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Common Roots of the Latvian and Estonian Literary Languages

by Kristiina Ross (Author) Peteris Vanags (Author)
©2008 Edited Collection 380 Pages

Summary

Estonian and Latvian are members of different language families. Estonian is a Finno-Ugric language, while Latvian belongs to the Baltic branch of the Indo-European languages. The cultural and socio-political developments of Estonia and Latvia, however, have been remarkably similar since the Christianisation of the two peoples in the 13th century. The Estonian and Latvian cultures were both moulded to form part of Christian Europe by German-speaking mediators who worked hard from the 16th to 18th centuries in order to create the Estonian and Latvian literary languages by translating ecclesiastical texts. The authors assume that similarities in the cultural history must have left some similar traces in the structures of the two languages as well. This book represents a collection of papers on certain common developments in the Estonian and Latvian cultural history, which are obviously related to the formation of the two literary languages.

Details

Pages
380
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631563441
Language
English
Keywords
Estonian Estnisch Literatursprache Lettisch Ähnlichkeit Geschichte 1250-1750 Aufsatzsammlung Latvian Christianisation
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. 380 pp., 3 fig., num. tables

Biographical notes

Kristiina Ross (Author) Peteris Vanags (Author)

The Editors: Kristiina Ross, born 1955, is researcher at the Institute of the Estonian Language in Tallinn. Her main field of research is the early history of literary Estonian, especially the history of Estonian Bible translations. Pēteris Vanags, born 1962, is professor of the Baltic languages at the University of Latvia in Riga and at Stockholm University. His main fields of research are connected with the history of the Baltic languages, especially the early written period (16th-18th century) of Latvian.

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Title: Common Roots of the Latvian and Estonian Literary Languages