Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 68

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 68
66 Michael Barnes development in one of the 1355 Shetland diplomas (DN III 284), where í hjá is written <i þia>, conceivably an inverse spelling, and a somewhat firmer indication in Low’s 1774 Foula material, e.g. <ita> (< *hitta <þettd). The occurrence of several Orkney place-names with original first element Þór-, late sixteenth-century <Hur->, <Hor->, now <Hur->, <Hour-> ‘[the god] Þórr’, not only supports the idea that Foula forms such as <ita> are derived from etymons with initial þ- that changed to *h-, but implies that the change /0/ > /h/ was common in Norn and affected much the same words as in Faroese, i.e. certain pro- nouns and adverbs, and names with Þór- as the first element (on this change in Faroese see e.g. Barnes 1985; Höskuldur Thráinsson et al. 2004:400 and references cited there). 4. The life and death of Norn As will be clear from what has already been said, there are today no speakers of Norn. At some point the language was replaced by Scots in both Orkney and Shetland. Why this happened, how, and when, have been and remain matters of lively and sometimes acrimonious debate (cf. Rendboe 1984; Barnes 1989, 1998:21-8; Smith 1996; Wiggen 2002). The dominance Scandinavian attained in the Northem Isles fol- lowing the Norse settlement persisted until the late Middle Ages when first Orkney and then Shetland began to come under the control of speakers of Scots. There was doubtless a variety of reasons for the increasing Scottish involvement in Northern-Isles affairs in the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries, including the strengthening of royal power at the expense of that of local potentates, but the overriding cause must have been geographical proximity. Who had Scandinavian as their principal language and who Scots in late medieval and early Reformation Orkney and Shetland can often be no more than a matter of conjecture, but the changing relationship between the two speech communities emerges clearly enough. There is little doubt, for exam- ple, that Henry Sinclair, who succeeded to the Earldom of Orkney in 1379, was primarily a Scots speaker. Although a grandson of Earl
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