MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN


'Middle High German' (MHG, German ''Mittelhochdeutsch'') is the term used for the period in the history of the German language between 1050 and 1350. It is preceded by Old High German and followed by Early New High German. In some uses, the term covers a longer period, going up to 1500.[1]

Contents
Varieties
Writing System
Grammar
Pronouns
Personal pronouns
Nouns
Strong nouns
Weak nouns
Articles
Verbs
Strong verbs
Weak verbs
Periodisation
Phonology
Vowels
Diphthongs
Consonants
Sample text
Literature
See also
External links
Sources

Varieties


Middle High German is not a unified written language and the term covers two main dialect areas:[2]

Upper German (''Oberdeutsch'')


Alemannic (''Alemannisch'' = ''Westoberdeutsch'')


Bavarian (''Bairisch'' = ''Ostoberdeutsch'')


East Franconian (''Ostfränkisch'' = ''Nordoberdeutsch'')


South Franconian (''Südfränkisch'' = ''Nordoberdeutsch'')

Central German or Middle German (''Mitteldeutsch'')


Franconian (''Westmitteldeutsch'')



Rhine Franconian (''Rheinfränkisch'')



Middle Franconian (''Mittelfränkisch'')



Hessian (''Hessisch'')


East Central German (''Ostmitteldeutsch'')



Thuringian (''Thüringisch'')



Upper Saxon (''Obersächsisch'')



Silesian (''Schlesisch'')



High Prussian (''Hochpreußisch'')
While there is no ''standard'' MHG, the prestige of the Hohenstaufen court gave rise in the late 12th century to a supra-regional literary language (''mittelhochdeutsche Dichtersprache'') based on Swabian, an Alemannic dialect. However, the picture is complicated by the fact that modern editions of MHG texts have a tendency to use ''normalised'' spellings based on this variety (usually called "Classical MHG"), which make the written language appear more consistent than is actually the case in the manuscripts. It is uncertain whether the literary language reflected a supra-regional ''spoken'' language of the courts.
An important development in this period was the eastward expansion of German settlement beyond the Elbe-Saale line which marked the limit of Old High German. This process started in the 11th century, and all the East Central German dialects are a result of this expansion.
"Judeo-German" is the precursor of the Yiddish language which is attested in the 13th-14th centuries as a variety of Middle High German written in Hebrew characters.

Writing System


Middle High German texts are written in the Latin alphabet, in Gothic minuscules that evolved into the Fraktur typefaces of the Early Modern period. Vowel length may be marked diacritically, with a circumflex.
:''a, â (æ), b, d, e, ê, f, g, h, i, î (y), k (c, ch), l, m, n, o, ô, p, qu (=kw), r, s, t, u, û, v (f), w, z (c, cz, ʒ)''
''z'' also appears as ''c'' before ''e'' and ''i''. After vowels it is weakened to ''ʒ'' ("weak ''z''", or "sharp ''s''", written as ''geschwänztes z'' "tailed ''z''"; also transcribed as ''ȥ'' "z with hook"), after short vowels geminating to ''ʒʒ'' (''haʒ'', genitive ''haʒʒes'' "hate"). This group from early times begins merging with ''ss'', ultimately the origin of the ß of Modern German orthography.
There is also emerging use of ''j'' in Nuremberg, often in place of ''g''.
The full development of the Germanic umlaut was only completed in the course of the MHG period, and notation of umlauted vowels (Modern German ''ä, ö, ü'') and their notation emerges in the period after 1300, e.g. ''uohse'' "armpit" vs. ''üehse'' (Wolkenstein 49.1.11). Note that the umlaut diacritic (the two dots) appear only in Early Modern German (around 1500). What in standard transliteration appears as ''üe'' in the manuscripts is usually written with a diacritic ''e'', viz. the transliteration ''güete'' ("goodness") renders ''guͤte''.

Grammar


Pronouns

Middle High German pronouns of the first person refer to the speaker; those of the second person refer to an addressed person. The pronouns of the third person may be used to replace nominal phrases. These have the same gender, number and case as the original nominal phrase. This goes for other pronouns, too.
Personal pronouns

Personal Pronouns
1st sg 2nd sg 3rd sg 1st pl 2nd pl 3rd pl
Nominative ich du ër sie ëz wir ir sie
Accusative mich dich in sie ëz uns iuch sie
Dative mir dir im ir im uns iu in
Genitive
mîn dîn sîn ir sîn unser iuwer ir


★ Note: the genitive form is used as an adjective and hence takes on adjective endings following the normal rules. This includes 'unser' and 'iuwer', despite the fact that they already end in -er.
Nouns

Middle High German nouns were declined according to four cases (Nominative, genitive, dative, accusative), two numbers (singular and plural) and three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter), much like Modern High German, though there are several important differences.
Strong nouns

'''dër tac
day'' m.
'''diu zît
time'' f.
'''daÊ’ wort
word'' n.
'Singular' 'Plural' 'Singular' 'Plural' 'Singular' 'Plural'
'Nominative' dër tac die tage diu zît die zîte daʒ wort diu wort
'Genitive' dës tages dër tage dër zît dër zîte dës wortes dër worte
'Dative' dëm tage dën tagen dër zît dën zîten dëm worte dën worten
'Accusative' dën tac die tage die zît dër zîten daʒ wort diu wort

Weak nouns

'''dër veter
(male) cousin'' m.
'''diu zunge
tongue'' f.
'''daÊ’ herze
heart'' n.
'Singular' 'Plural' 'Singular' 'Plural' 'Singular' 'Plural'
'Nominative' dër veter die veteren diu zunge die zungen daʒ herze diu herzen
'Genitive' dës veteren dër veteren dër zungen dër zungen dës herzen dër herzen
'Dative' dëm veteren dën veteren dër zungen dën zungen dëm herzen dën herzen
'Accusative' die veteren die veteren die zungen die zungen daÊ’ herze diu herzen

Note that ë is a short, open /e/, so so MHG ''dër'' /dɜr/ as opposed to modern /de:r/.
Articles

Middle High German articles have a feature called "strength", which influences the declension of the adjectives. There are strong articles, weak articles, and articles that have strong and weak cases. Sometimes this feature is not constant in literature.
The inflected forms depend on the number, the case and the gender of the corresponding noun. Articles have the same plural forms for all three genders.
Definite article (strong)
MasculineNeuterFemininePlural
Nominativedërdaʒdiudie/diu
Genitivedësdësdërdër
Dativedëmdëmdërdën
AccusativedendaÊ’diedie/diu
Instrumentaldiu

The instrumental case, only existing in the neuter singular, is used only with prepositions: ''von diu'', ''ze diu'', etc. In all the other genders and in the plural it is substituted with the dative: ''von dëm'', ''von dër'', ''von dën''.
Verbs

Verbs were conjugated according to three moods (indicative, subjunctive and imperative), three persons, two numbers (singular and plural) and two tenses (present tense and preterite tense) There was a present participle, a past participle and a verbal noun that somewhat resembles the Latin gerund, but that only existed in the genitive and dative cases.
An important distinction was made between strong verbs (that exhibited ablaut) and weak verbs (that didn't).
Furthermore, there were also some irregular verbs.
Strong verbs

The present tense conjugation went as follows:
'''nëmen'
to take
'Indicative' 'Subjunctive'
'1. sg.' ich n'i'me ich nëme
'2. sg.' du n'i'm(e)st du nëmest
'3. sg.' ër n'i'm(e)t er nëme
'1. pl.' wir nëmen wir nëmen
'2. sg.' ir nëm(e)t ir nëmet
'3. sg.' sie nëment sie nëmen

'Imperative': 2.sg: nim, 2.pl: nëmet
'Present participle': nëmente
'Infinitive': nëmen
'Verbal noun': ''Genitive'': nëmennes, ''dative'': ze nëmenne
The bold vowels demonstrate ablaut; the vowels in brackets were dropped in rapid speech.
The preterite tense conjugation went as follows:
'''genomen haben'
to have taken
'Indicative' 'Subjunctive'
'1. sg.' ich n'a'm ich n'æ'me
'2. sg.' du n'æ'me du n'æ'mest
'3. sg.' ër n'a'm er n'æ'me
'1. pl.' wir n''a'men wir n'æ'men
'2. sg.' ir n''a'met ir n'æ'met
'3. sg.' sie n''a'men sie n'æ'men

'Past participle': genomen
Weak verbs

The present tense conjugation went as follows:
'''suochen'
to seek
'Indicative' 'Subjunctive'
'1. sg.' ich suoche ich suoche
'2. sg.' du suoch(e)st du suochest
'3. sg.' ër suoch(e)t er suoche
'1. pl.' wir suochen wir suochen
'2. sg.' ir suoch(e)t ir suochet
'3. sg.' sie suochent sie suochen

'Imperative': 2.sg: suoche, 2.pl: suochet
'Present participle': suochente
'Infinitive': suochen
'Verbal noun': ''Genitive'': suochennes, ''dative'': ze suochenne
The vowels in brackets were dropped in rapid speech.
The preterite tense conjugation went as follows:
'''gesuocht haben'
to have sought
'Indicative' 'Subjunctive'
'1. sg.' ich suochete ich suochete
'2. sg.' du suochetest du suochetest
'3. sg.' ër suochete er suochete
'1. pl.' wir suocheten wir suocheten
'2. sg.' ir suochetet ir suochetet
'3. sg.' sie suochetent sie suocheten

'Past participle': gesuochet

Periodisation


There are several criteria which separate MHG from the preceding Old High German period:

★ the weakening of unstressed vowels to /e/ - OHG ''taga'' > MHG ''tage'' ("days")

★ the full development of Umlaut and its use to mark a number of morphological categories

★ the devoicing of final stops - OHG ''tag'' > MHG ''tac'' ("day")
Culturally, the two periods are distinguished by the transition from a predominantly clerical written culture to one centred on the courts of the great nobles. The imperial court in Vienna and the rise of the Swabian Hohenstaufen and then the Habsburg dynasties make South Germany the dominant region in both political and cultural terms.
Linguistically, the transition to Early New High German is marked by four vowel changes which together produce the phonemic system of modern German:

Monophthongisation of some of the MHG diphthongs: MHG ''huot''> NHG ''Hut'' ("hat")

★ Diphthongisation of long vowels MHG ''hût'' > NHG ''Haut'' ("skin"); these two phenomena may be seen together as a chain shift.

★ lengthening of short vowels MHG ''sagen'' // > NHG ''sagen'' // ("say")

★ The loss of unstressed vowels in many circumstances - MHG ''vrouwe'' > NHG ''Frau'' ("lady")
The centres of culture in the ENHG period are no longer the courts but the towns.

Phonology


The charts show the vowel and consonant systems of classical MHG. The spellings indicated are the standard spellings used in modern editions - there is much more variation in the manuscripts.
Vowels

  front central back
unrounded rounded
short long short long short long short long
close <ü>  
close-mid        
mid <ö> <Å“>  
open-mid <ä> <æ>      
open    

Notes:
# Not all dialects distinguish the three unrounded mid front vowels.
# It is probable that the short high and mid vowels are lower than their long equivalents, as in Modern German, but this is impossible to establish from the written sources.
# The found in unstressed syllables may indicate [] or schwa [].
Diphthongs

MHG diphthongs are indicated by the spellings: , , , <öu> and , <üe>, .
Consonants

 BilabialLabiodentalAlveolarPostalveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
'Plosive' p  b   t  d     k   g  
'Affricates'   ts        
'Nasal' m   n      
'Fricative'   f v s  z   x h
'Approximant' w       j    
'Liquid'     r  l        

#Precise information about the articulation of consonants is impossible to establish, and will have varied between dialects.
#In the plosive and fricative series, where there are two consonants in a cell, the first is fortis the second lenis. The voicing of lenis consonants varied between dialects.
#MHG has long consonants, and the following double consonant spellings indicate not vowel length as in Modern German orthography, but rather genuine double consonants: pp, bb, tt, dd, ck (for /kk/), gg, ff, ss, zz, mm, nn, ll, rr.
#It is reasonable to assume that /x/ had an allophone [] before back vowels, as in Modern German.

Sample text


From the prologue of Hartmann von Aue's ''Iwein'' (circa 1200; c.f. MS B (Giessen), mid 13th c.)











5





10





15





20

Swer an rehte güete

wendet sîn gemüete,

dem volget sælde und êre.

des gît gewisse lêre

künec Artûs der guote,

der mit rîters muote

nâch lobe kunde strîten.

er hât bî sînen zîten

gelebet alsô schône

daz er der êren krône

dô truoc und noch sîn name treit.

des habent die wârheit

sîne lantliute:

sî jehent er lebe noch hiute:

er hât den lop erworben,

ist im der lîp erstorben,

sô lebet doch iemer sîn name.

er ist lasterlîcher schame

iemer vil gar erwert,

der noch nâch sînem site vert.

Whoever to true goodness

Turns his mind

He will meet with fortune and honour.

We are taught this by the example of

Good King Arthur

who with knightly spirit

knew how to strive for praise.

In his day

He lived so well

That he wore the crown of honour

And his name still does so.

The truth of this is known

To his countrymen:

They affirm that he still lives today:

He won such fame that

Although his body died

His name lives on.

He will forever be free

Of sinful shame

Who follows his example.

This text shows many typical features of Middle High German poetic language. Most Middle High German words survive into modern German in some form or other: this passage contains only one word (''jehen'' 'say' 14) which has since disappeared from the language. But many words have changed their meaning substantially. ''Muot'' (6) means 'state of mind', where modern German ''Mut'' means courage. ''Êre'' (3) can be translated with 'honour', but is quite a different concept of honour from modern German ''Ehre''; the medieval term focusses on reputation and the respect accorded to status in society.

Literature


Main articles: Medieval German literature


★ ''Minnesang''


Codex Manesse


Walther von der Vogelweide


Heinrich Frauenlob


Oswald von Wolkenstein

★ Epics


Hartmann von Aue's ''Erec'' and ''Iwein''


Wolfram von Eschenbach's ''Parzival''


Gottfried von Strassburg's ''Tristan''


★ ''Nibelungenlied''


★ ''Kudrun''


Ulrich von Türheim's ''Rennewart'' and ''Willehalm''


Rudolf von Ems's works


Konrad von Würzburg's works


Eilhart von Oberge' ''Tristrant''

★ Nonfiction writings


★ ''Annolied'' (Early Middle High German)


Jans der Enikel's ''Weltchronik'' and ''Fürstenbuch''


★ ''Kaiserchronik''


★ ''Sachsenspiegel''

See also



High German consonant shift

Matthias von Lexer

External links



Wright's Middle High German Primer

Middle High German conceptual database

Online versions of the two main MHG dictionaries

★ Mediaevum.de's MHG Texts:


11th Century (Early MHG)


12th Century


13th Century


14th Century

Sources



Hermann Paul, ''Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik'', 23rd edn, edited by Peter Wiehl and Sigfried Grosse (Niemeyer, 1989) ISBN 3-484-10233-0

★ M.O'C. Walshe, ''A Middle High German Reader: With Grammar, Notes and Glossary'' (Oxford University Press, 1974) ISBN 0-19-872082-3

Joseph Wright, ''Middle High German Primer'', 5th edn revised by M.O'C. Walshe (Oxford University Press, 1955)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves