Ancient Greek writing

A new Grammar will be the first comprehensive description of the medieval and early modern Greek language.

But, despite the increasing availability of this material, there has been no systematic and detailed account of the development of the Greek language during this crucial period.

Professor David Holton

For the past five years, a team led by Professor David Holton in the Modern Greek Section of the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages has been gathering, analysing and organising linguistic data for a new Greek Grammar. Co-directed by Professor Geoff Horrocks (Faculty of Classics), the project is staffed by two full-time research associates, Dr Notis Toufexis and Ms Marjolijne Janssen, and two honorary consultants, Dr Io Manolessou and Dr Tina Lendari, and is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC).

Greek is one of the world’s oldest recorded languages, with a documented history spanning 34 centuries. Although scholars have analysed and described the Greek of the Classical, Hellenistic and Roman periods in detail, the linguistic situation is much less studied after the end of Antiquity. At around 1100 AD the beginnings of the modern vernacular first became evident, and over the next 600 years the language underwent significant changes, with the medieval vernacular gradually acquiring the morphological and syntactic features that are characteristic of Greek today.

Fortuitously, 1100–1700 is also a period in which texts in the vernacular are available in sufficient quantities for researchers to observe trends and identify the factors that influence variation. ‘But, despite the increasing availability of this material, there has been no systematic and detailed account of the development of the Greek language during this crucial period,’ said Professor Holton. ‘The Grammar aims to fill a serious gap in the history of Greek. This standard reference work will underpin a growing interest in medieval and early modern Greek literature and its historical, social and cultural context.’

The Grammar spans a geographical area from southern Italy to the Black Sea, encompassing written texts of all kinds, and giving a full account of linguistic developments within this period. It is a high-tech project, using electronic databases and digitised corpora to store and sort a mass of information. Once completed, the Grammar will be published by Cambridge University Press.

For more information, please contact Professor David Holton (dwh11@cam.ac.uk) or see www.mml.cam.ac.uk/greek/grammarofmedievalgreek

 


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. If you use this content on your site please link back to this page.