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Estonian and Orthodox
* 1983 – Alexander Schmemann, Estonian Orthodox Christian priest and theologian ( b. 1921 )
* Estonian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate < nowiki >*</ nowiki >
However, all Eastern Orthodox churches rejected this rule and continue to use the Julian calendar to determine the date of Easter ( except for the Finnish Orthodox Church and the Estonian Orthodox Church which now use the Gregorian Easter ).
Currently these include the Orthodox of the Belarusian exarchate ; the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia ; the Latvian, the Moldovan, the Estonian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate.
Orthodox missionaries also worked successfully among the Estonians from the 10th to the 12th centuries founding the Estonian Orthodox Church.
The cathedral, nowadays the main church of the Estonian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate, has become for tourists somewhat of a symbol of Tallinn due to its exotic look, while the opinion of Estonians about it is rather ambiguous.
Liturgical languages used in the Eastern Orthodox Church include ( but are not limited to ): Koine Greek, Church Slavonic, Romanian, Georgian, Arabic, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, Moldovan, Serbian, English, Spanish, French, Polish, Portuguese, Albanian, Finnish, Swedish, Chinese, Estonian, Korean, Japanese, many African dialects, and many other world languages.
One of his most important works is the oratorio Passion and Resurrection ( 1992 ), based on Orthodox liturgical texts, premièred in 1993 by Red Byrd and the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir under Tõnu Kaljuste at the Tampere Festival.
Setos are mostly Seto-speaking Orthodox Christians of Estonian nationality.
* Estonian Orthodox Church
Other 2007 premieres included Symphony No. 2 " Requiem for a Poet " by Hannover's NDR Radio Philharmonic, as well as A Russian Requiem ( on Russian Orthodox sacred texts and poetry by Alexander Pushkin, Gavrila Derzhavin, Mikhail Lermontov, Boris Pasternak, Osip Mandelstam, Alexander Blok, Zinaida Gippius, Anna Akhmatova, Joseph Brodsky, Viktor Sosnora and Irina Ratushinskaya ) by the Bremen Philharmonic with the Latvian National Choir and the Estonian Opera Boys Choir.

Estonian and Church
The Nationality Question in the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church, 1918 – 1939.
In 1938, the Archbishop of Canterbury invited the representatives of the Estonian Lutheran Church and Latvian Lutheran Church to Lambeth Palace in order to reach " altar and pulpit fellowship " between the Anglican and Baltic Lutheran churches.
* The Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church
The Lutheran Cathedral ( Toomkirik ) from which the name Toompea was originally derived, is now the seat of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church and has perhaps best retained a medieval look among the buildings of Toompea.
* Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church
: Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church Abroad
: Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church
The Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church ( Estonian: Eesti Evangeelne Luterlik Kirik ) is a Lutheran church in Estonia.
The Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church ( EELC ) was constituted in 1949, when the previous church hierarchy, Eesti Evangeeliumi Luteriusu Kirik, headed by bishop Johan Kõpp, had escaped to Sweden in 1944.
The Archbishop of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church Abroad is the Most Rev.
At services on December 2, 2007, the first Sunday of Advent, St. Jacob's Church ( Estonian: Jakobi kogudus, literally St. Jacob's congregation ), the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church ( EELK ), celebrated its 75th anniversary.

Estonian and <
< p > Estonian Prime Minister Mart Laar came to my office the other day to recount his country ’ s remarkable transformation.
** Estonian puu " tree, wood " ( singular ) – puu < u > d </ u > " the trees, woods " ( nominative plural )
The Sõjaväepolitsei are the Military Police of the Estonian Defence Forces < http :// www. mil. ee >.
Afrikaans ( af ), Akan ( ak ), Albanian ( sq ), Arabic ( ar ), Armenian ( hy ), Assamese ( as ), Asturian ( ast ), Basque ( eu ), Belarusian ( be ), Bengali ( India and Bangladesh ) ( bn ), Bosnian ( bs ), Breton ( br ), Bulgarian ( bg ), Catalan ( ca ), Chinese ( Simplified and Traditional ) ( zh ), Croatian ( hr ), Czech ( cs ), Danish ( da ), Dutch ( nl ), English ( Britain, South Africa, and US ) ( en ), Esperanto ( eo ), Estonian ( et ), Finnish ( fi ), Fula ( ff ), French ( fr ), Frisian ( fy ), Friulian ( fur ) < sup id =" fn_1_back "> 1 </ sup >, Gaelic ( gd ), Galician ( gl ), Georgian ( ka ), German ( de ), Greek ( el ), Gujarati ( gu ), Hebrew ( he ), Hindi ( hi ), Hungarian ( hu ), Icelandic ( is ), Indonesian ( id ), Irish ( ga ), Italian ( it ), Japanese ( ja ), Kannada ( kn ), Kashubian ( csb ), Khmer ( km ), Kazakh ( kk ), Korean ( ko ), Kurdish ( ku ), Latvian ( lv ), Ligurian ( lig ), Lithuanian ( lt ), Luganda ( lg ), Macedonian ( mk ), Maithili ( mai ), Malayalam ( ml ), Marathi ( mr ), Northern Sotho ( nso ), Mongolian ( mn ) < sup id =" fn_2_back "> 2 </ sup >, Norwegian ( Bokmål ) ( no ), Norwegian ( Nynorsk ) ( nn ), Occitan ( oc ), Oriya ( or ), Persian ( fa ), Polish ( pl ), Portuguese ( Brazil and Portugal ) ( pt ), Punjabi ( pa ), Romanian ( ro ), Romansh ( rm ), Russian ( ru ), Serbian ( sr ), Sinhala ( si ), Slovak ( sk ), Slovenian ( sl ), Songhai ( son ), Spanish ( Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and Spain ) ( es ), Swedish ( sv ), Tamil ( ta ), Tamil ( Sri Lanka ) ( ta ), Tatar ( tt ) < sup id =" fn_1_back "> 1 </ sup >, Telugu ( te ), Thai ( th ), Turkish ( tr ), Ukrainian ( uk ), Vietnamese ( vi ), Welsh ( cy ), Zulu ( zu )
At 11. 9 km < sup > 2 </ sup > it has currently less than 100, mostly ethnic Estonian permanent inhabitants.
The rank has also been borrowed by several other militaries, namely Swedish fältväbel, Russian фельдфебель ( fel ' dfebel < nowiki >'</ nowiki >), Bulgarian фелдфебел ( feldfebel ), Finnish vääpeli and Estonian veebel.
Some of these words are ( with the reconstructed form in P-N ): rõngas ( Estonian )/ rengas ( Finnish ) < * hrengaz ( ring ), kuningas ( Estonian, Finnish ) < * kuningaz ( king ), ruhtinas ( Finnish ) < * druhtinaz ( sv.
drott ), silt ( Estonian ) < * skild ( tag, token ), märk / ama ( Estonian ) / ( panna ) merkille ( Finnish ) < * mērke ( to spot, to catch sight of ), riik ( Estonian ) < * rik ( state, land, commonwealth ), väärt ( Estonian ) / väärti ( Finnish ) < * vaērd ( worth ), kapp ( Estonian ) / kaappi ( Finnish ) < * skap ( chest of drawers ; shelf )

Estonian and >
In December 1999 Estonian foreign minister ( and since 2006, president of Estonia ) Toomas Hendrik Ilves delivered a speech entitled " Estonia as a Nordic Country " to the Swedish Institute for International Affairs .< ref >
On the Independence Day military parade on February 24, 2005, Rüütel repeatedly congratulated soldiers on ' Victory day ' ( Estonian Victory Day is on June 23 ), which caused speculation about the then 76-year-old president's mental health .< ref >
He beat Max Euwe with the black pieces in Dubrovnik in 1950, as well as the Estonian chess player Paul Keres in the 1952 Helsinki Olympiad .< ref >
The loss of initial before a short rounded vowel has also been proposed as a common innovation, but with counterexamples such as Estonian võtta-" to take " ( with preserved as its regular reflex due to the development > ) suggesting a date postdating not only the split between Finnic and Samic, but also of northern and southern Finnic ( cf.
File: Estonian Church Thirlmere. jpg |< center > Former Estonian Church </ center >
File: Estonian Village Thirlmere. jpg |< center > Estonian Retirement Village </ center >
File: Estonian_Cemetery_Thirlmere. jpg |< center > Estonian section Thirlmere cemetery </ center >
File: Estonian Hall Thirlmere NSW. jpg |< center > Estonian Hall </ center >

Estonian and autonomy
On 12 February 1925 The Estonian government passed a law pertaining to the cultural autonomy of minority peoples.
Strandman was also active in Estonian national organizations and became an activist on self-government reform, where he supported national autonomy in the Baltic governorates.
The Council of Elders of the assembly came together underground and decided to make him an Estonian delegate to Stockholm to find support for Estonian independence, or at least for its autonomy.

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