Imagine waking up in your own country and discovering you no longer speak the language of power.
Not because you moved. Not because you forgot. But because the people in charge simply decided to speak something else.
That's exactly what happened in England for nearly 300 years.
The Conquest That Changed Everything
It's 1066. William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, crosses the English Channel, defeats King Harold at the Battle of Hastings, and claims the English crown.
He brings with him an army of Normans. And he brings something else: the French language.
From that moment on, if you wanted to be somebody in England - if you wanted to speak to the king, argue a case in court, or conduct any official business - you did it in French.
English? That was for the peasants.
A Country Divided by Language
For nearly three centuries, England operated as a two-tier linguistic nation:
The Elite: Spoke French. Conducted business in French. Wrote laws in French. Looked down on English as the crude tongue of the uneducated.






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