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NAMING THE CROATIAN LANGUAGE IN GRAMMAR BOOKS BEFORE THE CROATIAN REVIVAL

Sanja Knežević


Full text: croatian pdf 506 Kb

page 41-69

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Abstract

In older Croatian manuscripts, in literary, linguistic and other works the Croatian language was generally called Illyrian. This tendency existed as far back as the Renaissance and came wholly to the fore in Croatian culture after the Trident council, that is during the period of the Catholic restoration. Bartol Kašić from Pag, the author of the first Croatian grammar, played a key role in the process of the standardization of the Croatian language. In his Grammar he standardized the language of the štokavian basis which superseded the dialects and named it Illyrian. Through an analysis of old Croatian grammars during the 17th, 18th and the beginning of the 19th century one notes that the majority of grammarians followed the example of their predecessors and that within the history of the Croatian language one can follow the continuity of the standardization of the literary language from the first Croatian grammar all the way up to the Illyrian grammar written by Vjekoslav Babukić in 1836.

Keywords

naming the Croatian language; grammar books before the Revival; Illyrian language

Hrčak ID:

19116

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/19116

Publication date:

11.1.2008.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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