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Anastasiya Davydava (Belarusian State University, Minsk)

Helias Pilgrimovius’ literary works between real and symbolic power:

strategies in the sacralization of history

Eva Frimmová (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava)

Slavonic themes in the works of Slovak and other humanists

working in Slovakia

 

Beata Maria Gaj (Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University, Warsaw)

An outline of ideas, thoughts and views of Silesia in earlier centuries,

based on rich Neo-Latin literature

Sanja Perić Gavrančić (Institute of Croatian Language and Literature, Zagreb)

Lingua Sclavonica in the cross-linguistic perspective of Conrad Gessner

and Bartol Durdević

Martin Homza (Comenius University, Bratislava)

Mauro Orbini and his concept of the "Kingdom of the Slavs" on the example

of the coronation of Svätopluk, King of Slavs: Historical fiction or fact?

Katarína Karabová (University of Trnava)

A content and linguistic comparison of the ideological structures of Slavic reciprocity in the works of some late eighteenth-century Slovak

and Croatian thinkers

 

Elisabeth Klecker (University of Vienna)

Humanistische Anfänge der Wiener Slawistik

Jozef Kordoš (University of Trnava)

Matthias Bel’s Notitia Hungariae novae historico-geographica

as a precursor to Slavic studies in Slovakia

Maja Matasović – Tamara Tvrtković (University of Zagreb)

In Search of Lingua Illyrica: Theories on the Origin of the Slavic Language

Cyril Tomáš Matějec (Charles University, Prague)

Nepomuceidos libri octo (1773): a Czech Medieval Clergyman as a Hero of a Latin

Early Modern Epic

Zhanna Nekrashevich-Karotkaja (Belarusian State University, Minsk)

Das hagiographische Poem Iosaphatidos (1628) von Iosaphat Isakowicz:

eine griechisch-katholische Version der frühen christlichen Geschichte

der Ostslawen

Sorin Paliga (University of Bucharest)

Re-reading Anonymus’ Gesta Hungarorum. Who were the Sclavi and the Blachi? And who were the Bulgari and the pastores Romanorum?

Petr Pavlas (Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague)

The Slavonic Languages as an Inspiration for Comenius’s Project of a Universal Language

Aleksandra Maria Popiołek (University of Wrocław)

The multinational intellectual elite of Wroclaw according to Martin Hanke.

The description of seventeenth-century professors of Slavonic origin in his Quorundam scriptis in publicum editis clarorum Silesiorum philosophorum philologorumque vitae in Gymnasio Vratislaviensi Elisabetano

Vitalii Shchepanskyi (The National University of Ostroh Academy, Ukraine)

The Latin astrological treatise of Ian Liatos Prognosticon de regnorum ac imperiorum mutationibus ex orbium coeli syderumque motu & lumine vario in haec tempora incidentibus in the context of early modern science in Rzecz Pospolita

Giovanna Siedina (University of Verona)

Historica relatio de Ruthenorum origine eorumque miraculosa conversione,

et quibusdam alijs Regum rebus gestis (1598) by Caesar Baronius

Angela Škovierová (Comenius University, Bratislava)

Martin Moncovicenus – a humanist with national awareness?

Mária Strýčková (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava)

Latin – Church Slavonic relationship on the example of the bilingual work

Tolkovanðe Sò0énnyä Lðturgƒ´i / Explicatio Sacrae Liturgie (1815)

by Juraj J. Bazilovič

Oleksandra Trofymuk (Stefan Gzhytskyi National University, Lviv)

Die Barockmythologie als die Grundlage des Bewusstseins der frühmodernen europäischen Nationen (aufgrund der Präambel der Verfassung der Ukraine

von 1710)

 

Myroslav Trofymuk (Ivan Franko National University of Lviv)

Philologisches Problem der Unterscheidung der frühmodernen Nationen

(aufgrund der Grammatiken von Iwan Uzewić)

Oľga Vaneková (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava)

Identifying Scholars of Slavic Origin

in 18th-Century Latin Works of Hungarian historia litteraria

Arsenii Vetushko-Kalevich (University of Lund)

Russians and Poles in Johannes Widekindi’s representation

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