「slavic」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目
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ceived a B.A. from Vassar and later a Ph.D. in | Slavic Linguistics from Columbia University. |
ki (Musagetes; contributions to the history of | Slavic literature and culture) |
lso continued an interest in Russian and other | Slavic literature (mainly Serbian) which had begun du |
rn slawischen Literaturen ("History of Ancient | Slavic Literatures", Leipzig, 1908). |
eraturen: die Kultur der Gegenwart ("The South | Slavic Literatures: the Culture of the Present", Stut |
opposed their efforts to create a specifically | Slavic liturgy. |
tion, he studied the chronological sequence of | Slavic loanwords in the Baltic languages. |
n lost all territories east of the Elbe in the | Slavic Lutici uprising of 983. |
elarus and Ukraine had been assimilated by the | Slavic majority, and the influx of new settlers had c |
used his position to feed the interests of the | Slavic majority; he was thus unsympathetic towards th |
"There is a new epoch of | Slavic march to the west that has replaced the German |
ril 24, is found in both the Roman, Irish, and | Slavic martyrologies and in the metrical calendar of |
Slavic Masurians) and their culture in Warmia and Mas | |
The | Slavic meaning of the word is given not coincidently |
after the 6th century, when as a result of the | Slavic migration, groups of Slavs populated the area |
Journal of | Slavic Military Studies, 17(3), 449-74. |
The Varangian (and later | Slavic) military stationed at Duboviki could effectiv |
They are the native languages of the Sorbs, a | Slavic minority in the Lusatia region of eastern Germ |
More than 60,000 of the Sorbian | Slavic minority continue to live in the region. |
sement park is set up, one ride is called the ' | Slavic Mountain'. |
English and Lowland Scots folklore), Buyan in | Slavic Mythology and the realms of the Gods and the d |
In | Slavic mythology, Hors (Old Church Slavonic: Хърсъ, C |
In | Slavic mythology, Koschei is an evil person of ugly s |
Zaria or Zoria is the goddess of beauty in | Slavic mythology. |
ce is based on the noon demon "Lady Midday" of | slavic mythology. |
pak" in Karakalpak) and the "Chernye Klobuki" ( | Slavic name of same meaning). |
It is also not clear if the original | Slavic name of Sarskoe Gorodishche was Rostov or some |
ers during the East Colonization; the original | Slavic name was not kept. |
It is directly comparable to the Old East | Slavic name Vladimir and the Germanic name Valdemar, |
Saafet decided to adopt a | Slavic name - Ruska (Bulgarian: Руска). |
ussian or Ukrainian: Землянка) - is an Eastern | Slavic name for a dugout or earth-house which was use |
Mstiwoj is an old | Slavic name popular among West Slavs and East Slavs, |
If so, the original | Slavic name for Gnyozdovo must have been different. |
lement had previously existed, and had the old | Slavic name vrutok. |
The name of the river derives from the | slavic name "Liubana", meaning "valley of love". |
His name is an old | Slavic name, and could be translated as "defender of |
CNVTI regis nostri"), which without doubt is a | Slavic name. |
This is a | Slavic name. |
bottled in the United States, Dubra utilizes a | Slavic name. |
CNVTI regis nostri"), which without doubt is a | Slavic name. |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mykolayovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Vasylyovych |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Spirov and t |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Kalistratovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mushanbetovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Georgiev and |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Anatolevich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Pradanov and |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Fyodorovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Magomedbashi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Amberkovich |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Vladimirovic |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Felekhdinovi |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Petkov and t |
This name uses Eastern | Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Mykolayovych |
was prince of the confederation of Obotrites, | Slavic nation settled on the shores of Baltic sea on |
This provoked war with nearby | Slavic nation of Wiltzi. |
Exhibiting traits of a | Slavic national mysticism, Kruchenykh aimed at recove |
ntury "was the period when the smaller, mostly | Slavic nationalities of the empire - Czechs, Slovaks, |
s, and 32% represented Russians and other East | Slavic nationalities. |
especially cosmonauts from | slavic nations like Czech Republic or Slovacia can le |
Austroslavism also found some support in other | Slavic nations in the Austrian Empire, especially the |
avonic music, his book Folk Dance Music of the | Slavic Nations earned him two honorary degrees. |
While decorated eggs of various | Slavic nations have much in common, national traditio |
envisioned peaceful cooperation of the smaller | Slavic nations of Central Europe within the Habsburg |
d Methodius, widely regarded as heroes for the | Slavic nations celebrated for spreading Christianity |
Stratsimir contributed soldiers to assist the | Slavic nations' bid to overturn the Ottoman Empire. |
the political and economic organization of the | Slavic nations, and on his return published in the Re |
unication between representatives of different | Slavic nations, as well as to allow people who don't |
ntecostalism to Russia, Ukraine and some other | slavic nations. |
Verchen) was a battle between Saxons and West | Slavic Obotrites on 6 July 1164. |
ween a coalition of Christian forces and pagan | Slavic Obotrites in 1093. |
the first Russian Sport Competition, a kind of | Slavic Olympic Games. |
ometer range around the settlement, remains of | Slavic open settlements have been found. |
to the Native Country (Russian War Relief) and | Slavic organizations. |
Others assert that the name is of | Slavic origin - from halytsa (galitsa) meaning "a nak |
d to the central position occupied by words of | Slavic origin in the Romanian language, Hasdeu develo |
This placename, Skogen, is of | Slavic origin, but its meaning is unknown. |
ins of the name are unknown, probably it is of | Slavic origin, in the old Slavic language the word "w |
The name is of | Slavic origin. |
ro Sclavo or Uuonomiro Sclavo), because of his | Slavic origin. |
the Saxons and Polabian Slavs; its name is of | Slavic origin. |
German, Greek, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and | Slavic origins available as well. |
hbours of Germany and conflict with nations of | Slavic origins, who were considered to be of lower de |
Most people with NBS have West | Slavic origins. |
In | Slavic Orthodox use, no one below the rank of subdeac |
as I to serve the spiritual needs of the large | Slavic Orthodox community in the Galata section of Is |
In | Slavic paganism kalyna also represents a beauty of a |
bush's symbolical roots can be traced into the | Slavic paganism of millennia ago. |
874, being one of the very few princesses with | Slavic patriline to ever marry a male dynast of the H |
Most of this was then settled with | Slavic peasant colonisers. |
years 1839-1840 he gave lectures on history of | Slavic people in French Historical Institute in Paris |
mation of the empire into a federation of free | Slavic people with Russians being one of the equal ra |
The | Slavic people of that time were weakly differentiated |
ave hypothesized that the Kylfings were a West | Slavic people related to the Pomeranians. |
s the Wendland, a designation referring to the | Slavic people of the Wends from Obotrite tribe Drevan |
ever, there is also some facts that some nomad | Slavic people inhabited this region long ago before a |
and the Carpatho-Ruthenians were the last East | Slavic people that kept the ancient historic name (Ru |
ent was the death by starvation of millions of | Slavic people, something that partially came to pass |
d in the 820s, they were replaced largely by a | Slavic people, who established the state of Great Mor |
them to be one and the same "Illyrian" (South | Slavic) people. |
robably closely related to each of neighboring | Slavic people: Great Moravians (Western Slavs) to the |
ght Christianity and the Byzantine Rite to the | Slavic peoples in the ninth century. |
(from 968) and a successful missionary to the | Slavic peoples to the east of Germany. |
lplan Ost was designed to eliminate the native | Slavic peoples from these lands and replace them with |
nt as an act of brotherly help for fellow East | Slavic peoples |
Henry had granted the | Slavic peoples freedom to practice their paganism and |
Ethnographic map of the | Slavic peoples prepared by Czech ethnographer Lubor N |
ks, committed to the independence of the South | Slavic peoples from Austria-Hungary. |
e time and route of the original settlement of | Slavic peoples in these regions has been the subject |
ole Croatia: one favoured the union of all the | Slavic peoples, believing that they were of one natio |
Similar folk dances are known among other | Slavic peoples, e.g., the Polish Trojak. |
Bulgarians facilitated the conversion of East | Slavic peoples, most notably the Rus', predecessors o |
Southern Europeans, the | Slavic peoples, and especially Jews and gypsies were |
They evangelized to the | Slavic peoples, translated the liturgy into Slavonic |
to protect against attacks by the neighboring | Slavic peoples. |
Its name probably comes from the | slavic person name Narayov. |
From 1897 to 1902, he taught | Slavic philology at the University of Vienna, from 19 |
g school in Oostakker and studied Germanic and | Slavic philology at the University of Ghent. |
Kranjec studied | Slavic philology at the University of Ljubljana. |
In 1977 he became full professor of | Slavic philology at the University of Vienna, Austria |
associate professor (1954-8) and professor of | Slavic philology at Columbia University (1958-77). |
ng of Kreisler's transcriptions of Russian and | Slavic pieces. |
specially Count Adolf II of Holstein, allowing | Slavic pirates to attack the Danes. |
An unpublished collection of his own | Slavic poems was titled in Latin: Slavica Poematia La |
Ukri, Vukraner, Polish: Wkrzanie) were a West | Slavic Polabian tribe in the Uckermark (terra U(c)ker |
inavia became defined by its resistance to the | Slavic policies of Charlemagne, who was inviting Slav |
After all | Slavic Pomeranian tribes had lost their independence |
rt of Farther Pomerania and included much more | Slavic Pomeranian and Kashubian influence. |
iddle Ages, Pomerania was largely populated by | Slavic Pomeranians and Liuticians, who spoke the Pome |
Where | Slavic population was left, they were called Wends, K |
the region and are related to the local early | Slavic population, according to others they are desce |
oups, changed their attitude towards the local | Slavic population. |
n the form of targeted killing of the unwanted | Slavic population. |
upation of the Macedonian and Serbian Orthodox | Slavic populations. |
Two fibulae and | Slavic pottery made 550-600 show that a considerable |
the abandoned site have uncovered remnants of | Slavic pottery, it is thought the settlement was orig |
The | Slavic practice, by contrast, uses a larger vessel sh |
the most famous being the Moscow Pride and the | Slavic Pride. |
enburg passed to Albert after the death of the | Slavic prince in Brandenburg an der Havel. |
his identity: first, that there actually was a | Slavic prince of that name; second, that this was the |
incess Gunhilda of Wenden was a semi-legendary | Slavic princess and Danish Viking age queen consort, |
lled Tova, Tofa or Thora, (10th century) was a | Slavic princess and a Danish Viking Age queen consort |
ated to early Slovenian history, including the | Slavic principality of Carantania and the Freising ma |
In the 7th century the area was part of the | Slavic principality of Carantania, which about 743 fe |
At this time she changed her last name to the | Slavic pronunciation Hitschmanova which sounded less |
n, but the family came from Silesia, hence the | Slavic rather than German surname. |
e Bear recovered Havelberg, lost since the 983 | Slavic rebellion. |
tation was developed in Kievan Rus' as an East | Slavic refinement of the Byzantine neumatic musical n |
eserved today than dialects of many other West | Slavic regions. |
terary forgery claimed to be a text of ancient | Slavic religion and history written on wooden planks. |
regard the tradition as inherited from the old | Slavic religion, where Christians began referring to |
ays in World Politics, International Security, | Slavic Review, Foreign Affairs, and other academic an |
New Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire, | Slavic Review, p. 111, 1968. |
In 983, the brothers were leaders of the great | Slavic revolt, which German historiography labels the |
Mikhail Bakunin, a Russian Pan | Slavic revolutionary, visited Prague in March 1849 an |
114: Suite, Two Short Pieces, Toccata Giocosa, | Slavic Rhapsody (The Novgorod Kremlin at Night), Burl |
ed differs depending upon whether the Greek or | Slavic Rite is used. |
Many of the names derive from the | Slavic root pisa which relates to painting (and cogna |
a is a common Polish toponym, derived from the | Slavic root *-bystr, denoting speed or fast flow. |
The lechitic ( | Slavic) root of the name, Wagria, meant not only the |
ith a Bulgarian boyar named Tikhomir (from the | Slavic roots for "calm" and "peace"). |
Its name has | slavic roots and translates appromximately as a dimin |
rol of Badajoz, by death of Sabur al-Khatib (a | Slavic serf, previously serving at the court of Calip |
first historian who advanced the theory of the | Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps in the 6th cent |
st the popular Venetic theory which denied the | Slavic settlement in the East Alps. |
Since the | Slavic settlement of the region in the 8th and 9th ce |
During 9th century an early | Slavic settlement was established. |
The second phase of | Slavic settlement came from the south and took place |
Following the | Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps about 600, the |
ands in the early middle ages, focusing on the | Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps and the medieva |
For Pomeranian settlements, see Grad ( | Slavic settlement). |
Rybinsk is one of the oldest | Slavic settlements on the Volga River. |
entury, thus constituting some of the earliest | Slavic settlements near the Baltic coast. |
904 showing a spring landscape with some early | Slavic ships on the background and the In the Blue Ex |
This language is not to be confused with the | Slavic Silesian language, a language spoken today by |
river flowing through it, in turn derived from | Slavic sol ("salt") - in reference to the area's salt |
Slavic solar symbol found on the Zbruch Idol as a sym | |
The defenders of these positions included | Slavic soldiers and SS troops. |
e to speak Danish .This explains the village's | slavic sounding name and even today approximately 45% |
The control of the estuary (known in East | Slavic sources as Beloberezhye, or White Shores) was |
that the name of the Kievan Rus', the old East | Slavic state, may have originated from the name of th |
school in Novo Mesto in 1940 and then studied | Slavic studies at the University of Ljubljana's Facul |
Slavic Studies (Russian, Polish, Serbian, Croatian, C | |
, continuing her studies in literary sciences, | Slavic studies and librarian sciences at the Universi |
IUC includes the university's Seminar of | Slavic Studies, the Seminar of History of Religions, |
, he wrote some of the most important works in | Slavic studies, historiography and philology. |
1999-2004, she also taught at the Institute of | Slavic Studies, Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Rep |
l studies, English, French studies, German and | Slavic studies, Hispanic studies, history, kinesiolog |
omics, English, French and Italian, German and | Slavic Studies, History, Music, Philosophy, Political |
cation, General Studies, Hellenic Studies, and | Slavic Studies. |
rofessor at the Hokkaido University Center for | Slavic Studies. |
ch Photius send missionaries to evangelize his | Slavic subjects. |
han as a valid political term, knyaz being the | Slavic term for the ruler of the Rus, which was by th |
sal by Charlemagne in the only expedition into | Slavic territory led by Charlemagne himself, in 798, |
espectively with the Greek title archon or the | Slavic title knyaz. |
tion of most of the Pomeranian tribes was from | Slavic to German in the 13th century. |
e stated he considers himself as an Italian of | Slavic tongue. |
Brod (disambiguation), a | Slavic toponym. |
This mix of American influence with | Slavic tradition is also perceptible in the rhythm of |
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