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      • Based on archaeological evidence, we know that Proto-Slavic people were already active by 1,500 BCE from Poland to Belarus. Some authors have traced the origin of the Slavs back to indigenous Iron Age tribes living in the valleys of the Oder and Vistula rivers (in present-day Poland and the Czech Republic) around the 1st century CE.
      www.worldhistory.org › Slavs
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  2. History of Proto-Slavic. The Proto-Slavic language, the hypothetical ancestor of the modern-day Slavic languages, developed from the ancestral Proto-Balto-Slavic language ( c. 1500 BC), which is the parent language of the Balto-Slavic languages (both the Slavic and Baltic languages, e.g. Latvian and Lithuanian ).

  3. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The Proto-Slavic language, the hypothetical ancestor of the modern-day Slavic languages, developed from the ancestral Proto-Balto-Slavic language ( c. 1500 BC), which is the parent language of the Balto-Slavic languages (both the Slavic and Baltic languages, e.g. Latvian and Lithuanian ).

  4. Sep 10, 2014 · Based on archaeological evidence, we know that Proto-Slavic people were already active by 1,500 BCE from Poland to Belarus. Some authors have traced the origin of the Slavs back to indigenous Iron Age tribes living in the valleys of the Oder and Vistula rivers (in present-day Poland and the Czech Republic) around the 1st century CE.

    • Cristian Violatti
  5. Proto-Slavic (abbreviated PSl., PS.; also called Common Slavic or Common Slavonic) is the unattested, reconstructed proto-language of all Slavic languages. It represents Slavic speech approximately from the 2nd millennium BC through the 6th century AD.

  6. Timeline. c. 1500 BCE. Proto-Slavic people are active within an area that stretched roughly from western Poland to the Dnieper River in Belarus. 531 CE - 534 CE. Byzantine forces engaged in a series of military campaigns against the Slavs and other groups. c. 550 CE.

    • Cristian Violatti
  7. The emergence of the individual Slavic languages. After the schism between the Eastern (Orthodox) and Western (Roman) Christian churches in the 11th century and the beginning of the Crusades, the Church Slavonic language fell out of use in all West Slavic countries and in the western part of the Balkan Slavic region.

  8. views updated. SLAVS AND THE EARLY SLAV CULTURE. The first certain information about the Slavs dates to the sixth century a.d. The question of the location, time, and course of ethnogenetic processes that shaped the "earliest" branch of Indo-Europeans remains one of the most fiercely discussed issues in central and eastern European historiography.

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