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Slavic Identities: Peoples, Languages, and Religions Laura A. Janda janda@unc.edu www.unc.edu/~lajanda
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Overall Distribution of Slavic Peoples in Europe
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You are what you speak Language is closely tied with identity Political borders do not always correspond to linguistic borders Religious borders also play an important role Language can both unify and divide peoples
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Can you name the Slavic languages?
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North Slavic Russian, Belorusian, Ukrainian West Slavic Polish, Czech, Slovak, Upper&Lower Sorbian South Slavic Slovene, Croatian, Serbian, Macedonian, Bulgarian Note how former Soviet Union, Soviet Bloc, and former Yugoslavia divided up this territory
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Who are the Slavs’ neighbors? Indo-European: Speakers of German, Greek, Albanian, Romanian, Lithuanian, Latvian, and Italian, plus Romany Non-Indo European: Speakers of Hungarian, Estonian, Finnish, and Turkish, plus Caucasian and Central Asian languages
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The Cyrillic Alphabet Actually the second alphabet of the Slavs Invented in the tenth century Modeled primarily after Greek capital letters Associated with Orthodox (Byzantine) Christianity
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The Alphabetic Divide Western Christianity & Latin Alphabet: Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Slovenia Croatia Eastern Christianity & Cyrillic Alphabet: Russia Belarus Ukraine Serbia Macedonia Bulgaria
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Megali Idea Most nations (not just Slavic ones) have some “memory” of a time when their borders were at their largest. These nations see these remembered borders as vital to their identity and seek to regain them. These remembered borders overlap and do not contain a homogeneous population, motivating “ethnic cleansing”.
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Poland Primarily Catholic, previously had a significant Jewish minority (birthplace of Yiddish) 1385 -- Polish union with Lithuania -- administrative language is Latin 16th-17th centuries -- Polish used alongside Latin
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Poland, cont’d. 1795 -- Poland partitioned among Russia, Prussia, and Austria Poland ceased to exist for 123 years, during which time harsh policies established German & Russian as administrative languages Intelligentsia & Catholic Church helped maintain Polish language & identity Polish state reborn at end of WWI with minorities of Ukrainians, Ruthenians, Jews, Belarusians, Germans
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Poland, cont’d. WWII Nazi occupation reduced minorities via extermination & population transfers Ethnic groups in present-day Poland: Lemkos (Ruthenians), Roma, Kashubians (330,000 speakers, status is controversial)
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Slovakia Historically part of Hungary Used Czech as their literary language until mid-19th century 1843 Stur’s grammar launches Slovak national movement. After 1867, Austro- Hungarian Magyarization suppresses Slovak
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Slovakia, cont’d. 1939 Slovakia yields to Nazi Germany 1944 Restoration of Czechoslovakia 1948 Communists come to power 1960s Campaign against “bourgeois” (aka Slovak) nationalism & antireligious campaign targets Slovaks Reforms after 1968 favored Slovaks Since 1993: Independent Slovakia with Hungarian and Roma minorities, Slovak linguistic purism
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Czech lands 9th century -- Mission of SS. Cyril & Methodius -- Czechs are the first Slavs to gain literacy Political independence dates to 10th century, when the Czech lands were part of the Holy Roman Empire
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Czech lands, cont’d. Charles IV 1346-1378 King of Bohemia and Holy Roman Emporer founded Charles U. (Carolina!), the oldest university north of the Alps 1415 Jan Hus is burned at the stake, ushering in the Reformation and Hussite wars 1526, Ferdinand I, a Hapsburg, becomes King of Bohemia, and ultimately Austria and Hungary as well, ushering in 400 years of Hapsburg rule 1618 Hapsburg repressions incite Prague defenestration, 30 year war
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Czech lands, cont’d. Two centuries of decline and oppression, with German as the only official language 1809 Josef Dobrovsky’s Czech grammar helps to launch Czech National Revival
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Czech lands, cont’d. 1918 “The First Republic” and tensions between the 3M Germans and 7M Czechs in Bohemia 1938 Munich After WWII, Benes decrees forced most Germans out 1948 Communists come to power 1968 Prague Spring and August invasion 1989 Velvet Revolution 1993 Velvet Divorce
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Some Conclusions concerning Central Europe Central Europe was dominated by others: Hapsburgs, Russian Empire, Prussia, Austro-Hungary Enlightenment inspired educated classes to pursue nationalism The rise of ethno-nationalism in Central Europe hampered a process of assimilation of different ethnic groups into bigger national entities
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Some Conclusions concerning Central Europe, cont’d. After WWI new states emerged based on language and ethnicity After WWII communists came to power The fall of communist regimes created a vacuum filled by ethno-nationalism Language has been extremely important for identity and nationhood Central Europe has been homogenized to maximize linguistic and national identity through genocide, population exchanges, etc.
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Slavs in the Balkans Bulgaria, Macedonia, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Croatia, Slovenia Balkan states succumbed to dictatorships in inter-war period Balkan states were reconstructed by communists after WWII
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The Former Serbo-Croatian Goes by many names, including “bezimeni jezik” Written with two alphabets Used for worship in three major religions Interlaced with several other languages (Hungarian, Romany, and dialects related to Romanian)
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Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia-Montenegro) Includes Kosovo, which is 90% Albanian Serb nationalism suppressed under Tito. Milosevic cast Albanians as oppressors in late 1980s (600th anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo Polje), and attempted to have them removed. Montenegrans try to assert separate language & identity.
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Bosnia-Hercegovina Contains Muslims, Orthodox, and Catholics 1991 census: 44% Muslim, 32% Serb, 17% Croat, 7% Yugoslav 1992 war destroyed ethnic fabric of Bosnia
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Croatia Unrest makes figures on ethnic composition unreliable Conflicts with Serbs, many of whom have fled State is now relatively homogeneous
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Slovenia Ethnically & politically the most stable state in the Balkans 1.7 M: 88% Slovene 2% Serb 3% Croat 1% Muslim 0.6% Yugoslav
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Bulgaria 8.5 M people 85% ethnic Bulgarian 9% Turkish 300,000 Roma 14,000 Armenian 1984 attempt to forcibly “Bulgarize” the Turks led to international criticism Tension with Macedonia
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Macedonia (FYROM) 1912 Annexed by Serbia Macedonian Republic established 1946 2M, over 1/4 of these are Albanian
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Ideologies of Nationalism in the Balkans Post-Communist nationalisms have aimed for greater national homogeneity, often via ethnic cleansing Magnification of linguistic differences for political purposes Anti-democratic, narrow constructions of identity privilege “ethnicity” over region, religion, human rights, shared histories, and even shared languages.
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Slavs in the Former Soviet Union Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine Russia is the largest sovereign state on earth, and contains great linguistic and ethnic diversity All 3 had significant Jewish minorities drastically reduced by pogroms, massacres, and emigration
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Russia 989 Kievan Rus converted to Christianity Capital moved to Moscow undr Ivan the Terrible 1453 Russia became the protector of Orthodoxy (“Third Rome”) after Fall of Constantinople.
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Russia, cont’d. 17th-19th centuries -- vast expansion to incorporate Siberia, Belarus, Ukraine, part of Poland, and Baltics Catherine the Great through Romanov dynasty -- consistent policy of enforced Russification -- Russian becomes lingua franca of the area Russian chauvinism continued in Soviet period, and most non-Russian languages suffered serious decline
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Belarus Belarusian language codified 1906-14 78% Belarusian, 13% Russian But Belarus was intensively Russified, and most Belarusians are more comfortable with Russian than with Belarusian
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Ukraine Ukrainian language codified 19th C 73% Ukrainian, 22% Russian Complex situation, since many dialects are very close to Russian, many people are bilingual, and there are also close ties to Poland
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Former Soviet Union: Conclusions Russia heavily dominates the area Other identities are weakly felt or suppressed Economic decline presents a potential problem that could be exploited by nationalists
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