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Selected Literatures
and Authors Page - Karelian Literature
Karelian Literature and Authors - Including Karelian
Proper, Olonets
Karelian, Vepsi
Karelian, Ludic
Karelian, Tver Karelian, and Ingrian
["Olonets Karelian and Ludian are transitional
dialects between Karelian proper and Vepsian"].
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Literature Web Sites - Karelian [Karelian proper.
The Karelians call themselves karjalaiset or karjalazhet in Finnish
and Karelian. Their language is karjalan kieli. In Russian, the
people are --; the language karelskii]
Sites originating in the Republic of Karelia
or elsewhere in the Russian Federation:
- Karjalan
kansallinen kirjallisuus. [In Finnish].
- Kirjallisuus
[Literature]. From the Kultuurisivuja Karjalasta page of Petroskoin
yliopisto/University of Petroskoi/Petrozavodsk.
- Iz
istorii karelskoi literatury. By Armas Mishin.
- The Karelians.
By A. Mishin - Chairman of the Board, Writers’ Union of the Karelian
Republic.
- "K a r
e l i k a" (Joint catalogue of literature in the Karelian
language). Their Svodny'
Katalog Knig na Karel'skom Yazyke - Tematicheskii ukazatel'.
- ethno-futurism
as a mode of thinking for an alternative future - on the future
of the Finno-Ugric peoples.
- Karjala,
aunus, lyydi, vepsä [Karelian, Olonets Karelian, Ludic Karelian,
Vepsi Karelian]. From Johanna Laakso's Itämerensuomalaisten
kielten johdatuskurssi.
- Karjalaiset
Itkuvirret. By Aleksandra Stepanova.
- "Kuunelgua
vai armas rahvahaine!" - Karjalan rahvahan runot, virret,
suarnat Leninah-Stalinah, revol'utsijan bohatteriloih, uudeh vesseläh
elekseh näh. [Karelian-language poems, verses, etc glorifying
Lenin, Stalin, and the 1917 Revolution].
- Karjalaiset
ja karjalan kieli. By Pekka Zaikov. [In Finnish].
- The
Karelians. By Andrew Hund.
- Opening
the windows from Karelia to Europe.
Sites originating in the Republic of Finland,
or in other countries (e.g., Estonia), but related to the Karelian
language - or the literature of Finnish Karelia:
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Authors Web Sites - Karelian [Karelian proper.
The Karelians call themselves karjalaiset or karjalazhet in Finnish
and Karelian. Their language is karjalan kieli. In Russian, the
people are --; the language karelskii]
Sites originating in the Republic of Karelia
or elsewhere in the Russian Federation:
- [Elias Lönnrot (1802-1884).]
- Jalmari Virtanen (1889-1939).
- Lea Helo (o.s. Topias Huttari) (1907-1953).
- Ragnar Rusko (o.s.Nyström) (1896-1939).
- Eemeli Parras (1884-1939).
- Hilda Tihlä (1870-1944).
- Oskar Johansson (1892-1938).
- Nikolai Jaakkola (1905-1967).
- Vladmir Brendoev (1931-1990).
- Pekka Perttu (1917-1992).
- Armas Mishin (kirjailijanimeltään Armas Hiiri) (1935- ).
Sites originating in the Republic of Finland,
or in other countries (e.g., Estonia), but related to the Karelian
language - or the literature of Finnish Karelia:
- Arhippa Perttunen (1769-1840).
- Simana Sissonen (1786-1846).
- Anders Juhana Sjögren (1794-1855).
- Elias Lönnrot (1802-1884).
- M.A.Castrén (1813-1852). (Matias Aleksanteri Castrén).
- David Emanuel Daniel Europaeus (1820-1884).
- Petri Shemeikka (1821?-1915).
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Literature Web Sites - Ludic Karelian [The Ludic
Karelians call themselves lüüdiköit or luudikoit. Their language
is lüüdi or luudikiel. In Finnish the people are called lyydiläiset
and the language lyydin karjalan kieli].
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Authors Web Sites - Ludic Karelian [The Ludic
Karelians call themselves lüüdiköit or luudikoit. Their language
is lüüdi or luudikiel. In Finnish the people are called lyydiläiset
and the language lyydin karjalan kieli].
- Obraman Fed'uu [Feodor Pahomov] (1899-1984).
- Miikul Pahomov ( - ).
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Literature Web Sites - Olonets Karelian [The
Olonets Karelians call themselves liüdi or liügi and livviköit.
Their language is livvin kieli. They are called aunuksenkarjalaiset
in Finnish; their language livvin or aunuksenkarjalan kieli; The
language is called livvikovskii iazyk in Russian]
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| Authors Web Sites - Olonets Karelian [The Olonets
Karelians call themselves liüdi or liügi and livviköit. Their language
is livvin kieli. They are called aunuksenkarjalaiset in Finnish; their
language livvin or aunuksenkarjalan kieli; The language is called
livvikovskii iazyk in Russian] |
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Literature Web Sites - Vepsi Karelian [Vepsän kieli]
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Authors Web Sites - Vepsi Karelian [Vepsän kieli]
- Nikolai Bogdanov (1904?-1959).
- Nikolai Abramov ( - ).
- Nina Zaitseva ( - ).
- Igor Brodski ( - ).
- Alevtina Andrejeva ( - ).
- Nikolai Fomin ( - ).
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Literature Web Sites - Tver Karelian [Tverskaia Kareliia]
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Authors Web Sites - Tver Karelian [Tverskaia Kareliia]
- Mikhail Mikhailovich Orlov (1932-1993).
- Aleksandra Vasilevna Punzhina (1934- ).
- Stanislav Vasilevich Tarasov (1937- ).
- Anatolii Nikolaevich Golovkin (1949- ).
- Zoja Aleksandrovna Turicheva (1951- ).
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Literature Web Sites - Ingrian and Izhori and Ingrian Finns
[The original inhabitants (the Ingrians
or Izhori) call themselves Vadjalaizõt, inkeroiset (singular, inkeroine),
izhorat or izhoralaine or in general maaväki. The Finns call the
original inhabitants Inkeriläiset and the later inhabitants who
moved to Inkeri from Finland as inkerin suomalaiset. The Russians
refer to the original inhabitants as Izhori. The language is known
as inkerin or izhoran keeli, or maakeeli. The Finns call the languages
inkerin, as well as inkerin suomen kieli for the inkerin suomalaiset
/ Ingrian Finns] [This
site describes the peoples, their self-designations, etc. Another
site.]
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Authors Web Sites - Ingrian and Ingrian Finns and Izhori
[See notes in above section].
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