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Researchers Discovered a Lost Copy of the Oldest English Poem, Composed by an Illiterate Cowherd More Than 1,300 Years Ago

Smithsonian Magazine·Sonja Anderson·about 1 month ago
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This version of “Caedmon’s Hymn” shows how Old English evolved. It also features early use of a punctuation mark that readers of English take for granted today—the period—but not in the expected way April 30, 2026 11:39 a.m. The page of the manuscript in Rome that contains “Caedmon’s Hymn” Rome, Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale “Vittorio Emanuele II” The English language’s oldest poem is “ Caedmon ’s Hymn ,” nine lines of verse composed by a Northumbrian herdsman who lived in the seventh century C.E. Caedmon couldn’t read or write, but after he dreamed of a stranger telling him to sing of “the beginning of things,” he began speaking “verses which he had never heard.” The cowherd moved into a monastery, learned biblical scripture and reportedly produced much vernacular poetry on sacred Christian themes. But of all his work, only “Caedmon’s Hymn” survives. “Now let us praise Heaven-Kingdom’s guardian,” it begins.…

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