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  1. A sign in Venetian reading "Here Venetian is also spoken" Distribution of Romance languages in Europe. Venetian is number 15. Venetian, wider Venetian or Venetan (łengua vèneta [ˈeŋɡwa ˈvɛneta] or vèneto) is a Romance language spoken natively in the northeast of Italy, mostly in Veneto, where most of the five million inhabitants can understand it.

  2. Jul 26, 2020 · Addeddate 2020-07-26 05:13:11 Genre Encyclopedia Identifier enwiki-Venetian_language-20200726.pdf Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t13p14z5w

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  4. Venetic language, a language spoken in northeastern Italy before the Christian era. Known to modern scholars from some 200 short inscriptions dating from the 5th through the 1st century bc , it is written either in Latin characters or in a native alphabet derived from Etruscan , the Etruscans having established settlements in the Po Valley in ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Middle Ages
    • The Republic of Venice
    • Republic of Venice and The Kingdom of Hungary in Dalmatia
    • Venetian and Ottoman Rule in Dalmatia
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    • Bibliography
    • References

    Venice influenced Dalmatia commercially since the times of Charlemagne. But only at the end of the first millennium the Republic of Venicestarted to conquest Dalmatia. Indeed, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Illyrian towns on the dalmatian coast continued to speak Latin and their language evolved relatively independent from other Romanc...

    Dalmatia never attained a political or racial unity and never formed as a "nation", but it achieved a remarkable development of art, science and literature. Politically, the neolatin Dalmatian city-states were often isolated and compelled to either fall back on the Venetian Republic for support, or tried to make it on their own. The geographical po...

    As the city states gradually lost all protection by Byzantium, being unable to unite in a defensive league hindered by their internal dissensions, they had to turn to either Venice or Hungaryfor support. Each of the two political factions had support within the Dalmatian city states, based mostly on economic reasons. The Venetians, to whom the Dalm...

    During the Venetian rule in Dalmatia from 1420 to 1797 the number of Orthodox Serbs in Dalmatiawas increased by numerous migrations. An interval of peace ensued, but meanwhile the Ottoman advance continued. Hungary was itself assailed by the Turks, and could no longer afford to try to control Dalmatia. Christian kingdoms and regions in the east fel...

    Narodni Trg (Pjaca) in Spalato/Split. Pjaca means square in old Venetian (piazain old Italian).
    St. Mary's Church in Zara/Zadar. Built with "Stone of Istria" in typical Venetian style of northern Dalmatia.
    Cathedral of St. Anastasia, Zara/Zadar. Basilica in Romanesque style built in the 12th to 13th century (high Romanesque style), the largest cathedral in Dalmatia.
    The Venetian-looking view of Lussinpiccolo/Losinj, a city of northern Dalmatia that belonged to Italy until 1947.
    Chambers, D.S. (1970). The Imperial Age of Venice, 1380-1580.London: Thames & Hudson.
    Garrett, Martin, "Venice: a Cultural History" (2006). Revised edition of "Venice: a Cultural and Literary Companion" (2001).
    John Rigby Hale. Renaissance Venice (1974) (ISBN 978-0-571-10429-1)
    Lane, Frederic Chapin (1973). Venice, a maritime republic. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-1445-7.

    Wolff, Larry (2002). Venice and the Slavs: The Discovery of Dalmatia in the Age of Enlightenment. Stanford University Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-8047-3946-7.

  5. Among other Wikipedia in linguistic varieties, Venetian Wikipedia is positioned among the top 12 Wikipedias that contain more than 5000 written article contents.2 Therefore, Venetian Wikipedia represents a regional language variety of Wikipedia in the European context with a quite larger amount of article content produced in this language and ...

  6. This page was last edited on 14 December 2023, at 03:35 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

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