Rural Literacy in Sixteenth Century Norway

This contribution discusses how the increased importance of literacy, in its widest meaning, in the beginning of the Early Modern era affected the Common Man in Norway. What relationship did farmers in remote areas have to the written word in the sixteenth century? The paper claims a “literacy of th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Berg, Ivar
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Umeå University and the Royal Skyttean Society 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2392596
Description
Summary:This contribution discusses how the increased importance of literacy, in its widest meaning, in the beginning of the Early Modern era affected the Common Man in Norway. What relationship did farmers in remote areas have to the written word in the sixteenth century? The paper claims a “literacy of the illiterate.” Even people who could not themselves read were members of communities that relied on written testimonies and their use; they were used to hearing charters read out loud and knew how they were supposed to sound. The language that defines rural charters on land trade and similar matters will first be briefly compared to the general development in Norway during the sixteenth century. Then there follows a discussion of what kind of people were involved in the issuing and writing of charters, before these charters are evaluated as sources of our understanding of the literary or textual culture, if one may use such a word, of their time. The claim is made that the social function of these texts and their peculiar linguistic form (compared to other texts written in Norway at the same time) are connected. © The authors, the series Northern Studies Monographs and Vardagligt skriftbruk.