. Every individual speaks a variety of his language, termed an idiolect. hopping process" that may be related to geographical factors like demography demography (dĭmŏg`rəfē), science of human population. Demography represents a fundamental approach to the understanding of human society. , patterns of migration, etc. (Nevalainen 2000: 347-350; Nevalainen and Raumolin and Brunberg 2000: 305-322) (1). It seems that population geography Population geography is a division of human geography. It is the study of the ways in which spatial variations in the distribution, composition, migration, and growth of populations are related to the nature of places. may have played a role in the spatial diffusion of English linguistic innovations during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and that a hierarchical model In a hierarchical data model, data are organized into a tree-like structure. The structure allows repeating information using parent/child relationships: each parent can have many children but each child only has one parent. of diffusion, typical of modern urban societies, might have coexisted in these periods with the expected wave-like model. One reason for this assumption is that interpersonal contacts between potential adopters are basic for linguistic diffusion and these are (and possibly were) remarkably facilitated in urban centres, which, to quote Nevalainen and Raumolin-Brunberg, "are instrumental in promoting dialect mixture and in spreading linguistic innovations" (2000: 299). As a result, the historical diffusion of linguistic innovations would have been not only a question of physical distance, like the wave-model proposes, but also, like modern geolinguistics assumes, aspects like population size and its spatial distribution (concentration and dispersion dispersion, in chemistry dispersion, in chemistry, mixture in which fine particles of one substance are scattered throughout another substance. A dispersion is classed as a suspension, colloid, or solution. ), as well as the demographic and functional roles of urban centres and their respective interaction (communication networking), may help to understand why two given localities in the past shared or not certain linguistic features, or why a given innovation appeared and spread to a centre C from a centre B rather than from centre A (Hernandez Campoy 1999a: 149-150; 1999b: 7-11) (2). 2. Objectives In this paper we intend to reconstruct some of the geographical aspects that may have contributed to a hypothetical hierarchical diffusion of innovations in the late Middle English period. We believe that the reconstruction of demographic evidence from the late 14th century combined with the analysis of communications in late medieval England may allow us to establish a hypothetical "gravity model Gravity models are used in various social sciences to predict and describe certain behaviors that mimic gravitational interaction as described in Isaac Newton's law of gravity. ", in the geolinguistic sense, and help to theorize the·o·rize v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es v.intr. To formulate theories or a theory; speculate. v.tr. To propose a theory about. on the interurban courses followed by linguistic features emanated from London -- one of the most innovative areas in late Middle English -- to the rest of the country. Our aim is basically speculative since, at this stage, we do not intend to correlate the model with linguistic evidence; however, we expect that it draws our attention to the demographic and functional importance of some urban centres in this period and, by doing this, we may establish the background for a comparison with the relationship between geography and language in the later history of English . The process whereby late Middle English innovations were diffused dif·fuse v. dif·fused, dif·fus·ing, dif·fus·es v.tr. 1. To pour out and cause to spread freely. 2. To spread about or scatter; disseminate. 3. from London to the rest of the country is related to the importance of this city in the late Middle Ages. London became a centre for the exportation of corn, wool and textiles, within a large international network that spread into the Netherlands and the North Sea, to such an extent that commerce, manufactures and national wealth started to be concentrated in the area (Keene 2000: 99; see also: Beier and Finley (eds.) 1985; Nevalainen and Raumolin-Brunberg 1989: 106). Additionally, the progressive centralization cen·tral·ize v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate. 2. of the state and the "extensive authority of the Crown as the source of justice, peace and economic regulation" (Keene 2000: 99) contributed to the functional relevance of London throughout the rest of the country. Such prosperity is reflected in demography: population raised from around 35,000 people and a population density of 56.2 sq/mile in 1377, when London was still part of the county of Middlesex, to nearly 80,000 in 1545 (86.7 s q/mile) when the metropolitan area of London had annexed Westminster and Southwark-Lambeth (Russell 1948: 285). It is well-known that the increase in population was due to the attraction of a growing immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. from all over the country, and specially from the north: people in temporal business, like political, legal or financial errands, and "betterment bet·ter·ment n. 1. An improvement over what has been the case: financial betterment. 2. Law An improvement beyond normal upkeep and repair that adds to the value of real property. migrants" in search of social advancement, were attracted to the metropolis. This population mixture created a fluid social structure that favoured the consolidation and diffusion of certain language changes (Conde Silvestre and Hernandez Campoy, fc.). The role of London as a focus of English identity and civilization, and, in the words of Keene, as "an engine of communication and exchange", confirm the function of this city as a source of "ideas and information [which were] distributed ... across an increasingly extensive, complex and varied field" (2000: 111). Assuming that innovations from London may London May (born 20 July 1967), joined Samhain in the summer of 1985. Previously, he had been the drummer for Reptile House. He remained with the band until February 1987, when Chuck Biscuits joined the band and London was asked to leave. have diffused either evenly, in a wave-like epidemic fashion, or hierarchically, we will explore in this paper the second possibility and will adopt modern geolinguistic tenets to reconstruct the diffusion of innovations along a hierarchy of provincial centres. 3. Geolinguistic tenets and the diffusion of linguistic innovations in late Middle English Following the common geolinguistic procedure (Trudgill 1974; Callary 1975; Gerritsen and Jansen 1980; Hernandez-Compoy 1999a, 1999b) the geographical space of late medieval England has been divided into nine large cells, or grids, as Map 1 shows, which correspond to traditionally accepted Middle English dialect areas: London, East Anglia (EA), the South-East (SE), the South-West (SW), the South-East Midlands (SEM), the North-East Midlands (NEM), the South-West Midlands (SWM SWM Silent Wave Motor (Nikon) SWM Stadtwerke München GmbH (German: municipality utility company) SWM Solid Waste Management SWM Single White Male SWM Small Window Manager SWM Stay With Me ), the North-West Midlands (NWM NWM Natural World Museum (San Francisco, CA) NWM Network Management NWM New World Monkeys NWM Normal White Matter NWM Nationwide Wholesale Mortgage NWM No Worries Mate NWM No Way Man NWM Nearly Wet Myself ) and the North (N) (see: Moore, Meech and Whitehall 1935; Fernandez 1982: 590). From a geolinguistic perspective, three factors are of paramount importance in the study of the spatial diffusion of linguistic innovations: a) the population density of the areas involved and its distribution, b) the geographical distance between them, and c) the distance or similarity of the linguistic systems peculiar to each area. Regarding population density and its distribution, it is widely known that innovations are more likely to arise in large, heavily populated areas that have historically been powerful socioeconomic so·ci·o·ec·o·nom·ic adj. Of or involving both social and economic factors. socioeconomic Adjective of or involving economic and social factors Adj. 1. and cultural centres, and to spread out from there to other moderately sized cities falling under the area of influence of the larger focal centre, thence thence adv. 1. From that place; from there: flew to Helsinki and thence to Moscow. 2. From that circumstance or source; therefrom. 3. Archaic From that time; thenceforth. to towns, until they ultimately and gradually reach the smallest and most sparsely sparse adj. spars·er, spars·est Occurring, growing, or settled at widely spaced intervals; not thick or dense. [Latin sparsus, past participle of spargere, to scatter. populated villages, even though they are quite close to the original focal area. Therefore, population density should be taken as an important ingredient in the study of spatial diffusion, if only because of the obvious tenet that the larger the population of an urban centre is, the higher the probability that an individual from elsewhere may establish interpersonal contact with a speaker from that city (Trudgill 1986: 40; 1992: 76). Consequently, for the purposes of this study the reconstruction of historical population data is crucial. Information about the population of late medieval England can be gathered from a variety of sources; unfortunately none of them is as accurate as Domesday Book Domesday Book (d mz`dā), record of a general census of England made (1085–86) by order of William I (William the Conqueror). is for the 11th and 12th centuries. In
addition to local records, like manorial extents and inquisitions post
mortem [Latin, After death.] Pertaining to matters occurring after death. A term generally applied to an autopsy or examination of a corpse in order to ascertain the cause of death or to the inquisition for that purpose by the Coroner . , which tend to be poor after the Black Death and only contain
information about the upper layers of society, most reliable data can be
drawn from the poll tax returns of the l4th century and from the Chantry chan·try n. pl. chan·tries Ecclesiastical 1. An endowment to cover expenses for the saying of masses and prayers, usually for the soul of the founder of the endowment. 2. surveys that started to be compiled in the late 15th. The returns were lists of the lay individual tax payers tax payer n → contribuyente m/f tax payer n → contribuable m/f tax payer n → contribuente who contributed to the state revenue needed for the Hundred Years' War Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) Intermittent armed conflict between England and France over territorial rights and the issue of succession to the French throne. It began when Edward III invaded Flanders in 1337 in order to assert his claim to the French crown. and, despite the fact that taxes were collected from the clergy on a different regional basis, they afford a more detailed information than the surveys, which were only gathered in the smaller parishes (Darby 1936: 231; Russell 1948: 90; Reynolds 1977: 142). Historical geographers have divided this period into three distinct phases (see Table 1): a) a peri peri (pēr`ē), in Persian mythology, supernatural being. Peris were said to be fallen angels who were denied paradise until they did penance. Originally agents of evil, in later mythology they were identified as benevolent spirits. od of increasing demography throughout Europe up to 1348, when the population of England Due to the lack of authoritative contemporary sources, estimates of the population of England for dates prior to the first census in 1801 vary considerably. It has been suggested that even the 1801 census may have left up to 250,000 people uncounted. , despite famines, harvest failures and cattle epidemics, may have reached 3,700,000 people -- at a low estimate; b) a sharp decline between 1348-1430, due to the high incidence of mortality resulting from successive strokes of the Black Death, so that the population of England was possibly reduced to 2,100,000 by the late 14th century; c) after 1430 a slow increase in population is acknowledged, to the extent that by 1470 the figures for England started to rise again for the first time since the Black Death and approximated 2,300,000, they rose to 3,220,000 in 1554 and 4,080,000 in 1690 (Russell 1948: 235; Samarkin 1976: 92-98; Coleman 1977: 112; Coleman and Salt 1992). Even though these figures are mere estimates, and for some scholars low ones (see: Campbell 1990), it is clear that they reflect a very acute period of demographic decline in the late English Middle Ages. Nevertheless, most historical geographers agree that this situation was accompanied by the economic prosperity of towns. The transformation of England's economy from wool to cloth production Historically, cloth production in England, Wales, and much of Europe was often historically organised under the domestic system, prior to (and also in the early stages of) the introduction of the factory system. entailed an expansion of trade in some areas and favoured rural migration, so that those towns which were "well placed to take advantage of the surge in demand for English cloth in the mid 14th century recovered population levels fairly rapidly following the Black Death" (Kermode 2000: 444). In a sense, the situation of late medieval England is one "of urban vigour amid demographic decline" (Unwin 1990: 132), which lends itself to the geolinguistic analysis we intend to undertake. Exact figures on the distribution of medieval England's population are impossible to discern dis·cern v. dis·cerned, dis·cern·ing, dis·cerns v.tr. 1. To perceive with the eyes or intellect; detect. 2. To recognize or comprehend mentally. 3. ; nevertheless historical geographers have attempted to estimate the rough population of counties, towns and boroughs on the evidence afforded by the poll tax returns (especially for the years 1377 and 1381). For the purposes of our study we rely on the calculations made by Russell (1948), who assumed that 1000 payers of poll tax in one locality 1. locality - In sequential architectures programs tend to access data that has been accessed recently (temporal locality) or that is at an address near recently referenced data (spatial locality). This is the basis for the speed-up obtained with a cache memory. 2. corresponded roughly to 1500-2000 inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. . The relevant figures may be lower than the real ones, in view of the possibility that certain groups, like "free miners", evaded the tax, and others, like the clergy, were taxed on a different regional basis (Darby 1936: 231). Table 2 includes the population data for counties in each of the nine ME dialect areas, for towns with a population over 1,500 people and gives additional details on demographic density, which is also displayed on Map 2 (p. 156). (3) Within a geolinguistic framework, physical distance is closely related to population density and distribution, provided that the influence exerted by two urban centres on each other is directly proportional (Math.) proportional in the order of the terms; increasing or decreasing together, and with a constant ratio; - opposed to See also: Directly to their relative population size and inversely proportional See See also: Inversely to the distance between them. That is, given that face-to-face interaction is crucial in the process of diffusion and adoption of linguistic innovations and that communication is an act that decreases with distance, then the nearest to the source of innovation (or to a centre where it has already been adopted) the potential adopting unit is, the greater the possibility of being adopted will be. Physical distance is a basic geographical component in the analysis of spatial diffusion, if only because of the evident tenet -- stated by Trudgill (1992: 76) -- that "... people, on average, come into contact most often with people who live closest to them and least often with people who live furthest away". Distances between towns in medieval England ar e normally estimated 'as the crow flies', that is by drawing a line from place to place, without any consideration of physical obstacles, like forests, mountains, or rivers (Keene 2000). On account of the impossibility Impossibility See also Unattainability. belling the cat mouse’s proposal for warning of cat’s approach; application fatal. [Gk. Lit. of reconstructing the details of medieval England's physical geography physical geography: see geography. , we believe that the contemporary road distances can be a much more reliable source of information than "the fly of the crow", provided that the construction of roads often adapts itself to the landscape and to earlier prevalent routes. 3.1. Model 1: Population potential Both factors, population and distance, are first considered to select the urban nuclei that were the central places or gravity centres in the different cells in which the space of medieval England has been divided -- the ME dialect areas. Population and distance are quantified into a formula devised by J. Q. Stewart (1947), which, on the basis of Newton's laws Noun 1. Newton's law - one of three basic laws of classical mechanics law of motion, Newton's law of motion law of nature, law - a generalization that describes recurring facts or events in nature; "the laws of thermodynamics" of gravitation, assumes that the extent of influence exerted by a given settlement on another is directly proportional to its mass, in this case its population size or range, and inversely proportional to the distance. The population potential exerted by the urban centre P on urban centre i would be defined as follows: Population Potential Equation [PP.sub.i] = [summation summation n. the final argument of an attorney at the close of a trial in which he/she attempts to convince the judge and/or jury of the virtues of the client's case. (See: closing argument) over (n/j=1)] [P.sub.j]/[D.sub.ij] where [P.sub.j] is the population of the jth urban centre, [D.sub.ij] is the distance between points i and j, and n is the number of settlements in the system (Hernandez-Campoy 1999b: 12-13). We believe that the urban potential of medieval towns was not only a question of their respective populations, but that other geographical factors, which also contribute to demography, should be considered. At an inter-urban level, not all cities play the same roles, nor have they the same importance, but rather they constitute a hierarchy, both within and across regions, in which demographic, functional and physical distance have a significant influence. Demographic distance is based on the difference in population size that exists amongst the different settlements, while functional distance determines the number of functions and activities provided by the urban centre. In the context of the framework developed by Christaller's central place theory (1966) both factors are inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble adj. 1. a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit. b. related: the larger a city is, the higher the number of different activities and functions it monopolizes, which, in turn, results in a wider area of influence that embraces other urban centres with a lower centrality (or acces sibility) and functional range (see also: Hernandez-Campoy, fc.). Although these tenets may seem biased towards circumstances prevalent in recent centuries, we understand that they may be applicable to England in the late Middle Ages, provided that the largest towns were economically dependent on their respective hinterlands and, at the same time, offered the nearby boroughs a market outlet for agricultural and manufactured products. On a national scale, the progressive development of an integrated economy promoted a certain amount of commercial interdependence in·ter·de·pen·dent adj. Mutually dependent: "Today, the mission of one institution can be accomplished only by recognizing that it lives in an interdependent world with conflicts and overlapping interests" between towns of various sizes, so that the larger the town, the greater was its amount of trade and the greater its sphere of influence, to the point, for instance, that Unwin has claimed that "the structure of the urban economy became increasingly subordinated to the demands of the inhabitants of the capital, London" (1990: 146). Following these premises, the data obtained from the application of the population potential equation have been modulated mod·u·late v. mod·u·lat·ed, mod·u·lat·ing, mod·u·lates v.tr. 1. To adjust or adapt to a certain proportion; regulate or temper. 2. by taking into account the functions of towns and, especially, their location within the communication network of late medieval England. These circumstances may have contributed to increase the flow of people to some areas and may have favoured the population potential of some towns. This practice is followed by Galloway in the research project on "Market networks in the London region, c. 1400" (see: Keene 2000), where the raw population figures of seaports This is a list of the world's seaports: Atlantic Ocean
modulation, in communications, process in which some characteristic of a wave (the carrier wave) is made to vary in accordance with an information-bearing signal wave (the modulating wave); demodulation is the process by which (2) is applied in our study to the population potential index of the ports of Sandwich (SE), Romney (SE), Ipswich (EA), Lynn (EA), Yarmouth (EA), Exeter (SW), Plymouth (SW), Southampton (SW), Bristol (SWM), Boston (NEM), Chester (NWM), Newcastle (N), Scarborough (N) and Kingston upon Hull Kingston upon Hull: see Hull, England. Kingston upon Hull or Hull City and unitary authority (pop., 2001: 243,595), geographic county of East Riding of Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, England. (N). We believe that other circumstances could also be pondered and that the transport advantages of towns on river banks should also be reflected in their urban potential; in fact, rivers in the late Middle Ages can be assimilated to contemporary railways, at least as regards the transportation of heavy goods, which would often be carried downstream to seaports and loaded in larger vessels for shipment overseas (Darby 1936: 261). Historical geographers make a difference between extensive river networks, which certainly encouraged long-distance trade and functioned as basic routes of transport inter areas, giving their headports commercial power and economic advantage, and smaller rivers which only linked places within nearby counties and favoured the development of some kind of internal trade along their banks (Unwin 1990: 144-145; Kermode 2000: 446). Accordingly, the population potential index of port towns on extensive river networks, the Thames, Severn, Trent/Witham and Ouse, has been modulated by 1.7. This af fects Oxford (SEM) and Reading (SW), along the Thames, Shrewsbury (SWM), Worcester (SWM) and Gloucester (SWM), along the Severn, Nottingham (NEM) and Lincoln (NEM) along the Trent and Witham, as well as York (N) on the Ouse. The results for towns located by other river courses have modulated by 1.5. This is the case of: Canterbury in the South-East; Cambridge, Ely, Colchester and Norwich in East Anglia; Salisbury in the South-West; Leicester and Northampton in the South-East Midlands; Derby, Stamford and Newark in the North-East Midlands; Ludlow and Hereford in the South-West Midlands; and Beverley in the North. In medieval England, goods were also taken from one place to another on horse or cart. Even though the condition of roads was not always appropriate, and water transport was cheaper, the complaints in contemporary records about problems derived from weirs and obstructions in river courses are so common that road transport must often have been preferred (Darby 1936: 260-261). Transportation of goods by road may have been confined con·fine v. con·fined, con·fin·ing, con·fines v.tr. 1. To keep within bounds; restrict: Please confine your remarks to the issues at hand. See Synonyms at limit. to local areas, while river and sea routes were possibly preferred on a national scale. Nevertheless, roads were used for human journeys, so that officials (secular and ecclesiastical ECCLESIASTICAL. Belonging to, or set apart for the church; as, distinguished from civil or secular. Vide Church. ), pilgrims Pilgrims, in American history, the group of separatists and other individuals who were the founders of Plymouth Colony. The name Pilgrim Fathers is given to those members who made the first crossing on the Mayflower. , justices and tax collectors, as well as the king, his army and court, and medieval people at large often travelled both along the early Roman roads Roman roads, ancient system of highways linking Rome with its most distant provinces. The roads often ran in a straight line, regardless of obstacles, and were efficiently constructed, generally in four layers of materials; the uppermost layer was a pavement of flat, that still remained intact and along the new highways which were multiplied through the country on account of the growth of towns and trade (Darby 1936: 262; Hindle 1982: 193). Historical geographers agree that, despite the perilous and tedious na ture of tours, the 14th century saw the development of a complex netoworks of road communications throughout England; in the words of Stenton: ...with all its defects the road system of medieval England provided alternate routes An official alternate route is a bannered highway that provides an alternate alignment for a highway. Originally, the term for these routes was "optional"; but in 1959, the designation became alternate. between many pairs of distant towns, united port and inland market, permitted regular if not always easy communication between the villages of a shire and the county town ... and brought every part of the country within a fortnight's ride of London. In the last resort it proved not inadequate to the requirements of an age of notable economic activity, and it made possible a centralisation n. 1. same as centralization. Noun 1. centralisation - the act of consolidating power under a central control centralization consolidation, integration - the act of combining into an integral whole; "a consolidation of two corporations"; of national government to which there was no parallel in western Europe Western Europe The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO). (Stenton: 1936: 21). We are lucky that an original map from the second half of the 14th century has been preserved: the Gough map, possibly an official compilation for government use drawn c. 1360. Although this map may be an incomplete copy of an earlier one and lacks well-attested routes, like the London-Dover section of Wattling wat·tle n. 1. a. A construction of poles intertwined with twigs, reeds, or branches, used for walls, fences, and roofs. b. Material used for such construction. 2. Street, the roads linking Southampton to Winchester or York to Newcastle, it reflects a centralized cen·tral·ize v. cen·tral·ized, cen·tral·iz·ing, cen·tral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To draw into or toward a center; consolidate. 2. national network radiating ra·di·ate v. ra·di·at·ed, ra·di·at·ing, ra·di·ates v.intr. 1. To send out rays or waves. 2. To issue or emerge in rays or waves: Heat radiated from the stove. from London (Darby 1936: 261-262; Samarkin 1976: 177; Hindle 1982: 196-197). For the purposes of this study we have considered this representation of medieval roads (Map 3, p. 160) and have modulated by 1.6 the population potential index of the towns located on the main roads leading to London. Additionally, the results for towns located at important junctions in this network, like Coventry (SEM) and Gloucester (SWM), have been modulated by 2, since the flow of people to these places would have been facilitated and encouraged by their pivotal position. Finally, we believe that the potential of medieval monasteries to attract pilgrims should also be reflected in the data and, accordingly, have modulated the indices of Canterbury (SE), Ely (EA), Bury St Edmunds Coordinates: Bury St Edmunds is a town in the county of Suffolk, England, and was formerly the county town of West Suffolk. It is also the seat of the East of England Regional Assembly. (EA) and St Albans
These calculations have helped us to select the towns which behaved as gravity centres within each of the areas. The relevance of the local town in medieval times
Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament , added to the large extension of some of the dialectal di·a·lect n. 1. a. A regional or social variety of a language distinguished by pronunciation, grammar, or vocabulary, especially a variety of speech differing from the standard literary language or speech pattern of the culture in areas involved in this study, as well as the differences in population density between them, have made us choose more than one urban nucleus in some cases. Undoubtedly, Canterbury, with a population potential index of 18.48, would have been the gravity centre in the South-East: this was an ancient town which was not far from London and attracted pilgrims throughout the late Middle Ages. In East-Anglia, one of the most populated regions, the towns of Norwich, Lynn, Bury St. Edmunds Bury St. Edmunds (bĕr' sənt ĕd`məndz), town (1991 pop. 30,563), Suffolk, E central England. It is the market and processing center for the surrounding rich farm region. and Canterbury have been selected as gravity centres. London was connected by road to the monastic town of Bury St. Edmunds (13.34) and to Norwich (20.77), an important market town for cloth manufactures in and around the Stour valley The Stour Valley is based around the River Stour and is situated on the Essex / Suffolk county border in East Anglia. John Constable captured the area in his painting: The Stour Valley and Dedham Church c. 1815. , so that both may have acted as catalysts in this part of the region. The rich arable region around the harbour of Lynn was also densely populated, as reflected in this town's population potential index (10.6); even though it may have been partly isolated by land, on account of the difficulties for road transportation and travelling in the Fens Fens A lowland district of eastern England west and south of the Wash. Early attempts by the Romans to drain the area were abandoned by Anglo-Saxon times. Modern-day reclamation of the Fens began in the 17th century. , it was possibly well connected by sea to London, the Low Countries and the North of England, and provided them with corn, salt, malt and ale. Finally, Cambridge, with a population potential index of 11.47, has also been considered as a gravity centre, particularly because it is situated westwards west·ward adv. & adj. Toward, to, or in the west. n. A westward direction, point, or region. west and far from the main towns of East Anglia, so that it may have functioned as a catalyst on its own. Three towns have been selected as gravity centres in the large area of the South-West. The sea-port of Plymouth was undoubtedly the main urban centre in the western extreme, as reflects the population potential index (26.64). Additionally, the near port of Exeter (9.72) has also been considered. In fact both towns participated in the trade routes that linked Gascony and Brittany to Irish and Welsh ports and were in the coastal route from London-Southampton to Bristol and Chester (Darby 1936: 280). As regards the central parts of the South-West, only Salisbury (12.5) has been considered as a gravity centre: it had a relatively large population and became, together with Winchester, an important cloth manufacturing centre. Salisbury was well situated in the middle of a network that connected it to London, to the woolen wool·en also wool·len adj. 1. Made or consisting of wool. 2. Of or relating to the production or marketing of woolen goods. n. Fabric or clothing made from wool. Often used in the plural. areas of the Costwolds and to the sea outlet of Southampton; in fact, it is assumed that "apart from the years of the plague, [in Salisbury] there was no pause of development during the Middle Age s" (Reynolds 1977: 157), and this may be the reason for its high population potential index (16.12). (5) The main urban centre in the South-East Midlands was Oxford (12.54), a cloth-manufacturing town linked by river and road to London. Both Coventry (9.20) and Leicester (11.47) have also been selected as gravity centres in this area. Coventry, in particular, one of the five more populated towns, was an important junction which, located in the ancient Roman Wattling Street, linked the North and South of England, and became an outlet for the cloth, metal and leather industry in which the town prospered. Lincoln (19.14), an important cloth-manufacturing town in the [14.sup.th] century, was possibly the main gravity centre of the North-East Midlands. Additonally, the sea-port of Boston (9.40) may have acted as population catalyst: it was linked by road and river to neighbouring areas, which provided it with wool and lead, and was connected by sea to East Anglia and London. The port of Bristol The Port of Bristol comprises the commercial, and former commercial, docks situated in and near the city of Bristol in England. The Port of Bristol (Authority) was the commercial title of the Avonmouth and Royal Portbury Docks when they were operated by Bristol City (35.28), the third largest town in England, was clearly the most important centre in the South-West Midlands: in addition to the role of this town in international and national trade (with Ireland, Gascony, Brittany, Wales Wales, Welsh Cymru, western peninsula and political division (principality) of Great Britain (1991 pop. 2,798,200), 8,016 sq mi (20,761 sq km), west of England; politically united with England since 1536. The capital is Cardiff. , etc.), it was the natural outlet and marketing centre for the surrounding hinterland, which included such wealthy cloth-manufacturing and wool-producing areas as the Mendips and the Costwolds, and from the 14th century developed its own cloth industry (Darby 1936: 284-286; Reynolds 1977: 152). These factors mean that Bristol enjoyed outstanding prosperity and may have behaved as a gravity centre in this part of the country. Although Gloucester has a lower population potential index (14.80), we have also considered it as a gravity centre in the South-West Midlands. Situated at a strategic point in the river Severn, it was the natural outlet for a hinterland that comprised the Severn valley Severn Valley could be
In the scarcely populated North-West Midlands, only the port of Chester (3.60) may have attracted people and goods from surrounding settlements and benefited from trade with Irish towns like Dublin or Dorgheda. Finally, York, the second largest city, was undoubtedly the main gravity centre of the North, with a population potential index of 37.29. It had been a key military, ecclesiastical and administrative centre Administrative Centre (in Norwegian administrativt senter; in Portuguese centro administrativo) is often used in several countries to refer to a county town, or other seat of regional/local government, or the place where the central administration of a commune is for centuries and gained profit from the development of cloth, leather and metal industries, to the point of reaching a peak of prosperity about the end of the 14th century (Reynolds 1977: 155). Together with York, Newcastle (15.12) has been selected: it possibly behaved as population catalyst or gravity centre in the furthest northern extreme in connection with economic activities like shipping coal or wool produced north of the river Tees The Tees is a river in Northern England. It rises on the eastern slope of Cross Fell in the Pennines, and flows eastwards for about 87 miles (137 km) to the North Sea, between Hartlepool and Redcar. . This hierarchy of urban centres implies (as shown in Figure 1) that, at an intra-regional level, innovations were more likely to reach the selected towns and that later they would have spread out into other inferior nuclei -- with a lower population potential index, of the same grid. For instance, in East Anglia innovations from London would possibly reach Cambridge (11.47) before Ely (9.80), and Norwich (20.77) before Yarmouth (7.40). In the South-West they would reach Salisbury (16.12) before Winchester (4.32), and in the South-West Midlands, Bristol (35.28) and Gloucester (14.80) may have received innovations earlier than Worcester (9.90), Shrewsbury (5.78), Hereford (10.54) or Ludlow (3.45). 3.2. Model 2: Interaction and linguistic influence potential Linguistic contact, which takes place through speakers' interaction in predominantly conversational communicative contexts (spoken language), is inevitably necessary for the transmission of an innovation to occur. As Trudgill (1992: 76) underlines, interpersonal contacts, with face-to-face interaction, between potential adopters will be essential for any process of diffusion. With this in mind, once the main gravity centres for the nine areas have been selected, we intend to establish the interaction potential between them, as a measure of the chances of exposure to communication through personal contacts, so as to gain an insight into the possible ways that innovations from London might have taken in their diffusion throughout late medieval England. For this purpose, geolinguists have traditionally used the gravity model equation; it was developed by human geographers and sociologists (Ravenstein 1885; Stewart 1974) to quantify and measure the interaction between different urban centres and to predict the mo vements of population, goods and information between them. The formula was inspired in Newton's law of gravitation Newton's law of gravitation: see gravitation. Newton's law of gravitation Statement that any particle of matter in the universe attracts any other with a force (F) that is proportional to the product of their masses (m1 and proposes that the movement or interaction between two cities ([M.sub.ij]) is directly proportional to the product of the population sizes ([P.sub.i], and [P.sub.j]) and inversely proportional to the distance between them ([D.sub.ij]) (see: Hernandez-Campoy 1999b: 16-17). Gravity Model Equation [M.sub.ij] = K[P.sub.i].[P.sub.j]/[D.sub.ij.sup.2] Geolinguistics has enriched this model in two directions. Firstly by considering that, in terms of probability, interaction between two urban centres can never be equal if they have different population sizes. On the contrary, as Trudgill assumes, "interaction consists of influence in each direction proportional to population size" (1974: 235). As a result, the formula is modified to include a coda that takes account of the population density of the influencing centre. Thus, the degree of influence exerted and received by the different nuclei can be quantified and a model for the geographical distribution the natural arrangements of animals and plants in particular regions or districts. See under Distribution. See also: Distribution Geographic and diffusion of innovations is developed (Hernandez--Campoy 1999b: 18). Influence Potential Equation [M.sub.ij] =K [P.sub.i].[P.sub.j]/[D.sub.ij.sup.2].[P.sub.i]/[P.sub.i]+[P.sub.j] The total Interaction Potential Index (IPI (Intelligent Peripheral Interface) A high-speed hard disk interface used with minis and mainframes that transfers data in the 10 to 25 MBytes/sec range. IPI-2 and IPI-3 refer to differences in the command set that they execute. See hard disk. ) of every single urban centre is defined as the addition of its different individual interaction potential indexes, obtained using the gravity model formula, with respect to the rest of centres. For example, the total IPI of Coventry would be: [IPI.sub.Coventry]=([Interact,.sub.Coventry-London])+([Interact..sub. Coventry-Bristol])+([Interact..sub.Coventry-York])+([Interact..sub.Co ventry-Bristol])+(...)=4.41 The results of these calculations are shown in Table 4, for each locality, and Table 5 for each of the ME dialect areas. In both cases, in addition to the raw figures, percentages are given so as to make their interpretation easier and within commoner referents. For instance, as regards the IPI of Coventry, whose [summation over (term)][interaction.sub.x-y] = 100%, while [Interaction.sub.x-y] of any other two places [greater than or equal to] 100%, the normalised normalised - normalisation percentage is calculated as: 100.([Interaction.sub.x-y])/[summation over (term)[Interaction.sub.x-y]=8.1% The interpretation of these data (Tables 4 and 5) makes it clear that London was the nucleus showing the highest degree of interaction with the rest of localities. This may mean that inhabitants from this city had greater chances of mobility and contact with speakers from other areas and makes of London the urban nucleus enjoying the greatest degree of exposure to innovations as well as the greatest chances of adopting and transmitting them outwardly out·ward·ly adv. 1. On the outside or exterior; externally. 2. Toward the outside. 3. In regard to outward condition, conduct, or manifestation: outwardly a perfect gentleman. . London is followed by other demographically inferior locations, although the interaction potential of towns like Coventry (8.1%), Bristol (7%), Lynn (5.5%), Oxford (5.3%), Leicester (5.2%), Boston (5.2%) and Cambridge (5%) is also outstanding. Most of these towns, except Bristol and Boston, are located in East Anglia and the South-East Midlands, the most populated areas in the late 14th century (see Maps 2 and 4) and, possibly, those with the greatest flow systems among settlements and the highest exposures to innovations. The equation above has also been enriched by geolinguists by taking account of the distance or similarity between the linguistic systems peculiar to each area. Indeed, a linguistic system can have either a restraining RESTRAINING. Narrowing down, making less extensive; as, a restraining statute, by which the common law is narrowed down or made less extensive in its operation. (slowing/rejecting) or stimulating (accelerating) effect on the adoption of a given innovation, because the higher or lower compatibility of the innovation in question with the characteristics of the variety receiving it will make the whole process easier or more complicated. Quoting Trudgill's words "... it appears to be psychologically and linguistically easiest to adopt linguistic features from those dialects or accents that most clearly resemble one's own largely, we can assume, because the adjustments that have to be made are smaller" (1974: 235). This principle is contemplated by enlarging ENLARGING. Extending or making more comprehensive; as an enlarging statute, which is one extending the common law. the influence potential formula to include a conventional quantification of linguistic similarity (S). Linguistic Influence Equation [I.sub.xy] = S . [P.sub.x] . [P.sub.i]/[([D.sub.xy]).sup.2] . [P.sub.x]/[P.sub.x] - [P.sub.y] In order to quantify the degree of linguistic similarity between the dialect areas involved in this study, ten phonological pho·nol·o·gy n. pl. pho·nol·o·gies 1. The study of speech sounds in language or a language with reference to their distribution and patterning and to tacit rules governing pronunciation. 2. and morphological characteristics of late ME dialects have been considered (see Table 6, p.168). In particular we have looked at the QE test vowels which would develop differently in the various areas of the country and especially in the London dialect of the late 14th century: [eo], [ae], [ae] and [a + nasal nasal /na·sal/ (na´zil) pertaining to the nose. na·sal adj. Of, in, or relating to the nose. nasal pertaining to the nose. ] (see: Ekwall 1956; Jacobson 1970). We have also considered the behaviour of the fricative consonant Noun 1. fricative consonant - a continuant consonant produced by breath moving against a narrowing of the vocal tract fricative, spirant continuant, continuant consonant - consonant articulated by constricting (but not closing) the vocal tract [f] in initial position and some distinctive morphological features: the third person singular feminine personal pronoun personal pronoun n. A pronoun designating the person speaking (I, me, we, us), the person spoken to (you), or the person or thing spoken about (he, she, it, they, him, her, them). (ho, heo, he, sche, scho), the th- or h- forms of third person plural PLURAL. A term used in grammar, which signifies more than one. 2. Sometimes, however, it may be so expressed that it means only one, as, if a man were to devise to another all he was worth, if he, the testator, died without children, and he died leaving one personal pronouns, the present participle pres·ent participle n. A participle expressing present action, in English formed by the infinitive plus -ing and used to express present action in relation to the time indicated by the finite verb in its clause, to form progressive tenses with ending (-inge, -ende or -ande), as well as the inflection inflection, in grammar. In many languages, words or parts of words are arranged in formally similar sets consisting of a root, or base, and various affixes. Thus walking, walks, walker have in common the root walk and the affixes -ing, -s, and for the present indicative plural (-en, -e, -ep, and -es) and for the third singular present indicative (-ep, -es) (see: Moore, Meech and Whitehall 1935; Fernandez 1982: 590-592). A score of 1, 0.5 or 0 has been given to each of the dialect areas on account of the presence or absence of each of these distinctive features, so that a numerical value ranging from 0 to 10 can conventionally be assumed to express the degree of linguistic similarity. The figures are displayed in Table 7. Calculations of the influence potential exerted and received by every single urban centre are displayed in Table 8 (p. 166) in percentages. These figures allow us to speculate on how linguistic innovations from London might have spatially diffused throughout the country. It is feasible to construct a pattern which combines the wave-like model with hierarchical diffusion (see Map 5, p. 167). In this sense, linguistic features would have spread more or less evenly to the towns of Cambridge (EA), Oxford (SEM), Canterbury (SE), Bury St Edmunds (EA) and Salisbury (SW); although it is possible to claim, on account of the population potential index of the different localities in each of these areas, that these gravity centres would have received innovations earlier than other places, despite being nearer to London. The process of wave-like diffusion would possibly have been prevalent in the case of the ports of the Southwest, so that innovations from London must have reached Southampton (not included among the main gravity centres), Exeter and Plymouth succesively. Nevertheless, a process of hierarchical diffusion may have led innovations from London to Coventry (SEM). Similarly, Lynn (EA) may have been affected before Norwich in view of the former's higher potential for influencing (4.9%) and being influenced (5.9%); the reason was possibly the connection by sea between the ports of Lynn and London. The same hierarchical pattern may have applied to Bristol (SWM): as a port-town directly linked to London by sea, innovations from this city may have reached Bristol before other places in the Southwest and the South-West Midlands. The high potential for influencing of some of these towns, particularly Coventry (9.4%), Lynn (4.9%) and Bristol (3.2%), makes it plausible that innovations from London rebounded from them to neighbouring towns, in a new wave-like pattern of diffusion. Connection by sea may have favoured the diffusion of innovations from Lynn to Boston (NEM), and roads may have facilitated their movement from Bristol to the near town of Gloucester (SWM) and from Coventry to Leicester (SEM). It is possible that innovations reached Norwich (EA) either from the port of Lynn, or directly from London and/or Bury St. Edmunds, although in view of the road connection between the last three towns, and the difficulties for transportation in the Fens, we prefer to speculate on the second possibility. Finally, it is harder to trace the routes that linguistic innovations from London followed in their diffusion through the northern counties. While it is clear that Newcastle (N) and Chester (NWM) would have been the last places to receive t hem, if they did at all, the low potential for influencing and being influenced of towns like Lincoln (NEM) (2.8% and 4%) and York (N) (1.1% and 5%), makes it likely that the former received London innovations from the near port of Boston The Port of Boston is a major seaport located in Boston Harbor and adjacent to the City of Boston. It is the largest port in Massachusetts as well as being one of the principal ports on the east coast of the United States. or from Leicester and that, in a wave-like manner, they finally reached York either from Coventry or from Lincoln. As regards each dialect area (Table 8 and Figure 2), East Anglia and the South-East Midlands are clearly prone to receiving (being influenced) and diffusing dif·fuse v. dif·fused, dif·fus·ing, dif·fus·es v.tr. 1. To pour out and cause to spread freely. 2. To spread about or scatter; disseminate. 3. (influencing) innovations from London and, therefore, may have been the more innovative areas during the late Middle English period. The South-West Midlands, the North-East Midlands and the South-West follow in the rank, while the North and North-West Midlands lag behind in this particular process. This pattern is not unexpected, since these areas are also arranged in this order as far as population density and proximity to London are concerned (see Map 2). It seems odd that the South-East, even though it is near London, does not reflect high chances of being linguistically influenced by the metropolis; we understand that this may be due to the differences between the dialects peculiar to each area. In fact, although, as Mackenzie (1928) and Ekwall (1956) demonstrated decades ago, both the South-Eastern and South-Western varieties had a direct linguistic influence on the configuration of the early ME London dialect, the later London standard separated progressively from the former to align itself more conclusively with the latter and was further reinforced with features coming from the East Midlands The East Midlands is one of the regions of England and consists of most of the eastern half of the traditional region of the Midlands. It consists of the combined area of Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Rutland, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire and most of Lincolnshire. . 4. Conclusion As a conclusion, we would like to insist on the speculative character of this paper. We have simply accepted the possibility that linguistic innovations in late Middle English did not only diffuse diffuse /dif·fuse/ 1. (di-fus´) not definitely limited or localized. 2. (di-fuz´) to pass through or to spread widely through a tissue or substance. dif·fuse adj. in a epidemic, wave-like manner, but that the growth and development of towns may have favoured a process of hierarchical diffusion. In this process demography and communication networks may have played a vital role. Following these premises, we have considered the population of late medieval England and have attempted to reconstruct a road network that could have linked towns in different parts of the country; we have also pointed to the importance of river transport and coastal shipping as basic means for innovations to diffuse from London, possibly the most innovative area in linguistic terms, to other parts of the country. The application of geolinguistic models to late Middle English results in a model that combines epidemic and hierarchical diffusion and points to the importance of towns like Coventry (SEM), Bristol (SWM) and Lynn (EA), in addition to London, in the linguistic panorama of late 14th century England. These towns, particularly Coventry, may have been places, like London, where key linguistic processes Noun 1. linguistic process - a process involved in human language linguistics - the scientific study of language agglutination - the building of words from component morphemes that retain their form and meaning in the process of combining were taking place at the time and we think it is worthwhile to analyse their contribution to this period of the history of the English language English is a West Germanic language that originated from the Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Britain by Germanic settlers and Roman auxiliary troops from various parts of what is now northwest Germany and the Northern Netherlands. in more detail. Similarly, it would be interesting, as a follow-up, to carry this study along the diachronic di·a·chron·ic adj. Of or concerned with phenomena as they change through time. axis by comparing these medieval patterns of diffusion with those prevalent in later periods, just as the importance of urban centres and the prestige of local varieties vary from period to period throughout history. For instance, the decline from the late 15th century of some of the towns that figure prominently in this study, like Boston (NEM), Lynn (EA) and Covent ry (SEM), is well attested at·test v. at·test·ed, at·test·ing, at·tests v.tr. 1. To affirm to be correct, true, or genuine: The date of the painting was attested by the appraiser. 2. , just as other relatively minor localities, like Exeter, almost doubled in size and may have become important centres as far as the reception of linguistic innovations was concerned. Finally, it is necessary to emphasize that, even in a non-speculative paper, geolinguistics does not provide us with a complete picture of the complexity behind the diffusion of linguistic innovations. Gravity models may give adequate statistical explanations for the volume, distance and direction of geographical diffusion flows, but they do not reveal factors like the particular social group in which the innovation arose, the profile of the potential adopters and diffusers, the reasons leading speakers to adopt and reject an innovation, etc. (HernandezCampoy 1999b: 38; see also: Britain 2002: 609-610). Historical sociolinguistics sociolinguistics, the study of language as it affects and is affected by social relations. Sociolinguistics encompasses a broad range of concerns, including bilingualism, pidgin and creole languages, and other ways that language use is influenced by contact among has started to reconstruct these pieces of the jigsaw A Web server from the W3C that incorporates advanced features and uses a modular design similar to the Apache Web server. Jigsaw supports HTTP 1.1 and provided an experimental platform for HTTP-NG. See HTTP-NG and Amaya. puzzle and the mutual contribution with geolinguistics is necessary if we wish to illuminate il·lu·mi·nate v. il·lu·mi·nat·ed, il·lu·mi·nat·ing, il·lu·mi·nates v.tr. 1. To provide or brighten with light. 2. To decorate or hang with lights. 3. some of these crucial aspects for the history of languages. [FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
able 1
The population of England, 14th- 17th centuries
1348-1430 2,100,000
1430-1475 2,300,000
c. 1550 3,220,000
c. 1690 4,080,000
able 2
The population of England in the late 14th cenury (Russell 1948)
Area County Population Density Town
London Middlesex 51,835 56.2 London
South East Kent 89,551 48.6 Canterbury
[Sandwich.sup.+]
[Romney.sup.+]
Surrey 27,058 34.7 [Southwark.sup.-]
Sussex 54,292 19.8
Total 170,901 34.4
East Anglia Cambridgeshire 46,461 49 Cambridge
Ely
Essex 76,375 47.3 Colchester
Suffolk 93,843 59.7 Bury St. Edmunds
Ipswich
Norfolk 146,726 65.5 Norwich
Lynn
Yarmouth
Total 363,405 55.3
South West Berkshire 34,084 42.2 [Reading.sup.+]
Cornwall 51,411 37.3
Devon 78,707 29.1 Exeter
Plymouth
Dorset 51,361 46.6
Hampshire 60,849 31.4 Southampton
Winchester
Somerset 84,111 47.6 Wells
Wiltshire 68,742 -- Salisbury
Total 429,265 39
South East Warwickshire (4) 27,238 28.3 Coventry
Midlands Bedfordshire 30,508 63.4
Buckinghamshire 37,008 48.5
Hertforshire 29,962 49.1 [St. Albans.sup.+]
Huntingdonshire 21,243 50.7
Leicestershire 50,748 58.1 Leicester
Northamptonshire 62,553 60.3 Northampton
Oxfordshire 41,008 51 Oxford
Rutland 8,991 59.1
Total 309,259 42
North East Derbyshire (4) 21,433 20.28 Derby
Midlands Lincolnshire 142,678 49.8 Lincoln
Boston
Stamford
Nottinghamshire 43,328 48.8 Nottingham
Newark
Total 228 872 40
South West Warwickshire (4) 18,158 19
Midlands Shropshire 40,242 28.5 Shrewabury
Ludlow
Gloucestershire 68,016 46.4 Bristol
Gloucester
Herefordshire 25,831 27.9 Hereford
Worcestershire 24,148 29.3 Worcester
Total 221,791 30.2
North West Derbyshire (4) 14,573 13.52
Midlands Lancashire 35,820 26.2
Staffordshire 33,734 47.6 Liehfield
Cheshire 11.5 Chester +
Total 84,127 24.7
North Cumberland 18,778 17
Northumberland 25,210 17.2 Newcastle
Westmoreland 11,084 19.3
Yorkshire 196,560 37.2 York
Beverley
Scarborough *
Kingston on Hull
Durham 14.2
Total 251,632 21
Area Population
London 34,971
South East 3,861
c. 1,500-2,000
c. 1,500-2,000
c. 2,400
East Anglia 2,853
2,583
4,432
3,668
2,260
5,928
4,691
2,912
South West c. 1,500-2,000
2,340
7,256
1,728
2,160
1,352
4,839
South East 7,226
Midlands
c. 1,500-2,000
3,152
2,216
3,536
North East 1,569
Midlands 5,354
4,307
1,827
2,170
1,767
South West
Midlands 3,123
1,758
9,518
3,358
2,854
2,336
North West
Midlands
1,536
c. 1,500-2,000
North
3,970
10,872
3.994
c. 3,500
2,336
able 3
Primary Second. Main
Area Town PPI Seaport river river road
Canterbury 4.2 1.5 1.6
South-East Sandwich 2.2 2 1.6
Romney 2.0 2
Cambridge 3.7 1.5 1.6
Ely 3.5 1.5
Colchester 5.1 1.5
East Anglia Bury St Edmunds 4.6 1.6
Ipswich 3.2 2
Norwich 6.7 1.5 1.6
Lynn 5.3 2
Yarmouth 3.7 2
Reading 2.0 1.7 1.6
Exeter 2.7 2 1.6
Plymouth 7.4 2 1.6
South West Southampton 2.3 2 (1.6)
Winchester 2.7 1.6
Wells 1.7
Salisbury 5.2 1.5 1.6
St. Albans 2.0 1.6
Leicester 3.7 1.5 1.6
South East Northampton 2.7 1.5 1.6
Midlands Oxford 3.8 1.7 1.6
Coventry 4.6 2.0
Derby 2.0 1.5 1.6
Lincoln 5.8 1.7 1.6
North East Boston 4.7 2
Midlands Stamford 2.2 1.5 1.6
Nottingham 2.7 1.7 1.6
Newark 2.5 1.5 1.6
Shrewsbury 3.4 1.7
Ludlow 2.3 1.5
South West Bristol 9.8 2 1.6
Midlands Gloucester 4.0 1.7 2
Hereford 3.4 1.5 1.6
Worcester 3.0 1.7 1.6
North West Lichfield 1.7 1.6
Midlands Chester 1.8 2
Newcastle 4.2 2 (1.6)
York 11.3 1.7 1.6
North Beverley 4.8 1.5
Scarborough 4.1 2
Kingston upon 3.3 2
Hull
Pilg.
Area route Total
1.3 18.48
South-East 7.92
4.00
11.47
1.3 9.80
7.65
East Anglia 1.3 13.34
6.40
20.77
10.60
7.40
6.60
9.72
26.64
South West 8.28
4.32
1.70
16.12
1.3 5.80
11.47
South East 8.37
Midlands 12.54
9.20
6.20
19.14
North East 9.40
Midlands 6.82
8.91
7.75
5.78
3.45
South West 35.28
Midlands 14.80
10.54
9.90
North West 2.72
Midlands 3.60
15.12
37.29
North 7.20
8.20
6.60
able 4
Interaction potential index of the ME urban centres
Rank Urban Centre Dialect Area Interaction Potential
raw data percentage
1 London Middlessex 11.60 21.3%
2 Coventry South East Midlands 4.41 8.1%
3 Bristol South West Midlands 3.81 7.0%
4 K. Lynn East Anglia 2.99 5.5%
5 Oxford South East Midlands 2.86 5.3%
6 Leicester South East Midlands 2.84 5.2%
7 Boston North East Midlands 2.83 5.2%
8 Cambridge East Anglia 2.68 5.0%
9 Bury St. Edmonds East Anglia 2.38 4.4%
10 Lincoln North East Midlands 2.35 4.3%
11 Norwich East Anglia 2.30 4.2%
12 York North 2.23 4.1%
13 Gloucester South West Midlands 2.15 3.9%
14 Salisbury South West 1.96 3.6%
15 Canterbury South East 1.83 3.4%
16 Plymouth South West 0.99 1.8%
17 Newcastle North 0.92 1.7%
18 Exeter South West 0.81 1.5%
19 Chester North West Midlands 0.29 0.5%
able 5
Interaction potential index of the ME dialect aras
Rank Dialect Area percentage
1 London 21.3%
2 East Anglia (EA) 19.1%
3 South East Midlands (SEM) 18.6%
4 South West Midlands (SWM) 10.9%
5 South West (SW) 10.9%
6 North East Midlands (NEM) 9.5%
7 North (N) 5.8%
8 South East (SE) 3.4%
9 North West Midlands (NWM) 0.5%
able 6
Phonological and morphological features of the nine dialect areas
London SE EA SW
OE [eo] [e:] [e:] [e:] [o:]
OE [ae] [a] [e] [a] [e, a]
OE [ae:] [[epsilon]:] [e:] [a:] [[epsilon]:]
OE [a+nasal] [??:] [??:] [??:] [??:]
Initial [f] [v] [v] [f] [v]
Feminine pp sche he, ho sche ho
Plural pp th-, h- h- th-, h- h-
Present part -inge -inge -inge -inge
-ende
Present pl -en, -e -ep -en -ep
3 present sg -ep -ep -epp -epp
SEM NEM SWM
OE [eo] [e:] [e:] [o:]
OE [ae] [a] [e, a] [e, a]
OE [ae:] [[epsilon]:, e:] [[epsilon]:, e:] [[epsilon]:, e:]
OE [a+nasal] [??:] [??:] [a:]
Initial [f] [f] [f] [f, v]
Feminine pp sche scho heo, ho
Plural pp th-, h- th- h-
Present part -inge -inge -inge
-ende -ende
Present pl -en -en, -es -ep
3 present sg -ep -es -ep
NWM N
OE [eo] [o:] [e:]
OE [ae] [e] [a]
OE [ae:] [[epsilon]:, e:] [[epsilon]:, e:]
OE [a+nasal] [a:] [a:]
Initial [f] [f] [f]
Feminine pp heo, ho scho
Plural pp h- th-
Present part -inge -ande
-ende
Present pl -en -es
3 present sg -es -es
able 7
Degree of linguistic similarity amongst me dialect areas
Dialect Area Main Urban Centres Linguistic similarity
Middlessex London 10
South East Canterbury 5
East Anglia Cambridge 7.5
Norwich 7.5
Bury St Edmunds 7.5
King's Lynn 7.5
Exeter 5.5
Plymouth 5.5
Salisbury 5.5
South East Midlands Oxford 8
Coventry 8
Leicester 8
North East Midlands Lincoln 5
Boston 5
South West Midlands Bristol 3
Gloucester 3
North West Midlands Chester 2
North York 3
Newcastle 3
able 8
Influence potential exerted/received by the urban centres
Potential for Influecing Potential for being Influenced
1. London 51.2% Oxford 8%
2. Coventry 9.4% Cambridge 7.7%
3. Lynn 4.9% Coventry 7.6%
4. Norwich 4% Leicester 7.2%
5. Leicester 4.4% Canterbury 6.7%
6. Bristol 3.2% Bury St. Edmunds 6.1%
7. Oxford 3.2% Lynn 5.9%
8. Boston 3.1% Bristol 5.7%
9. Bury St. Edmunds 3% Boston 5.3%
10. Lincoln 2.8% York 5%
11. Cambridge 2.7% Norwich 4.7%
12. Salisbury 1.8% Salisbury 4.3%
13. Plymouth 1.5% Gloucester 4.1%
14. York 1.1% Lincoln 4%
15. Gloucester 0.9% London 3.7%
16. Newcastle 0.84% Exeter 1.6%
17. Canterbury 0.83% Plymouth 1.3%
18. Exeter 0.5% Newcastle 1.2%
19. Chester 0.05% Chester 0.7%
able 9
Influence potential exerted/received by each dialect area
Potential for Influencing Potential for being Influenced
1. London (M) 51.2% East Anglia
2. South-East Midlands 17% South-East Midlands
3. East Anglia 14.6% Sourhwest
4. South-West Midlands 4.1% South-West Midlands
5. North-East MIdlands 5.9% North-East Midlands
6. Southwest 4.5% Southeast
7. North 1.94% North
8. Southeast 0.83% London (M)
9. North-West Midlands 0.05% North-West Midlands
Potential for Influencing
1. London (M) 24.4%
2. South-East Midlands 22.8%
3. East Anglia 15.5%
4. South-West Midlands 9.8%
5. North-East MIdlands 9.3%
6. Southwest 6.7%
7. North 6.2%
8. Southeast 3.7%
9. North-West Midlands 0.7%
(1.) In addition to epidemic and hierarchical diffusion, geolinguists have also seen other models at work in contemporary situations. Bailey et al. have detected a model of contrahierarchical diffusion in Oklahoma, where some innovations spread from rural to urban communities (1993: 371-373), while Horvarth and Horvarth have traced a pattern which combines contagion and hierarchy in the case of some features of Australian English which "gain a foothold foot·hold n. 1. A place providing support for the foot in climbing or standing. 2. A firm or secure position that provides a base for further advancement. foothold Noun 1. in both town and country in one particular region before diffusing to other regions" (1997; quoted from Britain 2002: 625). (2.) On geolinguistics, its theoretical tenets and applications, see also Callary (1975), Trudgill (1974, 1983, 1986), Larmouth (1981), Gerritsen (1988) and Britain (2002), among others. (3.) The same procedure has recently been followed by Keene (2000: 102), and by Galloway in the research project on "Market networks in the London region, c. 1400". In the absence of returns for 1377, these historians have calculated figures for Scarborough on the basis of the 1480 tax payers listed in the 1381 returns (c. 2200-2900 inhabitants). Towns like Chester, St. Albans, Reading, Romney and Sandwich are assumed by Galloway and Russell to have had no less than 1000 poll-tax payers, which roughly corresponds to c. 1500-2000 people. The towns situated in the immediate neighbourhood of London, Westminster and Southwark, are not considered in this study, since a) within a few decades they would have been subsumed into the metropolitan area, and b) 14th century innovations from the city would reach them earlier than other places, in case they are not the actual source of the innovation themselves (as may often have been the case of 15th century Westminster). (4.) It is well-known that dialect areas and political boundaries do not necessarily coincide. For instance, Warwickshire and Derbyshire are split in two halves by the reconstructed isoglosses separating, respectively, the South-West Midlands from the South-East Midlands, and the NorthWest Midlands from the North-East Midlands. This is the reason why the two counties have been included in both areas, and their respective populations have been adjusted depending on a) the extension that belongs to one area or the other and b) the location of the main towns - Coventry on the South-East Midlands and Derby on the North-West Midlands. (5.) It may seem strange that Salisbury reaches higher scores than Southampton in the calculations of this index and that, therefore, the former has been chosen as urban catalyst in this part of the South-West. The reason may be the absence of industrial development at the port of Southampton. While it is true that this was an important harbour placed in the main European trade routes -- it was connected to France and the Mediterranean and redistributed re·dis·trib·ute tr.v. re·dis·trib·ut·ed, re·dis·trib·ut·ing, re·dis·trib·utes To distribute again in a different way; reallocate. Adj. 1. products from these areas to Flanders, Northern Europe and to other English ports (Darby 1936: 272-280)-historical geographers agree that it had little industry and was not a prosperous town (Reynolds 1977:152; Kermode 2000: 448), which may explain the demographic differences with other towns of the area. However, it must be assumed and this is reflected in the following sections -- that Southampton was directly linked by coastal shipping to London, and that innovations from the capital must have often followed this route. REFERENCES Ammon Ammon, in the Bible Ammon (ăm`ən), in the Bible, people living E of the Dead Sea. Their capital was Rabbath-Ammon, the present-day Amman (Jordan). 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