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Les Slaves: peuples et nations (Destins Du…
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Les Slaves: peuples et nations ("Destins Du Monde") (edición 1965)

por Roger Portal (Autor)

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"The Slavs is a book of original conception and wide scope: it covers over a thousand years of history, from the eighth century to the present day. The Slav peoples, inhabiting the eastern fringes of Europe, were latecomers to civilization. They developed as separate nations, and although they have now been brought together under a single ideology, this relative uniformity makes a strong contrast with the diversity and tumult of the past. The Eastern Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, Byelorussians), the Poles, the Czechs and Slovaks, the Croats and Slovenes, the Bulgars and Macedonians--each of these groups followed a path of its own. Eventful and often tragic, Slav history in all periods is fascinatingly strange. In most Slavic countries, the Middle Ages have dovetailed directly with the modern world. Serfdom did not disappear from Russia until the mid-nineteenth century. Economic development was late. But change, when it came, was stupendously rapid: the switch to capitalism took place far more quickly than in the West, and the new social forms it brought with it turned out to be mushroom growths. After two world wars and the revolution of 1917, the social and economic structure of the twentieth-century Slav world is still in process of radical transformation. The author has successfully disentangled the confusion of nationalities, languages and religions in Slavic history. He presents at vivid, evocative picture--both of remote periods, in all their charm and naiveté, and of the present day, which he treats in an unusually objective spirit."--Dust jacket.… (más)
Miembro:FERNANDOJ
Título:Les Slaves: peuples et nations ("Destins Du Monde")
Autores:Roger Portal (Autor)
Información:Librairie Armand Colin (1965)
Colecciones:HISTORIA
Valoración:
Etiquetas:J5-1, HISTORIA

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The Slavs; a cultural and historical survey of the Slavonic peoples por Roger PORTAL

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A study of Slavic development and migration from the 8th century. Mostly emphasizes other Slavs but has a nice section called “Birth of a Nation: the Slovenes,” in which he talks about the development of literature as the basis for their nationalism. That and the crush of Teutonic culture and Croatian “Illyrianism” and general “Pan-Slav” ambitions(unspecified as to whom.) He lists all the early authors, and adds, “Although legislation[by the Austrians] fostered the teaching of German at the expense of Slovenian, the population as a whole benefited from the high quality of the educational system; of all the South Slav peoples the Slovenes had the lowest illiteracy rate (3 per cent of the under-twenties in 1910. and less than one percent in 1990 ( )
  Dragavon | Oct 1, 2009 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
PORTAL, Rogerautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
KOCBEK, Edvardautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
KOSMAC, Cirilautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
SOLOMAN, Tomasautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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"The Slavs is a book of original conception and wide scope: it covers over a thousand years of history, from the eighth century to the present day. The Slav peoples, inhabiting the eastern fringes of Europe, were latecomers to civilization. They developed as separate nations, and although they have now been brought together under a single ideology, this relative uniformity makes a strong contrast with the diversity and tumult of the past. The Eastern Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, Byelorussians), the Poles, the Czechs and Slovaks, the Croats and Slovenes, the Bulgars and Macedonians--each of these groups followed a path of its own. Eventful and often tragic, Slav history in all periods is fascinatingly strange. In most Slavic countries, the Middle Ages have dovetailed directly with the modern world. Serfdom did not disappear from Russia until the mid-nineteenth century. Economic development was late. But change, when it came, was stupendously rapid: the switch to capitalism took place far more quickly than in the West, and the new social forms it brought with it turned out to be mushroom growths. After two world wars and the revolution of 1917, the social and economic structure of the twentieth-century Slav world is still in process of radical transformation. The author has successfully disentangled the confusion of nationalities, languages and religions in Slavic history. He presents at vivid, evocative picture--both of remote periods, in all their charm and naiveté, and of the present day, which he treats in an unusually objective spirit."--Dust jacket.

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