Otto von B.
Chieftain
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2007
- Messages
- 34
@Onagan
So it was joke wasnt it XD ?
So it was joke wasnt it XD ?
Damn, I wanted it to be Allemagne because of the "magne" on it and Charlie-magne...![]()
I was tought that the original meaning of "Deutsch" was actually "of the people". The language of the church was Latin, while the people spoke "Deutsch".In the German language - Deutch from the Teutons
A question for our East-European friends here: when I was in Hungary last year, I noticed that their word for Germany is "Nemet Orszag" ("Orszag" means "country"). Besides the fact that Hungarian is an extremely strange language (), I was also told that the name is similar to the Polish, Russian and other slavic names for Germany. Does anyine have an idea were this words come from?
I was tought that the original meaning of "Deutsch" was actually "of the people".
Just adding to the confusion
Charlemagne is supposed to be born (no hard proof on this one) in Jupille, which is today a village in Belgium.
Nope, I'm not saying he's Belgian
Neither France nor Germany existed at the time of Charlemagne, so he is neither.
He wasn't French or German. He was a Frank.