Archibald Cregeen

Archibald Cregeen (baptised 20 November 1774 - 9 April 1841) was a Manx lexicographer and scholar. He is best known for compiling A Dictionary of the Manks Language (1838).

Archibald Cregeen
Born
Arbory, Isle of Man
Baptised20 November 1774
Died9 April 1841
Arbory, Isle of Man
Resting placeArbory Churchyard, Isle of Man
NationalityManx
OccupationMarble mason, Coroner, Lexicographer
Notable work
A Dictionary of the Manks Language (1838)

Early life

Archibald Cregeen was born in late October or early November to Manxman William Cregeen and his Irish wife Mary Fairclough in Colby on the Isle of Man.[1] In 1798 he married Jane Crellin and had eight children. Shortly after his wedding, he built a small cottage near his father's in Colby and lived there with his family for the rest of his life.[2] Although his father was a cooper by trade, Cregeen became a marble mason, engraving lettering on tombstones.[3]

He later was appointed coroner of Rushen Sheading in 1813.[2] This was a position of considerable responsibility and influence in the local community as the coroner held inquests of deaths, served summonses, and levied fines.[3]

Manx Language

Manx is a member of the Goidelic language family, closely related to Irish and Scottish Gaelic. Cregeen himself was a native Manx speaker, as Manx was the community language for much of the Island at that time. The language was first brought to the Island by sailors, monks and traders from Ireland as they travelled to and from Britain. The language experienced significant changes due to the influence of Norse after the Viking invasion of the Isle of Man and its relative political isolation from the rest of the Gaelic speaking world in later cenuries.

Cregeen was aware of the long and complicated history of the Manx language, describing the language as being "ancient" and "venerable for its antiquity".[4] Despite this, Cregeen noted the negative attitudes towards it and the low-prestige nature of the language on the Isle of Man in the preface to his dictionary:

I am well aware that the utility or the following work will be variously appreciated by my brother Manksmen. Some will be disposed to deride the endeavour to restore vigour to a decaying language. Those who reckon the extirpation of the Manks a necessary step towards that general extension of the English, which they deem essential to the interest of the Isle of Man, will condemn every effort which seems likely to retard its extinction.

Dictionary

Cregeen began to work the dictionary in 1814. He did not work completely alone, but was aided by several Manx clergymen, notably Reverend John Edward Harrison, a vicar of the parish of Jurby, who supplied him with additional information. Compiling the dictionary took Cregeen over 20 years of meticulous research, travelling throughout the Island, visiting farms and cottages and collecting words, phrases, and proverbs from the people he met.[3]

When the dictionary was ready for publication, Reverend John Edward Harrison gave the introduction and the manuscript was brought to Manx printer John Quiggin for it to be printed. On the title page of the original edition, the publication date is 1835, although the dictionary was not published until 3 years later in 1838. This was because the title page was distributed as an advertisement in 1835 to gauge interest, and never updated when the dictionary actually went to print.[3]

The dictionary was ordered in an unusual way for a language that undergoes initial mutation of words, in that it is strictly alphabetical:

Both the first edition of the Dictionary (1835) and the second (1910) comprise a strictly alphabetical list of word forms, which is particularly valuable for users not entirely familiar with the nature and range of variation in the initial letter of Manx words, due to initial consonant mutations, and to the addition of consonants (such as d- or n-) before certain forms of vowel-initial verbs. A consequence of this strictly alphabetical procedure, though, is that related forms of the same word, or word-family, are scattered throughout the dictionary. Thus, in a sense, Cregeen’s Dictionary as published is more like an index to a lexicon than a lexicon itself.[5]

It is worth noting that Cregeen was not the first person to attempt to write a dictionary for the Manx language. Reverend John Kelly has attempted to do so in his A Triglot Dictionary of the Celtic Language, as spoken in Man, Scotland, and Ireland together with the English, but much of this was destroyed in a fire during publishing.[6] Cregeen would not have been aware of this as although Kelly's dictionary was partially extant in manuscript form, it would not be published until decades later in 1866.[2]

Legacy

Although the Manx language declined greatly even in Cregeen's own lifetime, his contribution was not forgotten. The centenary of the publication of his dictionary was celebrated in Peel in 1938 with William Cubbon, the director of the Manx Museum stating that "we students would be poor without his precious book".[7] A year later a commemorative plaque was erected over the door of the house that Cregeen himself built in Colby.[3]

In more recent years Culture Vannin has celebrated Cregeen's work by selecting some of the lesser known words from his dictionary and posting them on social media.[8]

References

  1. Jeffcott, J. M. (1890). "Archibald Cregeen: The Manx lexicographer". A Manx Notebook. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  2. Moore, A. W. (1901). "Archibald Cregeen". A Manx Notebook. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  3. "In Memory of Archibald Cregeen". Mona's Herald. 1 August 1938. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  4. Cregeen, Archibald (1838). A Dictionary of the Manks Language. Liverpool: J. Quiggan.
  5. Cregeen, Archibald (2015). Wheeler, Max (ed.). Dictionary of the Manks Language (Fockleyr Chregeen aa-orderit ed.). Ramsey.
  6. Moore, A.W. (1901). "John Kelly (1750-1809)". A Manx Notebook. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  7. "Centenary of Manx Dictionary". Isle of Man Examiner. 18 November 1938. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  8. "Archibald Cregeen Words". Learn Manx. Retrieved 18 July 2020.

A Dictionary of the Manx Language Re-ordered by Max Wheeler (2015)

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.