Title: BRITISH SOURCES OFEUROPEANAMERICAN ENGLISH
1BRITISH SOURCES OFEUROPEAN-AMERICAN ENGLISH
- A SHORT HISTORY OF MIGRATIONS TO AMERICA FROM THE
BRITISH ISLES
2THE BRITISH ISLES
3English Civil War, 1642-1651
- Charles I, owing to his belief in the Divine
Right of Kings would not bend to the will of
Parliament. - Oliver Cromwell representing the Puritains and
Parliament, raised an army against Charles. - Charles was beheaded in 1649 at the height of the
civil war, which ended soon thereafter. - The principle of pariamentary government was
established for all time, even though the
monarchy was restored in 1660 with the ascension
of Charles II.
4Many fled England to escape religious and
political persecution.
- America became the richer for it.
- The first to leave in great numbers were the
Puritans.
5PRURTANS
-
- 1629-1640. Puritans were religious dissenters
against the Church of England (Anglicans). They
fled from East Anglia and settled in New England. -
6Sources of am-engl dialects
Origins of American English Dialects Summary http
//www.picturesofengland.com/mapofengland/regions.h
tml 1. 1629-1640. Puritan religious dissenters
from East Anglia settled in New England 2.
1642-1675. Royalists (Cavaliers) were religious
dissenters against Puritan rule fleeing from
south and southwest England, they settled in
Virginia 3. 1675-1725. Quakers, also seeking
religious freedom from Puritans and Anglicans
alike, migrated from the west midlands of England
and Wales to Boston and into the valley of the
Delaware. (In Boston they again met with
prejudice from American Puritans!) 4. 1718-1775.
Scots-Irish left North Britain and Northern
Ireland and settled in the Appalachian
backcountry
7ROYALISTS (CAVALIERS)
-
- 1642-1675. Royalists (Cavaliers) were religious
dissenters against Puritan rule. Fleeing from
south and southwest England, they settled in
Virginia and later migrated into the coastal
South. -
8British Sources of am-engl dialects
Origins of American English Dialects Summary http
//www.picturesofengland.com/mapofengland/regions.h
tml 1. 1629-1640. Puritan religious dissenters
from East Anglia settled in New England 2.
1642-1675. Royalists (Cavaliers) were religious
dissenters against Puritan rule fleeing from
south and southwest England, they settled in
Virginia 3. 1675-1725. Quakers, also seeking
religious freedom from Puritans and Anglicans
alike, migrated from the west midlands of England
and Wales to Boston and into the valley of the
Delaware. (In Boston they again met with
prejudice from American Puritans!) 4. 1718-1775.
Scots-Irish left North Britain and Northern
Ireland and settled in the Appalachian
backcountry
9QUAKERS
-
- 1675-1725. Quakers, seeking religious freedom
from Puritans and Anglicans alike, migrated from
the west midlands of England and Wales to Boston
and into the valley of the Delaware. (In Boston
they again met with prejudice from American
Puritans!)
10Sources of am-engl dialects
Origins of American English Dialects Summary http
//www.picturesofengland.com/mapofengland/regions.h
tml 1. 1629-1640. Puritan religious dissenters
from East Anglia settled in New England 2.
1642-1675. Royalists (Cavaliers) were religious
dissenters against Puritan rule fleeing from
south and southwest England, they settled in
Virginia 3. 1675-1725. Quakers, also seeking
religious freedom from Puritans and Anglicans
alike, migrated from the west midlands of England
and Wales to Boston and into the valley of the
Delaware. (In Boston they again met with
prejudice from American Puritans!) 4. 1718-1775.
Scots-Irish left North Britain and Northern
Ireland and settled in the Appalachian
backcountry
11SCOTS-IRISH
- 1718-1775. The Scots-Irish left Scotland and
Northern Ireland and settled the Appalachian
backcountry, fleeing from the Troubles and
seeking a better economic life and freedom to
practice their Presbyterian religion.
12How the Troubles began
- James VI of Scotland became King of England in
1603, uniting the those two crowns also gaining
possession of the Kingdom of Ireland. The
Plantation of Ulster was sold to him as a joint
English and Scottish, venture. So at least half
of the new settlers would be Scots, and half
English. - The Catholic Irish did not take too kindly to any
of this. But they lost one war with James, and
another later against Cromwell.
13THE BRITISH ISLES
14appalachia
15SUMMARY
- 1. 1629-1640. Puritans were religious
dissenters against the Church of England
(Anglicans) they fled from East Anglia and
settled in New England. -
- 2. 1642-1675. Royalists (Cavaliers) were
religious dissenters against Puritan rule
fleeing from south and southwest England, they
settled in Virginia. -
- 3. 1675-1725. Quakers, seeking religious
freedom from Puritans and Anglicans alike,
migrated from the west midlands of England and
Wales to Boston and into the valley of the
Delaware. (In Boston they again met with
prejudice from American Puritans!) - 4. 1718-1775. Scots-Irish left Scotland and
Northern Ireland and settled in the Appalachian
backcountry, fleeing from the Troubles and
seeking a better economic life.
16this short history is just the beginning, however
- Of course there are many other factors that have
influencedand continue to shapeAmerican
English. Migrations brought Finns to Minnesota
and Puerto Ricans to New York. American culture
developed, too, including scientific inventions,
baseball, Hollywood movies, and Jazz and the
Blues.
17 The fUTURE OF AMERICAN ENGLISH
- John Steinbeck, in his 1962 novel, Travels with
Charley, expressed fear that American dialects
would disappear because of the influence of mass
communication. Most dialectologists, however,
believe that dialects are here to stay, since
they are acquired from parents at an early age.
Thus the well established regional dialects of
American English are not disappearing. In fact,
the western, "leveled" English is itself showing
signs of dialect genesis. So the history of
American English is far from over.