Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2451891> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 43 of
43
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2451891 subject Q7702300.
- Q2451891 subject Q8754347.
- Q2451891 abstract "The Venetic theory (Slovene: venetska teorija) is an autochthonist theory of the origin of Slovenes that denies the Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps in the 6th century, claiming that proto-Slovenes (also regarded as the Veneti people by the proponents of this theory) have inhabited the region since ancient times. Although it has been rejected by scholars, it has been an influential alternative explanation of the Slovenian ethnogenesis. During the 1980s and 1990s, it gained wide attention in Slovenia and the former Yugoslavia. A version of this theory states that most of Central Europe and portions of today's northern Turkey were originally inhabited by a single people - the Veneti - a people that were subsequently dispersed by several invasion from the North in the form of Celtic and Germanic migrations and by the push northwards of the Roman Empire. According to this variant, the Armorican Veneti, the Adriatic Veneti, the Vistula Veneti as well as portion of the Illyrians and the Veneti of northern Turkey were all related people who spoke the same or similar language. The theory also counts among the Veneti several peoples of North Spain, Northern coastal France as well as portions of Denmark, Wales and of Ireland. In this version, most of the northern Slavs as well as Slovenes and some Croats are the last remnant the original European Veneti.".
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q125323.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q131434.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q13876576.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q1416201.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q145852.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q146521.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q146715.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q158281.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q15863.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q160424.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q1668109.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q215.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q217903.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q220379.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q22633.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q233853.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q2641492.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q2718867.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q27509.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q35966.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q40477.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q4345530.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q4423052.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q485762.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q4922418.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q4937682.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q5238003.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q5242106.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q535355.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q649179.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q669623.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q7106923.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q7177974.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q747537.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q7702300.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q83286.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q8754347.
- Q2451891 wikiPageWikiLink Q900396.
- Q2451891 comment "The Venetic theory (Slovene: venetska teorija) is an autochthonist theory of the origin of Slovenes that denies the Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps in the 6th century, claiming that proto-Slovenes (also regarded as the Veneti people by the proponents of this theory) have inhabited the region since ancient times. Although it has been rejected by scholars, it has been an influential alternative explanation of the Slovenian ethnogenesis.".
- Q2451891 label "Venetic theory".