Portal:Uralic languages and literature
Appearance
Top level portal for Class PH: Uralic languages and literature. The Uralic languages include Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian, as well as many languages in northern Scandinavia and northern Russia.
Hungarian (Magyar)
[edit]Language
[edit]- Simplified Grammar of the Hungarian Language, by Ignácz Singer (1882)
- "Hungary#Language," in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed., 1911)—III. Language, by Charles Norton Edgcumbe Eliot
- On Wikipedia: Hungarian language
Literature
[edit]- "Hungary#Literature," in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed., 1911)—IV. Literature, by E. D. Butler
- "Hungarian Literature," by Adalbert Bangha in Catholic Encyclopedia, (ed.) by Charles G. Herbermann and others, New York: The Encyclopaedia Press (1913)
- A History of Hungarian Literature, by Frigyes Riedl (1906)
- Poetry of the Magyars, translated by John Bowring (1830)
- See also: Category:Hungarian authors
- On Wikipedia: Hungarian literature
Estonian (Eesti)
[edit]- See also: Category:Estonian authors
- On Wikipedia: Estonian language and Estonian literature
Finnish (Suomi)
[edit]Language
[edit]- "Finno-Ugrian," by Charles Norton Edgcumbe Eliot in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed., 1911)
- On Wikipedia: Finnish language
Literature
[edit]- "Finland#Literature," in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed., 1911)—"Finnish Literature", by Edmund William Gosse
- Kalevala, by Elias Lönnrot
- On Wikipedia: Finnish literature
Short stories
[edit]- "When Father Brought Home the Lamp" ("Siihen aikaan kun isä lampun osti"), by Juhani Aho (1883), translated by Robert Nisbet Bain
- "My Traveling Companion" by Pietari Päivärinta, translated by Edna Worthley Underwood (1921)
See also
[edit]- See also: Category:Finnish authors
See also
[edit]