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Encyclopedia > Bohemian literature

This article or section should be merged with Czech literature

Bohemian literature is literature of Bohemians (also known as Cesi, Czechs) and also literature written in Bohemia in other languages (e.g. Latin, German, Greek, Hebrew or Russian).


The Bohemian language is a western-slavonic language. Slovak and Upper-Sorabian languages (national minority in Saxonia, part of Germany) are quite similar to the Bohemian language and people of those three languages can understand each other without translation.


Bohemia is a short name for Bohemian Crown (or Bohemian Lands) which includes Bohemia (in Bohemian Cechy), Moravia (in B. Morava) and Bohemian part of Silesia (in B. Slezsko). Today's official name of Bohemia is the Czech Republic.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Bohemian literature - definition of Bohemian literature - Labor Law Talk Dictionary (145 words)
Bohemian literature is literature of Bohemians (also known as Cesi, Czechs) and also literature written in Bohemia in other languages (e.g.
Slovak and Upper-Sorabian languages (national minority in Saxonia, part of Germany) are quite similar to the Bohemian language and people of those three languages can understand each other without translation.
Bohemia is a short name for Bohemian Crown (or Bohemian Lands) which includes Bohemia (in Bohemian Cechy), Moravia (in B. Morava) and Bohemian part of Silesia (in B. Slezsko).
  More results at FactBites »

 

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