Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/History_of_Proto-Slavic> ?p ?o }
- History_of_Proto-Slavic abstract "The history of Proto-Slavic is the linguistic history of the Proto-Slavic language, the hypothetical ancestor of the modern-day Slavic languages, as it developed from the ancestral Proto-Balto-Slavic language (c. 1500 BC), which is the parent language of the Balto-Slavic languages (both the Slavic and Baltic languages, e.g. Latvian and Lithuanian). The first 2,000 years or so consist of the pre-Slavic era, a long period during which none of the later dialectal differences between Slavic languages had yet happened. The last stage in which the language remained without internal differences that later characterize different Slavic languages can be dated around 500 AD and is sometimes termed Proto-Slavic proper or Early Proto-Slavic. Following this is the Common Slavic period (c. 500–1000 AD), during which the first dialectal differences appeared but the entire Slavic-speaking area continued to function as a single language, with sound changes tending to spread throughout the entire area. By around 1000 AD, the area had broken up into separate East Slavic, West Slavic and South Slavic languages, and in the following centuries it broke up further into the various modern Slavic languages of which the following are extant: Belarusian, Russian, Rusyn and Ukrainian in the East; Czech, Slovak, Polish, Kashubian and the Sorbian languages in the West, and Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbo-Croatian and Slovenian in the South.The period from the early centuries AD to the end of the Common Slavic period around 1000 AD was a time of rapid change, concurrent with the explosive growth of the Slavic-speaking area. By the end of this period, most of the features of the modern Slavic languages had been established. The first historical documentation of the Slavic languages is found in isolated names and words in Greek documents starting in the 6th century AD, when Slavic-speaking tribes first came in contact with the Greek-speaking Byzantine Empire.https://www.docdroid.net/U7MwVPo/img-20140510-0018.pdf.html Hold on salonica was slavic speaking at the time. Byzantine official language was Latin only byzantine church liturgy was also written in Greek. Look at the names and artifacts all over the empire. Also Greek empire did not exist as it was under the Bulgarian Empire and Slavic speaking. The first continuous texts date from the late 9th century AD and were written in Old Church Slavonic—based on the language of Thessaloniki in Greek Macedonia—as part of the Christianization of the Slavs by Saints Cyril and Methodius and their followers. Because these texts were written during the Common Slavic period, the language they document is close to the ancestral Proto-Slavic language and is critically important to the linguistic reconstruction of Slavic-language history.This article covers historical developments up through the end of the Common Slavic period. For later developments, see History of the Slavic languages.".
- History_of_Proto-Slavic thumbnail Balto-Slavic_lng.png?width=300.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink lingua.pdf.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink art066e.pdf.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink art111e.pdf.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink 04_Blazeko.pdf.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink books?id=uRF9Yiso1OIC.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink books?id=uRF9Yiso1OIC&.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageExternalLink img-20140510-0018.pdf.html.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageID "40965747".
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageLength "75448".
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageOutDegree "216".
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageRevisionID "707593759".
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Aesti.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greek.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Antes_(people).
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Baltic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Balto-Slavic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Bast_fibre.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Belarusian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Bulgarian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Empire.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Caron.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Category:Slavic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Celtic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Centum_and_satem_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Chakavian.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Chernoles_culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Chernyakhov_culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Christianization_of_the_Slavs.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Codex_Suprasliensis.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Codex_Zographensis.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Corded_Ware_culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Creaky_voice.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Czech_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Dacian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Dnieper.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Dniester.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Dybos_law.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Dębczyn_culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink East_Slavic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Europe.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Iranian_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopedia_of_Indo-European_Culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Epenthesis.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Frederik_Kortlandt.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Freising_manuscripts.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink French_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Fricative_consonant.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Genitive_case.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_parent_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Glottal_stop.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Goths.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_number.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Great_Moravia.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Haplogroup_R1a.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Havlxc3xadks_law.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink History_of_the_Slavic_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Hungary.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Hydronym.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Indo-Iranian_languages.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Ivxc5xa1ixc4x87s_law.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Kashubian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Kievan_Rus.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Kurgan_hypothesis.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Labialization.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Languages_of_Europe.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Laryngeal_theory.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Latvian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Lexeme.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Lingua_franca.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Lithuanian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Macedonia_(Greece).
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Macedonia_(region).
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Macedonian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Meillets_law.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Metathesis_(linguistics).
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Dnieper_culture.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Monophthong.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Mutual_intelligibility.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Nasalization.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Northern_Macedonian_dialects.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Ogonek.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Old_Church_Slavonic.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Old_East_Slavic.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Old_Novgorod_dialect.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Old_Prussian_language.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Palatal_consonant.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Palatal_stop.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Palatalization_(sound_change).
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Pannonian_Avars.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Periodization.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Phonological_history_of_English_consonant_clusters.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Pitch_accent.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Place_of_articulation.
- History_of_Proto-Slavic wikiPageWikiLink Polish_language.