David Crystal

Tim Hankins helps maintain All Saints Church in Aldwincle, England. Poet John Dryden was born in Aldwincle and baptized in the church.

English might not have become quite so popular, if a 17th-century poet had his way

Back in the 17th century, there was a move to create rules for English, based on Latin. The man behind it, poet John Dryden, thought that Shakespeare and others had turned English into an unruly mess. Dryden failed to establish an English “academy” to impose rules. And that failure may have helped make English the worldwide language it is today.

Tim Hankins helps maintain All Saints Church in Aldwincle, England. Poet John Dryden was born in Aldwincle and baptized in the church.

English might not have become quite so popular, if a 17th-century poet had his way

At Bede's World in Jarrow, Britain, a staff member dressed as a monk poses in front of a recreation of an Anglo-Saxon animal shelter.

From its beginnings to today, the English language has always been a hodgepodge