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- Bread_and_salt abstract "Bread and salt is a welcome greeting ceremony in many European cultures.The tradition, known by its local Slavic names Ukrainian: Хліб-сіль; Belarusian: Хлеб і соль; Bulgarian: Хляб и сол; Macedonian: Леб и сол; Croatian: Kruh i sol; Serbian: Хлеб и со; Polish: Chleb i Sól; Slovak: Chlieb a soľ; Czech: Chléb a sůl; Slovene: Kruh in sol; Russian: Хлеб-соль), was also adopted by two non-Slavic nations — Lithuanians (Baltic) and Romanians (Latin) — both of which are culturally and historically close to their Slavic neighbours (Lithuanian: Duona ir druska and Romanian: Pâine și sare).When important, respected, or admired guests arrive, they are presented with a loaf of bread placed on a rushnik (embroidered towel). A salt holder or a salt cellar is placed on top of the bread loaf or secured in a hole on the top of the loaf. In modern Russia, on official occasions, the "bread and salt" is presented by young women dressed in national costumes (e.g., sarafan and kokoshnik).When this tradition is observed in spaceflight, appropriately small packages of bread and salt are used.".
- Bread_and_salt thumbnail Russian_bread_and_salt.jpg?width=300.
- Bread_and_salt wikiPageExternalLink chlebem-i-sola-dawne-uczty-polskie.
- Bread_and_salt wikiPageExternalLink potocki.html.
- Bread_and_salt wikiPageID "5398628".
- Bread_and_salt wikiPageRevisionID "596908804".
- Bread_and_salt hasPhotoCollection Bread_and_salt.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Eastern_Christian_liturgy.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Greetings.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Lithuanian_customs.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Religious_food_and_drink.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Slavic_culture.
- Bread_and_salt subject Category:Traditions.
- Bread_and_salt comment "Bread and salt is a welcome greeting ceremony in many European cultures.The tradition, known by its local Slavic names Ukrainian: Хліб-сіль; Belarusian: Хлеб і соль; Bulgarian: Хляб и сол; Macedonian: Леб и сол; Croatian: Kruh i sol; Serbian: Хлеб и со; Polish: Chleb i Sól; Slovak: Chlieb a soľ; Czech: Chléb a sůl; Slovene: Kruh in sol; Russian: Хлеб-соль), was also adopted by two non-Slavic nations — Lithuanians (Baltic) and Romanians (Latin) — both of which are culturally and historically close to their Slavic neighbours (Lithuanian: Duona ir druska and Romanian: Pâine și sare).When important, respected, or admired guests arrive, they are presented with a loaf of bread placed on a rushnik (embroidered towel). ".
- Bread_and_salt label "Bread and salt".
- Bread_and_salt label "Brot und Salz".
- Bread_and_salt label "Pan y sal".
- Bread_and_salt label "Хлеб-соль".
- Bread_and_salt label "面包和盐".
- Bread_and_salt sameAs Brot_und_Salz.
- Bread_and_salt sameAs Pan_y_sal.
- Bread_and_salt sameAs m.0dk1qn.
- Bread_and_salt sameAs Q945218.
- Bread_and_salt sameAs Q945218.
- Bread_and_salt wasDerivedFrom Bread_and_salt?oldid=596908804.
- Bread_and_salt depiction Russian_bread_and_salt.jpg.
- Bread_and_salt isPrimaryTopicOf Bread_and_salt.