Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 69

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.2004, Side 69
Norn 67 Malise (in power c. 1336-53), he came from a family of landowners whose chief property lay just south of Edinburgh. Scots thus became the language of the immediate ruler of Orkney as early as the last quarter of the fourteenth century. In 1468 and 1469 respectively Orkney and Shetland were pledged to King James III of Scotland by King Christian I of Denmark and Norway for the marriage dowry of his daughter. Although the intention was to redeem the pledge, this was never done, and 1468/9 therefore mark the effective political inte- gration of the Northem Isles into the Scottish kingdom. The diocese of Orkney included Shetland — unlike the earldom after 1195 — and there were Scottish bishops in Orkney and Scottish clergy in both groups of islands from the late fourteenth century. After the Reformation in 1560 virtually all the ministers in both Orkney and Shetland appear to have been Scottish — of particular importance in the light of the shift from Latin to the vernacular ushered in by the change of religion. The immigration of Scottish laymen into Orkney, as far as can be judged, was a gradual process, but one that gained considerable momentum in the latter half of the fourteenth century. Large-scale Scottish immigration into Shetland does not appear to begin until the sixteenth century. Probably the best indicator of the relative positions of Norn and Scots in the Northem Isles is the use made of the two languages in public documents. As we have seen, very few in Scandinavian have survived, the latest from Orkney being c. 1425, from Shetland 1586. The first extant document in Scots from Orkney is dated 1433, and five years later we find the native lawman of the islands using Scots on internal Orcadian business (ORS 27). Some in the Orkneys may have continued to write Scandinavian after this, but if so, all traces of their activity have vanished. Lrom Shetland we have nothing in Scots until 1488. During the next century it becomes overwhelmingly the preferred medium, but Scandinavian is still very occasionally found. In addition to Scandinavian-language diplomas emanating from Orkney and Shetland, we find that Norwegians continue to use their native language (more or less Danicised) in dealings with the Northern Isles until just into the seventeenth century.
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Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði

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