thumb|Tartu maa rahwa Näddali-Leht (Estonian for "Tartu-land People's Weekly") was one of the first regular Estonian language publications, published in 1807 Estophilia (from Greek: φίλος, filos - "dear, loving") refers to the ideas and activities of people not of Estonian descent who are sympathetic to, or interested in, Estonian language, Estonian literature or Estonian culture, the history of Estonia, and Estonia in general. Such people are known as Estophiles.
thumb|Tartu maa rahwa Näddali-Leht (Estonian for "Tartu-land People's Weekly") was one of the first regular Estonian language publications, published in 1807 Estophilia (from Greek: φίλος, filos - "dear, loving") refers to the ideas and activities of people not of Estonian descent who are sympathetic to, or interested in, Estonian language, Estonian literature or Estonian culture, the history of Estonia, and Estonia in general. Such people are known as Estophiles.
The term particularly refers to the activities of the Estophile Movement of the late 18th to early 19th century, when local Baltic German scholars began documenting and promoting Estonian culture and language. This movement played a crucial role in triggering the Estonian Age of Awakening in the 1850s, which eventually led to the Estonian Declaration of Independence and the foundation of the Republic of Estonia, as an independent democratic nation, in 1918.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).