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         Slavic:     more books (100)
  1. Slavic Excursions: Essays on Russian and Polish Literature by Donald Davie, 1990-06-11
  2. The Life of Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago (Stanford Slavic Studies)
  3. Choosing Slovakia: Slavic Hungary, the Czechoslovak Language and Accidental Nationalism (International Library of Political Studies) by Alexander Maxwell, 2009-10-15
  4. A Prehistory of Slavic: the Historical Phonology of Common Slavic by George Y. Shevelov, 1965
  5. The Slavic Name in History by Ancestry.com, 2007-06-23
  6. The Martyred Princes Boris and Gleb: A Social-Cultural Study of the Cult and the Texts (Ucla Slavic Studies, Vol 19) by Gail Lenhoff, 1989-06-01
  7. Russian Postmodernism: New Perspectives on Post-Soviet Culture (Studies in Slavic Literature, Culture, and Society, Vol 3) by Mikhail Epshtein, Alexander Genis, et all 1999-02
  8. The Learning and Teaching of Slavic Languages and Cultures by Olga Kagan, 2000-11-01
  9. The Bugarstica: A Bilingual Anthology of the Earliest Extant South Slavic Folk Narrative Song (Illinois Medieval Studies) by John S. Miletich, 1990-03-01
  10. Case and Aspect in Slavic (Oxford Linguistics) by Kylie Richardson, 2007-08-23
  11. Russian Literature and its Demons (Studies in Slavic Literature, Culture, and Society, V. 8)
  12. Toward a Philosophy of the Act (University of Texas Press Slavic Series) by M.M. Bakhtin, 1993
  13. Parameters of Slavic Aspect: A Cognitive Approach (Center for the Study of Language and Information - Lecture Notes) by Stephen M. Dickey, 2000-06-01
  14. Slavic Sins of the Flesh: Food, Sex, and Carnal Appetite in Nineteenth-Century Russian Fiction (Becoming Modern: New Nineteenth-Century Studies) by Ronald D. LeBlanc, 2009-06-30

61. Slav/ Germ Manual: Slavic Languages Cataloging Table Of Contents
Credits and short description of focus and scope of this manual, Index to the slavic Cataloging Manual Send a message. Short Courses
http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/katmandu/sgman/smtocs.html
[Top] [Team Table of Contents]
Introduction

Credits and short description of
focus and scope of this manual Index to the
Slavic Cataloging Manual
Send
a
...
message
Short Courses
Prolegomenon to the Short Courses
Subject Analysis

Name and Title Changes
Descriptive Cataloging ... Table of Contents

Detailed guidelines for each bibliographic field Acquisitions Information

62. Apartments And Pension - Island Of Hvar - Hvar Apartment Hvar Ferienwohnung Hvar
Apartments and pension for rent in Sucuraj. Features contact information, prices, and travel directions with maps.
http://www.apartman-hvar.com
english deutsch italiano slovenšèina Welcome to Dalmatia site map links

63. Center For Slavic, Eurasian And East European Studies
Center for slavic, Eurasian and East European Studies. blue line the Center is one of fifteen National Resource Centers (NRC) in slavic, Eurasian,
http://www.unc.edu/depts/slavic/
Established in 1991 and operated jointly by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University, the Center is one of fifteen National Resource Centers (NRC) in Slavic, Eurasian, and East European Studies so designated by the International Education and Graduate Programs (IEGPS) Office of the US Department of Education. Government funds through a Title VI NRC grant support a variety of activities, including teacher training, undergraduate education, graduate student and faculty research, exchange programs, conferences, seminars, and public outreach programs. Upcoming Events and Announcements: Recent Publications: Quick Links: To join our mailing list, contact

64. Bearded Collie
Pictures, show results, and information about new litters. Poland.
http://www.beardedcollie.katowice.pi.pl/
Cassie
"SLAVIC CHARM" BEARDED COLLIES
Kontakt Isza Szczenieta Nowosci!!! ... Switch to ENGLISH Uaktualniono 05.05.05 Reproduktory Wystawy

65. Polish Slavic Federal Credit Union
Manhattan. Serves the needs of people of Polish and slavic origin.
http://www.psfcu.com/

66. Pre-Christian Eastern Slavic Reflections On Nature
An account of how, the Eastern Slavs, particularly the preChristian Russians, interacted with nature.
http://www.ignca.nic.in/ps_05018.htm
MAN IN NATURE
Previous Page
Contents of the Book Next Page Pre-Christian Eastern Slavic Reflections on Nature Molly Kaushal According to some scholars, Rusi, or Russians as we call them, have their origins in the word Roce . Although conjectural, this view is of a direct relevance to the paper, and I shall dwell upon it a little more. Roce was the name of an ancient river, a stream of the Dnieper, which flowed in the city called Rodnei. Rod or Svetovit was their clan god, and the bear their totem. Ancestor worship was common, and the dead were cremated. The central god — Svetovit or Belbog (the white god or the god of heavenly lights) later came to be represented by the thunder god Perun, the most revered god of the Eastern Slavs as late as the seventeenth century. If Belbog or Perun was the god of the heavenly lights, Chernobog — the black god — represented death. It has already been stated that the relations between these deities were not hierarchical; these three deities formed, as it were, the triangle of the slavic religion. arbor mundi and the axis mundi in the slavic religion.

67. University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill, Department Of Slavic Languages And
Department Chair Beth Holmgren Director of Graduate Studies - Madeline G. Levine Director of Undergraduate Studies - Christopher Putney
http://www.unc.edu/depts/slavdept/
Department Chair - Beth Holmgren
Director of Graduate Studies - Madeline G. Levine
Director of Undergraduate Studies - Christopher Putney
Department Manager - Glenda Thompson
425 Dey Hall CB# 3165 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3165
phone: 919-962-3977 fax: 919-962-2278 email: slavdept@unc.edu

68. Frater Gwydion's Magickal Gateways
A slavic thelemite and neopagan in Serbia, Frater Gwydion provides information and a mailing list on slavic Gods and The Book of Veles.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/8933/
I'm Frater Gwydion and I live in Serbia, Yugoslavia. Yes I know, this is that awful place so torn up with war. As you can guess this is very fucking bad place for living with a lot of communists and fundamental Christians in unnatural coalition. It means a lot of various repression and violations of individual rights. A lot of people left the country. But I don't want to flee. I'm not a "pussy", I'm a Slavic Pagan, and I'm proud of this. Also, I'm a Thelemite. If you are interested in what Thelema is you can get some information about this here
I use the name Gwydion because I'm a Celtophile. But primarily I'm Slavic Pagan and one of the people who work on the reanimation of our native religion. You can read something about old Slavic Gods here . I don't know if The Book of Veles, a very important Slavic Pagan text from the XI century, translated in English, but according to my information our Brothers from Russia will put translation on the WWW in the next months. Till then you can read what some people from the Leszi mailing list said about The Book of Veles here
Drawings (by Jurij Miroljubov) on the top of this page represents Mater Slave, principal Goddess of the Slavs. Between her wings is the Pantheon of Slavic Gods and Goddesses. She is the Cosmic Mother described as a bird in The Book of Veles. She came back among us. And we, her children, salute her. You can read something little about her

69. Moist Mother Earth - Slavic Myth And Religion
slavic Myth and Religion, slavic Gods, and rituals.
http://www.winterscapes.com/slavic.htm
Slavic Myth and Religion Gods and Goddesses
Otherworldly Creatures

Calendar Festivals

Death and the Afterlife
...
Bibliography
and Websites This page contains lists of information I've gathered on Slavic gods, rituals, etc. While my primary passion is ancient Greek paganism, I am also interested in pre-Christian Slavic religion, and these are the fruits of my research. I do not claim to be an expert, but I hope my efforts help others called to the Slavic way. For more about me, see my homepage . Or you can email me Russian text, The Way in which Pagans acclaimed Idols (9th-12th cen.) "And these very people have begun to sacrifice to the Rod and to the Rozanitsa,
to Perun, their god, whereas formerly they sacrificed to vampires and nymphs." Gods and Goddesses Baba Yaga is a traditional crone goddess - portrayed not as wise and gentle, but frightening and terrible (although sometimes wise as well). She is one of the most frequent characters in Russian fairy tales, where she plays the part of a witch. She lives in a peasant hut made of bones which stands on chicken legs and spins, and is lighted by glowing skulls on posts. She travels through the air in a mortar bowl, pushing it along with the pestle or a broom. She is always very hungry. In mythology, she is sometimes represented as a snake coiled around the Waters of Life and Death. Byelobog means "white god," and so he appears as an old man with a long white beard, dressed in white and carrying a staff. He is a giver of light, traveling only in the daytime. He leads the lost out of dark forests, bestows wealth and fertility on all, and helps reapers in the fields. He fights with Chernobog every winter and summer solstice.

70. The Early Slavic Studies Association
Scholarly, nonprofit organization based in the US dedicated to fostering the study of pre-eighteenth century slavic studies.
http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~essa/
The Early Slavic Studies Association
Statement of Purpose:
"The Early Slavic Studies Association is a scholarly, non-profit organization dedicated to fostering closer worldwide communication among scholars interested in pre-eighteenth century Slavic studies; and to promoting the dissemination of scholarly information on early Slavic studies through the organization of meetings and conferences and through the Association's newsletter." ESSA meeting at AAASS Our conference in Salt Lake City is coming soon. The ESSA meeting will be Friday, November 4 during session 5 that's 2:15-4:15 p.m. in the Sun Valley Room of the Little America Hotel. The Vienna Bistro - 132 S. Main St. For $16/person we get an entree, salad and dessert (they will offer a limited menu of goulash, a chicken dish; vegetarians can also be accomodated). Drinks are extra.
Officers

Newsletters

Constitution

Announcements
...
ESSA Web Directory of Specialists

Questions? Comments? Contact Sandra Levy , ESSA Webmaster. It was last modified 09.01.2005.

71. Russian Fairy Tales, Spring 1998: Pagan Gods
List of Russian prechristian gods, taken from Linda Ivanits' Russian Folk Belief.
http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~tales/pagan.html
Russian 0090: Russian Fairy Tales
Russian Pagan Gods
The following inventory and discussion of Russian pagan gods is taken from Linda Ivanits, Russian Folk Belief, Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1989. Russian words are transliterated according to the Library of Congress system , with the stressed vowel indicated by bold type . Numbers in parentheses are page references to Ivanits's book.
D a zhbog
sun god, also god of blessings and son of Svar o g; Iranian influence (13)
Iar i lo
minor god of male sexual potency (14); associated by Rybakov with s e mik
Kh o rs
sun god; Iranian influence (13)
Kol ia da
spirit of the winter solstice (14)
K u palo
spirit of the summer solstice, associated with K u palo's Day (June 24) (14)
L a da, L a do
variously thought to be the mother of L e l' and Pol e l', a god of the underworld and marriage, or not a deity at all (14); Rybakov considers her the goddess of spring and mother of L e lia (17)
L e l'
possibly the son of L a da and brother of Pol e l' (14)
L e lia
possibly the daughter of L a da (17)
M a t' syr a zeml ia
Moist Mother Earth, personification of the earth as a female deity (15)
Mok o sh'
only female deity included among Vladimir's idols, possibly associated with Moist Mother Earth (14); Rybakov associates her with fertility, bounty, mositure, women's work, the protection of maidens (16), October 28 (

72. Russian And East European Studies
slavic Information Resources. University of Pittsburgh REESWeb Medieval slavic Character Sets, Fonts, Typesetting, and Transcription
http://clover.slavic.pitt.edu/~djb/slavic.html
Russian and East European Studies
Slavic Information Resources
Medieval Slavic Studies
General Medieval Slavic Studies

73. Cleveland Neighborhood Tour
Presents neighborhood history, tour, map, census details, and community resources.
http://www.nhlink.net/neighborhoodtour/south-broadway/

74. SEELRC : The Slavic And East European Language Resource Center
SEELRC The slavic and East European Language Resource Center. Projects Webliographies Ejournal Glossos Summer Institutes About SEELRC
http://seelrc.org/
SEELRC The Slavic and East European Language Resource Center Projects
Webliographies

E-journal
Glossos ...
About SEELRC
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CURRENT PROJECTS
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    E stablished in 1999 and operated jointly by Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Slavic and East European Language Resource Center (SEELRC) is one of fourteen National Foreign Language Resource Centers. T he mission of the SEELRC (pronounced "see-l-r-c") is to improve the national capacity to teach and learn Slavic and East European languages. The Center accomplishes this by developing teaching and assessment materials as well as by supporting research and a variety of activities, including undergraduate and graduate education and exchange programs, conferences, seminars, and public outreach programs. Funding for the Center comes from the U.S. Department of Education under Title VI of the Higher Education Act of 1965.

75. Slavophilia-Russia And Central/Eastern European Internet Resources
slavic Studies Archives and Libraries, Area Studies Social Sciences Society and Culture Ethnic Groups, Family, Genealogy
http://www.slavophilia.com/

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76. Mythology's Mything Links: Eastern Europe / Pan Slavic Traditions & Beliefs
Focusing on the polarities and depth of slavic mythology. Provides artwork and descriptive links.
http://www.mythinglinks.org/euro~east~panSlavic.html
MYTH*ING LINKS
by Kathleen Jenks, Ph.D.
GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
EUROPE: EASTERN EUROPE
Pan Slavic Traditions and Beliefs
Page is graphics-intensive please be patient while it loads.
Myth*ing Links Search Engine (Note: some of the themes dealt with on this page are also found elsewhere in Myth*ing Links, which is why I'm including the search engine here.)
Vasilisa and the White Horseman of Dawn
By Kharcheb
(Courtesy of Tradestone International Author's Note: 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. . . .
GENERAL REFERENCE SECTION
The Firebird and Ivan (Courtesy of Russian Sunbirds

http://members.aol.com/HPSofSNERT/beli.html

77. Cyrillic For Windows
Type Russian or any other slavic language with an easyto-learn Cyrillic keyboard layout in Windows 95/98/ME or NT4/2000/XP.
http://zsigri.tripod.com/fontboard/cyrillic.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
Search: Lycos Tripod Murderball Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
Cyrillic for Windows
Version 2.2 Home
Contents
Cyrillic keyboard layout for Western users
Microsoft's Cyrillic keyboard layouts are perfect for Cyrillic physical keyboards but what if you have a Western keyboard? You can download a keyboard layout from this site, designed for the U. S. keyboard. Contents Up
How do you switch languages?
Switch languages with the keyboard layout indicator on the Windows taskbar: Up Up
How do you type Cyrillic?
Most keys are mapped by sound or transliteration:
Transliteration follows the orthographies of Slavic languages written with the Latin alphabet:
Keys in red are mapped by shape:
Well, some mappings are arbitrary but not completely. If the soft sign is mapped onto the ' key then it is logical to map the hard sign onto the ` key.
Contents Up
Download
I believe this package to be safe but it is entirely your risk to download and use it. You can freely use and distribute it but you are not allowed to restrict the rights of others to freely use and distribute it.

78. NYPL, Slavic And Baltic Division
The slavic and Baltic Division is the locus for the Library s single largest of slavic and Baltic vernacular language monographic and serial materials,
http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/slv/slav.balt.html
@import "/styles/markup-nonNS4.css"; Skip to Left Navigation Skip to Main Content get a library card? find a book? renew a book? reserve a book? research a topic? find a job at NYPL? volunteer for NYPL? support NYPL? rent space? order/license images? learn to read? learn English? find events? find exhibitions? find classes? connect with wireless? Humanities and Social Sciences Library
Slavic and Baltic Division
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phone: (212) 930-0714
fax: (212) 930-0693
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"Man Reading," Paris, 1958.
Original painting by Ukrainian-American artist Jacques Hnizdovsky (1915-85). Donated by Ms. Mira Hnizdovsky, 1995. Slavic and Baltic Division. The Slavic and Baltic Division is the locus for the Library's single largest concentration of Slavic and Baltic vernacular language monographic and serial materials, with more than 465,323 volumes, 1,200 current serials, and 21,800 microform titles. More Library Marketplace Space Rental Contact Us ... Policy on Public Use of the Internet

79. Index
Recreational and performing South slavic folk dance group from Dayton, Ohio, sponsored by the Association of South slavic Peoples.
http://www.geocities.com/ziviodayton/
Preserving the dance culture of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia.
Located in Dayton, Ohio, USA
Here is more information on Zivio! activities Adult performing group instruction and rehearsals (Jan - May)
2005 Calendar of Events
Kolo Party 2005, "Igranka" "Vecherinka"
( May 07)
Zivio and Zivio Jr. at Dayton's "A World A'Fair"

(May 13 - 15)
Polka Fest 2005
- (August 28)
Adult classes in Slavic Folk Dancing
(Sept - Dec)
Slavic Kolo Party 2005
(Fall, Oct. 08)
Past Zivio! Dance Suites

Zivio Costumes
Zivio! is a folk dance group whose purpose is to preserve and present the folk culture (especially dance) of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia. We are sponsored by the Association of South Slavic Peoples in Dayton, Ohio. Also known as the South Slavic Club, it is primarily a social organization with members of many nationalities who share an interest in the cultures of South Slavic Peoples. Both organizations are non-political and non-profit. Our activities include adult amateur performances, classes in folk dancing, childrens classes and performing, public dance parties, and occasional folk dance workshops.

80. Department Of Slavic Languages, Georgetown University
Provides contentbased instruction in Russian, Ukrainian, and Polish as well as a variety of courses in Russian literature, culture, and linguistics. Undergraduate major and minor in Russian and a concentration within the M.A. degree in Russian Area Studies. Cources, faculty, and activities.
http://www.georgetown.edu/departments/slavic/
Updated 8/1/04
Georgetown University

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