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  1. The Rise of English, the Decline of French: Supplications to the English Crown, c. 1420–1450.Gwilym Dodd - 2011 - Speculum 86 (1):117-150.
    It is now some thirty years since the researches of John H. Fisher and Malcolm Richardson highlighted the importance of the records of the central government in the process of English-language “vernacularization” in early-fifteenth-century England. Their publication of the Anthology of Chancery English provided irrefutable evidence of a linguistic transition that overtook some key types of government records, which began to be drafted in English where previously they had been written in Anglo-Norman French and, to a lesser extent, Latin. But (...)
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  • The Vernacularization of Science, Medicine, and Technology in Late Medieval Europe: Broadening Our Perspectives.William Crossgrove - 2000 - Early Science and Medicine 5 (1):47-63.
    The following article is the concluding piece of a series on the vernacularization of science, medicine, and technology in the Late Middle Ages inaugurated in 1998 with a special issue of ESM and continued with two articles in ESM in 1999, featuring papers selected by William Crossgrove and Linda Ehrsam Voigts. All of these articles grew out of a series of papers presented at the Thirty-Second International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western Michigan University in May 1997, a series which (...)
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