Throughout history, there has been different usage of the term (ON.) Wendland, Vendland, Ventheland or (Lat.) Vandalia. The Latinized form is usually associated with the germanic tribe Vandals, although Wendland or Vandalia is the land inhabited by the Wends (today considered to be a Slavic people). The most common interpretations: Old Norse or Danish tongue is the Germanic language once spoken by the inhabitants of the Nordic countries (for instance during the Viking Age). ... Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. ... Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. ... The Vandals were an East Germanic tribe that entered the late Roman Empire during the 5th century and created a state in North Africa, centered on the city of Carthage. ... Wends (German: Wenden, Latin: Venedi) is the English name for some Slavic people from north-central Europe particularly the Sorbs living in modern-day Germany. ... Interpretation, or interpreting, is an activity that consists of establishing, either simultaneously or consecutively, oral or gestural communications between two or more speakers who are not speaking (or signing) the same language. ...
The region inhabited by West Slavic groups, corresponding to North-Eastern Germany.
The region Lüchow-Dannenberg including the former micronation de:Republik_Freies_Wendland.
According to the Finnish historian Matti Klinge, an earlier name for Finland, especially Finland Proper. This theory has few supporters, and is based on an interpretion of old maps, some of which place Wendland in the far north or European Russia, and term Gulf of Finland as 'Mare Vendicus'.
The Slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages) comprise the languages of the Slavic peoples. ... Lüchow-Dannenberg is a district in Lower Saxony, Germany. ... Micronations â sometimes also referred to as cybernations, fantasy countries, model countries, and new country projects â are entities that resemble independent nations or states, but which are unrecognized by them, and for the most part exist only on paper, on the Internet, or in the minds of their creators. ... Matti Klinge (Born August 31, 1936 -), Finnish historian, Ph. ... Finland Proper (Varsinais-Suomi in Finnish, Egentliga Finland in Swedish) is a region in south-western Finland. ... European Russia can be considered the western areas of Russia, where most of the population is centred. ... The Baltic Sea The Gulf of Finland is an arm of the Baltic Sea that extends between Finland (to the north) and Estonia (to the south) all the way to the city of Saint Petersburg in Russia, where the river Neva drains into it. ...
Rose Wendland said that her husband had told her before the accident that he would not want to be kept alive under the circumstances he now faced.
Rose Wendland has testified that her husband told her shortly before the accident that he would not want to be kept alive if he was on life support.
She said that Florence Wendland, 78, felt that a trip to San Francisco was too much for her and preferred to spend the day with her son in his Lodi hospital room.
Wendland emerged from the coma, but today remains tethered to feeding tubes and lives with only a fleeting sense of what goes on around him.
According to testimony in a 1997 trial, Wendland told both his wife and brother that he would not want to survive artificially; the issue was discussed just before the car accident because of concerns about Robert's drinking and driving habits.
Florence Wendland's lawyers are asking the state Supreme Court to declare the California law unconstitutional, warning that it provides more rights to conservators than to the most vulnerable people in society.