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Article

Volume 104 • Number 3

July 2005



 

 

Pentecost and Linguistic Self-Consciousness
in Anglo-Saxon England: Bede and Ælfric

Kees Dekker, University of Groningen

The miracle of Pentecost must have appealed to the imagination of the Anglo-Saxons. As Germanic settlers in areas inhabited by Romanized Britons, they had been confronted with linguistic diversity from moment they set foot on British soil, and their conversion to Christianity by Roman and Irish missionaries would only have heightened their awareness of linguistic difference. Fostered by a tradition of scholarship, their linguistic self-consciousness developed into a tradition of composition and translation in the vernacular that outshone any contemporary efforts in Germanic Europe.


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