Continental English Books and The Standardization of The English Language in The Early Sixteenth Century: 1525-1540
Continental English Books and The Standardization of The English Language in The Early Sixteenth Century: 1525-1540
Continental English Books and The Standardization of The English Language in The Early Sixteenth Century: 1525-1540
In the long process of normalization undergone by the English language in the early modern
period the printing press is generally considered to have been a highly influential contributing
factor. Most of the early presses were set up in Westminster-London and they printed mainly
books in the vernacular at comparatively affordable prices. By so doing, they added to the
recognition and diffusion of the incipient national standard based on the mixed language of the
capital. Albert Baugh and Thomas Cable summarize the linguistic impact of the printing press in
the following terms A powerful force thus existed for promoting a standard, uniform language,
and the means were now available for spreading that language throughout the territory in which it
was understood. (1978: 200)
The early printers, however, were not linguistic reformers and the study of the texts they produced shows them on the whole not to be above their most enlightened contemporaries as far as
variation in language is concerned (Scragg 1974, Gmez Solio 1984, 1985, 1986). Early Modern
Standard English was far from being a uniform variety and, though to a lesser degree than
manuscripts, the printed books of that period are not exempt from variant spellings, often
phonologically motivated and thus ultimately dialectal in origin (Wyld 1920, Dobson 1955).
Another contributing factor to linguistic normalization, though one less commented upon by
the authors of standard textbooks, was the Protestant Reformation. One of the points in the
reformers agenda was the biblical and liturgical use of the vernacular. The eventual
implementation of that program represented again a significant step in the recognition and
diffusion of the London-based standard language. The initial phases of the English Reformation
were in addition marked by intense polemical and theological debate, which resulted in an
outpouring of books and pamphlets eagerly read and contested by the parties concerned (Elton
1977).
In the beginning, however, the advocates of reform were forced to conduct their publishing activities in exile. Thus, the father of the English Reformation, William Tyndale, thought it safer and
more convenient to leave England in order to carry out his biblical translations and write his books
in defense of Protestantism. He was not the only early reformer to make his way to the Continent.
Other leaders of the first generation of English protestants, such as George Joye, William Roye,
Robert Barnes, Jerome Barlow, John Frith, and Miles Coverdale, also took advantage of the
comparatively milder conditions and better publishing opportunities prevailing in some parts of
Germany and the Low Countries. The writings of these and other English protestant exiles have
been studied by Anthea Hume (1961a), who has also published (1961b) an annotated bibliography
of the English protestant books printed on the Continent from 1525 to 1535.
Anthea Humes research, however, wasnt primarily concerned with the linguistic make up of
the texts in question, although an analysis of their language would certainly throw light on the role
and contributions of the different people who had a hand in the production of those books. It is the
purpose of this paper, therefore, to offer a first approximation to the language of the early English
42
protestant books printed abroad and here we will mainly concentrate our attention on their position
in relation to the process of linguistic standardization as reflected by contemporary insular
chancery documents and printed texts.
As an illustrative case we can mention to begin with a small octavo volume of the New Testament in English printed in 1535, a copy of which can be consulted at Cambridge University
Library.1 The place and printer of this book are unknown. Some information is however given by
its second title, which reads: The newe Testament dylygently corrected and compared with the
Greke by Willyam Tindale and fynesshed in the yere of oure Lorde God A. M. D. and. xxxv. The
wording of this title repeats almost exactly that of a slightly earlier edition of Tyndales revised
version of the New Testament printed at Antwerp in November 1534 by Martin Keyser, alias
Martin Emperowr . From a linguistic point of view the 1535 anonymous reprint is interesting
because of its peculiar orthography, specially the frequent use of digraphs involving the use of the
letter e after (or before) another vowel. Francis Fry (1878: 63-65; cf. also Table 1 below)
published a representative list of the most peculiar variants together with the corresponding forms
used in the earlier edition dated in November 1534. Fry points out that some words, Faether and
Moether, for example, are almost always so spelled; () some words will be found peculiarly
spelled but once or twice; and () the frequency of the use of the words as given in the List will
be found to vary greatly between these extremes (65).
How should we then interpret those unusual spellings? In the nineteenth century some people
(Roach 1881) advanced the view that the peculiar orthography shown by the Cambridge 1535 copy
of Tyndales revised edition of the New Testament reflected provincial spellings typical of the
South West. Tyndale would thus be fulfilling the promise made in his early days at Little Sodbury
that, if God spared his life, he would cause ploughboys to know more of the Scripture than some
learned men (Foxe 1563: cf. Daniel 1994: 79). Had Tyndale put out an edition in his local dialect
in earnest pity for the ploughboy and husbandmen of Gloucestershire? (Anderson, as quoted by
Fry 65).
When this hypothesis was put forward little was known about the Gloucestershire dialect in the
late and early postmedieval periods. No evidence could be produced to show that those spellings
were provincialisms. None of the 19th century scholars involved in the study of Tyndales
biography and works were aware that oe (= open/close o) is a Worcestershire and Gloucestershire
spelling of great frequency in Middle English, and that ae (as in a word like made) is found,
though more rarely, in Worcestershire and Herefordshire; ie = i is also found in Worcestershire.
(M.L. Samuels, personal communication). So at first sight it seems that the provincial spelling
theory cannot in principle be dismissed or disproved.
There are however several reasons why the dialectal character of those spellings should be dismissed. The first objection has to do with the their varying frequency. The use of those digraphs
varies from almost complete regularity (in a few cases) to almost complete exceptionality. If that
orthography was adopted with a fixed design, why was it not used regularly throughout the book?
(cf. Fry 1878: 65). A second argument against the provincialism of those spellings lies in the fact
that they seem to obey no discernible rule. Both long and short vocalic sounds, in either stressed or
unstressed2 syllabic positions, are liable to be expressed by them. Those spellings are, moreover,
inconsistently used, as witness variants such as naedeth and neade for NEED-, or haeth and heath
for HATH.
But if the unequal distribution, unsystematic character and inconsistent use shown by those
variants were not enough to render them suspect, we yet have a more decisive argument against
their provincial value. The Linguistic Atlas of Late Mediaeval English (LALME) offers an
extensive repertoire of all the variants registered in late medieval texts, so that it is possible for us
1 Imperfect copies of this edition are also kept at the British Library and Exeter College, Oxford.
2 Cf. accompaenyinge, captaeyne, certaeyne, counsael, desolaete, fountaeyne, mountaeyns, etc. Some of the
syllables where the redundant <e> is used can be interpreted as stressed if we assume a Frenchified pronunciation.
now to interpret those spellings in the light of the evidence uncovered by the Atlas. Table 1 below
offers a list of some of the peculiar realizations found in the 1535 reprint. Those spellings can be
compared with their counterparts in the earlier 1534 edition of Tyndales translation. They can also
be compared with the dialectal preferences for those variables found in the southern part of
Gloucestershire, especially in the vicinity of Berkeley, where Tyndale was most probably born and
where he worked for a while after his graduation from Oxford (Daniel 1994). Finally, another
column gives us information about the status of those variants according to the large inventory of
forms offered in the fourth volume of LALME. Table 1 shows that most of the unusual spellings
examined not only do not match the forms that prevailed in southern Gloucestershire, but are also
unattested anywhere in England in the 15th c.
If the provincial spelling theory can be confidently dismissed, how can we then account for
that idiosyncratic orthography? For an adequate answer to this question we must turn our attention
to the conditions under which the printing of the CUL misspelt copy was carried out. Tyndales
revised translation of the New Testament was printed in November 1534. In the months that
followed its publication there appeared several piratical reprints which, according with the
testimony of George Joye, had not been properly supervised by a native English speaker and, as a
consequence, show an unusual number of mistakes and false readings. We must remember that the
printing of English translations of biblical texts was then a semi-clandestine affair, that their
printers often concealed their names and whereabouts, and that Tyndale himself could not leave
the privileged Merchants House at Antwerp without risking being arrested and sent to prison on a
charge of heresy, something that finally happened in May 1535. In those circumstances, engaging
the services of competent and trustworthy native English proof-readers wasnt always easy and
would in any case increase the final price of the product.
The idiosyncratic spellings we have been discussing constitute an extreme and exceptional
case. For a better picture of the linguistic practice shown by continental English books we must
examine texts that were adequately proofread. This is the case of the three Tyndale texts whose
linguistic behaviour is illustrated in Table 2. For comparative purposes I include a list of the forms
favoured by the contemporary chancery and London-printed texts, together with an additional
column showing the typical South-Gloucestershire forms.1
Table 2 shows that Tyndales printed works exhibit well established variants, such as hir,
soche, eache, thorow(e, awne and silfe / sylfe, which are distinctly avoided by the Chancery and the
contemporary London printers alike. In some variables, the texts seem to show a change in the
direction of the standard form (hit > it, eny > any), but in other cases there is still a marked
fluctuation (her / hir, selfe / silfe, soche / suche). In most cases the variants in Tyndales works can
be related to the linguistic realizations in Southern Gloucestershire. The only exceptions to that
pattern are awne and eache.
Although Tyndale was executed well before he could complete his translation of the whole
Bible, the biblical books that he translated were on the whole incorporated into the full versions
published after his death. This could be the reason why the early editions of the English Bible
printed on the continent still retain most of the linguistic preferences shown by Tyndales printed
works. Table 3 shows the variants exhibited by three different continental editions of the English
Bible. The first column to the left corresponds to the first printed edition of the Bible translated by
Miles Coverdale and printed at Zurich by Christopher Froschouer in 1535. The second column
offers the variants used in Thomas Matthews translation printed at Antwerp in 1537. The next
column lists the forms found in Coverdales revision of Matthews Bible. This is usually called the
Great Bible and was printed in 1539 partly in Paris and partly in London. Finally, the
righthandside column gives us the variants used in Richard Taverners version printed by John
Byddell in London also in 1539. Richard Taverner was a clerk of the Signet. For this reason, and
1 The variants listed in Tables 2-3-4 are based on an examination of extensive samples of the titles/editions mentioned. Since this paper presents a preliminary report of research in progress, no details will here be given as to
the sections examined. The author is however convinced that the selection of the samples both in terms of
length and distribution warrants the representativeness of the linguistic profiles obtained.
43
44
also because his version of the Bible was printed in London, the forms used in this text exhibit the
standard realizations at the time and can therefore be used to gauge the degree of linguistic
standardization shown by the continental versions. As table 3 shows, the continental editions are
on the whole more hesitant in their choice of variants and exhibit significant departures (hyr,
soche, eache, eny, thorow, awne) from the standard forms.
Not all the English books printed on the Continent in the early sixteenth century were biblical
texts. Some were also pieces of polemical writing and propaganda or doctrinal treatises defending
protestant views. In order to illustrate the linguistic behaviour of this type of texts we must finally
turn to table 4. Here we find the linguistic profile of four texts written by different authors and
printed in four different workshops. Although these texts exhibit a less homogeneous practice
when compared with the previous ones, we still find in most of them the same range of variants
favoured by biblical translations but frowned upon by the chancery scribes and the London
printers. Robert Barness Supplication to Henry VIII is of particular interest in this context since
its London reprint of 1534 can be used to illustrate not only the standard forms once again, but
also the linguistic nonconformism of the texts printed on the Continent. I must point out in this
connection that the present-day spelling of the word EACH appears earlier in the continental books
than in their contemporary London printed texts and chancery documents.
So, from the data I have marshalled so far the following conclusions can be tentatively
derived:
1. In the early sixteenth century the Chancery seems to still have been a leading
factor in the process of linguistic standardization, since chancery documents are
on the whole more homogeneous and formally more modern than other types of
text.
2. The London printed books generally agree with the Chancery texts and show on
the whole a more restricted set of acceptable variants than most other types of
text, handwritten or (continentally) printed.
3. The English books printed on the Continent show more internal fluctuation
and/or they are linguistically more liberal in their choice of forms than London
printed texts.
4. As far as the protestant literature is concerned, the linguistic make up of English
biblical, doctrinal or polemical books printed on the Continent seems to have
been influenced by William Tyndales linguistic preferences.
5. And, finally, Baugh and Cables view that the printing press was a powerful
force promoting a standard uniform language must be qualified. On the whole,
the continental English books we have been discussing promoted confusion
rather than uniformity of spelling.
I must again stress the tentative character of these conclusions. Obviously, more research is needed
before their general validity can be firmly established.
REFERENCES
Baugh, A. C. & Th. Cable. 1978. A History of the English Language. London, Routledge & Kegan
Paul.
Daniel, D. 1994. William Tyndale: A Biography. New Haven, Yale University Press.
Dobson, E. 1955. Early Modern Standard English. Transactions of the Philological Society. 25-54.
Elton, G. R. 1977. Reform and Reformation: England 1509-1558. London, Edward Arnold.
Fry, F. 1878. A Bibliographical Description of the Editions of the New Testament, Tyndales
version, in English. London.
Gmez Solio, J. S. 1984. Variacin y estandarizacin en el Ingls Moderno Temprano: 14701540. PhD thesis, University of Oviedo.
Gmez Solio, J. S. 1985. William Caxton y la Estandarizacin de la Lengua Inglesa en el Siglo
XV. Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses 10: 95-118.
Gmez Solio, J. S. 1986. La Normalizacin Lingstica en la poca de Enrique VIII. > Onega, S.
1986: 19-44.
Hume, A. 1961. A Study of the Writings of the English Protestant Exiles, 1525-35. PhD thesis,
University of London.
Hume, A. 1973. English Protestant Books Printed Abroad, 1525-1535: An Annotated Bibliography. The Complete Works of St. Thomas More, vol. 8, part II. App. B: 1065-1091.
McIntosh, A., M. L. Samuels, & M. Benskin. 1986. A Linguistic Atlas of Late Medieval English.
Aberdeen, Aberdeen University Press.
Onega, S. ed. 1986. Estudios Literarios Ingleses: Renacimiento y Barroco. Madrid, Ctedra.
Roach, T. 1881. Tyndales New Testament and the Gloucestershire Dialect. Gloucestershire Notes
and Queries. 402: 408-9.
Scragg, D. G. 1974. A History of English Spelling. Manchester, Manchester University Press.
Wyld, H. C. 1920. A History of Modern Colloquial English. London, Fisher Unwin.
***
TABLE 1. IDIOSYNCRATIC SPELLINGS IN CONTEXT OF CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
1535 REPRINT OF TYNDALES REVISED TRANSLATION OF THE NEW TESTAMENT
VARIABLE
1535
LALME vol. IV
Southern
GLOUCS.
1534
2. THESE
theese
acceptable
es(e / eos(e
these
16. MUCH
moeche
muche / moche
moche
eare
(very rare)
unattested
be / bu / beo
are
22. SHALL
shaell
unattested
schal / shal
shall
23. SHOULD
shoeld
unattested
scholde
should*
25. WOULD
woeld
unattested
wold(e
would*
agaeyne
unattested
ae(n / aeyn
ageyne
theare
unattested
(acceptable)
17. ARE
37. AGAIN
51. THERE
theere
52. WHERE
54. THROUGH
ar(e / er(e
there
whar(e / wher(e
woere
unattested
unattested
war(e
where
thoorow
unattested
orou / urgh /
orw
thorow
wheare
boethe
(very rare)
85. BOTH
booth
bo e
bothe
93. CALL
caelinge
(acceptable)
unattested
[clepe(n]
callynge
coelde
unattested
cou (e
colde
99. COULD
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46
daeis
unattested
104. DOES
doeth
137. GAVE
gaeve
(acceptable)
unattested
142. HAVE
haeve
sae
101. DAYES
210. SAY
dawes / daies /
dayes
dayes
do
doth
af
gave
unattested
habbe / haue
have
unattested
say
* The predominant variants in Tyndales printed texts are shulde and wolde.
TABLE 2. VARIANTS IN THREE OF TYNDALES WORKS PRINTED ON THE CONTINENT IN COMPARISON WITH THEIR
STANDARD AND DIALECTAL COUNTERPARTS
VARIABLE
5. HER
S-GLOUCS.
NT: 1526
OBED.: 1528
NT: 1534
HUR(E,
HER,
HER /
HER /
her(e,
(hyr)
HIR,
HIR,
hyr
(hyr)
hir(e
6. IT
HIT,
IT / HIT
hyt
IT
CHANCERY LONDON-PRS
HER
HER
(hyr, hir, here)
IT,
IT /
IT
(yt)
YT
(yt, hit)
SOCHE,
SUCH(
SUCHE,
SUCHE,
soche
soche
ECHE
ENY
15. ANY
SUCH(E
suche
eche,
eache
ENY
SOCH
(siche, sych)
ECHE,
ECH(E
eache
(yche, iche)
ANY
ANY
ANY
ANY,
(anye, ani,
(eny)
eny,
eny)
16. MUCH
MUCHE,
MOCHE
MOCH
(ony)
MOCHE
MOCHE
54. THROUGH
OROU,
through,
orw,
(throwe,
thorewe,
thoro)
orew
98. CHURCH
THOROW(E, THOROW(e
urgh,
CHIRCHE,
CHURCHE,
CHERCHE
(throw, throu)
THOROW,
thorowe
MOCH(E,
MOCH(E,
muche
(myche, miche,
muche)
THROUGH, THROUGH(e,
(throwgh)
thrugh(e,
thorow(e, thorugh,
(through)
(thorough,
throw[e,
thurgh,
throwgh,
troughthorought)
CHURCH
CHURCH
(chyrch,
(churche)
CHURCHE
CHURCH(E,
chyrche,
chruch)
(chirche,
cyrche)
202. OWN
213. SELF
OWNE,
AWNE,
AWNE
AWNE
OWN(E
OWN(E
SELF(E
OWEN
(owne)
SYLF,
SILF(E,
SELFE
SELFE /
SELF(E
SILF,
sylfe,
(silfe)
SILFE,
(selffe)
SELF,
(selfe, sylffe,
silve)
SULF
SYLFE
(sylffe)
NT: 1526 = The New Testament, 1st ed., printed by Peter Schoeffer, Worms 1526.
OBED: 1528 = The Obedience of a Christian Man, printed by J. Hoochstraten, Antwerp 1528.
NT: 1534 = The New Testament, 2nd ed., printed by Martin de Keyser, Antwerp 1534.
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48
VARIABLE
5. HER
BIBLE: 1535
ZURICH
BIBLE: 1537
ANTWERP
BIBLE: 1539
PARIS &
LONDON
BIBLE: 1539
LONDON
HER, hir
HER / HYR
HER
IT
IT
IT
IT
SOCH(E
SOCH(E
SOCH(e / SUCH
SUCHE
ECHE
6. IT
10. SUCH
12. EACH
15. ANY
16. MUCH
54. THROUGH
98. CHURCH
(such[e)
(such[e)
ech(e
eche / eache
eche / each
ENY, (any)
ENY / ANY
ENY / ANY
ANY
MOCH(E
MOCH(E
MOCH(E
MOCHE
THOROW(e
THOROW(e
THOROW(e
THROUGH(E
(through)
through
through
CHURCH
church
202. OWN
AWNE / OWNE
AWNE, (owne)
AWNE, (owne)
churche
OWNE
213. SELF
SELF(E, (sylfe)
SELFE
SELFE
SELF(E
REDE ME & BE
SUPPLICACYON
FOR THE
A PROPER
DYALOGE
SUPPLICATYON
TO HENRY VIII
SUPPLICATION
NOT WROTH
Barlowe: 1528
BEGGERS
Barlowe: 1530
Barnes: 1531
Barnes: 1534
STRASBOURG
Fish: 1529
ANTWERP-2
ANTWERP-3
LONDON
TO HENRY VIII
ANTWERP-1
5. HER
6. IT
10. SUCH
12. EACH
15. ANY
16. MUCH
HER
her
her
IT (itt, yt)
IT, (yt)
SOCHE, (suche)
SUCHE
SOCHE, (suche)
HER
YT, it
IT
such(e
SUCHE
EACHE
eche / eache
eche / each
ENY, (any)
ENY, ANY
ANY
ANY
ANY
MOCHE
MOCHE
MOCH(E
muche
MOCHE
THOROW(e
thorough
THROUGH
THOROW
THROUGH
CHURCHE
CHURCHE
(muche)
54. THROUGH
through
(thorough
(throw[e, throug)
98. CHURCH
CHURCHE
thourough)
churche
CHIRCHE
(chyrche,
church[e)
202. OWN
OWNE, (own)
OWNE
OWNE, (oune)
AWNE
OWNE
213. SELF
silfe
SILF(e
SELFE
SELF(E
SELFE
(selve, selfe)
(selue)
***
49