Sorbian people: Wends, Sorbian languages, Sorbs, Slavic names, Upper Lusatia, Ernest Mason Satow, Lower Sorbian language, Wends of Texas
Book Details
Author(s)Source: Wikipedia
PublisherBooks LLC, Wiki Series
ISBN / ASIN1233069802
ISBN-139781233069804
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 29. Chapters: Wends, Sorbian languages, Sorbs, Slavic names, Upper Lusatia, Ernest Mason Satow, Lower Sorbian language, Wends of Texas, Lower Lusatia, Upper Sorbian language, Serbin, Texas, Sorbian alphabet, Stanislaw Tillich, John Kilian, Milceni, Pavle JuriÅ¡ić Å turm, Rjana Åužica, Dervan, Johann Crüger, Domowina, Wendish People's Party, Miliduch, Handrij Zejler, Jugoslovenima, Korla Awgust Kocor, Czimislav, Jan ArnoÅ¡t Smoler, List of Sorbs, Luzzatto, Luzzatti. Excerpt: Given names originating from the Slavic languages are most popular in Slavic countries such as Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine, and others. In pre-Christian traditions, a child younger than 7-10 years old would bear a "subtitutional name" (e.g. Niemój "not mine", Nielub "not loved"), whose purpose was to decrease the apparent importance of a child and protect him or her from the curiosity of evil powers. This practice probably derived from the existence of a high fatality rate for young children at that time. A child who survived 7-10 years was worthy of care and was granted adult status and a new adult name during the ritual of a first haircut. Generally traditional names were dominant until Slavic nations converted to Christianity (e.g. the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church). For instance, the Council of Trent (1545-63) decided that every Catholic should have a Christian name instead of native one. Names in Poland After ban of use native non-Christian names (ordered by Council of Trent), Polish nobility (especially Protestants) tried to preserve traditional names, such as Zbigniew and JarosÅ‚aw. Ordinary people, however, tended to choose names solely from Christian calendar, where there was only a few saints' names of Slavic origin, like: Kazimierz (St. Casimir), S...










