Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
There, Slavdom was perhaps never completely broken.
On the opposite wall is an allegory entitled "Slavdom's Homage to Prague".
The poetics of Slavdom: the mythopoeic foundations of Yugoslavia", Volume 2"
---- The expansion of agriculture was especially noticeable along the frontiers of the Latin society from Spain to Slavdom.
The area of early Slavdom, which roughly coincides with the territory of Ukraine, was at an important crossroad, namely, barbarian migrations from the north, south, and west.
Fragmenty dziejów Słowiańszczyzny Zachodniej (Fragments of the History of Western Slavdom), vols.
Besides magnifying Slavdom and the battles against the conquerors, Ivan described the life of the Ottoman sultan Osman II.
Classical Slavophiles believed that "Slavdom", that is the alleged by Slavophile movement common identity to all people of Slavic origin, was based on Orthodox religion.
Slav raids on Eastern Roman territory are mentioned in 518, and by the 580s they had conquered large areas referred to as Sclavinia ("Slavdom", from Sklavenoi).
The name Biograd is a compound literally meaning "white city", and etymologically corresponding to several other toponyms spread throughout the Slavdom: Beograd, Belgorod, Białogard etc.
The very name Slavophiles indicated that the characteristics of the Slavs were based on their ethnicity, but at the same time Slavophiles believed that Orthodoxy equaled Slavdom.
Other subjects often discussed in the Wilhelm-Chamberlain letters were the dangers posed to the Reich by the "Yellow Peril", "Tartarized Slavdom", and by the "black hordes".
While these territorial claims were regarded as "megalomaniac" by the Soviet ambassador in London, in October 1941 Stalin announced the "return of East Prussia to Slavdom" after the war.
The outcome was to postpone plans for war with the Russian Empire until the near future, but to prepare the German public for an inevitable "racial war, the war of Slavdom against Germandom" in 1914 or 1915.
The term Byzantinism was used in a positive context by 19th-century Russian scholar Konstantin Leontiev in Byzantism and Slavdom (1875) to describe the type of society which Russian Empire needs to counter the degenerating influence of the West.
This Horace Evsevonovich (just think, what a primordial Russian name, it had the fresh smell of plowed earth about it, it came from the very depths of Slavdom) definitely had dignity, it was at once apparent that he was both experienced and quick-witted.