Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knaanic_language> ?p ?o }
- Knaanic_language abstract "Knaanic (also called Canaanic, Leshon Knaan, Judaeo-Czech, or Judaeo-Slavic) is an extinct West Slavic Jewish language, formerly spoken in the lands of the Western Slavs, notably the Czech lands, but also the lands of modern Poland, Lusatia and other Sorbian regions. It became extinct in the Late Middle Ages.The name comes from the land of Knaan, a geo-ethnological term denoting the Jewish populations living east of the Elbe river (as opposed to the Ashkenazi Jews living to the West of it, or the Sephardi Jews of Iberian Peninsula). As such, the land is often simply translated as Slavonia, or Slavic Europe.The term is derived from ancient Canaan (Hebrew כנען "kəna'an"). The term Canaan was used by Jews in Europe for the Slavic peoples, as a punning reference to the so-called "curse of Canaan" (Genesis 9:25), that Canaan shall "be a slave".The language became extinct some time in the Middle Ages, possibly due to expansion of the Ashkenazi culture and their own Yiddish language based on German. This hypothesis is often backed up with a large number of Yiddish loanwords of Slavic origin, many of which were no longer in use in Slavic languages themselves at the time of the Ashkenazi expansion. These are believed to be loaned from Knaanic rather than from the Czech, Sorbian, or Polish languages. The linguist Paul Wexler has hypothesized that Knaanic is indeed the direct predecessor of Yiddish and that the language later became Germanized. In other words, the Knaanim, that is, the people speaking the Judaeo-Slavic languages, were the main cause of changes within the Yiddish language. This view has been dismissed among nearly all mainstream academics, however, and contrasts with the more widely accepted theories of Max Weinreich, who argued that the Slavic loanwords were assimilated only after Yiddish was already fully formed.A possible early example of Knaanic is a 9th-century letter for a Jewish community of Ruthenia. One of the very few commonly accepted examples of Knaanic are inscriptions on bracteates issued under Mieszko the Old and Leszek the White, two Polish rulers of 12th and 13th century. The last evidence of usage of the language (written with Hebrew script) come from the 16th century.200pxFile:Brakteat02.jpgThe reason Knaanic inscriptions (which use Hebrew letters) appear on coins minted for a Polish duke is that at the time he leased some mints to Jews. The mint masters were responsible for collecting bullion and striking coins, as well as periodically taking in and restriking existing coins.The inscriptions on the coins range widely. Some are Hebrew names, possibly of the mintmasters. Some are the name of the town in which the mint operated, for instance Kalisz, the burial place of Mieszko the Old. Some have the Duke's name. One in the National Bank of Poland's numismatic collection bears the word "bracha", Hebrew for blessing.".
- Knaanic_language iso6393Code "czk".
- Knaanic_language languageFamily Balto-Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language languageFamily Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language languageFamily West_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language thumbnail Brakteat01.jpg?width=300.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageExternalLink sbornik_blok.pdf.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageExternalLink www.franzkafka-soc.cz.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageID "150810".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageLength "7450".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageOutDegree "52".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageRevisionID "679782531".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Ashkenazi.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Ashkenazi_Jews.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Balto-Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Berakhah.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Bracteate.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Canaan.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Category:Extinct_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_Czech_history.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Category:West_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Czech_lands.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Czech_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Czech–Slovak_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Elbe.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Germanisation.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Germanization.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_alphabet.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_script.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Judaeo-Spanish.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Kalisz.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Late_Middle_Ages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Leszek_the_White.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Lusatia.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Max_Weinreich.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Mieszko_III_the_Old.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Mieszko_the_Old.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink National_Bank_of_Poland.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Wexler_(linguist).
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Poland.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Polish_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Ruthenia.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Sephardi_Jews.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Slavic_Europe.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Slavs.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Sorbian_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Sorbs.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink West_Slavic_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink West_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink West_Slavs.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Western_Slavs.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink Yiddish_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink File:Brakteat01.jpg.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLink File:Brakteat02.jpg.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLinkText "Judeo-Czech".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLinkText "Knaanic language".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLinkText "Knaanic".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageWikiLinkText "Paul Wexler".
- Knaanic_language extinct Late_Middle_Ages.
- Knaanic_language fam Balto-Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language fam Czech–Slovak_languages.
- Knaanic_language fam Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language fam West_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language familycolor "Indo-European".
- Knaanic_language glotto "none".
- Knaanic_language hasPhotoCollection Knaanic_language.
- Knaanic_language iso "czk".
- Knaanic_language linglist "czk".
- Knaanic_language name "Knaanic".
- Knaanic_language region "Europe".
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cs_icon.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_language.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jewish_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wiktionarycat.
- Knaanic_language subject Category:Extinct_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language subject Category:Jewish_Czech_history.
- Knaanic_language subject Category:Medieval_languages.
- Knaanic_language subject Category:West_Slavic_languages.
- Knaanic_language hypernym Language.
- Knaanic_language type Article.
- Knaanic_language type Language.
- Knaanic_language type Article.
- Knaanic_language type History.
- Knaanic_language type Language.
- Knaanic_language type Language.
- Knaanic_language type Thing.
- Knaanic_language type Q315.