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Walddeutsche : ウィキペディア英語版 | Walddeutsche
Walddeutsche ((ドイツ語:Walddeutsche) ("Forest Germans") or ''Taubdeutsche'' ("Deaf Germans"); (ポーランド語:Głuchoniemcy) ("deaf-mutes", a pun), sometimes simply called Polish Germans, the name for a group of people, mostly of German origin, who settled during the 14th-17th century on the territory of present-day Sanockie Pits, Poland, a region which was previously only sparsely inhabited because the land was difficult to farm.〔 == Nomenclature == The term ''Walddeutsche'' - coined by the Polish historians Marcin Bielski, 1531,〔 Szymon Starowolski 1632, Bishop Ignacy Krasicki〔 and Wincenty Pol - also sometimes refers to Germans living between Wisłoka and the San River part of the West Carpathian Plateau and the Central Beskidian Piedmont in Poland. The Polish term ''Głuchoniemcy'' is a sort of pun; it means "deaf-mutes", but sounds like "forest Germans": ''Niemcy'', Polish for "Germans", sounds as if derived from ''niemy'' ("mute"), and ''głuchy'' ("deaf",〔 i.e. "unable to communicate") sounds similar to ''głusz'' "wood".〔
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