Учебное пособие для специальностей «Переводческое дело» и«Иностранный язык: два иностранных языка»


UNIT 11. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NATIONAL LITERARY



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UNIT 11. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NATIONAL LITERARY 
LANGUAGE 
§ 1. England in early New English 
The formation of the national literary English language covers the early New 
English period (about 1475 – 1660). There were at least 2 major external factors 
which contributed to the rise of the national language and the literary standard: the 
centralization of the country and progress of culture. Other historical events, such as 
expanded foreign contacts, affected the language in a less general way, though their 
influence on the vocabulary growth is of no doubt.
The most significant event of the period was the Wars of the Roses (1455 – 
1485), which marked the decay of feudalism and the birth of a new social order. The 
political result of this long struggle was the rise of absolute monarchy. This meant a 
high degree of political centralization, which, in its turn, led to the centralization of 
the language as well. This means that there appeared national language dominating 
over local dialects. 
The 15
th
and 16th c. brought about other striking changes in the life of the 
country. Trade had extended outside the local boundaries. Besides cattle-breeding 
and farming an important wool trade and industry was carried on in the country-side. 
Soon the demand for wool and cloth started to rise, and Britain began to export 
woolen cloth produced by the 1
st
big enterprises known as “manufactures”. As this 
wool business turned out to be profitable, the landowners and manufacturers needed 
more wool and, correspondingly, more sheep and pastures. For this reason, the 
landowners evicted peasants from their lands, enclosed the land with ditches and 
fences and turned it into vast pastures.
The new nobility, who traded in wool, fused with the rich townspeople and 
formed a new class – the bourgeoisie. The evicted farmers, peasants, poor artisans 
and monastic servants turned into farm labourers and wage workers or remained 
unemployed and joined the ranks of vagrants, paupers and highway robbers. 
These changes in economic and social conditions were accompanied by the 
intermixture of people coming from different regions, the growth of towns with a 
mixed population, and the strengthening of social ties between the various regions. 


42 
All these processes played an important role in the unification of the English 
language. 


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