Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abagar> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 triples per page.
- Abagar abstract "Abagar ("Абагар") is a breviary by the Bulgarian Roman Catholic Bishop of Nikopol Filip Stanislavov printed in Rome in 1651. It is regarded as the first printed book in modern Bulgarian. The language of the breviary is a specific blend of modern Bulgarian and Church Slavonic (Old Bulgarian) with Serbo-Croatian influences, that was used in writing by the Catholics from Chiprovtsi, Bulgaria, in the period. Unlike many other works of the Bulgarian Roman Catholics, it was printed in Cyrillic and not Latin.The book is named after the apocryphal message of King Abgar to Jesus that was included. A total of six copies of the book are preserved, only one of which in Bulgaria, housed in the SS. Cyril and Methodius National Library in Sofia. The first phototype issue of the book was published in 1905 by the Russian Kuzinsky. The first Bulgarian one followed in 1926 by Vasil Pundev and the one by Bozhidar Raykov was printed in 1979. It was not until 2001 that an edition translated to standard modern Bulgarian (by Kiril Kabakchiev) was published.".
- Abagar thumbnail Abagar_003.jpg?width=300.
- Abagar wikiPageID "5151767".
- Abagar wikiPageLength "1888".
- Abagar wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Abagar wikiPageRevisionID "649987426".
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Abgar_V.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Abgar_V_of_Edessa.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Apocrypha.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Apocryphal.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Breviary.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Bulgarian_language.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Category:1651_books.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bulgarian_books.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_Catholic_Church_in_Bulgaria.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Chiprovtsi.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Church_Slavonic_language.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Cyrillic.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Cyrillic_script.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Filip_Stanislavov.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Jesus.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Latin_alphabet.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Nikopol,_Bulgaria.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholicism.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholicism_in_Bulgaria.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink SS._Cyril_and_Methodius_National_Library.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Serbo-Croatian.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink Sofia.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLink File:Abagar_003.jpg.
- Abagar wikiPageWikiLinkText "Abagar".
- Abagar hasPhotoCollection Abagar.
- Abagar wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Bulgaria-stub.
- Abagar wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Christian-book-stub.
- Abagar wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Abagar wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:RC-stub.
- Abagar subject Category:1651_books.
- Abagar subject Category:Bulgarian_books.
- Abagar subject Category:Roman_Catholic_Church_in_Bulgaria.
- Abagar type Book.
- Abagar type Work.
- Abagar type Art.
- Abagar type Book.
- Abagar type Work.
- Abagar comment "Abagar ("Абагар") is a breviary by the Bulgarian Roman Catholic Bishop of Nikopol Filip Stanislavov printed in Rome in 1651. It is regarded as the first printed book in modern Bulgarian. The language of the breviary is a specific blend of modern Bulgarian and Church Slavonic (Old Bulgarian) with Serbo-Croatian influences, that was used in writing by the Catholics from Chiprovtsi, Bulgaria, in the period.".
- Abagar label "Abagar".
- Abagar sameAs Абагар.
- Abagar sameAs m.0d54_z.
- Abagar sameAs Абагар.
- Abagar sameAs Abagar.
- Abagar sameAs Q1975173.
- Abagar sameAs Q1975173.
- Abagar wasDerivedFrom Abagar?oldid=649987426.
- Abagar depiction Abagar_003.jpg.
- Abagar isPrimaryTopicOf Abagar.