The term "literature" as it is used in connection with Old High German has a broader scope than for later periods in the history of German: it is not restricted to imaginative works but encompasses everything written in the language, including prayers and theological works as well as verse narratives. The surviving texts were written exclusively by
clerics, in the main
monks in a small number of monastic
scriptoria, and serve almost entirely the purposes of the church in a region that was still being fully Christianized. Pre-Christian and non-clerical literary traditions are reflected in a small number of works, such as the
Hildebrandslied and the
charms, but otherwise there is little surviving evidence of the
oral culture which must have been present outside clerical circles. The earliest texts date from the second half of the 8th century: translation aids (
glosses and
glossaries) for those learning to read
Latin and translations of Latin Christian texts (
prayers,
creeds,
confessions) for use in
missionary or pastoral work among the lay population. Translations and, later, adaptations of Latin Christian texts, continue throughout the period, and are seen in
Otfrid's
gospel harmony in the 9th century and the extensive works of
Notker III in the early 11th century. After Notker, there is gap of some 40 years before evidence of a new tradition of biblical verse in a form of language now called Early
Middle High German, which is followed by the flourishing secular literature of Middle High German. ==Language==