
Wordsmiths and Warriors
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Content
- 1: Pegwell Bay: arrival
- 2: Caistor St Edmund: the earliest known English word
- 3: Undley Common: the first recorded English sentence
- 4: Jarrow: Bede and the origins of English
- 5: Lindisfarne: glossaries and translations
- 6: Ruthwell: the finest runic inscription
- 7: Stourton and Edington: King Alfred and the birth of English
- 8: Maldon: the ultimate warrior wordsmith
- 9: Winchester: the first standard English
- 10: Cerne Abbas: Ælfric and the first English conversation
- 11: Ely: Wulfstan and Old English style
- 12: Peterborough: the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- 13: Battle and Normans Bay: the French connection
- 14: Bourne: Orrm and English spelling
- 15: Areley Kings: Layamon's English Chronicle
- 16: Chester and Berkeley: Higden, Trevisa, and the rise of English
- 17: Rhuddlan: the English language in Wales
- 18: Manorbier: little England beyond Wales
- 19: Dunfermline: the birth of Scots English
- 20: Talbot Yard, London SE1: Chaucer and Middle English
- 21: Canterbury: from ancient to modern
- 22: Cursitor Street, London EC4: Chancery and standard English
- 23: Tothill Street, London SW1: Caxton and printing English
- 24: St Albans: Juliana Berners and collective nouns
- 25: Paston: a family of letters
- 26: Lutterworth: John Wycliffe and Bible translation
- 27: North Nibley: William Tyndale and the English Bible
- 28: Chichester: William Bullokar and the first English grammar
- 29: Suffolk Lane and St Paul's, London EC4: Richard Mulcaster and the status of English
- 30: Stratford-upon-Avon: Shakespeare and English idiom
- 31: Park Street, London SE1: Shakespeare and linguistic innovation
- 32: Oakham: Robert Cawdrey and the first dictionary
- 33: Willoughby: John Smith and new Englishes
- 34: East India Dock, London E14: the East India Company and global English
- 35: Hampton Court Palace: King James and his Bible
- 36: Black Notley: John Ray and English proverbs
- 37: Aldwincle: John Dryden and an English Academy
- 38: Old Broad Street, London EC2: the Royal Society and scientific English
- 39: Rochdale: Tim Bobbin and local dialect
- 40: Lichfield: Johnson and the dictionary
- 41: Old St Pancras Church, London NW1: John Walker and pronunciation
- 42: York: Lindley Murray and English grammar
- 43: Alloway: Robert Burns and Scots
- 44: Peebles and Edinburgh: the Chambers brothers and encyclopedic English
- 45: Grasmere: William Wordsworth and poetic language
- 46: West Malvern: Roget and the thesaurus
- 47: Bath: Isaac Pitman and English shorthand
- 48: Oxford: James Murray and the Oxford English Dictionary
- 49: Winterborne Came: William Barnes and speech-craft
- 50: Higher Bockhampton: Thomas Hardy and Wessex dialect
- 51: Saltaire: Joseph Wright and English dialects
- 52: Hinton St George: Henry Fowler and English usage
- 53: Ayot St Lawrence: George Bernard Shaw and spelling reform
- 54: Laugharne: Dylan Thomas and Welsh English
- 55: Tilbury: the Empire Windrush and new dialects
- 56: University College, London WC1: Daniel Jones and English phonetics
- 57: University College, London WC1: the Survey of English Usage
- Regional Grouping
- Index of Places
- General Index
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