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Marko Marulić | A Wisdom Archive on Marko Marulić |  | Marko Marulić A selection of articles related to Marko Marulić |  |
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Marko Marulić |  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples
Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš.
Mlačna noć; u selu lavež; kasan
Ćuk il netopir;
Ljubav cvijeća - miris jak i strasan
Slavi tajni pir.
Sitni cvrčak sjetno cvrči, jasan
Kao srebren vir;
Teške oči sklapaju se na san,
S neba rosi mir.
S mrkog tornja bat
Broji pospan sat,
Blaga svjetlost sipi sa visina;
Kroz samoću, muk,
Sve je ti ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - CountiesMain article: Counties of Croatia
Croatia is divided into 20 counties (Croatian: županija) and the city district of the capital, Zagreb*:
Zagreb county (Zagrebačka županija)
Krapina-Zagorje county (Krapinsko-zagorska županija)
Sisak-Moslavina county (Sisačko-moslavačka županija)
Karlovac county (Karlovačka županija)
Varaždin county (Varaždinska županija)
Koprivnica-Križevci county (Koprivničko-križevačka županija)
Bjelovar-Bilogora county (Bjelo ...
See also:Croatia, Croatia - Name, Croatia - History, Croatia - Counties, Croatia - Geography, Croatia - Politics, Croatia - Political system, Croatia - European Union, Croatia - Economy, Croatia - Demographics, Croatia - Culture, Croatia - Famous Croats, Croatia - Literature Read more here: » Croatia: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - Counties |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - DemographicsMain article: Demographics of Croatia
The population of Croatia has been stagnating over the last decade. The 1991-1995 war in Croatia had previously displaced large parts of the population and increased emigration. The natural growth rate is minute or negative (less than +/- 1%), as the demographic transition has been completed half a century ago. Average life expectancy is approximately 7 ...
See also:Croatia, Croatia - Name, Croatia - History, Croatia - Counties, Croatia - Geography, Croatia - Politics, Croatia - Political system, Croatia - European Union, Croatia - Economy, Croatia - Demographics, Croatia - Culture, Croatia - Famous Croats, Croatia - Literature Read more here: » Croatia: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - Demographics |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - HistoryMain article: History of Croatia
The Croats are largely Slavic people who lived in an area of what is today Galicia (in northwestern Ukraine and southern Poland). From there they migrated further south to present-day Croatia during the 7th century. Nominally under East Roman and then Frankish authority, Croatia eventually became a strong independent kingdom under king Tomislav in 925, but in 1102 the Croatians ended a decade-long dynastic struggle by agreeing to submit ...
See also:Croatia, Croatia - Name, Croatia - History, Croatia - Counties, Croatia - Geography, Croatia - Politics, Croatia - Political system, Croatia - European Union, Croatia - Economy, Croatia - Demographics, Croatia - Culture, Croatia - Famous Croats, Croatia - Literature Read more here: » Croatia: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - History |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - GeographyMain article: Geography of Croatia
Croatia is situated between central, southern, and eastern Europe. It has a rather peculiar shape that resembles a crescent or a horseshoe which helps account for its many neighbours: Slovenia, Hungary, the Serbian part of Serbia and Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Montenegrin part of Serbia and Montenegro, and Italy across the Adriatic (disputed, see Slovenia-Croatia border dispute). Its mainland territory is split in two non-contiguous parts by the short coastline o ...
See also:Croatia, Croatia - Name, Croatia - History, Croatia - Counties, Croatia - Geography, Croatia - Politics, Croatia - Political system, Croatia - European Union, Croatia - Economy, Croatia - Demographics, Croatia - Culture, Croatia - Famous Croats, Croatia - Literature Read more here: » Croatia: Encyclopedia II - Croatia - Geography |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian periodBut, due to the unique Croat linguistic situation, formal shaping of Croatian standard language was a process that took almost four centuries to complete: Croatian is a three dialects tongue (a somewhat simplistic way to distinguish between dialects is to refer to the pronoun what, which is ča, kaj, što in, respectively, čakavian, kajkavian and štokavian dialects) and three scripts language (Glagolitic, Croatian/Western/Bosnian Cyrillic and Latin script, with Latin script as the ultimate winner). The final obstacle t ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian period |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples
Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš.
Mlačna noć; u selu lavež; kasan
Ćuk il netopir;
Ljubav cvijeća - miris jak i strasan
Slavi tajni pir.
Sitni cvrčak sjetno cvrči, jasan
Kao srebren vir;
Teške oči sklapaju se na san,
S neba rosi mir.
S mrkog tornja bat
Broji pospan sat,
Blaga svjetlost sipi sa visina;
Kroz samoću, muk,
Sve je ti ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Language examples |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Current eventsCroatian language is today the official language of the Republic of Croatia and, along with Bosnian and Serbian, one of three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
There isn't a single official definition of Croatian, but there exists an Institute for Croatian language and linguistics with a prescription department.
The current rules of the language are generally laid out in the grammar books and dictionaries used in education facilities, such as the school curriculum prescribed by the Ministry of Education and the univ ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Current events |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Split - EconomyThe city is still feeling the effects of the difficult transition to market economy, worsened by the depression caused by Croatia's war of independence. In the Yugoslav era, it was an important economic centre with a diverse industrial base including shipbuilding, food, chemical, plastics, clothing, paper industry etc. Today most of the socialist factories are closed down and the city has been concentrating on commerce and services, consequently leaving many factory workers unemployed. Despite everything, it has managed to maintain its position as an important transportation, commercial, and administrative center of Dalmatia, ensuring stable, th ...
See also:Split, Split - History, Split - Split in the 20th century, Split - Economy, Split - Transportation, Split - Culture, Split - Sport Read more here: » Split: Encyclopedia II - Split - Economy |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology
Croatian language - Vowels.
The Croatian vowel system is simple, with five long and five short vowels (all monophthongs), as well as the diphthong /ie/. Although meaningful, the difference between long and short vowels is not represented in Croatian orthography. The five vowel qualities are as follows. (A schwa /ə/ also occurs marginally.)
The syllabic trill can also be either long or short, and can carry ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Phonology |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - A note on Serbo-CroatianOne still finds many references to Serbo-Croatian, and proponents of Serbo-Croatian who deny the existence of Croatian (as well as Serbian and Bosnian) as a separate standard language. The usual argument generally goes along the following lines:
Croatian, Serbian and Bosnian are almost completely mutually intelligible, sharing much vocabulary
Typologically and structurally, these languages have virtually the same grammar, i.e. morphology and syntax
The Serbo-Croatian language was "created" in the mid 19th centu ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Modern language and standardisationAlthough the first purely vernacular texts in a Croatian distinctly different from Church Slavonic date back to the 13th century, it was in the 14th and 15th centuries that the modern Croatian language emerged (recorded in texts as Vatican Croatian prayer book from 1400.) in the form (morphology, phonology and syntax) that only slightly differs from contemporary Croatian standard language.
The standardization of Croatian language can be traced back to the first Croatian dictionary (Faust Vrančić: Dictionarium quinque nobil ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian periodBut, due to the unique Croat linguistic situation, formal shaping of Croatian standard language was a process that took almost four centuries to complete: Croatian is a three dialects tongue (a somewhat simplistic way to distinguish between dialects is to refer to the pronoun what, which is ča, kaj, što in, respectively, čakavian, kajkavian and štokavian dialects) and three scripts language (Glagolitic, Croatian/Western/Bosnian Cyrillic and Latin script, with Latin script as the ultimate winner). The final obstacle t ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Illyrian period |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connectionThe 19th century language development overlapped with the upheavals that befell Serbian language. It was Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, an energetic and resourceful Serbian language and culture reformer, whose scriptory and orthographic stylisation of Serbian linguistic folk idiom made a radical break with the past; until his activity in the first half of the 19th century, Serbs had been using the Serbian variant of Church Slavonic and a hybrid Russian-Slavonic language. His "Serbian Dictionary", published in Vienna 1818 (along with the appende ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Split - TransportationSplit is an important transportation centre for Dalmatia and the wider region. In addition to the Zagreb-Split highway (A1), all the road traffic along the Adriatic coast on the route Zadar–Dubrovnik flows by the city. The airport in Kaštela is the third largest in Croatia in terms of passenger numbers (788,000 in 2004), with year-round services to Zagreb and Frankfurt in Germany and heavy tourist traffic in the summer.
Split passenger seaport is one of the largest on the eastern Adriatic coast with daily coastal routes to Rijeka, ...
See also:Split, Split - History, Split - Split in the 20th century, Split - Economy, Split - Transportation, Split - Culture, Split - Sport Read more here: » Split: Encyclopedia II - Split - Transportation |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Split - CultureSplit is also known as one of the centres of Croatian culture.
Its literary tradition can be traced to medieaval times, and includes names like Marko Marulić, while in more modern times Split excelled by authors famous for their sense of humour. Among them the most notable is Miljenko Smoje.
Split also houses two important archeological museums - one dedicated to antique, another to early medieval period.
But the most recognisable aspect of Split culture is popular music. Notable composers include Ivo Tijardović, Zdenko Runjić - some of the most influentia ...
See also:Split, Split - History, Split - Split in the 20th century, Split - Economy, Split - Transportation, Split - Culture, Split - Sport Read more here: » Split: Encyclopedia II - Split - Culture |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early developmentThe beginning of the Croatian written language can be traced to the 9th century, when Old Church Slavonic was adopted as the language of the liturgy. This language was gradually adapted to non-liturgical purposes and became known as the Croatian version of Old Slavonic. The two variants of the language, liturgical and non-liturgical, continued to be a part of the Glagolitic service as late as the mid-9th century.
Until the end of the 11th century, Croatian medieval texts were written in three scripts: Latin, Glagolitic, and Bosnian Cy ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Also see, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early development |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connectionThe 19th century language development overlapped with the upheavals that befell Serbian language. It was Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, an energetic and resourceful Serbian language and culture reformer, whose scriptory and orthographic stylisation of Serbian linguistic folk idiom made a radical break with the past; until his activity in the first half of the 19th century, Serbs had been using the Serbian variant of Church Slavonic and a hybrid Russian-Slavonic language. His "Serbian Dictionary", published in Vienna 1818 (along with the appende ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - The Serbian connection |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - A note on Serbo-CroatianOne still finds many references to Serbo-Croatian, and proponents of Serbo-Croatian who deny the existence of Croatian (as well as Serbian and Bosnian) as a separate standard language. The usual argument generally goes along the following lines:
Croatian, Serbian and Bosnian are almost completely mutually intelligible, sharing much vocabulary
Typologically and structurally, these languages have virtually the same grammar, i.e. morphology and syntax
The Serbo-Croatian language was "created" in the mid 19th centu ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Modern language and standardisationAlthough the first purely vernacular texts in a Croatian distinctly different from Church Slavonic date back to the 13th century, it was in the 14th and 15th centuries that the modern Croatian language emerged (recorded in texts as Vatican Croatian prayer book from 1400.) in the form (morphology, phonology and syntax) that only slightly differs from contemporary Croatian standard language.
The standardization of Croatian language can be traced back to the first Croatian dictionary (Faust Vrančić: Dictionarium quinque nobil ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation |
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|  |  |  | Marko Marulić: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early developmentThe beginning of the Croatian written language can be traced to the 9th century, when Old Church Slavonic was adopted as the language of the liturgy. This language was gradually adapted to non-liturgical purposes and became known as the Croatian version of Old Slavonic. The two variants of the language, liturgical and non-liturgical, continued to be a part of the Glagolitic service as late as the mid-9th century.
Until the end of the 11th century, Croatian medieval texts were written in three scripts: Latin, Glagolitic, and Bosnian Cy ...
See also:Croatian language, Croatian language - Early development, Croatian language - Modern language and standardisation, Croatian language - Illyrian period, Croatian language - The Serbian connection, Croatian language - Unification and separation with Serbian, Croatian language - A note on Serbo-Croatian, Croatian language - Phonology, Croatian language - Vowels, Croatian language - Pitch accent, Croatian language - Consonants, Croatian language - Language examples, Croatian language - Notturno A. G. Matoš, Croatian language - The Lord's Prayer, Croatian language - Current events, Croatian language - Differences to similar languages, Croatian language - Language history, Croatian language - General links Read more here: » Croatian language: Encyclopedia II - Croatian language - Early development |
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