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  1. Die krimgotische Sprache war eine germanische, möglicherweise ostgermanische, Sprache, die vermutlich ab dem 3. Jahrhundert auf der Krim von gotischen Gruppen gesprochen wurde. Die Quellenlage für das Krimgotische ist sehr dürftig, da von der Sprache lediglich Fragmente in der Form von etwa 100 überwiegend Einzelformen aus dem 16.

  2. クリミアゴート語(クリミアゴートご、英: Crimean Gothic )は、クリミア半島で用いられたゴート語の方言。クリミア半島の隔絶された土地で話された言語であり、18世紀後半まで存在した。 クリミアゴート語は、ごくわずかな断片しか現存しない。

  3. The Principality of Theodoro ( Greek: Αὐθεντία πόλεως Θεοδωροῦς καὶ παραθαλασσίας ), also known as Gothia ( Γοτθία) or the Principality of Theodoro-Mangup, [1] was a Greek principality in the southern part of Crimea, specifically on the foothills of the Crimean Mountains. [2] It represented one of ...

  4. Crimean Gothic; J. John of Gothia; M. Metropolitanate of Gothia ; T. Theophilus (bishop of the Goths) This page was last edited on 31 December 2019, at 11:22 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike Licen ...

  5. The Metropolitanate of Gothia (also of Gothia and Caffa ), also known as the Eparchy of Gothia or Metropolitanate of Doros, was a metropolitan diocese of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in the Middle Ages . The 9th-century Metropolitanate of Doros was centered in the Crimea, but it seems to have had dioceses further afield, as far east as ...

  6. Gótico da Crimeia Inglês Gótico de Úlfilas Alemão Holandês Feroês Islandês Sueco Dinamarquês; apel apple apls (m.) Apfel appel súrepli epli (vild-)apel, äpple

  7. Crimean Gothia appeared as a specific polity in the 3rd-4th centuries AD as a result of the Gothic tribes' migration to the northern Black Sea area. In the 6th cen­tury, the Goths and the Alans became phoideratoi (allies) of the Byzantine Empire and therefore numerous fortresses and fortified settlements were built in the mountainous Crimean area to protect the local population and the Empire ...