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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday November 28, 2024
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Hrvat in medieval times was pronounced "Harvat or Hrovat". Harvat/Hrovati was translated to Latin: Chroatorum and then simplified to Croatorum.  
 
Hrvat in medieval times was pronounced "Harvat or Hrovat". Harvat/Hrovati was translated to Latin: Chroatorum and then simplified to Croatorum.  
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modern Croatian: Hrvatska
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Modern Croatian: Hrvatska
    
Old Chakavian Slavi speakers (Croatian tribes) must arrived in the early 700s (8th Century AD) and made the Dalmatian hinterland there home, one group went west as far as Histri (modern: Istria) and the other eastward to Montenegro.   
 
Old Chakavian Slavi speakers (Croatian tribes) must arrived in the early 700s (8th Century AD) and made the Dalmatian hinterland there home, one group went west as far as Histri (modern: Istria) and the other eastward to Montenegro.   
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There are no contemporary written records of Chakavian-Slavic speakers (Croatian tribes) invasion/migration/settlement or about the events as a whole in area itself.
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There are '''no''' contemporary written records of Chakavian-Slavic speakers (Croatian tribes) invasion/migration/settlement or about the events as a whole in area itself. It is quite possible that the area had a drop in population and the military presents of the Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire) and the Carolingian Empire was minimal or even non existent. This would have lead to a easy invasion/migration/settlement of the area concern (opportunity beckons).  The  Roman Latin-Illyrian population as well as Liburnians, Greeks and others would have to have endured the arrival of these Sclaveni (Slavs). 
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It is quiet possible the success of the Chakavian-Slavic tribes set the precedent for the Kajkavian-Slavic speakers and Shtokavian-Slavic speakers to follow suit. There is a probability that the eastern Chakavian-Slavic tribes and Shtokavian-Slavic speakers started to mix with the Shtokavian-Slavic language becoming the Lingua Franca of this part of old the Old Roman Dalmatia area.
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The first written records started in the late 8th and early 9th century.
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It is quite possible that the area had a drop in population and the military presents of the Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire) and the Carolingian Empire was minimal or even non existent. This would have lead to a easy invasion/migration/settlement of the area concern (opportunity beckons).  The  Roman Latin-Illyrian population as well as Liburnians, Greeks and others would have to endured the arrival of theses Sclaveni (Slavs). 
      
'''Chronology'''
 
'''Chronology'''
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