History and Territorial Boundaries. The Yiddish language emerged around the tenth century among the Jewish communities in Lotharingia in the Rhine valley. From there it spread to Northern Italy, Northern France and Holland with newly established Ashkenazi colonies, and under the impact of the Crusades to Central Europe and then eastward, to Slavic countires.33 Old Yiddish (1250-1500), primarily a spoken language, functioned as the language of oral tales, songs, fables, and proverbs. From that period scattered glosses and phrases are extant, the earliest of them is a blessing inscribed in an illuminated prayer book of Worms dated from 1272. The earliest document of literary activity in Yiddish dates from 1382. It was discovered in a cachet o...
Shortly after World War I, when Yiddish literature began to be written and published in Palestine, a...
Eastern Yiddish is geographically spoken in Eastern European countries such as Poland, Ukraine, Lith...
Following the Holocaust, when Eastern European Yiddish-language culture was all but destroyed and mi...
History and Territorial Boundaries. The Yiddish language emerged around the tenth century among the ...
Jewish Literature in the Yiddish Language (XVIth-XVIIth centuries) : Religious Crisis, vernacular Cu...
ABSTRACT : One of the main transformations in the Jewish communities in Central and Eastern Europe d...
The Bovo-bukh written by Elia Levita is one of the most famous epics in the history of the Jewish li...
In an attempt to balance the complex, multi-component nature of Yiddish with its more homogenous spe...
Yiddish was spoken in pre-war Poland by just under 3 million people and thrived as a literary, theat...
Roughly one third of Old Yiddish literature is based on traceable European literary sources, mainly ...
The Dutch language has inherited several words and expressions from the Yiddish language spoken by A...
This article discusses the importance of Yiddish for our understanding of European Jewish histories ...
Le Département d'Histoire et le Programme des études yiddish de l'Université hébraïque de Jérusalem ...
Weitere Informationen unter: http://www.dovidkatz.net/dovid/dovid_stylistics.htm This version of th...
ABSTRACT : Yiddish constitutes an original example among European languages. A continuous grammatica...
Shortly after World War I, when Yiddish literature began to be written and published in Palestine, a...
Eastern Yiddish is geographically spoken in Eastern European countries such as Poland, Ukraine, Lith...
Following the Holocaust, when Eastern European Yiddish-language culture was all but destroyed and mi...
History and Territorial Boundaries. The Yiddish language emerged around the tenth century among the ...
Jewish Literature in the Yiddish Language (XVIth-XVIIth centuries) : Religious Crisis, vernacular Cu...
ABSTRACT : One of the main transformations in the Jewish communities in Central and Eastern Europe d...
The Bovo-bukh written by Elia Levita is one of the most famous epics in the history of the Jewish li...
In an attempt to balance the complex, multi-component nature of Yiddish with its more homogenous spe...
Yiddish was spoken in pre-war Poland by just under 3 million people and thrived as a literary, theat...
Roughly one third of Old Yiddish literature is based on traceable European literary sources, mainly ...
The Dutch language has inherited several words and expressions from the Yiddish language spoken by A...
This article discusses the importance of Yiddish for our understanding of European Jewish histories ...
Le Département d'Histoire et le Programme des études yiddish de l'Université hébraïque de Jérusalem ...
Weitere Informationen unter: http://www.dovidkatz.net/dovid/dovid_stylistics.htm This version of th...
ABSTRACT : Yiddish constitutes an original example among European languages. A continuous grammatica...
Shortly after World War I, when Yiddish literature began to be written and published in Palestine, a...
Eastern Yiddish is geographically spoken in Eastern European countries such as Poland, Ukraine, Lith...
Following the Holocaust, when Eastern European Yiddish-language culture was all but destroyed and mi...