- [ˈbaʊ̯t͡sn̩] ) or Budyšin (Upper
Sorbian pronunciation: [ˈbudɨʃin] ),
until 1868
Budissin in German, is a town in
eastern Saxony, Germany, and the administrative...
-
named after the
local West
Slavic Milceni tribe,
later also
called Land
Budissin.
Geomorphological Upper Lusatia is
shaped by the
uniform Lusatian granite...
- Přemyslid duke
Vladislaus II of
Bohemia with the
territory around Bautzen (
Budissin), then
called "Milsko", and
after the 15th
century called "Upper Lusatia"...
-
Missionaren in Labrador,
revidirt und
herausgegeben von
Friedrich Erdmann.
Budissin [mod. Bautzen] 1864. Iñupiat
Eskimo dictionary Archived 2
February 2017...
-
reach of
power to the west,
campaigning the
Milceni lands around Bautzen (
Budissin),
which after several years of German–Polish
struggle Emperor Henry II...
-
Silesian region of the
Early Polish state. The
eastern lands around Bautzen (
Budissin),
later known as
Upper Lusatia, were
ceded to the
Polish duke Bolesław...
-
campaigns into the
lands of the
Polabian Milceni tribes around Bautzen (
Budissin), with
their gained territory being gradually incorporated into the Saxon...
- part of Saxony. At the time Bautzen, the
district capital, was
called Budissin,
whence the name originated. All name bearers,
including those of family...
- Michał Hórnik [hsb].
Zmorski then
issued the
Polish newspaper Stadło in
Budissin,
translated four Smoler's
poems into Polish, and
published articles about...
- (Upper
Sorbian Budyšin,
Lower Sorbian: Budyšyn),
German Bautzen,
formerly Budissin).
Handrij Zejler's two
additional verses have been
excluded from the official...