EastSlavic can refer to Wiktionary EastSlavic languages East Slavs EastSlavic peoples disambig Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ko ... more details
Infobox Language family name EastSlavic map Image Slavic europe.svg 275px map caption legend 008000 Countries where an EastSlavic language is the national language region Eastern Europe familycolor Indo European fam1 Indo European languages Indo European fam2 Balto Slavic languages Balto Slavic fam3 Slavic languages Slavic child1 Belarusian language Belarusian child2 Russian language Russian child3 ... of Ukrainian small child5 Old EastSlavic language Old EastSlavic child6 Ruthenian language Ruthenian iso5 zle The EastSlavic languages constitute one of three regional subgroups of Slavic languages ... out numbering the West Slavic languages Western and South Slavic languages Southern Slavic groups. Current EastSlavic languages are Belarusian language Belarusian , Russian language Russian , Ukrainian language Ukrainian . ref The EastSlavic languages, Ukrainian, Belorussian and Russian, ... http www.google.com books?hl en&lr &id URs AAAAIAAJ&oi fnd&pg PP13&dq EastSlavic languages&ots uz9YnwF ... images 1. 20Language 20of 20Carpathian 20Rus .pdf ref The EastSlavic languages descend from a proto ... Indo European Balto Slavic languages Balto SlavicSlavic languages SlavicEastSlavic Old East ... assign two poles in the EastSlavic languages Ukrainian language Ukrainian and Russian language Russian ... of Grand Duchy of Lithuania Lithuania and Kingdom of Poland Poland into the EastSlavic area in the fourteenth ... in the mid 1920 s When the common Old EastSlavic language became separated from the ancient Slavic ... of Rus is still referred to in contemporary as Slavic. The history of the EastSlavic languages ... of the EastSlavic languages is of course a history of written Writing text s. We do not know ... After the conversion of the EastSlavic region to Christianity the people used service books ... University Press year 2006 isbn 978 0 521 22315 7 language English Slavic languages Category EastSlavic languages DEFAULTSORT EastSlavic Languages af Oos Slawiese tale ast Eslavu Oriental be x old ... more details
Infobox Language name Old EastSlavic nativename rus sk region Eastern Europe extinct developed into the various EastSlavic languages familycolor Indo European fam1 Indo European languages Indo European fam2 Balto Slavic languages Balto Slavic fam3 Slavic languages Slavic fam4 EastSlavic languages EastSlavic iso2 sla iso3 orv Old EastSlavic languages EastSlavic or Old Ruthenian language Ruthenian was a language used in 10th 15th centuries by East Slavs in the Kievan Rus and states ... vocalisation , which came to differentiate the newly evolving EastSlavic from other Slavic dialects ... , here run Old EastSlavic Literature The Old EastSlavic language developed a certain literature ... the only surviving pre Christian EastSlavic literary monument. Since the account of its find and eventual .... The earliest dated specimen of Old EastSlavic or, rather, of Church Slavonic with pronounced EastSlavic interference must be considered the written Slovo o zakone i blagodati , by Hilarion ... on Prince Vladimir of Kiev , the hero of so much of EastSlavic popular poetry. This subtle and graceful ... of the saints and the Fathers to be found in early EastSlavic literature, starting with the two ... EastSlavic the florid Byzantine style. In his sermon on Holy Week , Christianity is represented ... which nature plays in human lives. Of the whole bulk of the Old EastSlavic literature, the Lay ... of Europe. Study The earliest attempts to compile a comprehensive lexicon of Old EastSlavic ... page of the tenth century Novgorod Codex , thought to be the oldest EastSlavic book in existence ... Beyond the Three Seas See also History of the EastSlavic languages History EastSlavic languages ... Slavic chronicles Slavic languages DEFAULTSORT EastSlavic, Old Category Medieval languages Slavic language, Old East Category EastSlavic languages Category Belarusian language Category Russian language ... voivodship s of Poland . As the language is part of the pre national history of all East Slavs, in recent ... more details
The Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies ASEEES is a scholarly society dedicated to the advancement of knowledge about the former Soviet Union including Eurasia and Eastern Europe ... its name from the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies AAASS to the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies ASEEES , effective in 2010. Organizational history ..., effective in 2010, to the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies ASEEES . The ASEEES ... Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies Individual Membership. Retrieved Aug. 26, 2010. ref See also American Association of Teachers of Slavic and Eastern European Languages American ... Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies official website http www.aseees.org about bylaws.html Bylaws of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies http www.slavicreview.illinois.edu Slavic Review Homepage DEFAULTSORT Association For Slavic, East European, And Eurasian ... and territories within this area and publishes a quarterly journal, Slavic Review. The organization ... Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, in Canadian Slavonic Papers, VII. Toronto University of Toronto Press, 1965 pg. 13. ref By the mid 1950s, specialists in Slavic Studies began to constitute ... Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies AAASS in 1961. ref name JB13 The organization grew ..., The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, pg. 14. ref From the outset the AAASS published its own quarterly peer review ed journal, Slavic Review successor to the American Slavic and East European Review, a scholarly magazine launched in 1941 by John Hazard of Columbia University ... Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, pp. 14 15. ref Annual conventions The AAASS ..., The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, pg. 15. ref Although the organization ..., ref Berliner, The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, pg. 16. ref they have ... more details
states of Germany List of Medieval Slavic tribes Lech, ech, and Rus References Reflist Category Former countries in Europe Category Former Slavic countries Category Rus Category History of Russia Category Ukraine related lists EastSlavic states Category Lists of states by dominant ethnic group Slavic ... or Sclaviniae Veleti Vlachs Wends Early Middle Ages ca 800 1097 See Slavicisation , Slavic peoples , East Slavs , West Slavs , South Slavs File Kievan Rus historical map 980 1054.jpg thumb left ... more details
Wiktionary Slav , Slavic or Slavonic may refer to Slavic peoples Slavic languages Slavic mythology Slavic names Slavic surnames the Church Slavonic language , and its earliest form, the Old Church Slavonic language Slav village , a former Israeli settlement in the Gaza Strip The Slav Defense , a chess opening See also Slavonia , a region in eastern Croatia Slavyansky Disambig Category Slavic de Slawisch es Eslavo fa fr Slave gl Slave it Slavo he hu Szl vok no Slavisk ... more details
infobox ethnic group group Slavic American image File Flag of the United States.svg 100px , File Pan Slavic flag.svg 80px poptime Approx. 20 million br small 7 of the total U.S. population small langs American English Czech Language Czech Polish language Polish Slovak language Slovak Belarusian language Belarusian Russian language Russian Ukrainian language Ukrainian Bosnian language Bosnian Bulgarian language Bulgarian Macedonian language Macedonian Croatian language Croatian Montenegrin language Montenegrin Serbian language Serbian Slovenian language Slovenian rels Eastern Orthodox , Judaism , Roman Catholicism , Islam Slavic Americans are Americans of Slavic peoples Slavic descent. There are various subgroups of Slavic Americans, including West Slavic Flagicon Czech Republic Czech Americans Flagicon Poland Polish Americans Flagicon Slovakia Slovak Americans EastSlavic Flagicon Belarus Belarusian Americans Flagicon Russia Russian Americans Flagicon Ukraine Ukrainian Americans Rusyn American South Slavic Flagicon Bosnia Bosnian American s Flagicon Bulgaria Bulgarian Americans Flagicon Croatia Croatian Americans Flagicon Macedonia Macedonian Americans Flagicon Montenegro Montenegrin Americans Flagicon Serbia Serbian Americans Flagicon Slovenia Slovenian Americans flagicon Yugoslavia Yugoslav American s External links http slavicorganization.com Slavic American National Convention http slavicamericanchamber.org Slavic American Chamber of Commerce References Reflist Category American people of Slavic descent ... more details
of Slavic Studies . Abstracting and indexing The journal is abstracted and indexed, among others, in the American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies , Social Science Citation Index , Historical ... Official http www.slavicreview.illinois.edu http www.aseees.org Association for Slavic, East European ...italictitle Infobox Journal cover Image Slavic review cover.gif discipline Slavonic Studies Slavic Studies abbreviation publisher American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies country United States USA frequency Quarterly history 1941 present openaccess website http www.slavicreview.uiuc.edu ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 00376779 Slavic Review is a leading international Peer review peer reviewed academic journal publishing scholarly studies and book reviews in all disciplines concerned with Russia , Central Eurasia , and Eastern Europe Eastern and Central Europe . The journal s title, though pointing to its roots in Slavic studies, or Slavistics , does not fully encompass the range of disciplines represented or peoples and cultures examined. The journal publishes original scholarship, book and film reviews, and review essays on scholarly topics. History The journal has been published quarterly under the current name since 1961 by the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies The Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies, beginning in 2010 , continuing the series published by the same Association since 1941 under different names Slavonic Year Book. American Series 1941 , Slavonic and East European Review. American Series 1943 1944 , American Slavic and East European Review 1945 1961 . Under the current name, the subtitle of the journal has changed over the years to reflect changing terminologies about the region, evolving boundaries and relations, and developing conceptions of the field. Since 2006, the subtitle has been Interdisciplinary Quarterly of Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies . Since 1996, the office of the journal ... more details
The Russian Review Sarmatian Review Scando Slavica Slavic and East European Journal , published ... Guide Duke http www.library.yale.edu Internet slavic.html Slavic & East European Collections Yale http www.library.uiuc.edu spx resources guide.htm Slavic and East European Internet Resources University ..., and East European Studies at Slavic Review http www.fas.harvard.edu aaass American Association ...Slavic studies or Slavistics borrowed from Russian is the academic field of area studies concerned with Slavic peoples Slavic areas, Slavic languages , literature, history, and culture. Originally ..., a Slavic AmE or Slavonic BrE scholar. Increasingly historians and other humanists and social scientists who study Slavic area cultures and societies have been included in this rubric. Slavistics ... Slavic peoples nations of Slavic origins and failed ideological attempts to establish a common sense of Slavic community, exemplified by the Pan Slavism Pan Slavist movement . Among the first scholars to use the term was Josef Dobrovsk . A Slavic specialist is also known as a Slavist borrowed from Russian . The history of Slavic studies is generally divided onto three periods. Until 1876 the early slavists concentrated on documentation and printing of monuments of Slavic languages, among them the first texts written in national languages. It was also then that the majority of Slavic ... period, ending with World War I , was marked by fast development of Slavic philology and linguistics , most notably, outside of Slavic countries themselves, in the circle formed around August Schleicher and August Leskien at the University of Leipzig . After World War I Slavic studies scholars focused ... Slavic origins. After World War II centres of Slavic studies, and much greater expansion into other .... Indeed, partly due to the political concerns in Western European and the United States about the Slavic world nurtured by the Cold War, Slavic studies flourished in the years from World War II into the 1990s ... more details
divide Slavic languages on the basis of geographical distribution into three main branches, some of which feature subbranches Style vertical align top EastSlavic languages Eastern Slavic branch Old EastSlavic small extinct small Russian language Russian Ruthenian language Ruthenian small extinct ... and EastSlavic languages into one group, in opposition to the South Slavic languages, due to traits the West and EastSlavic branches share with each other that they do not with the South Slavic languages. The most obvious differences between the West and EastSlavic branches are in orthography ..., have had more Greek language Greek influence. EastSlavic languages such as Russian have, however ... Slavic literary i.e., standard languages. For example, Slovak West Slavic and Ukrainian EastSlavic ... of the subsequent breakup of West and South Slavic. EastSlavic is generally thought to converge to one Old EastSlavic Old Russian or Old East Slavonic language, which existed until at least ... the ISO 639 1 and ISO 639 3 codes where available. EastSlavic languages Ruthenian language Ruthenian ...Infobox Language family name Slavic region throughout Eastern and Central Europe and Russia familycolor Indo European fam1 Indo European languages Indo European fam2 Balto Slavic languages Balto Slavic child1 EastSlavic languages EastSlavic child2 South Slavic languages South Slavic child3 West Slavic languages West Slavic map File Slavic europe.svg 300px map caption legend 008000 Countries where an EastSlavic language is the national language legend 7cdc87 Countries where a West Slavic language is the national language legend 004040 Countries where a South Slavic language is the national language iso2 sla iso5 sla The Slavic languages also called Slavonic languages , a group of closely related language s of the Slavic peoples and a subgroup of Indo European languages , have speakers in most ... of Asia . Branches Image Balto slavic languages1997.png thumb 250px Slavic languages by the number ... more details
Slavic peoples EastSlavic and West Slavic regions though historically western Ukraine was affected ... . For example, while EastSlavic peoples Eastern Slavic people use Cyrillic a larger alphabet derived ...Refimprove date July 2007 Infobox Geopolitical organization conventional long name Slavic Europe native name image map Slavic europe.png image caption legend 7cdc87 Countries where a West Slavic language is the national language legend 008000 Countries where an EastSlavic language is the national language legend 004040 Countries where a South Slavic language is the national language membership flag ... currency code time zone utc offset footnotes footnote1 footnote2 footnote7 Slavic Europe is a region of Europe where Slavic languages are spoken. This area is situated in Central Europe Central ... states also have considerable Slavic populations plus large numbers of other citizens who can speak a Slavic language, particularly Russian. Over three quarters of Latvians speak Russian either ..., table on mother tongues lv icon ref Roughly 29 of Estonia ns are Slavic mostly Russian and Ukrainian ... ns speak a Slavic language natively. ref Statistics Lithuania census 2001 http db.stat.gov.lt sips ... to historic Slavic minorities in what are majority non Slavic nations. History Pan Slavism .... Whilst the western Slavs were dominated by German Empires, South and East Slavs served as a buffer ... of Slavic origins to a common interest and develop a common identity. These efforts failed for a number ... its territorial expansion and the subjugation of nations of Slavic origin such as the Ukrainians or Poles. Another fact was due to independent developments amongst Slavic peoples and the development ... March 2008 . Also, while certain Slavic nations such as the Czechs and Slovaks in the Austria Hungary ... ruled theirs. With the Soviet Union came another period of attempts to use the idea of Slavic unity ... fought for independence from Poland. Due to the past, historical sympathy for the idea of a Slavic ... more details
no footnotes date January 2011 Slavic microlanguages are literary and linguistic forms that exist alongside the better known Slavic languages of historically prominent nations. The term literary microlanguages was coined by Aleksandr Dulichenko at the end of the 1970s and subsequently became a standard term in Slavistics . Citation needed date July 2009 Slavic microlanguages exist both as geographically and socially peripheral dialects of more well established Slavic languages and as completely isolated speech forms. They often enjoy a written form, a certain degree of standardization and are used in a variety of circumstances typical of literary languages, albeit in a limited fashion and always alongside a national literary language. Insular and peripheral microlanguages Native speakers or users of contemporary Slavic microlanguages either live among unrelated linguistic communities, thereby constituting an ethnic island, or live on the geographical periphery of their historical ethnic group . Correspondingly, these microlanguages can be divided into insular and peripheral categories the later of which can also be called regional languages . The principle insular forms are Rusyn language Rusyn , Burgenland Croatian , Molise Croatian , Resian dialect which may also be characterized as peninsular and Banat Bulgarian language Banat Bulgarian . The main peripheral forms include Prekmurian dialect Prekmurian , East Slovak , Lachian , Carpatho Russian , West Polesian and others. Functional characteristics The precise hierarchical relationship between national literary languages and microlanguages ... . In contrast to a dialect exploited for artistic purposes, every minor literary Slavic language is to a greater ... of location, Slavic microlanguages exist in both predominantly Slavic and non Slavic areas ... . D. Kleinschriftsprachen in der slawischen Sprachenwelt Zeitschrift f r Slawistik, 1994, Bd. 39. slavic languages DEFAULTSORT Slavic Microlanguages Category Slavic languages pl Mikroj zyki ru ... more details
South Slavic can refer to South Slavic languages South Slavs South Slavic peoples disambig Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ko ... more details
West Slavic can refer to West Slavic languages West Slavs West Slavic peoples disambig Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ko ... more details
Slavic Orthodox Church or Slavonic Orthodox Church is an umbrella term for East Orthodox churches that use Church Slavonic language Church Slavonic in liturgy , the latter being of Byzantine Rite . They use the Julian calendar , exclusively or partially. Autocephalous Slavonic Orthodox churches Russian Orthodox Church Serbian Orthodox Church Bulgarian Orthodox Church Polish Orthodox Church Czech and Slovak Orthodox Church Macedonian Orthodox Church See also Orthodoxy in Ukraine Old Believers List of Orthodox Churches Category Eastern Orthodoxy Orthodoxy stub ... more details
Svarog , compared to Greek Hephaestus . Also very interesting are the passages in the EastSlavic ... was worshiped, a likely corruption of Jarovit, a Slavic deity possibly identical to Jarilo of the East ... thumb Nicholas Roerich . Slavic Idols 1901 . The name of Svarog is found only in EastSlavic manuscripts ... after the Proto Slavs had split into East, West, and South Slavs. Each branch of the Slavic family ... as the EastSlavic borrowings from their Iranian neighbours. Image Bilibin. Baba Yaga.jpg ... Commons category Wikipedia Books Slavic mythology http www.crees.ku.edu SEEFA Slavic and East European ... Polish Paganism http pandora.cii.wwu.edu vajda russ110 handout p1 paganism.htm EastSlavic Paganism ... beliefs, gods, customs and calendar http www.mythinglinks.org euro east panSlavic.html Pan Slavic ...Citations missing date May 2008 Expand Russian date September 2009 Slavic mythology ... the Proto Indo European religion . Image Sadko.jpg thumb 225px Many generations of Slavic artists ... Kingdom 1876 . Slavic mythology Unlike Greek mythology Greek or Egyptian mythology , there are no first hand records for the study of Slavic mythology. Despite some arguable theories for instance .... Before that, sparse records of Slavic religion were mostly written by non Slavic Christian ... of old Slavic cult image s and shrine s have been found, though little can be yielded from them without ..., and stories of all the Slavic nations. Written sources There are currently no known written accounts of Slavic mythology predating the fragmentation of the Proto Slavic people into West Slavs West , East Slavs East , and South Slavs , with the possible exception of a short note in Herodotus Histories ... the Slavic folk belief in Werewolf werewolves , whilst others believe that Herodotus actually referred to Veles god God of the underworld and death ancient Slavic carnival festivals , when groups ... Byzantine historian Procopius , whose Bellum Gothicum described the beliefs of a South Slavic peoples ... more details
Slavic nationalisms Pan Slavism Russian nationalism Slavophile Ukrainian nationalism South Slavic, see rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire Macedonism National awakening of the ethnic Macedonians Illyrian movement Croatia Slovenian nationalism Venetic theory disambig ru ... more details
Slavic Corridor was a term for two territorial disputes after the First World War Czech Corridor Polish Corridor disambig de Slawischer Korridor ... more details
Old Slavic may refer to the Old Church Slavonic language the Proto Slavic language language also known as Common Slavic disambig Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Longcomment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. ... more details
Slavic literature refers to the literature in any of the Slavic languages Belarusian literature Bosnian literature Bulgarian literature Croatian literature Czech literature Kashubian literature Macedonian literature Polish literature Russian literature Serbian literature Slovak literature Slovene literature Ukrainian literature See also Slavic studies Old Church Slavonic language Category European literature ... more details
Slavic alphabet can refer to Glagolitic alphabet Early Cyrillic alphabet Cyrillic alphabet Russian alphabet Bulgarian alphabet Macedonian alphabet Serbian alphabet Ukrainian alphabet disambig Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Slavic Muslims are ethnic group s or sub ethnic groups of Slavs who observe the Islam Islamic faith , such as Bosniaks Bosnian Muslims or Bosniaks of Serbia Bosniaks born in Serbia Gorani Kosovo Gorani Serbian Muslims Pomaks Bulgarian Muslims Torbesh Torbe Macedonian Muslims See also Muslims by nationality Category Islam in Europe Category Muslim communities Category Slavic ethnic groups Muslims Islam stub Euro stub Ethno stub eu Eslaviar musulman nl Slavische moslims pl S owia scy muzu manie ru ... more details
File SlavS.gif right The Slavic Union small Russian language Russian small SS is a Russia Russian far right national socialist national socialistic movement, which aims at the creation of Russian national state. ref http www.demushkin.com page7.php faq1 , , , ? ref The Slavic Union is the most active ultranationalist political association in Russia. Organizational history Origins The Slavic Union was founded in September 1999. The leader of the organization is Dmitry Dyomushkin . ref name Banned http www.themoscowtimes.com news article slavic union banned 404968.html Slavic Union Banned, The Moscow Times, April 28, 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. ref The group s website, in Russian, links to extensive material on Holocaust denial ref http www.demushkin.com revisio Revizionizm kholokosta Holocaust Revisionism , www.demushkin.com Retrieved May 16, 2010. ref and to works by Adolf Hitler . Its organizational logo is a stylized swastika and the group s initials, SS in Russian, are the same as those used by the German Schutzstaffel and its secret intelligence service, the Gestapo Geheime Stadtpolizei, Secret Policeforce , during World War II . ref name Banned 2010 prohibition ruling The Slavic Union was banned by the Moscow City Court on April 27, 2010 following charges by prosecutors that the group promoted a national supremacist ideology similar to that of Nazi Germany . ref name Banned Responding to the ban on April 27th, Dyomushkin noted that the Slavic Union had been banned all across Russia and indicated that an appeal to higher legal authority of the organization s prohibition would definitely be forthcoming. ref K.K. and D.P., http www.interfax.com newsinf.asp?id 161488 Court bans Slavic Union organization, Interfax.com, April 27, 2010. Retrieved May 16, 2010. ref In September ... Bureau for Human Rights. External links http www.demushkin.com Slavic Union official website ... more details
Wikify date January 2011 Refimprove date December 2009 The Slavic antithesis is a style figure in Slavic peoples Slavic epic poetry . It consists of three parts a question is asked, then a negative answer is given, and finally the real explanation is provided. The last line differs since the first few lines of the poem are simply there to increase the power of the last line many poems use the same descriptive lines while only changing the last line. ref Similarity of Jablan na Konju with Mali Radojca and Svetci blago dijele ref This is an example of the first few descriptive lines ref Yugoslav Epic Preambles, by Eugene E. Pantzer. 1959 ref blockquote Ili grmi, il se zemlja trese? br Il se bije more o bregove? br Nit grmi, nit se zemlja trese, br Nit se bije more o bregove br ... blockquote English translation blockquote Is it thunder, is it the earth quaking? br Is it the sea which clashes gainst the coastland? br It isn t thunder, nor is the ground shaking, br nor is the sea clashing against the coast, br ... blockquote The final line is explanatory and supported by the previous descriptive lines, which give it impact on the audience. For example, in the poem Mali Radojca , the final line is blockquote Ve na Zadar pucaju topovi br It is the cannons, fired at Zadar br blockquote However, in other poems the descriptive sound of the first three lines similar to waves breaking on seashores or earthquakes may speak of the hoof beats of the hero s horse, the clash of armies or the power of God. References Reflist Links Complete song Mali Radojca http sr.wikisource.org sr el D0 9C D0 B0 D0 BB D0 B8 D0 A0 D0 B0 D0 B4 D0 BE D1 98 D0 B8 D1 86 D0 B0 DEFAULTSORT Slavic Antithesis Category Poetic form Category Slavic culture hr Slavenska antiteza mk sr sh Slovenska antiteza ... more details