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Theodiscus

Theodiscus (in Medieval Latin, corresponding to Old English þēodisc, Old High German diutisc and other early Germanic reflexes of Proto-Germanic *þiudiskaz, meaning "popular" or "of the people") was a term used in the early Middle Ages to refer to the West Germanic languages. The Latin term was borrowed from the Germanic adjective meaning "of the people" but, unlike it, was used only to refer to languages. In Medieval Western Europe non-native Latin was the language of science, church and administration, hence Latin theodiscus and its Germanic counterparts were used as antonyms of Latin, to refer to the "native language spoken by the general populace". They were subsequently used in the Frankish Empire to denote the native Germanic vernaculars. As such, they were no longer used as antonym of Latin, but of walhisk, a language descendant from Latin, but nevertheless the speech of the general populace as well.[1] In doing so Latin theodiscus and the Germanic reflexes of *þiudiskaz effectively obtained the meaning of "Germanic", or more specifically one of its local varieties – resulting in the English exonym "Dutch", the German endonym Deutsch, the modern Dutch word for "German", Duits, and the obsolete or poetic Dutch word for Dutch and its dialects such as Diets. In Romance languages the same word yielded the Italian word for "German", tedesco, and the old French word used for Dutch or, depending on the locality, German speakers, tiois.

Etymology edit

Theodiscus is derived from West Germanic *þiudisk,[2] from Proto-Germanic *þiudiskaz. The stem of this word, *þeudō, meant "people" in Proto-Germanic, and *-iskaz was an adjective-forming suffix, of which -ish is the Modern English cognate with the same meaning. The Proto-Indo-European word *tewtéh₂ ("tribe", "people"), which is commonly reconstructed as the basis of the word, is related to Lithuanian tautà ("nation"), Latvian tauta ("nation"), Old Irish túath ("tribe", "people") and Oscan touto ("community").[3]

The word existed in Old English as þēodisc ("speech", "public", 'native"), came into Middle English as thede ("nation", "people") and was extinct in Early Modern English, although surviving in the English place name Thetford, "public ford". It survives as the Icelandic word þjóð for "people, nation", the Norwegian word tjod for "people", "nation", and the word "German" in many languages including German Deutsch, Dutch Duits, Yiddish דײַטש, Danish tysk, Norwegian tysk, Swedish tyska and Italian tedesco.

The word theodism, a neologism for a branch of Germanic neopaganism, is based on the Gothic form of the word,[citation needed] where þiudisko also took on the meaning of "pagan",[4] a Judeo-Christian calque on similar formations such as "Gentile" from Latin gens ("people") and Hebrew goy, i.e. "belonging to (other) peoples". Proto-Slavic similarly borrowed the word as *ťuďь with the meaning "foreign", giving rise, for example, to modern Polish cudzy, Czech cizí, Serbo-Croat tuđi and Russian чужой.

While morphologically similar, the Latin root Teutonic for "Germanic" is more distantly related, and originally a name of a Celtic or Germanic tribe that inhabited coastal Germany. It came probably via Celtic from Proto-Germanic *þeudanaz ("ruler", "leader of the people"), from *þeudō ("people, tribe"), from Proto-Indo-European *tewtéh₂ ("people", "tribe").[5] In modern Welsh it is seen in words such as 'alltud' (exile) from 'allan' (outward) and Breton 'tud' (people).

Semantic development within English edit

Currently, the first known attestation of theodiscus is to be found in a letter written around the year 786 by the Bishop of Ostia. In the letter, the bishop writes to Pope Adrian I about a synod taking place in Corbridge, England; where the decisions were later read aloud elsewhere "tam Latine quam theodisce", meaning "in Latin as well as the vernacular / common tongue".[6][7][8] Rendered in Old English as þēodisc, the term was primarily used as an adjective concerning the language of the laity. It was rarely used as a descriptor of ethnicity or identity, as the Anglo-Saxons referred to themselves as Seaxe, Iutas or Engle, respectively meaning Saxons, Jutes and Angles. The latter term would later give rise to the adjective Englisc, which during the Early Middle Ages became the term for all speakers of the Germanic dialects now collectively known as Old English.[9]

By the late 14th century, þēodisc had given rise to Middle English duche and its variants, which were used as a blanket term for all the non-Scandinavian Germanic languages spoken on the European mainland. Historical linguists have noted that the medieval "Duche" itself most likely shows an external Middle Dutch influence, in that it shows a voiced alveolar stop rather than the expected voiced dental fricative. This would be a logical result of the Medieval English wool trade, which brought the English in close linguistic contact with the cloth merchants living in the Dutch-speaking cities of Bruges and Ghent, who at the time, referred to their language as dietsc.[10]

Its exact meaning is dependent on context, but tends to be vague regardless.[11] When concerning language, the word duche could be used as a hypernym for several languages (The North est Contrey which lond spekyn all maner Duche tonge — The North [of Europe] is an area, in which all lands speak all manner of "Dutch" languages) but it could also suggest singular use (In Duche a rudder is a knyght – In "Dutch" a rudder [cf. Dutch: ridder] is a knight) in which case linguistic and/or geographic pointers need to be used to determine or approximate what the author would have meant in modern terms, which can be difficult.[12] For example, in his poem Constantyne, the English chronicler John Hardyng (1378–1465) specifically mentions the inhabitants of three Dutch-speaking fiefdoms (Flanders, Guelders and Brabant) as travel companions, but also lists the far more general "Dutchemēne" and "Almains", the latter term having an almost equally broad meaning, though being more restricted in its geographical use; usually referring to people and localities within modern Germany, Switzerland and Austria:

By early 17th century, general use of the word Dutch had become exceedingly rare in Great Britain and it became an exonym specifically tied to the modern Dutch, i.e. the Dutch-speaking inhabitants of the Low Countries. Many factors facilitated this, including close geographic proximity, trade and military conflicts.[15][16] Due to the latter, "Dutch" also became pejorative label pinned by English speakers on almost anything they regard as inferior, irregular, or contrary to their own practice. Examples include "Dutch treat" (each person paying for himself), "Dutch courage" (boldness inspired by alcohol), "Dutch wife" (a type of sex doll) and "Double Dutch" (gibberish, nonsense) among others.[17]

In the United States, the word "Dutch" remained somewhat ambiguous until the start of the 19th century. Generally, it referred to the Dutch, their language or the Dutch Republic, but it was also used as an informal monniker (for example in the works of James Fenimore Cooper and Washington Irving) for people who would today be considered Germans or German-speaking, most notably the Pennsylvania Dutch. This lingering ambiguity was most likely caused by close proximity to German-speaking immigrants, who referred to themselves or (in the case of the Pennsylvania Dutch) their language as "Deutsch" or "Deitsch".[18][19][20][21][22][23]

Semantic development within Dutch edit

From Old Dutch *thiudisk a southern variant duutsc and a western variant dietsc developed in Middle Dutch. In the earliest sources, its primary use was to differentiate between Germanic and the Romance dialects, as expressed by the Middle Dutch poet Jan van Boendale, who wrote:[15][24]

During the High Middle Ages "Dietsc/Duutsc" was increasingly used as an umbrella term for the specific Germanic dialects spoken in the Low Countries, its meaning being largely implicitly provided by the regional orientation of medieval Dutch society: apart from the higher echelons of the clergy and nobility, mobility was largely static and hence while "Dutch" could by extension also be used in its earlier sense, referring to what to today would be called Germanic dialects as opposed to Romance dialects, in many cases it was understood or meant to refer to the language now known as Dutch.[15][16][26] Apart from the sparsely populated eastern borderlands, there was little to no contact with contemporary speakers of German dialects, let alone a concept of the existence of German as language in its modern sense among the Dutch. Because medieval trade focussed on travel by water and with the most heavily populated areas adjacent to Northwestern France, the average 15th century Dutchman stood a far greater chance of hearing French or English than a dialect of the German interior, despite its relative geographical closeness.[27] Medieval Dutch authors had a vague, generalised sense of common linguistic roots between their language and various German dialects, but no concept of speaking the same language existed. Instead they saw their linguistic surroundings mostly in terms of small scale regiolects.[28]

The 15th century saw the first attested use of "Nederlandsch" (Dutch: Netherlandish, Lowlandish) alongside "Duytsch" (the Early Modern spelling of the earlier "Dietsc/Duutsc") as a term for the Dutch language and it would eventually manifest itself as the main ethnonym.[29] The use of "low(er)" or "nether" in describing the area now known as the Low Countries has a long historical record. In the 13th century epic the Nibelungenlied, written in Middle High German, the protagonist Sigurd is said to hail from the city of Xanten in the "Niderlant", meaning the Low Countries.[30] In Old French, the inhabitants of the Low Countries were known as the "Avalois", meaning "those of the [Rhine/Scheldt/Meuse] estuary"; compare contemporary French "en aval" and "à vau-l'eau" meaning "downstream". The Dukes of Burgundy referred to their Dutch possessions as "pays d'embas" (French: "lower lands") as opposed to their higher/upper territorial possessions in Burgundy itself, which was echoed in the Middle and Modern French "Pays-Bas" meaning "Low Countries".[31]

In the second half of the 16th century the neologism "Nederduytsch" (literally: Nether-Dutch, Low-Dutch) appeared in print, in a way combining the earlier "Duytsch" and "Nederlandsch" into one compound. The term was preferred by many leading contemporary grammarians such as Balthazar Huydecoper, Arnold Moonen and Jan ten Kate because it provided a continuity with Middle Dutch ("Duytsch" being the evolution of medieval "Dietsc"), was at the time considered the proper translation of the Roman Province of Germania Inferior (which not only encompassed much of the contemporary Dutch-speaking area / Netherlands, but also added classical prestige to the name) and amplified the dichotomy between Early Modern Dutch and the "Dutch" (German) dialects spoken around the Middle and Upper Rhine which had begun to be called overlantsch of hoogdutysch (literally: Overlandish, High-"Dutch") by Dutch merchants sailing upriver.[32] Though "Duytsch" forms part of the compound in both Nederduytsch and Hoogduytsch, this should not be taken to imply that the Dutch saw their language as being especially closely related to the German dialects spoken in Southerwestern Germany. On the contrary, the term "Hoogduytsch" specifically came into being as a special category because Dutch travelers visiting these parts found it hard to understand the local vernacular: in a letter dated to 1487 a Flemish merchant from Bruges instructs his agent to conduct trade transactions in Mainz in French, rather than the local tongue to avoid any misunderstandings.[32] In 1571 use of "Nederduytsch" greatly increased because the Synod of Emden chose the name "Nederduytsch Hervormde Kerk" as the official designation of the Dutch Reformed Church. The synods choice of "Nederduytsch" over the more dominant "Nederlandsch", was inspired by the phonological similarities between "neder-" and "nederig" (the latter meaning "humble") and the fact that it did not contain a worldly element ("land"), whereas "Nederlandsch" did.[32]

As the Dutch increasingly referred to their own language as "Nederlandsch" or "Nederduytsch", the term "Duytsch" became more ambiguous. Dutch humanists, started to use "Duytsch" in a sense which would today be called "Germanic", for example in a dialogue recorded in the influential Dutch grammar book "Twe-spraack vande Nederduitsche letterkunst", published in 1584:

Beginning in the second half 16th century, the nomenclature gradually became more fixed, with "Nederlandsch" and "Nederduytsch" becoming the preferred terms for Dutch and with "Hooghduytsch" referring to the language today called German. Initially the word "Duytsch" itself remained vague in exact meaning, but after the 1650s a trend emerges in which "Duytsch" is taken as the shorthand for "Hooghduytsch". This process was probably accelerated by the large number of Germans employed as agricultural day laborers and mercenary soldiers in the Dutch Republic and the ever increasing popularity of "Nederlandsch" and "Nederduytsch" over "Duytsch", the use of which had already been in decline for over a century, thereby acquiring its current meaning (German) in Dutch.[28]

While "Nederduytsch" briefly eclipsed the use of "Nederlandsch" during the 17th century, it always remained a somewhat officious, literary and scholarly term among the general populace and steadily started to lose ground to "Nederlandsch" in print after 1700.[34] When, in 1815, the United Kingdom of the Netherlands was proclaimed, it was specifically noted that the official language of the kingdom was "Nederlandsch" and that the Dutch Reformed Church, as the official State Church, would be known as the "Nederlandsch Hervormde Kerk" resulting in a profound drop in the already declining use of the word. The Dutch-speaking Cape Colony came under British control two years prior in 1814, resulting in the continued use of "nederduytsch" by the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa in its official nomenclature to the present day. The disappearance of "Nederduytsch", left "Nederlandsch", first documented in the 15th century, as the sole ethnonym for the Dutch language.[15]

The graph below visualises the decline of "Duytsch" and rise and decline of "Nederduytsch" as an ethnonym and the eventual dominance of "Nederlands":[35]

In the late 19th century "Nederduits" was reintroduced to Dutch through the German language, where prominent linguists, such as the Brothers Grimm and Georg Wenker, in the nascent field of German and Germanic studies used the term to refer to Germanic dialects which had not taken part in the High German consonant shift. Initially this group consisted of Dutch, English, Low German and Frisian, but in modern scholarship only refers to Low German-varieties. Hence in contemporary Dutch, "Nederduits" is used to describe Low German varieties, specifically those spoken in Northern Germany as the varieties spoken in the eastern Netherlands, while related, are referred to as "Nedersaksisch".[36] Likewise in the 19th century, the term "Diets" was revived by Dutch linguists and historians as a poetic name for Middle Dutch and its literature.[37]

Semantic development within German edit

The second recorded use of "theodisca" as a reference to a Germanic language was Old High German. In 788, the Annals of the Frankish Kingdom report the punishment of a Bavarian duke: "quod theodisca lingua herisliz dictum", meaning "known in the language of the people as herisliz". Herisliz is a German word now obsolete: the "slicing", i.e. tearing apart of the "Heer" (Desertion).[1]

In German dialects, a large amount of forms of "theodiscus" existed throughout the Middle Ages and which all referred to either the broader Romance/Germanic dichotomy in the West and South or the Slavic/Germanic bipartition in the East. In Old High German both diutisk and diutisc are known, that developed in Middle High German as diutsc. In Middle Low German it was known as düdesch and Modern Low German as dütsch. However, in German, the use of the term referring to Germans specifically as opposed to people speaking Germanic languages in general evolves during the Early Modern Period and it is in the late 17th and 18th century that the modern meaning of Deutsch is established.[16]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b M. Philippa e.a. (2003-2009) Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands [diets]
  2. ^ W. Haubrichs, "Theodiscus, Deutsch und Germanisch - drei Ethnonyme, drei Forschungsbegriffe. Zur Frage der Instrumentalisierung und Wertbesetzung deutscher Sprach- und Volksbezeichnungen." In: H. Beck et al., Zur Geschichte der Gleichung "germanisch-deutsch" (2004), 199-228
  3. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, D. Q. (2006), The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World, USA: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-929668-5, p. 269.
  4. ^ J. de Vries (1971), Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek [diets]
  5. ^ "Teutonic | Origin and meaning of the name teutonic by Online Etymology Dictionary".
  6. ^ Dümmler, Ernst. Epistolae Karolini Aevi 2, MGH 3 (Berlin: Weidmann, 1895), pp. 20-9 at 28
  7. ^ Alice L. Harting-Correa: Walahfrid Strabo's Libellus de Exordiis Et Incrementis Quarundam in ... [1]
  8. ^ Cornelis Dekker: The Origins of Old Germanic Studies in the Low Countries [2]
  9. ^ Farmer, David Hugh (1978). The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19282-038-9.
  10. ^ P.A.F. van Veen en N. van der Sijs (1997), Etymologisch woordenboek: de herkomst van onze woorden, 2e druk, Van Dale Lexicografie, Utrecht/Antwerpen
  11. ^ H. Kurath: Middle English Dictionary, part 14, University of Michigan Press, 1952, 1346.
  12. ^ H. Kurath: Middle English Dictionary, part 14, University of Michigan Press, 1952, 1345.
  13. ^ F.C. and J. Rivington, T. Payne, Wilkie and Robinson: The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng, 1812, p. 99.
  14. ^ F.C. and J. Rivington, T. Payne, Wilkie and Robinson: The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng, 1812, p. 99
  15. ^ a b c d M. Philippa e.a. (2003-2009) Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands [Duits]
  16. ^ a b c L. Weisgerber, Deutsch als Volksname 1953
  17. ^ Rawson, Hugh, Wicked Words, Crown Publishers, 1989.
  18. ^ Hughes Oliphant Old: The Reading and Preaching of the Scriptures in the Worship of the Christian Church, Volume 6: The Modern Age. Eerdmans Publishing, 2007, p. 606.
  19. ^ Mark L. Louden: Pennsylvania Dutch: The Story of an American Language. JHU Press, 2006, p.2
  20. ^ Irwin Richman: The Pennsylvania Dutch Country. Arcadia Publishing, 2004, p.16.
  21. ^ The Pennsylvania Dutch Country, by I. Richman, 2004: "Taking the name Pennsylvania Dutch from a corruption of their own word for themselves, "Deutsch," the first German settlers arrived in Pennsylvania in 1683. By the time of the American Revolution, their influence was such that Benjamin Franklin, among others, worried that German would become the commonwealth's official language."
  22. ^ Moon Spotlight Pennsylvania Dutch Country, by A. Dubrovsk, 2004.
  23. ^ Pennsylvania Dutch Alphabet, by C. Williamson.
  24. ^ J. de Vries (1971), Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek
  25. ^ a b L. De Grauwe: Emerging Mother-Tongue Awareness: The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period (2002), p. 102–103
  26. ^ L. De Grauwe: Emerging Mother-Tongue Awareness: The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period (2002), p. 98-110.
  27. ^ A. Duke: Dissident Identities in the Early Modern Low Countries (2016)
  28. ^ a b L. De Grauwe: Emerging Mother-Tongue Awareness: The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period (2002), p. 102.
  29. ^ M. Janssen: Atlas van de Nederlandse taal: Editie Vlaanderen, Lannoo Meulenhoff, 2018, p.29.
  30. ^ F. W. Panzer:Nibelungische Problematik: Siegfried und Xanten, 1954, p.9.
  31. ^ M. de Vries & L.A. te Winkel: Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal, the Hague, Nijhoff, 1864-2001.
  32. ^ a b c G.A.R. de Smet, Die Bezeichnungen der niederländischen Sprache im Laufe ihrer Geschichte; in: Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter 37 (1973), p. 315-327
  33. ^ L.H. Spiegel: Twe-spraack vande Nederduitsche letterkunst (1584)
  34. ^ W. de Vreese: Over de benaming onzer taal inzonderheid over "Nederlandsch", 1910, p. 16-27.
  35. ^ This graph is based on the figures cited in M. Janssen: Atlas van de Nederlandse taal: Editie Vlaanderen, Lannoo Meulenhoff, 2018, p.29. and W. de Vreese: Over de benaming onzer taal inzonderheid over "Nederlandsch", 1910, p. 16-27. and G.A.R. de Smet, Die Bezeichnungen der niederländischen Sprache im Laufe ihrer Geschichte; in: Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter 37 (1973), p. 315-327.
  36. ^ M. Janssen: Atlas van de Nederlandse taal: Editie Vlaanderen, Lannoo Meulenhoff, 2018, p. 82.
  37. ^ M. Janssen: Atlas van de Nederlandse taal: Editie Vlaanderen, Lannoo Meulenhoff, 2018, p. 30.

theodiscus, teutsch, redirects, here, painter, with, this, surname, jános, mattis, teutsch, medieval, latin, corresponding, english, þēodisc, high, german, diutisc, other, early, germanic, reflexes, proto, germanic, þiudiskaz, meaning, popular, people, term, u. Teutsch redirects here For the painter with this surname see Janos Mattis Teutsch Theodiscus in Medieval Latin corresponding to Old English theodisc Old High German diutisc and other early Germanic reflexes of Proto Germanic thiudiskaz meaning popular or of the people was a term used in the early Middle Ages to refer to the West Germanic languages The Latin term was borrowed from the Germanic adjective meaning of the people but unlike it was used only to refer to languages In Medieval Western Europe non native Latin was the language of science church and administration hence Latin theodiscus and its Germanic counterparts were used as antonyms of Latin to refer to the native language spoken by the general populace They were subsequently used in the Frankish Empire to denote the native Germanic vernaculars As such they were no longer used as antonym of Latin but of walhisk a language descendant from Latin but nevertheless the speech of the general populace as well 1 In doing so Latin theodiscus and the Germanic reflexes of thiudiskaz effectively obtained the meaning of Germanic or more specifically one of its local varieties resulting in the English exonym Dutch the German endonym Deutsch the modern Dutch word for German Duits and the obsolete or poetic Dutch word for Dutch and its dialects such as Diets In Romance languages the same word yielded the Italian word for German tedesco and the old French word used for Dutch or depending on the locality German speakers tiois Contents 1 Etymology 2 Semantic development within English 3 Semantic development within Dutch 4 Semantic development within German 5 See also 6 NotesEtymology editTheodiscus is derived from West Germanic thiudisk 2 from Proto Germanic thiudiskaz The stem of this word theudō meant people in Proto Germanic and iskaz was an adjective forming suffix of which ish is the Modern English cognate with the same meaning The Proto Indo European word tewteh tribe people which is commonly reconstructed as the basis of the word is related to Lithuanian tauta nation Latvian tauta nation Old Irish tuath tribe people and Oscan touto community 3 The word existed in Old English as theodisc speech public native came into Middle English as thede nation people and was extinct in Early Modern English although surviving in the English place name Thetford public ford It survives as the Icelandic word thjod for people nation the Norwegian word tjod for people nation and the word German in many languages including German Deutsch Dutch Duits Yiddish דײ טש Danish tysk Norwegian tysk Swedish tyska and Italian tedesco The word theodism a neologism for a branch of Germanic neopaganism is based on the Gothic form of the word citation needed where thiudisko also took on the meaning of pagan 4 a Judeo Christian calque on similar formations such as Gentile from Latin gens people and Hebrew goy i e belonging to other peoples Proto Slavic similarly borrowed the word as tud with the meaning foreign giving rise for example to modern Polish cudzy Czech cizi Serbo Croat tuđi and Russian chuzhoj While morphologically similar the Latin root Teutonic for Germanic is more distantly related and originally a name of a Celtic or Germanic tribe that inhabited coastal Germany It came probably via Celtic from Proto Germanic theudanaz ruler leader of the people from theudō people tribe from Proto Indo European tewteh people tribe 5 In modern Welsh it is seen in words such as alltud exile from allan outward and Breton tud people Semantic development within English editCurrently the first known attestation of theodiscus is to be found in a letter written around the year 786 by the Bishop of Ostia In the letter the bishop writes to Pope Adrian I about a synod taking place in Corbridge England where the decisions were later read aloud elsewhere tam Latine quam theodisce meaning in Latin as well as the vernacular common tongue 6 7 8 Rendered in Old English as theodisc the term was primarily used as an adjective concerning the language of the laity It was rarely used as a descriptor of ethnicity or identity as the Anglo Saxons referred to themselves as Seaxe Iutas or Engle respectively meaning Saxons Jutes and Angles The latter term would later give rise to the adjective Englisc which during the Early Middle Ages became the term for all speakers of the Germanic dialects now collectively known as Old English 9 By the late 14th century theodisc had given rise to Middle English duche and its variants which were used as a blanket term for all the non Scandinavian Germanic languages spoken on the European mainland Historical linguists have noted that the medieval Duche itself most likely shows an external Middle Dutch influence in that it shows a voiced alveolar stop rather than the expected voiced dental fricative This would be a logical result of the Medieval English wool trade which brought the English in close linguistic contact with the cloth merchants living in the Dutch speaking cities of Bruges and Ghent who at the time referred to their language as dietsc 10 Its exact meaning is dependent on context but tends to be vague regardless 11 When concerning language the word duche could be used as a hypernym for several languages The North est Contrey which lond spekyn all maner Duche tonge The North of Europe is an area in which all lands speak all manner of Dutch languages but it could also suggest singular use In Duche a rudder is a knyght In Dutch a rudder cf Dutch ridder is a knight in which case linguistic and or geographic pointers need to be used to determine or approximate what the author would have meant in modern terms which can be difficult 12 For example in his poem Constantyne the English chronicler John Hardyng 1378 1465 specifically mentions the inhabitants of three Dutch speaking fiefdoms Flanders Guelders and Brabant as travel companions but also lists the far more general Dutchemene and Almains the latter term having an almost equally broad meaning though being more restricted in its geographical use usually referring to people and localities within modern Germany Switzerland and Austria He went to Roome with greate power of Britons strong with Flemynges and Barbayns Henauldes Gelders Burgonians amp Frenche Dutchemene Lubardes also many Almains 13 He went to Rome with a large number of Britons with Flemings and Brabanters Hainuyers Guelders Burgundians and Frenchmen Dutchmen Lombards also many Germans 14 Excerpt from Constantyne John Hardyng J Rivington The Chronicle of Iohn HardyngBy early 17th century general use of the word Dutch had become exceedingly rare in Great Britain and it became an exonym specifically tied to the modern Dutch i e the Dutch speaking inhabitants of the Low Countries Many factors facilitated this including close geographic proximity trade and military conflicts 15 16 Due to the latter Dutch also became pejorative label pinned by English speakers on almost anything they regard as inferior irregular or contrary to their own practice Examples include Dutch treat each person paying for himself Dutch courage boldness inspired by alcohol Dutch wife a type of sex doll and Double Dutch gibberish nonsense among others 17 In the United States the word Dutch remained somewhat ambiguous until the start of the 19th century Generally it referred to the Dutch their language or the Dutch Republic but it was also used as an informal monniker for example in the works of James Fenimore Cooper and Washington Irving for people who would today be considered Germans or German speaking most notably the Pennsylvania Dutch This lingering ambiguity was most likely caused by close proximity to German speaking immigrants who referred to themselves or in the case of the Pennsylvania Dutch their language as Deutsch or Deitsch 18 19 20 21 22 23 Semantic development within Dutch editFrom Old Dutch thiudisk a southern variant duutsc and a western variant dietsc developed in Middle Dutch In the earliest sources its primary use was to differentiate between Germanic and the Romance dialects as expressed by the Middle Dutch poet Jan van Boendale who wrote 15 24 Want tkerstenheit es gedeelt in tween die Walsche tongen die es een Dandre die Dietsche al geheel Because Christendom is divided in two parts the Walloon languages ie Romance languages form one the other part of the whole is Dutch ie Germanic Excerpt from Brabantsche Yeesten by Jan van Boendale 1318 25 During the High Middle Ages Dietsc Duutsc was increasingly used as an umbrella term for the specific Germanic dialects spoken in the Low Countries its meaning being largely implicitly provided by the regional orientation of medieval Dutch society apart from the higher echelons of the clergy and nobility mobility was largely static and hence while Dutch could by extension also be used in its earlier sense referring to what to today would be called Germanic dialects as opposed to Romance dialects in many cases it was understood or meant to refer to the language now known as Dutch 15 16 26 Apart from the sparsely populated eastern borderlands there was little to no contact with contemporary speakers of German dialects let alone a concept of the existence of German as language in its modern sense among the Dutch Because medieval trade focussed on travel by water and with the most heavily populated areas adjacent to Northwestern France the average 15th century Dutchman stood a far greater chance of hearing French or English than a dialect of the German interior despite its relative geographical closeness 27 Medieval Dutch authors had a vague generalised sense of common linguistic roots between their language and various German dialects but no concept of speaking the same language existed Instead they saw their linguistic surroundings mostly in terms of small scale regiolects 28 The 15th century saw the first attested use of Nederlandsch Dutch Netherlandish Lowlandish alongside Duytsch the Early Modern spelling of the earlier Dietsc Duutsc as a term for the Dutch language and it would eventually manifest itself as the main ethnonym 29 The use of low er or nether in describing the area now known as the Low Countries has a long historical record In the 13th century epic the Nibelungenlied written in Middle High German the protagonist Sigurd is said to hail from the city of Xanten in the Niderlant meaning the Low Countries 30 In Old French the inhabitants of the Low Countries were known as the Avalois meaning those of the Rhine Scheldt Meuse estuary compare contemporary French en aval and a vau l eau meaning downstream The Dukes of Burgundy referred to their Dutch possessions as pays d embas French lower lands as opposed to their higher upper territorial possessions in Burgundy itself which was echoed in the Middle and Modern French Pays Bas meaning Low Countries 31 In the second half of the 16th century the neologism Nederduytsch literally Nether Dutch Low Dutch appeared in print in a way combining the earlier Duytsch and Nederlandsch into one compound The term was preferred by many leading contemporary grammarians such as Balthazar Huydecoper Arnold Moonen and Jan ten Kate because it provided a continuity with Middle Dutch Duytsch being the evolution of medieval Dietsc was at the time considered the proper translation of the Roman Province of Germania Inferior which not only encompassed much of the contemporary Dutch speaking area Netherlands but also added classical prestige to the name and amplified the dichotomy between Early Modern Dutch and the Dutch German dialects spoken around the Middle and Upper Rhine which had begun to be called overlantsch of hoogdutysch literally Overlandish High Dutch by Dutch merchants sailing upriver 32 Though Duytsch forms part of the compound in both Nederduytsch and Hoogduytsch this should not be taken to imply that the Dutch saw their language as being especially closely related to the German dialects spoken in Southerwestern Germany On the contrary the term Hoogduytsch specifically came into being as a special category because Dutch travelers visiting these parts found it hard to understand the local vernacular in a letter dated to 1487 a Flemish merchant from Bruges instructs his agent to conduct trade transactions in Mainz in French rather than the local tongue to avoid any misunderstandings 32 In 1571 use of Nederduytsch greatly increased because the Synod of Emden chose the name Nederduytsch Hervormde Kerk as the official designation of the Dutch Reformed Church The synods choice of Nederduytsch over the more dominant Nederlandsch was inspired by the phonological similarities between neder and nederig the latter meaning humble and the fact that it did not contain a worldly element land whereas Nederlandsch did 32 As the Dutch increasingly referred to their own language as Nederlandsch or Nederduytsch the term Duytsch became more ambiguous Dutch humanists started to use Duytsch in a sense which would today be called Germanic for example in a dialogue recorded in the influential Dutch grammar book Twe spraack vande Nederduitsche letterkunst published in 1584 R ghy zeyde flux dat de Duytsche taal by haar zelven bestaat ick heb my wel laten segghen dat onze spraack uyt het Hooghduytsch zou ghesproten zyn S Ick spreeck met Becanus int ghemeen vande duytse taal die zelve voor een taal houdende R You ve just said that the Dutch language exists in its own right but I ve heard it said that our language comes from High Dutch ie German S I like Becanus speak of the Germanic language in general considering it as one language Excerpt from Twe spraack vande Nederduitsche letterkunst by Hendrik Laurenszoon Spiegel 1584 33 25 Beginning in the second half 16th century the nomenclature gradually became more fixed with Nederlandsch and Nederduytsch becoming the preferred terms for Dutch and with Hooghduytsch referring to the language today called German Initially the word Duytsch itself remained vague in exact meaning but after the 1650s a trend emerges in which Duytsch is taken as the shorthand for Hooghduytsch This process was probably accelerated by the large number of Germans employed as agricultural day laborers and mercenary soldiers in the Dutch Republic and the ever increasing popularity of Nederlandsch and Nederduytsch over Duytsch the use of which had already been in decline for over a century thereby acquiring its current meaning German in Dutch 28 While Nederduytsch briefly eclipsed the use of Nederlandsch during the 17th century it always remained a somewhat officious literary and scholarly term among the general populace and steadily started to lose ground to Nederlandsch in print after 1700 34 When in 1815 the United Kingdom of the Netherlands was proclaimed it was specifically noted that the official language of the kingdom was Nederlandsch and that the Dutch Reformed Church as the official State Church would be known as the Nederlandsch Hervormde Kerk resulting in a profound drop in the already declining use of the word The Dutch speaking Cape Colony came under British control two years prior in 1814 resulting in the continued use of nederduytsch by the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa in its official nomenclature to the present day The disappearance of Nederduytsch left Nederlandsch first documented in the 15th century as the sole ethnonym for the Dutch language 15 The graph below visualises the decline of Duytsch and rise and decline of Nederduytsch as an ethnonym and the eventual dominance of Nederlands 35 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki wiki In the late 19th century Nederduits was reintroduced to Dutch through the German language where prominent linguists such as the Brothers Grimm and Georg Wenker in the nascent field of German and Germanic studies used the term to refer to Germanic dialects which had not taken part in the High German consonant shift Initially this group consisted of Dutch English Low German and Frisian but in modern scholarship only refers to Low German varieties Hence in contemporary Dutch Nederduits is used to describe Low German varieties specifically those spoken in Northern Germany as the varieties spoken in the eastern Netherlands while related are referred to as Nedersaksisch 36 Likewise in the 19th century the term Diets was revived by Dutch linguists and historians as a poetic name for Middle Dutch and its literature 37 Semantic development within German editThe second recorded use of theodisca as a reference to a Germanic language was Old High German In 788 the Annals of the Frankish Kingdom report the punishment of a Bavarian duke quod theodisca lingua herisliz dictum meaning known in the language of the people as herisliz Herisliz is a German word now obsolete the slicing i e tearing apart of the Heer Desertion 1 In German dialects a large amount of forms of theodiscus existed throughout the Middle Ages and which all referred to either the broader Romance Germanic dichotomy in the West and South or the Slavic Germanic bipartition in the East In Old High German both diutisk and diutisc are known that developed in Middle High German as diutsc In Middle Low German it was known as dudesch and Modern Low German as dutsch However in German the use of the term referring to Germans specifically as opposed to people speaking Germanic languages in general evolves during the Early Modern Period and it is in the late 17th and 18th century that the modern meaning of Deutsch is established 16 See also edit nbsp The dictionary definition of theodiscus at Wiktionary nbsp The dictionary definition of thiudiskaz at Wiktionary Teutons Furor Teutonicus Theodism Theodoric Walha Tuath Name of the GothsNotes edit a b M Philippa e a 2003 2009 Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands diets W Haubrichs Theodiscus Deutsch und Germanisch drei Ethnonyme drei Forschungsbegriffe Zur Frage der Instrumentalisierung und Wertbesetzung deutscher Sprach und Volksbezeichnungen In H Beck et al Zur Geschichte der Gleichung germanisch deutsch 2004 199 228 Mallory J P Adams D Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World USA Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 929668 5 p 269 J de Vries 1971 Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek diets Teutonic Origin and meaning of the name teutonic by Online Etymology Dictionary Dummler Ernst Epistolae Karolini Aevi 2 MGH 3 Berlin Weidmann 1895 pp 20 9 at 28 Alice L Harting Correa Walahfrid Strabo s Libellus de Exordiis Et Incrementis Quarundam in 1 Cornelis Dekker The Origins of Old Germanic Studies in the Low Countries 2 Farmer David Hugh 1978 The Oxford Dictionary of Saints Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19282 038 9 P A F van Veen en N van der Sijs 1997 Etymologisch woordenboek de herkomst van onze woorden 2e druk Van Dale Lexicografie Utrecht Antwerpen H Kurath Middle English Dictionary part 14 University of Michigan Press 1952 1346 H Kurath Middle English Dictionary part 14 University of Michigan Press 1952 1345 F C and J Rivington T Payne Wilkie and Robinson The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng 1812 p 99 F C and J Rivington T Payne Wilkie and Robinson The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng 1812 p 99 a b c d M Philippa e a 2003 2009 Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands Duits a b c L Weisgerber Deutsch als Volksname 1953 Rawson Hugh Wicked Words Crown Publishers 1989 Hughes Oliphant Old The Reading and Preaching of the Scriptures in the Worship of the Christian Church Volume 6 The Modern Age Eerdmans Publishing 2007 p 606 Mark L Louden Pennsylvania Dutch The Story of an American Language JHU Press 2006 p 2 Irwin Richman The Pennsylvania Dutch Country Arcadia Publishing 2004 p 16 The Pennsylvania Dutch Country by I Richman 2004 Taking the name Pennsylvania Dutch from a corruption of their own word for themselves Deutsch the first German settlers arrived in Pennsylvania in 1683 By the time of the American Revolution their influence was such that Benjamin Franklin among others worried that German would become the commonwealth s official language Moon Spotlight Pennsylvania Dutch Country by A Dubrovsk 2004 Pennsylvania Dutch Alphabet by C Williamson J de Vries 1971 Nederlands Etymologisch Woordenboek a b L De Grauwe Emerging Mother Tongue Awareness The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period 2002 p 102 103 L De Grauwe Emerging Mother Tongue Awareness The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period 2002 p 98 110 A Duke Dissident Identities in the Early Modern Low Countries 2016 a b L De Grauwe Emerging Mother Tongue Awareness The special case of Dutch and German in the Middle Ages and the early Modern Period 2002 p 102 M Janssen Atlas van de Nederlandse taal Editie Vlaanderen Lannoo Meulenhoff 2018 p 29 F W Panzer Nibelungische Problematik Siegfried und Xanten 1954 p 9 M de Vries amp L A te Winkel Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal the Hague Nijhoff 1864 2001 a b c G A R de Smet Die Bezeichnungen der niederlandischen Sprache im Laufe ihrer Geschichte in Rheinische Vierteljahrsblatter 37 1973 p 315 327 L H Spiegel Twe spraack vande Nederduitsche letterkunst 1584 W de Vreese Over de benaming onzer taal inzonderheid over Nederlandsch 1910 p 16 27 This graph is based on the figures cited in M Janssen Atlas van de Nederlandse taal Editie Vlaanderen Lannoo Meulenhoff 2018 p 29 and W de Vreese Over de benaming onzer taal inzonderheid over Nederlandsch 1910 p 16 27 and G A R de Smet Die Bezeichnungen der niederlandischen Sprache im Laufe ihrer Geschichte in Rheinische Vierteljahrsblatter 37 1973 p 315 327 M Janssen Atlas van de Nederlandse taal Editie Vlaanderen Lannoo Meulenhoff 2018 p 82 M Janssen Atlas van de Nederlandse taal Editie Vlaanderen Lannoo Meulenhoff 2018 p 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theodiscus amp oldid 1191412881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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