-
Yotvingians (also called:
Sudovians, Jatvians, or Jatvingians; Yotvingian: Jotvingai; Lithuanian: Jotvingiai, Sūduviai; Latvian: Jātvingi; Polish: Jaćwingowie...
-
Hartknoch reported in 1684 that
there were
still Sudovians in Sambia.
Based on onomastics,
Sudovian is
thought to have had the
following consonants:: 302–303 ...
- (1921). "Zur
Sprache der Sudauer-Jatwinger" [About the
Language of the
Sudovians-Yatwingians].
Festschrift Bezzenberger (in German). Göttingen: Vandenhoek...
-
Pomeranians lived to the west of the Old Prussians, the
Poles to the south, the
Sudovians (sometimes
considered a
separate people,
other times regarded as a Prussian...
- 600 and 1,500
Sudovians were
relocated to
Sambia at the end of the 13th century.
Their descendants still lived in the so-called
Sudovian Corner and were...
- Latgalians) — all East
Balts — as well as the Old Prussians, Curonians,
Sudovians, Skalvians,
Yotvingians and
Galindians — the West
Balts —
whose languages...
-
about Prussian religion is
obtained from
dubious 16th-century
sources (
Sudovian Book and
Simon Grunau). The
Teutonic Order, a
crusading military order...
- was
closely related to the
other extinct West
Baltic languages,
namely Sudovian, West
Galindian and
possibly Skalvian and Old Curonian.: 33
Other linguists...
- Uprising, the
Sudovians sacked Bartenstein (Bartoszyce) in Bartia,
which was to be the
focal point of
their borders.
Defenseless against the
Sudovians, the Natangians...
- and
Lucas David,
followed Grunau in
their descriptions of Patollo. The
Sudovian Book (1520s),
mentioned two
beings – Peckols, the god of **** and darkness...