Introduction to Gothic
LecturesNelson Goering, Paul Peterson
The Gothic language, rich in vocabulary and archaic in structure, has survived in the earliest substantial corpus of texts written in any Germanic language. The primary texts of Gothic were translations of the Greek New Testament, probably produced or overseen by the missionary Bishop Wulfila (or Ulfilas) in the mid-4th century A.D. The Gothic language provides an essential resource for exploring the historical development of all the Germanic languages from English to German to Icelandic and beyond. The focus of the course will be on learning to read and translate texts written in Gothic, while also covering in detail the background of the language, the languageās structure and vocabulary, the cultural achievements and history of the Goths, and the role that Gothic plays in our understanding of related Germanic languages through the lens of Germanic philology.
Prior familiarity with any language besides modern English is not expected or required. The coursework involves primarily reading secondary texts, preparing translation exercises and assignments, taking two written exams (a midterm and a final), and delivering one short oral presentation in the second half of the course on a linguistic or cultural topic; individual preceptors may vary this plan to reach learning outcomes. The overall aim of the course is to acquire a basic reading knowledge of the Gothic language and to begin to understand the full context of the Gothic language.
This course pack contains all 24 lectures of the course.
- Lecture 1: Introduction to Gothic01:22:45
- Lecture 2: The Historic Setting of Gothic01:05:27
- Lecture 3: Alphabet and Orthography01:03:32
- Lecture 4: Texts and Manuscripts59:40
- Lecture 5: Overview of Gothic Grammar01:03:19
- Lecture 6: Translation - Basics01:10:59
- Lecture 7: Translation Practice01:01:51
- Lecture 8: Pronouns01:01:46
- Lecture 9: Nouns58:52
- Lecture 10: Adjectives01:00:48
- Lecture 11: Strong Verbs01:05:21
- Lecture 12: Weak Verbs01:00:29
- Lecture 13: Basic and Irregular Verbs01:03:32
- Lecture 14: Particle Linguistics01:00:42
- Lecture 15: Word Formation01:03:16
- Lecture 16: Introduction to Germanic Philology01:10:02
- Lecture 17: Gothic in Germanic Philology01:06:57
- Lecture 18: Gothic Innovations01:09:02
- Lecture 19: Reconstructing Proto-Germanic01:08:07
- Lecture 20: Reconstructing Proto-Indo-European01:12:09
- Lecture 21: The Art of Etymology01:14:16
- Lecture 22: Gothic and Greek01:13:58
- Lecture 23: Goths in Literature01:10:27
- Lecture 24: The Future of Gothic01:00:51
- Supplementary Documents and Media376 pages51 pages54 pages9 pages31 pages3 pages3 pages9 pages