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         Slavic:     more books (100)
  1. Tales from Slavic Myths by Ivan Hudec, 2001-02-01
  2. The Slavic Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys) by Roland Sussex, Paul Cubberley, 2006-10-23
  3. New Approaches to Slavic Verbs of Motion (Studies in Language Companion Series)
  4. The Mythology Of All Races V3: Celtic, Slavic by John A. MacCulloch, Jan Machal, 2007-06-01
  5. On Karel Capek (Michigan Slavic Materials) by ed. by Michael Makin and Jindrich Toman, 1992-04-21
  6. Monumenta Bulgarica: A Bilingual Anthology of Bulgarian Texts from the 9th to the 19th Centuries (Michigan Slavic Materials) by Thomas Butler, 1996-04-21
  7. Czech Prose, An Anthology (Michigan Slavic translations) by ed. and transl. by W.E. Harkins, 1983-04-21
  8. An Introduction to Old Church Slavic by William R. Schmalstieg, 1983-05-01
  9. Cleveland's Slavic Village (Images of America) by Sandy Mitchell, Slavic Village Historical Society, 2009-10-07
  10. A Bilingual Anthology of Slovene Literature (An Anthology of South Slavic Literatures , Fasc. 1) by Henry R. Cooper, 2003-06-01
  11. Historical View of the Languages and Literature of the Slavic - Nations by Therese Albertine Louise von Jacob Robinson, 2010-07-12
  12. Case in Slavic by Richard D. Brecht, 1986-09
  13. Studies in Slavic morphophonemics and accentology (Michigan Slavic materials) by Edward Stankiewicz, 1979
  14. Common and Comparative Slavic Phonology and Inflection: Phonology and Inflection : With Special Attention to Russian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croatian, Bulgarian by Charles Edward Townsend, Laura A. Janda, 1996-09-01

21. Okana Free Online Racing Game ?
Includes essays on Zaduszki (Polish Day of the Dead); Folk Customs; Polish Wedding Customs; Polish Paganism; faery tales; an online oracular divination; Polish proverbs; a Bookstore; and links.
http://www.okana.net/page.html
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22. Slavophilia - Slavic And East European Resources
A directory of resources by country or subject for Russia and Central and Eastern Europe.Category Regional Europe Central and Eastern Europe Directories......Slavophilia.net has moved to a new home at http//www.slavophilia.com/
http://www.slavophilia.net/

23. Slavic Resources On The Net
slavic Resources on the Net The following Web sites provide a wealth of linksto resources and sites of interest to slavic scholars on the Internet.
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~aaass/resources1.htm
Slavic Resources on the Net The following Web sites provide a wealth of links to resources and sites of interest to Slavic scholars on the Internet. Dictionaries and Language Resources List of dictionaries and other language resources on the Web prepared by the University of Michigan Graduate Library, Slavic and East European Division.
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Area.Programs/Slavic/diction.html
Russian and East European Studies Internet Resources Page (REESWeb) A comprehensive index of electronic resources on the Balkans, the Baltic states, the Caucasus, Central Asia, Central Europe, the CIS, Eastern Europe, the NIS, the Russian Federation, and the former Soviet Union.
http://www.pitt.edu/~cjp/rees.html
The Slavic Review: The American Quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European Studies. On this page you will find electronic post-print editions of Slavic Review from Fall 1994 to Winter 1995.
http://www.econ.uiuc.edu/~slavrev/

24. Sample Entry: Language / Encyclopedia Of Linguistics
General article on the group that includes SerboCroatian, Slovene, Bulgarian, and Macedonian.
http://www.fitzroydearborn.com/chicago/linguistics/sample-language.php3
Encyclopedia of Linguistics
Sample Entry: Language
SERBO-CROATIAN AND SOUTH SLAVIC LANGUAGES
The South Slavic languagesSerbo-Croatian, Slovene, Bulgarian, and Macedoniandescend from Slavic dialects that were brought to the sub-Alpine and Balkan regions of southwestern Europe ca. 500 C.E. by waves of westward migration along and across the Danube, Drava, and Sava River systems. In their new territory, the South Slavs encountered and undoubtedly mixed with Latin-speaking peoples, probably descendants of older Indo-European-speaking peoples, such as Illyrian and Thracian.
The exact relationships among the dialects at the time of settlement is uncertain, but we do know that there existed at that time no nascent Slovene, Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian, or Bulgarian dialects. Rather, these formed over the subsequent millennium. The South Slavic group may now be defined by its geographical discontinuity to the remainder of the Slavic-speaking world. To the north, Slovene is bounded by Friulian and Italian in Italy, by German in Austria, and Hungarian in Hungary. Croatian and Serbian are also bounded by Hungarian as well as Romanian (Romania). Bulgarian is bounded by Romanian, and each is separated from Ukrainian by the Black Sea.
Serbo-Croatian
Serbo-Croatian is spoken by approximately 16 million people. It is the state language of the Republic of Croatia (where it is called Croatian

25. Slav World
Historical essays, news, and information about different branches of the slavic peoples, as well as a directory of related links.
http://slavs.virtualave.net/
God Bless America
This Web site is not intended as a reference source. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this Web site, the author and the webmaster assume no responsibility for any errors or omissions. Nor is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. Sign Our Guestbook Slavic Links
Live Slavic News
Slavic Links ... Suggestions/Guestbook General information about the country of your roots Belarus Bulgaria Carpatho-Rusyns Croatia ... Map of the Balkans Dan Mabry's Historical Text Archives History of East Central Europe By Oscar Halecki Slavs and Their Neighbors
By Oscar Halecki Hitler's War By Oscar Halecki God Bless America
Got a comment, complaint, question, problem, concern, or an opinion? Send it in!
Mailto:

FriendlySlav@Slav.com
Slavs of America
An Essay
Europe's Largest Ethnic and Linguistic Group
In the USA, the current estimated population of Slavic Americans is over 20 million.
Slavic Americans
How do we compare to other ethnic groups?

26. Slavic Pagan Community Of Estonia
Overview of deities and festivals with articles and links.
http://slavjanskij.boom.ru/Stranicaangl.htm
Slavic Calendar Festivals Ancient Slavic Gods Slavic Fairy Creatures If It Dries Out, It's No Good: Women, Hair and Rusalki Beliefs ... Paganism at Estonians and others links You may translate for yourselves the information located on a Russian-speaking page with the help of the translator: PROMT's Online Translator The guest book Write to me: mailto:slavjanskij@list.ru
Slavic Pagan community of Estonia
" From morning till morning we saw evil which was created in Russia, and waited, when will come kindly. And it will not come never if we the shall not rally force... " " Are seized by enemies we may in Russia, but Svarog - the God ours, instead of other gods, and without Svarog we have no anything, except for death ". " The Veles book " The Slavic world is an endlesly fascinating, troubling, dramatic, and dynamic one. Slavic mythology has a strong focus on the sun, warmth, light, birds, fire (and firebirds), epic victories, and brightly painted cosmic bird-eggs. The opposing polarity, the dark, the dead, the cold, the gloomy forests, snakes, drowned spirits (usually female or children), and ruthless hags are feared, even demonized (especially under the influence of Christianity), yet many fairy tales indicate that if this darker world is treated with cautious respect, one will fare well. . . . PAGANISM Paganism is a religion of festival with an ethical component on how man should live in concert with nature and each other. By necessity, living provokes anxieties. Paganism is not a soteriological ("governed by a dogmatic code") religion, and therefore it could not reassure people by organizing their lives in this world on the pretext of securing salvation in the next. Pagans rejected the servile model as exemplified in the Religions of the Book (Christianity, Judaism, Islam).

27. Slavic Review Homepage
The slavic Review. American Quarterly of Russian,Eurasian and East European Studies.
http://www.econ.uiuc.edu/~slavrev/
The Slavic Review
American Quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European Studies
No frames page Frames page

28. Yurope Books
Electronic texts of works by South slavic authors, HTML version of Danish archive from Slavisk Institut Aarhus, Denmark, and mirror of ASCII version.
http://www.yurope.com/books/
"And then came the dark times, when the clever shut up,
fools were talkative, and the scum got rich."
From " Signs Along the Road" by Ivo Andric (1892-1975),
recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature for 1961 Danil Harms: Slucajevi
This book is in Serbian Language. Two document encoding ( see note on document encoding ) are available: Sorry, no English translations yet.
Tears through time
- a novel by Boris Vukov Pijanino u blatu - Predrag Ristic Sen's Archive on Yurope Yurope Mirror
Yurope maintains mirror of Danish archive ( Slavisk Institut Aarhus, Denmark ) on Yurope FTP site.This archive contains large collection of books in Serbo-Croatian compiled by Henning Moerk.
Thanks to Borut Maricic , Yurope has

29. Slavic Paganism & Witchcraft
Information regarding beliefs, rituals, holidays, deities, spells, and herbs.
http://hometown.aol.com/hpsofsnert/
htmlAdWH('7005340', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7002028', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help
This site is dedicated to the Gods, the spirits
and our ancestors.
May they awaken once again,
and remember.

Slavic Pagan Beliefs

Holidays

Gods and Goddesses

Herbs
...
Slavic Pagan Resources
- desperately needs updating
The Russian Pagan Tea Room - message board
Books and Research Material - updated 7/07/2002 Subscribe to leszi Our online Slavic Pagan study group! Powered by groups.yahoo.com E-mail me at hpsofsnert@aol.com Visitors

30. JSTOR: Slavic Review
slavic Review. (continues American slavic and East European Review) JSTORcoverage Vols. 2060, 1961-2001. Journal Information for slavic Review.
http://www.jstor.org/journals/00376779.html
RESOURCES FOR LIBRARIANS RESOURCES FOR PUBLISHERS PARTICIPATION INFORMATION
Slavic Review
(continues American Slavic and East European Review JSTOR coverage: Vols. 20-60, 1961-2001
Please read JSTOR's "Terms and Conditions of Use" before you begin. Search this journal Browse this journal
Journal Information for Slavic Review
Publisher The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies Moving Wall ISSN
OCLC
LCCN
Pre- and post-digitization work on this title was completed by Phyllis McCarty and Eric Boxrud, JSTOR Production Technicians.
JSTOR HOME
SEARCH BROWSE TIPS ... CONTACT JSTOR

31. JSTOR: American Slavic And East European Review
American slavic and East European Review. (continues Slavonic and East EuropeanReview. Journal Information for American slavic and East European Review.
http://www.jstor.org/journals/10497544.html
RESOURCES FOR LIBRARIANS RESOURCES FOR PUBLISHERS PARTICIPATION INFORMATION
American Slavic and East European Review
(continues Slavonic and East European Review. American Series and continued by Slavic Review JSTOR coverage: Vols. 4-20, 1945-1961
Please read JSTOR's "Terms and Conditions of Use" before you begin. Search this journal Browse this journal
Journal Information for American Slavic and East European Review
Publisher The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies ISSN
OCLC
LCCN

JSTOR HOME
SEARCH BROWSE TIPS ... CONTACT JSTOR

32. The American Bibliography Of Slavic And East European Studies (ABSEES)
Records journal articles, books, book chapters, book reviews, dissertations, and selected government Category Reference Bibliography...... The American Association for the Advancement of slavic Studies (AAASS). The slavicReview. The American Bibliography of slavic and East European Studies (ABSEES).
http://gateway.library.uiuc.edu/absees/
Selected SEES Resources on the World-Wide Web In the United States The American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (AAASS) The Slavic Review REESWeb: A Comprehensive Guide to SEES Resources The Russian and East European Network Information Center (REENIC) at the University of Texas at Austin ... Internet Resources: Russian Studies (from Russian History on the Web (maintained by Marshall Poe, Ph.D.) In Other Countries The British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies (BASEES) Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Inc. The RussGUS Database of German-Language Materials on Russia and the Former Soviet Union Libweb: Library Servers via WWW (University of California, Berkeley)
The American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (ABSEES)
128 Observatory
901 South Mathews Avenue
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Urbana, Illinois 61801
USA Telephone: +217-333-0284 / Fax: +217-333-7011
E-mail: absees@uiuc.edu ABSEES Online Price Sheet/Order Form
OFF-SITE ACCESS For Off-Campus UIUC Users For Other Institutions
About ABSEES
The American Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (ABSEES) has been compiled continuously since 1956 under the auspices of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (AAASS) and with the support at various times of the National Endowment for the Humanities, the U.S. State Department's Title VIII program, the International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), and the Center for Russian and East European Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. The bibliography is currently based at the University of Illinois Library at Urbana-Champaign.

33. Slavic And East European Journal
Publishes research studies in all areas of slavic languages, literatures, and cultures. Offers information for potential authors and subscribers, describes scope of the journal, as well as contact details for the editorial board.
http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~aatseel/AATSEEL/seej/seej.html
AATSEEL Home
Slavic and East European Journal
SEEJ Editorial Board SEEJ Contributor Questionnaire ... Advertising Information
Information for Contributors to Slavic and East European Journal
Slavic and East European Journal is published quarterly by the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages. Information you will find on this page: Subject Matter
SEEJ publishes research studies in all areas of Slavic languages, literatures, and cultures. Papers on non-Slavic East European subjects of interest to Slavicists may also be considered. Submitted articles should be well-documented, and should reflect command of relevant primary sources in original languages and knowledge of the current state of research in appropriate areas. Pedagogical articles report the results of serious research, experimentation, and evaluation. SEEJ does not publish original fiction or translations of literary works.

34. Slavic And East European Library At University Of Illinois
Welcome to the website of the slavic and East European Library at the Universityof Illinois UrbanaChampaign. slavic Reference Service Russian Version SRS
http://gateway.library.uiuc.edu/spx/default.asp

Online

Library

Catalogs

Online
... What's New Slavic and East European Library
225 Main Library, 1408 W. Gregory Dr.
Urbana, IL 61801 (217) 333-1349
Mon - Thurs 8:30 - 5:00, 7:00 - 9:00
Fri 8:30 - 5:00, Sat and Sun 1:00 - 5:00 Link directly to: RAS Bibliographies (INION) (UIUC Only) Newspapers through Eastview (UIUC Only)
Library Archives

About the Library
About the Collection Slavic Reference Service Submit a reference question, Chat with a librarian
Electronic Journals and Newspapers
Newspaper Index, Full text journals Guide to Slavic Information Resources Subject Guides, Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, Periodical Indexes... Internet Resources Databases, General Resources, Country Specific Resources Staff / Contacts Library and Reference Service Staff What's New Announcements, Current Projects, Trial Databases

35. Pacific Coast Slavic And East European Library Consortium
The Pacific Coast slavic and East European Library Consortium (PACSLAV) was formedto promote the development of slavic Studies resources in this region of the
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/Collections/Slavic/Pacslav/
The Pacific Coast Slavic and East European Library Consortium (PACSLAV) was formed to promote the development of Slavic Studies resources in this region of the United States and Canada. The services provided by the Consortium are for the use an d benefit of the faculty, students, and staff of its member institutions. Institutions wishing to apply for membership should consult the Memorandum of Agreement (Organization. Section E). The content of these pages belongs solely to the members of the Pacific Coast Slavic and East European Consortium and cannot be redistributed or altered without the consent of the Consortium.

36. Slavic Paganism & Witchcraft
slavic Paganism Witchcraft This site is dedicated to the Gods, the spiritsand our ancestors. Subscribe to leszi Our online slavic Pagan study group!
http://members.aol.com/hpsofsnert/
htmlAdWH('7005340', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7002028', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help
This site is dedicated to the Gods, the spirits
and our ancestors.
May they awaken once again,
and remember.

Slavic Pagan Beliefs

Holidays

Gods and Goddesses

Herbs
...
Slavic Pagan Resources
- desperately needs updating
The Russian Pagan Tea Room - message board
Books and Research Material - updated 7/07/2002 Subscribe to leszi Our online Slavic Pagan study group! Powered by groups.yahoo.com E-mail me at hpsofsnert@aol.com Visitors

37. South Slavic Literature Library
Excellent sections on encoding, tools and fonts.
http://www.borut.com/library/index.htm
Welcome to the South Slavic Literature Library - the most comprehensive referral point to on-line accessible South Slavic literature on the Web. Please proceede to:

38. 84.02.01: Looking North Of The Greek World: The Slavic Folk Poetry Of The Balkan
Curriculum materials comparing ancient Greek and slavic folk poetry.
http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1984/2/84.02.01.x.html
Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute Home
Looking North Of The Greek World: The Slavic Folk Poetry of The Balkans
by
Henry J. Brajkovic
Contents of Curriculum Unit 84.02.01:
To Guide Entry
A student might say, referring to the Iliad and the Odyssey; “That kind of stuff they did then, nobody does it anymore!” This paper is written to refute such a thought. Another student might wonder: “Where could we find plain folks making up poems?” Another might quip: “As to reciting them, forget it!” Yet, are there today any tribes or nations that have such a tradition? Where could we find an uninterrupted living tradition of uneducated people or persons with only an elementary education creating their own folk poetry? The answer is: in divided Macedonia. Most of Macedonia is located in the southernmost part of Yugoslavia. The remaining parts of Macedonia are in northern Greece, Bulgaria and Albania. The material in this paper could be used for the study of geography, ancient or medieval history, folk poetry, story-telling, or for a study about heroes. Therefore, it is usable in all grades and on all levels. Objectives Can one say that the spirit of creativity lives within each nation? Can one say that “ordinary” folks (distinguished from literary, educated writers and poets) make poetry that many accept? What is one to say about the lyrics of popular songs, for example, in the “standard” pop tunes, early rock, bluegrass and “urban” folk tunes, protest songs, etc. There seems to be a spirit at work among the people seeking an outlet through song. What about poetry readings? Isn’t it true that people want to hear jokes, anecdotes or that children recite rhymes and riddles, passed on from generation to generation of children? Children teaching children: no adults involved!

39. Leaders Of The Russian Revolution
Short biographies of various leaders of the Russian Revolution including Lenin, Trotsky, Kalinin, Kirov, Martov, Axelrod, Zasulich, Ordzhonokidze and Zhdanov.
http://www.library.yale.edu/slavic/leaders.html
Microform Collections
Leaders of the Russian Revolution
Leaders of the Russian Revolution contains microfilm and microfiche copies of the archives of the following nine figures important to the early history of Soviet Russia. Scholars can consult these sources in the Microtext Reading Room, which is in the basement of Sterling Memorial Library. Sterling Memorial Library's hours of operation AXELROD, PAVEL BORISOVICH (1850-1928) The Russian revolution : a CBS Legacy book distributed by The MacMillan Company New York, 1967, p. 92. One of the founders of the "Geneva Group for the Federation of Labour." Together with the St. Petersburg-based "Union for Struggle of the Liberation of the Working Class," this was the foundation of the Russian Social Democratic Workers Party (RSDRP). In 1903 the latter split into the split into the Bolshevik and Menshevik factions, with Axelrod becoming a major figure in the latter. Over the next 25 years, he was the outstanding ideologist, though not the most influential political leader of Menshevism. In Stockholm when the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917, Axelrod elected to remain abroad, and died in exile. The material in the Axelrod Collection dates from 1878 to 1924 and consists of autographs of his published and unpublished articles, correspondence, including that with other leading politicians, and photographs. There are 33 microfiche in the collection.

40. University Of Virginia Slavic Department
University Calendar. MS Windows, Macintosh. Enter search terms (UVAslavic Department topics only; this does not search the whole Web) Category Reference Education School of Arts and Sciences
http://www.virginia.edu/~slavic/
Contact Information
The Academic Program Graduate Undergraduate Russian Summer Institute Program at St. Petersburg University ... Fall 2003 Posters Powerpoint
(with descriptions) Course List for Fall 2003 Course Home Pages for Spring 2003 Advising Newsletter for Spring 2003 Students ... Macintosh Enter search terms (UVA Slavic Department topics only; this does not search the whole Web): Email slavic@virginia.edu for general departmental information
or email slavic-videos@virginia.edu for information about our video library. Forms for department use

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