List Of Sorbian-language Writers
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This is a list of notable Sorbian Language writers.


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Jakub Bart-Ćišinski Jakub Bart-Ćišinski (20 August 1856 in Kuckau – 16 October 1909 in Panschwitz), also known as Łužičan, Jakub Bart Kukowski, was Sorbian poet, writer and playwright, translator of Czech, Polish, Italian and German literature. He produce ...
(1856–1909) * Jurij Brězan (1916–2006)


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Benedikt Dyrlich Benedikt may refer to: *Benedikt, a spelling of the name Benedict *Benedikt, Benedikt Benedikt () is the central settlement in the Municipality of Benedikt in northeastern Slovenia. Before 1998, it was part of the Municipality of Lenart. It lies ...
(born 1950), writer, journalist and politician.


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Jurij Koch Jurij Koch (born 15 September 1936) is a German writer. He writes in both Sorbian languages as well as German. Koch's father worked in the nearby quarry, his mother worked several jobs at different farms. Jurij Koch went to school in Crostwitz, ...
(born 1936) *
Mato Kosyk Mato may refer to: People * Ana Mato (born 1959), Spanish politician * Jakup Mato (1934–2005), Albanian publicist * Mato Miloš (born 1993), Croatian footballer * Mato Neretljak (born 1979), Croatian footballer Places *Mato, a parish of Ponte ...
(1853-1940) *
Marja Kubašec Marja Kubašec (; ) was a Sorbian writer who is considered by literary historians to be the first woman to write novels in Upper Sorbian. Working as a schoolteacher, she wrote theatre plays, short stories, biographies, and novels dealing with t ...
(18901976)


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Kito Lorenc Kito Lorenc (4 March 1938 – 24 September 2017) was a German writer, lyric poet and translator. He was a grandson of the writer and politician Jakub Lorenc-Zalěski. Lorenc attended the Sorbian boarding high school in Cottbus from 1952 to 1956 ...
(1938-2017)


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Kita Fryco Stempel Kita or KITA may refer to: People * Kita (surname) * Kita Alexander (born 1996), Australian singer-songwriter * João Leithardt Neto, Brazilian footballer nicknamed Kita * Sampsa Astala, Finnish musician whose stage name is Kita Places In Ja ...
(1787-1867), poet. *
Bogumił Šwjela Krystijan Bogumił Šwjela (also spelled "Schwela" and "Schwele") (5 September 1873 in Schorbus, Drebkau – 20 May 1948 in Naumburg) was a Wendish/ Sorbian Protestant clergyman and ethnic activist in the Lower Lusatia region. He also acted a ...
(1873–1948), pastor, editor, journalist, language scholar


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Mina Witkojc Mina Witkojc (German: Wilhelmine Wittka; 28 May 1893, Burg (Spreewald) – 11 November 1975) was a German journalist, ethnic advocate, and poet. She wrote in the Lower Sorbian language. Works * ''Dolnoserbske basni'', Budyšin 1925 * ''Wĕn ...
(1893–1975)


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Handrij Zejler Handrij Zejler (1 February 1804 – 15 October 1872; official German name ''Andreas Seiler'') was a Sorbian writer, Lutheran pastor, and national activist. He co-founded the Lusatian cultural and scientific society '' Maćica Serbska''. Zejler ...
(1804–1872)


See also

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List of Sorbs At about a population of 60,000 (30,000 of which speak Sorbian), the Sorbs are the smallest Slavic-speaking group in Europe. This is a list of notable Sorbs. {{Dynamic list Historical * Czimislav (839 - 840) - 9th-century King of the Sorbs *Jaku ...
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Sorbian language The Sorbian languages ( hsb, serbska rěč, dsb, serbska rěc) are the Upper Sorbian language and Lower Sorbian language, two closely related and partially mutually intelligible languages spoken by the Sorbs, a West Slavic ethno-cultural mino ...
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Sorbian literature Sorbian literature refers to the literature written by the Western Slavic people of Central Europe called the Sorbs in Sorbian languages (Upper Sorbian language and Lower Sorbian language). Sorbian literature began with the Reformation and the tr ...
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Bible translations into Sorbian Lower Sorbian The oldest Sorbian languages, Sorbian Bible version, that of the New Testament of 1547, is extant in a manuscript in the Royal Library at Berlin. The translator was Miklawš Jakubica, who employed a now-extinct dialect of Lower Sorbian ...


References

{{reflist Sorbian *