English History and Its Language Development: INDEX or Table of Contents

(highlights of illustrated historical events for a better comprehension of the historical periods which contributed to the development of the English language)

Senior Scribe is pointing to quotes about history.

It has only just begun to dawn on us that in our own language alone, not to speak of its many companions, the past history of humanity is spread out in an imperishable map, just as the history of the mineral earth lies embedded in the layers of its outer crust.

—Owen Barfield, History in English Words, 1926

History is indeed little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind.

—Edward Gibbon, 1737-1794

History, in the human sense, is a language net cast backwards.

—George Steiner, 1975
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 11
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 12
A.D. 731, the Venerable Bede, a monk at Jarrow, England.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 13
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 14
A.D. 871-899, Alfred the Great served as the first king of England.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 15
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 16
A.D. 1016-1035, reign of King Canute (Cnute).
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 17
Accession of Edward the Confessor restored King Alfred's line.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 18
1066, "William the Conqueror" and his Normans and mercenaries took control of Britain.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 19
1150-1500, Middle English Period.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 20
1258, the "Provisions of Oxford", first official document to use English since the Norman Conquest.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 21
1350-1400, period of great literary production in Britain.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 22
Modern-English Period, A.D. 1500 to present.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 23
English writers used Greek and Latin to present their ideas.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 24
Human activities developed new objects and concepts, requiring new terms, many were still from Latin and Greek origins.
English and its Historical Development, Illustrated, Part 25
Scientific presentations used Latin and Greek as their nomenclature.
Robertson's Words for a Modern Age book cover and it reference to English words derived from Latin and Greek sources.