Words in Transition: Language, Literacy, and Education in the Dark Ages
MTA
The evolution of Latin, vernaculars, scriptoria, and schooling from late antiquity to the millennium
2nd Edition
"Words in Transition" explores the dynamic evolution of language, literacy, and education in Western Europe from late antiquity to the turn of the first millennium, challenging the notion of a "Dark Ages" marked by intellectual decline. The book argues that this period was one of profound transformation, where Latin diversified into regional varieties, vernaculars began to emerge in written form, and institutions like scriptoria and schools reorganized Europe's intellectual life. It highlights how these changes in writing technologies and teaching traditions not only transmitted information but also shaped identities, loyalties, and governance.
The early chapters detail how Latin, initially the unifying language of the Roman Empire, began to drift into regional forms after the empire's collapse, while still maintaining its prestige in legal, liturgical, and scholarly domains. The book emphasizes the crucial role of monastic scriptoria as centers for copying, preserving, and curating texts, developing standardized scripts like Caroline minuscule that dramatically improved legibility and facilitated the circulation of knowledge. Concurrently, education adapted, with grammar schools continuing to teach classical Latin, primarily using texts like Donatus's "Art of Grammar," to train clergy and administrators.
The emergence of written vernaculars is presented not as a sudden "birth," but as a gradual process seen through glosses, oaths, and practical notations in the margins of Latin texts. These vernacular beginnings in Old English, Old High German, and early Romance dialects reveal a multilingual society where Latin and local languages coexisted, each serving distinct functions. The book then broadens its scope to encompass regional variations, from the Insular innovations of Ireland and Northumbria to the unique scripts of Visigothic and Mozarabic Iberia, and the profound influence of Byzantium and the Slavic world. It concludes by showing how these diverse threads converged by the millennium, laying the groundwork for the more complex schools, standardized scripts, and nascent states of Romanesque Europe, demonstrating that "words in transition" were indeed the very tools through which medieval society was forged.
This book is intended for linguists, medieval historians, palaeographers, and cultural historians interested in the interdisciplinary study of language, literacy, and education in early medieval Europe. It will particularly benefit scholars examining the transition from Latin to Romance languages, the role of scriptoria in textual transmission, and the social functions of writing in law, liturgy, and administration.
January 22, 2026
74,871 words
5 hours 15 minutes
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