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Early Slavs

The early Slavs were a diverse group of tribal societies who lived during the Migration Period and the Early Middle Ages (approximately the 5th to the 10th centuries AD) in Central and Eastern Europe and established the foundations for the Slavic nations through the Slavic states of the High Middle Ages.[1] The Slavs' original homeland is still a matter of debate due to a lack of historical records; however, scholars believe that it was in Eastern Europe,[2] with Polesia being the most commonly accepted location.[3]

Battle between the Slavs and the Scythians — painting by Viktor Vasnetsov (1881)

The first written use of the name "Slavs" dates to the 6th century, when the Slavic tribes inhabited a large portion of Central and Eastern Europe. By then, the nomadic Iranian-speaking ethnic groups living on the Eurasian Steppe (the Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans etc.) had been absorbed by the region's Slavic-speaking population.[4][5][6][7] Over the next two centuries, the Slavs expanded west to the Elbe river and south towards the Alps and the Balkans, absorbing the Celtic, Germanic, Illyrian and Thracian peoples in the process,[8] and also moved east in the direction of the Volga River.[9]

Beginning in the 7th century, the Slavs were gradually Christianized (both Byzantine Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism). By the 12th century, they were the core population of a number of medieval Christian states: East Slavs in the Kievan Rus', South Slavs in the Bulgarian Empire, the Principality of Serbia, the Duchy of Croatia and the Banate of Bosnia, and West Slavs in the Principality of Nitra, Great Moravia, the Duchy of Bohemia, and the Kingdom of Poland. The oldest known Slavic principality in history was Carantania, established in the 7th century by the Eastern Alpine Slavs, the ancestors of present-day Slovenes. Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps comprised modern-day Slovenia, Eastern Friul and large parts of modern-day Austria.

Beginnings

 
Distribution of Venedi (Slavic), Sarmatian (Iranian) and Germanic tribes on the frontier of the Roman empire in 125 AD. Byzantine sources describe the Veneti as the ancestors of the Sclaveni (Slavs).

The early Slavs were known to the Roman writers of the 1st and 2nd centuries AD under the name of Veneti.[10] Authors such as Pliny the Elder, Tacitus and Ptolemy described the Veneti as inhabiting the lands east of the Vistula river and along the Venedic Bay (Gdańsk Bay). Later, having split into three groups during the migration period, the early Slavs were known to the Byzantine writers as Veneti, Antes and Sclaveni. The 6th century historian Jordanes referred to the Slavs (Sclaveni) in his 551 work Getica, noting that "although they derive from one nation, now they are known under three names, the Veneti, Antes and Sclaveni" (ab una stirpe exorti, tria nomina ediderunt, id est Veneti, Antes, Sclaveni).[11]

Procopius wrote that "the Sclaveni and the Ante actually had a single name in the remote past; for they were both called Sporoi in olden times".[12] Possibly the oldest mention of Slavs in historical writing Slověne is attested in Ptolemy's Geography (2nd century) as Σταυανοί (Stavanoi) and Σουοβηνοί (Souobenoi/Sovobenoi, Suobeni, Suoweni), likely referring to early Slavic tribes in a close alliance with the nomadic Alanians, who may have migrated east of the Volga River.[13][14] In the 8th century during the Early Middle Ages, early Slavs living on the borders of the Carolingian Empire were referred to as Wends (Vender), with the term being a corruption of the earlier Roman-era name.[15][16]

The earliest, archaeological findings connected to the early Slavs are associated with the Zarubintsy, Przeworsk and Chernyakhov cultures from around the 3rd century BC to the 5th century AD. However, in many areas, archaeologists face difficulties in distinguishing between Slavic and non-Slavic findings, as in the case of Przeworsk and Chernyakhov, since the cultures were also attributed to Germanic peoples and were not exclusively connected with a single ancient ethnic or linguistic group.[17] Later, beginning in the 6th century, Slavic material cultures included the Prague-Korchak, Penkovka, Ipotești–Cândești, and the Sukow-Dziedzice group cultures. With evidence ranging from fortified settlements (gords), ceramic pots, weapons, jewellery and open abodes.

Homeland

 
Map of the Slavic homeland. Early Slavic artifacts are most often linked to the Przeworsk and Zarubintsy cultures.

The Proto-Slavic homeland is the area of Slavic settlement in Central and Eastern Europe during the first millennium AD, with its precise location debated by archaeologists, ethnographers and historians.[18] Most scholars consider Polesia the homeland of the Slavs.[3] Theories attempting to place Slavic origin in the Near East have been discarded.[18] None of the proposed homelands reaches the Volga River in the east, over the Dinaric Alps in the southwest or the Balkan Mountains in the south, or past Bohemia in the west.[19][20] One of the earliest mention of the Slavs' original homeland is in the Bavarian Geographer circa 900, which associates the homeland of the Slavs with the Zeriuani, which some equate to the Cherven lands.[21]

Frederik Kortlandt has suggested that the number of candidates for Slavic homeland may rise from a tendency among historians to date "proto-languages farther back in time than is warranted by the linguistic evidence". Although all spoken languages change gradually over time, the absence of written records allows change to be identified by historians only after a population has expanded and separated long enough to develop daughter languages.[22] The existence of an "original home" is sometimes rejected as arbitrary[23] because the earliest origin sources "always speak of origins and beginnings in a manner which presupposes earlier origins and beginnings".[24]

According to historical records, the Slavic homeland would have been somewhere in Central Europe. The Prague-Penkova-Kolochin complex of cultures of the 6th and the 7th centuries AD is generally accepted to reflect the expansion of Slavic-speakers at the time.[25] Core candidates are cultures within the territories of modern Belarus, Poland and Ukraine. According to the Polish historian Gerard Labuda, the ethnogenesis of Slavic people is the Trzciniec culture[26] from about 1700 to 1200 BC. The Milograd culture hypothesis posits that the pre-Proto-Slavs (or Balto-Slavs) originated in the 7th century BC–1st century AD culture of northwestern Ukraine and southern Belarus. According to the Chernoles culture theory, the pre-Proto-Slavs originated in the 1025–700 BC culture of northwestern Ukraine and the 3rd century BC–1st century AD Zarubintsy culture. According to the Lusatian culture hypothesis, they were present in northeastern Central Europe in the 1300–500 BC culture and the 2nd century BC–4th century AD Przeworsk culture. The Danube basin hypothesis, postulated by Oleg Trubachyov[27] and supported by Florin Curta and Nestor's Chronicle, theorises that the Slavs originated in central and southeastern Europe.[28]

The latest attempt to identify the origin of Slavic language studied the paternal and maternal genetic lineages, as well as autosomal DNA, of all existing modern Slavic populations. Besides confirming their common origin and medieval expansion, the variance and frequency of the Y-DNA haplogroups R1a and I2 subclades R-M558, R-M458, and I-CTS10228 correlate with the medieval spread of Slavic language from Eastern Europe, most probably from the territory of present-day Ukraine (within the area of the middle Dnieper basin) and Southeastern Poland.[29][30][31][32][33][34]

Linguistics

 
Slavic language distribution, with the Prague-Penkov-Kolochin complex in pink, and the area of Slavic river names in red[35]

Proto-Slavic began to evolve from Proto-Indo-European,[36] the reconstructed language from which originated a number of languages spoken in Eurasia.[37][38] The Slavic languages share a number of features with the Baltic languages (including the use of genitive case for the objects of negative sentences, Proto-Indo-European and other labialized velars), which may indicate a common Proto-Balto-Slavic phase in the development of those two linguistic branches of Indo-European.[37][38] Frederik Kortlandt places the territory of the common language near the Proto-Indo-European homeland: "The Indo-Europeans who remained after the migrations became speakers of Balto-Slavic".[39] According to the prevailing Kurgan hypothesis, the original homeland of the Proto-Indo-Europeans may have been in the Pontic–Caspian steppe of eastern Europe.[40] However, "geographical contiguity, parallel development and interaction" may explain the existence of the characteristics of both language groups.[38]

Proto-Slavic developed into a separate language during the first half of the 2nd millennium BC.[36] The Proto-Slavic vocabulary, which was inherited by its daughter languages, described its speakers' physical and social environment, feelings and needs.[41][42] Proto-Slavic had words for family connections, including svekry ("husband's mother"), and zъly ("sister-in-law").[43] The inherited Common Slavic vocabulary lacks detailed terminology for physical surface features that are peculiar to mountains or the steppe, the sea, coastal features, littoral flora or fauna or saltwater fish.[44]

Proto-Slavic hydronyms have been preserved between the source of the Vistula and the middle basin of the Dnieper.[45] Its northern regions adjoin territory in which river names of Baltic origin (Daugava, Neman and others) abound.[46][47] On the south and east, it borders the area of Iranian river names (including the Dniester, the Dnieper and the Don).[48] A connection between Proto-Slavic and Iranian languages is also demonstrated by the earliest layer of loanwords in the former;[41] the Proto-Slavic words for god (*bogъ), demon (*divъ), house (*xata), axe (*toporъ) and dog (*sobaka) are of Scythian origin.[49][unreliable source?] The Iranian dialects of the Scythians and the Sarmatians influenced Slavic vocabulary during the millennium of contact between them and early Proto-Slavic.[50]

A longer, more intensive connection between Proto-Slavic and the Germanic languages can be assumed from the number of Germanic loanwords, such as *kupiti ("to buy"),[51] *xǫdogъ ("beautiful,"),[52] *šelmъ ("helmet")[53] and *xlěvъ ("barn").[54] The Common Slavic words for beech, larch and yew were also borrowed from Germanic, which led Polish botanist Józef Rostafiński to place the Slavic homeland in the Pripet Marshes, which lacks those plants.[55] Germanic languages were a mediator between Common Slavic and other languages; the Proto-Slavic word for emperor (*cĕsar'ь) was transmitted from Latin through a Germanic language, and the Common Slavic word for church (*crъky) came from Greek.[56]

Common Slavic dialects before the 4th century AD cannot be detected since all of the daughter languages emerged from later variants.[57] Tonal word stress (a 9th-century AD change) is present in all Slavic languages, and Proto-Slavic reflects the language that was probably spoken at the end of the 1st millennium AD.[57]

Historiography

 
The origin and migration of Slavs in Europe in the 5th to the 10th centuries AD:
  Original Slavic homeland (modern-day southeastern Poland, northwestern Ukraine and southern Belarus)
  Expansion of the Slavic migration in Europe
 
Southeastern Europe in 520, showing the Byzantine Empire under Justin I and the Ostrogothic Kingdom with Migration Period peoples along their borders

Jordanes, Procopius and other Late Roman authors provide the probable earliest references to the southern Slavs in the second half of the 6th century AD.[58] Jordanes completed his Gothic History, an abridgement of Cassiodorus's longer work, in Constantinople in 550 or 551.[59][60] He also used additional sources: books, maps or oral tradition.[61]

Jordanes wrote that the Venethi, Sclavenes and Antes were ethnonyms that referred to the same group.[62] His claim was accepted more than a millennium later by Wawrzyniec Surowiecki, Pavel Jozef Šafárik and other historians,[63] who searched the Slavic Urheimat in the lands that the Venethi (a people named in Tacitus's Germania)[64] lived during the last decades of the 1st century AD.[65] Pliny the Elder wrote that the territory extending from the Vistula to Aeningia (probably Feningia, or Finland), was inhabited by the Sarmati, Wends, Sciri and Hirri.[66]

Procopius completed his three works on Emperor Justinian I's reign (Buildings, History of the Wars, and Secret History) during the 550s.[67][68] Each book contains detailed information on raids by Sclavenes and Antes on the Eastern Roman Empire,[69] and the History of the Wars has a comprehensive description of their beliefs, customs and dwellings.[70][71] Although not an eyewitness, Procopius had contacts among the Sclavene mercenaries who were fighting on the Roman side in Italy.[70]

Agreeing with Jordanes's report, Procopius wrote that the Sclavenes and Antes spoke the same languages but traced their common origin not to the Venethi but to a people he called "Sporoi".[72] Sporoi ("seeds" in Greek; compare "spores") is equivalent to the Latin semnones and germani ("germs" or "seedlings"), and the German linguist Jacob Grimm believed that Suebi meant "Slav".[73] Jordanes and Procopius called the Suebi "Suavi". The end of the Bavarian Geographer's list of Slavic tribes contains a note: "Suevi are not born, they are sown (seminati)".[74] The language spoken by Tacitus's Suevi is unknown. In his description of the emigration (c. 512) of the Heruli to Scandinavia, Procopius places the Slavs in Central Europe.[citation needed]

A similar description of the Sclavenes and Antes is found in the Strategikon of Maurice, a military handbook written between 592 and 602 and attributed to Emperor Maurice.[75] Its author, an experienced officer, participated in the Eastern Roman campaigns against the Sclavenes on the lower Danube at the end of the century.[76] A military staff member was also the source of Theophylact Simocatta's narrative of the same campaigns.[77]

Although Martin of Braga was the first western author to refer to a people known as "Sclavus" before 580, Jonas of Bobbio included the earliest lengthy record of the nearby Slavs in his Life of Saint Columbanus (written between 639 and 643).[78] Jonas referred to the Slavs as "Veneti" and noted that they were also known as "Sclavi".[79]

Western authors, including Fredegar and Boniface, preserved the term "Venethi".[80] The Franks (in the Life of Saint Martinus, the Chronicle of Fredegar and Gregory of Tours), Lombards (Paul the Deacon) and Anglo-Saxons (Widsith) referred to Slavs in the Elbe-Saale region and Pomerania as "Wenden" or "Winden" (see Wends). The Franks and the Bavarians of Styria and Carinthia called their Slavic neighbours "Windische".[citation needed]

The unknown author of the Chronicle of Fredegar used the word "Venedi" (and variants) to refer to a group of Slavs who were subjugated by the Avars.[79] In the chronicle, "Venedi" formed a state that emerged from a revolt[79] led by the Frankish merchant Samo against the Avars around 623.[81] A change in terminology, the replacement of Slavic tribal names for the collective "Sclavenes" and "Antes", occurred at the end of the century;[82] the first tribal names were recorded in the second book of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius, around 690.[83] The unknown "Bavarian Geographer" listed Slavic tribes in the Frankish Empire around 840,[69] and a detailed description of 10th-century tribes in the Balkan Peninsula was compiled under the auspices of Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus in Constantinople around 950.[84]

Archaeology

 
7th-century Slavic cultures (the Prague-Penkov-Kolochin complex). The Prague and the Mogilla cultures reflect the separation of the early Western Slavs (the Sukow-Dziedzice group in the northwest may be the earliest Slavic expansion to the Baltic Sea); the Kolochin culture represents the early East Slavs; the Penkovka culture and its southwestward extension, the Ipoteşti-Cândeşti culture, demonstrate early Slavic expansion into the Balkans, which would later result in the separation of the South Slavs, associated with the Antes people of Byzantine historiography. In the Carpathian basin, the Eurasian Avars began to be Slavicized during the Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps.

In the archaeological literature, attempts have been made to assign an early Slavic character to several cultures in a number of time periods and regions.[85] The Prague-Korchak cultural horizon encompasses postulated early Slavic cultures from the Elbe to the Dniester, in contrast with the Dniester-to-Dnieper Prague-Penkovka.[86] "Prague culture" in a narrow sense,[86] refers to western Slavic material grouped around Bohemia, Moravia and western Slovakia, distinct from the Mogilla (southern Poland) and Korchak (central Ukraine and southern Belarus) groups further east. The Prague and Mogilla groups are seen as the archaeological reflection of the 6th-century Western Slavs.[87]

The 2nd-to-5th-century Chernyakhov culture encompassed modern Ukraine, Moldova and Wallachia. Chernyakov finds include polished black-pottery vessels, fine metal ornaments and iron tools.[88] Soviet scholars, such as Boris Rybakov, saw it as the archaeological reflection of the proto-Slavs.[89] The Chernyakov zone is now seen as representing the cultural interaction of several peoples, one of which was rooted in Scytho-Sarmatian traditions, which were modified by Germanic elements that were introduced by the Goths.[88][90] The semi-subterranean dwelling with a corner hearth later became typical of early Slavic sites,[91] with Volodymir Baran calling it a Slavic "ethnic badge".[91] In the Carpathian foothills of Podolia, at the northwestern fringes of the Chernyakov zone, the Slavs gradually became a culturally-unified people; the multiethnic environment of the Chernyakhov zone presented a "need for self-identification in order to manifest their differentiation from other groups".[92]

The Przeworsk culture, northwest of the Chernyakov zone, extended from the Dniester to the Tisza valley and north to the Vistula and Oder.[93] It was an amalgam of local cultures, most with roots in earlier traditions modified by influences from the (Celtic) La Tène culture, (Germanic) Jastorf culture beyond the Oder and the Bell-Grave culture of the Polish plain. The Venethi may have played a part; other groups included the Vandals, Burgundians and Sarmatians.[93] East of the Przeworsk zone was the Zarubinets culture, which is sometimes considered part of the Przeworsk complex.[94] Early Slavic hydronyms are found in the area occupied by the Zarubinets culture,[94] and Irena Rusinova proposed that the most prototypical examples of Prague-type pottery later originated there.[91] The Zarubinets culture is identified as proto-Slavic[95] or an ethnically mixed community that became Slavicized.[86]

With increasing age, the confidence with which archaeological connections can be made to known historic groups lessens.[96] The Chernoles culture has been seen as a stage in the evolution of the Slavs,[94] and Marija Gimbutas identified it as the proto-Slavic homeland.[97] According to many pre-historians, ethnic labels are inappropriate for European Iron Age peoples.[98]

The Globular Amphora culture stretched from the middle Dnieper to the Elbe during the late 4th and early 3rd millennia BC. It has been suggested as the locus of a Germano-Balto-Slavic continuum (the Germanic substrate hypothesis), but the identification of its bearers as Indo-Europeans is uncertain. The area of the culture contains a number of tumuli, which are typical of Indo-Europeans.[citation needed]

The 8th-to-3rd-century BC Chernoles culture, sometimes associated with Herodotus' "Scythian farmers", is "sometimes portrayed as either a state in the development of the Slavic languages or at least some form of late Indo-European ancestral to the evolution of the Slavic stock".[99] The Milograd culture (700 BC–100 AD), centred roughly in today's Belarus and north of the Chernoles culture, has also been proposed as ancestral for the Slavs or the Balts. The ethnic composition of the Przeworsk culture (2nd century BC to 4th century AD), associated with the Lugii) of central and southern Poland, northern Slovakia and Ukraine, including the Zarubintsy culture (2nd century BC to 2nd century AD and connected with the Bastarnae tribe) and the Oksywie culture are other candidates.[citation needed]

Southern Ukraine is known to have been inhabited by Scythian and Sarmatian tribes before the Goths. Early Slavic stone stelae that are found in the middle Dniester region are markedly different from the Scythian and Sarmatian stelae of the Crimea.[citation needed]

The Wielbark culture displaced the eastern Oksywie culture during the 1st century AD. Although the 2nd-to-5th-century Chernyakhov culture triggered the decline of the late Sarmatian culture from the 2nd to the 4th centuries, the western part of the Przeworsk culture remained intact until the 4th century and the Kiev culture flourished from the 2nd to the 5th centuries and is recognised as the predecessor of the 6th- and 7th-century Prague-Korchak and Pen'kovo cultures, the first archaeological cultures that are identified as Slavic. Although Proto-Slavic probably reached its final stage in the Kiev area, the scientific community disagrees on the Kiev culture's predecessors. Some scholars trace them from the Ruthenian Milograd culture, others from the Ukrainian Chernoles and Zarubintsy cultures and still others from the Polish Przeworsk culture.[citation needed]

Ethnogenesis

According to the mainstream and culture-historical viewpoint which emphasizes the primordial model of ethnogenesis, the Slavic homeland in the forests enabled them to preserve their ethnic identity, language except for phonetic and some lexical constituents, and their patrilineal, agricultural customs.[100] However, it was a "complex process that involved Scythian, Zarubintsy, and Cherniakhovo influences on at least two groups of Indo-European population living in the middle Dnieper; southeast Poland; and the area in-between, along the Pripiat' and the Bug".[86] After a millennium, when the Hunnic Empire collapsed and the Avars arrived shortly afterwards, an eastern-Slavic culture re-emerged and spread rapidly in south and central-eastern Europe bringing their customs and language.[86]

Russian archaeologist Valentin Sedov, using the Herderian concept of nationhood,[101] proposed that the Venethi were the proto-Slavic bearers of the Przeworsk culture. Their expansion began during the second century AD, and they occupied a large area of eastern Europe between the Vistula and the middle Dnieper. The Venethi slowly expanded south and east by the fourth century, assimilating the neighbouring Zarubinec culture (which Sedov considered partly Baltic) and continuing southeast to become part of the Chernyakhov culture. The Antes separated themselves from the Venethi by 300 (followed by the Sclaveni by 500) in the areas of the Prague-Penkovka and Prague-Korchak cultures, respectively.[102]

Paul Barford suggested that Slavic groups might have existed in a wide area of central-eastern Europe (in the Chernyakov and Zarubintsy-Przeworsk cultural zones) before the documented Slavic migrations from the sixth to the ninth centuries. Serving as auxiliaries in the Sarmatian, Goth and Hun armies, small numbers of Slavic speakers might have reached the Balkans before the sixth century.[103]

According to Marija Gimbutas, "[n]either Bulgars nor Avars colonized the Balkan Peninsula; after storming Thrace, Illyria and Greece they went back to their territory north of the Danube. It was the Slavs who did the colonizing ... entire families or even whole tribes infiltrated lands. As an agricultural people, they constantly sought an outlet for the population surplus. Suppressed for over a millennium by foreign rule of Scythians, Sarmatians and Goths, they had been restricted to a small territory; now the barriers were down and they poured out".[104]

In addition to their demographic growth, the depopulation of central-eastern Europe due, in part, to Germanic emigration, the lack of Roman imperial defenses on the frontiers which were decimated after centuries of conflicts and especially the Plague of Justinian, and the Late Antique Little Ice Age (536-660 CE) encouraged Slavic expansion and settlement to the west and the south of the Carpathian Mountains.[86][105][106] The migrationist model remains the most acceptable and logical explanation of the spread of Slavs and Slavic culture (including language).[107][108][109][110][111][112]

According to the processual viewpoint which emphasizes the culture-social model of ethnogenesis, there is "no need to explain culture change exclusively in terms of migration and population replacement".[113] It argues that the Slavic expansion was primarily "a linguistic spread".[114]

One of the theories used to explain language replacement is that a dominant Slavic elite diaspora managed to spread, conquer and slavicize various communities.[115][116][117][118] A more extreme hypothesis is argued by Florin Curta who considers that the Slavs as an "ethno-political category" were invented by an external source - the Byzantines - through political instrumentation and interaction on the Roman frontiers where a barbarian elite culture flourished.[119][120]

Horace Lunt attributes the spread of Slavic to the "success and mobility of the Slavic 'special border guards' of the Avar khanate",[121] who used it as a lingua franca in the Avar Khaganate. According to Lunt, only as a lingua franca could Slavic supplant other languages and dialects whilst remaining relatively uniform. Although it could explain the formation of regional Slavic groups in the Balkans, the Eastern Alps and the Morava-Danube basin, Lunt's theory does not account for the spread of Slavic to the Baltic region and the territory of the Eastern Slavs, which are areas with no historical links to the Pannonian Avars.[122]

A concept related to elite dominance is the notion of system collapse, in which a power vacuum created by the fall of the Hun and Roman Empires allowed a minority group to impose their customs and language.[115] However, Michel Kazanski concludes that although both "the movement of the populations of the Slavic cultural model and the diffusion of this model amid non-Slavic populations [occurred] (...) a pure diffusion of the Slavic model would hardly be possible, in any case in which a long period of time when the populations of different cultural traditions lived close to one another is assumed. Moreover, archaeologists researching Slavic antiquities do not accept the ideas produced by the "diffusionists," because most of the champions of the diffusion model know the specific archaeological materials poorly, so their works leave room for a number of arbitrary interpretations".[112]

Appearance

 
 
Depiction of an early Slav as a personification of "Sclavinia", from Otto's Gospel Book, 990 AD

In the Chronica Slavorum, Helmold writes on the Wends "These men have blue eyes, ruddy faces, and long hair."[123] Ibrahim Ibn Ya'qub mentioned the Slavs were bearded.[124] Procopius wrote that the Slavs "are all tall and especially strong, their skin is not very white, and their hair is neither blond nor black, but all have reddish hair."[125] Jordanes wrote "...all of them are tall and very strong... their skin and hair are neither very dark nor light, but are ruddy of face".[126] Ibrahim Ibn Ya'qub wrote: "They wear ample robes, although the ends of their sleeves are narrow."[124] Procopious wrote that the men also wear a kind of breeches pulled up to the waist.[127]

Theophylact Simocatta, wrote about the Slavs that "The Emperor was with great curiosity listening to stories about this tribe, he has welcomed these newcomers from the land of barbarians, and after being amazed by their height and mighty stature, he sent these men to Heraclea." Hisham ibn al-Kalbi, described the slavs as "...a numerous nation, fair-haired and of ruddy complexion.", and Al-Baladuri, made reference to the Slavs, writing "If the Prince so willed, outside of his doors would be black Sudanians or ruddy Slavs.[128]

Society

Early Slavic society was a typical decentralised tribal society of Iron Age Europe and was organised into local chiefdoms. A slow consolidation occurred between the 7th and the 9th, when the previously uniform Slavic cultural area evolved into discrete zones. Slavic groups were influenced by neighbouring cultures like Byzantium, the Khazars, the Vikings and the Carolingians and influenced their neighbours in return.[129]

these nations, the Sclaveni and the Antes, are not ruled by one man, but they have lived from of old under a democracy, and consequently everything which involves their welfare, whether for good or ill, is referred to the people.

— Procopius[130]

Differences in status gradually developed in the chiefdoms, which led to the development of centralized socio-political organisations. The first centralized organisations may have been temporary pantribal warrior associations, the greatest evidence being in the Danubian area, where barbarian groups organised around military chiefs to raid Byzantine territory and to defend themselves against the Pannonian Avars.[131] Social stratification gradually developed in the form of fortified, hereditary chiefdoms, which were first seen in the West Slavs areas. The chief was supported by a retinue of warriors, who owed their position to him. As chiefdoms became powerful and expanded, centres of subsidiary power ruled by lesser chiefs were created, and the line between powerful chiefdoms and centralised medieval states is blurred. By the mid-9th century, the Slavic elite had become sophisticated; it wore luxurious clothing, rode horses, hunted with falcons and travelled with retinues of soldiers.[132] These chiefs were often at war with one another.[133]

Tribal and territorial organisation

 
Reconstruction of a Slavic gatehouse in Thunau am Kamp, Austria. The site excavated in the 1980s dates back to the era of the Great Moravian Empire in the 9th and 10th centuries.

There is no indication of Slavic chiefs in any of the Slavic raids before AD 560, when Pseudo-Caesarius's writings mentioned their chiefs but described the Slavs as living by their own law and without the rule of anyone.[134]

The Sclaveni and the Antes were reported to have lived under a democracy for a long time.[135] The 6th-century historian Procopius, who was in contact with Slavic mercenaries,[136] reported, "For these nations, the Sclaveni and the Antes, are not governed by one man, but from ancient times have lived in democracy, and consequently everything which involves their welfare, whether for good or for ill, is referred to the people".[137] The 6th-century Strategikon of Maurice is considered an eyewitness of the Slavs and recommended the Roman generals to use any possible means to prevent the Sclaveni from uniting "under one ruler" and added that "the Sclaveni and Antes were both independent, absolutely refused to be enslaved or governed, least of all in their own land".[138]

Settlements were not uniformly distributed but were in clusters separated by areas of lower settlement density.[139] The clusters resulted from the expansion of single settlements, and the "settlement cells" were linked by familial or clan relationships. Settlement cells were the basis of the simplest form of territorial organization, known as a župa in South Slavic and opole in Polish. According to the Primary Chronicle, "The men of the Polanie lived each with his own clan in his own place". Several župas, encompassing individual clan territories, formed the known tribes: "The complex processes initiated by the Slav expansion and subsequent demographic and ethnic consolidation culminated in the formation of tribal groups, which later coalesced to create state which form the framework of the ethnic make-up of modern eastern Europe".[140]

The root of many tribal names denotes the territory in which they inhabited, such as the Milczanie (who lived in areas with mělloess), Moravians (along the Morava), Diokletians (near the former Roman city of Doclea) and Severiani (northerners). Other names have more general meanings, such as the Polanes (pola; field) and Drevlyans (drevo; tree). Others appear to have a non-Slavic (possibly Iranian) root, such as the Antes and Croats. Some geographically distant tribes appear to share names. The Dregoviti appear north of the Pripyat River and in the Vardar valley, the Croats in Galicia and northern Dalmatia and the Obodrites near Lübeck and their further south in Pannonia. The root Slav was retained in the modern names of the Slovenes, Slovaks and Slavonians. There is little evidence of migratory links between tribes sharing the same name. The common names may reflect names given the tribes by historians or a common tongue as a distinction between Slavs (slovo; word, letter) and others, Nemci (mutes) being a Slavic name for "Germans".[citation needed]

Culture

Settlements

 
Reconstruction of a Slavic hilltop Grod in Birów, Poland
 
Reconstruction of a Slavic settlement in Torgelow, Germany

Early Slavic settlements were no bigger than 0.5 to 2 hectares (1.2 to 4.9 acres). Settlements were often temporary, perhaps reflected their itinerant form of agriculture,[141] and were often along rivers. They were characterised by sunken buildings, known as Grubenhäuser in German or poluzemlianki in Russian. Built over a rectangular pit, they varied from 4 to 20 m2 (43 to 215 sq ft) in area and could accommodate a typical nuclear family. Each house had a stone or clay oven in a corner (a defining feature of Eastern European dwellings), and a settlement had a population of fifty to seventy.[142] Settlements had a central, open area in which communal activities and ceremonies were conducted, and they were divided into production and settlement zones.[143]

The Slavs also built underground shelters roofed with wood to keep out the cold during winter.[144]

Log cabin saunas were also used as recorded by Ibrahim Ibn Ya'qub: "They have no baths but they use log cabins in which gaps are stuffed with something that appears on their trees and looks like seaweed – they call it mech (original mh = moss)… In one corner they put up a stone stove and above it they open up a hole to let the smoke from the stove escape. When the stove is good and hot, they close up the opening and close the door of the hut. Inside are vessels with water and they pour out of them water onto the hot stove and steam comes from it. Each of them has in his hand a tuft of grass with which they make air circulate and draw it to themselves. Then their pores open up and the unneeded substances from their bodies come out…"[124]

Fortified strongholds (grods) appeared in significant numbers during the 9th century, especially the Western Slavic territories, and were often found in the centre of a group of settlements. The South Slavs did not form enclosed strongholds but lived in open, rural settlements that were adopted from the social models of the indigenous populations they encountered.[citation needed]

The Slavs preferred to live in hard to reach places to avoid attack, as recorded in Maurice's Strategikon: "They live among nearly impenetrable forests, rivers, lakes, and marshes, and have made the exits from their settlements branch outing many directions because of the dangers they might face."[133]

Food and agriculture

 
Slavic ceramic pottery vessel, c. 8th century AD

The Slavs practiced hunting, farming, herding and beekeeping. They often settled in valley bottoms with rich soil, along rivers to provide water for livestock.[145] The early Slavs also had knowledge of crop rotation and developed a new sort of plow known as the moldboard plow, this plough was very efficient in breaking up the clay full soil of northern Europe, and it helped drastically increase the Slavic population.[146] Other tools, common throughout the rest of Europe were also used, such as iron hoes, sickles, wooden spades and others. Some were made from wood. Selective breeding was also done.

When crops were ripe they were cut with sickles and threshing was then done with a wooden flail. The grain was then milled by stone querns, which were very valuable and difficult to come by. Cereal crops, wheat, millet and barley were common as they could thrive in even poor soil. Vegetables were grown in gardens, onions, carrots, radishes, turnip, parsnip, cucumber, pumpkins, cabbage, pea and beans were all grown. Herbs were mostly garlic and parsnip, hops were also grown for making beer. Fruit trees were cultivated in orchards, including cherry, apple, pear, plums and peaches. Walnuts were also loved.

Animal were tended, not only for meat, leather or milk but also to fertilize the soil. Several breeds of cattle were bred and kept in large herds, as draught animals and for meat, female cattle provided milk. Pigs were prized for their meat. Goats and sheep were more rare but still bred. Horses were very rarely eaten, mostly used as draught or riding animals. Fowl were also kept, especially ducks and geese.

Animals in the forest were hunted, prey included boar, deer, hare, elk and occasionally bear. Beavers and marten were trapped for their fur.[145]

"They sow during two seasons of the year, in summer and in spring, and harvest two crops. Their principal crop is millet... They refrain from eating chicken, asserting that it exacerbates erysipelas, but they eat beef and goose, both of which agree with them...Their drinks and wine are made out of honey."[124] -Ibrahim Ibn Ya'qub

"They have a sort of wooden box, provided with holes, in which bees live and make their honey; in their language they are called the ulishaj. They collect around ten jars of honey from each box. They herd pigs as if they were sheep...They drink mead"[144] -Ibn Rusta

Medicine

The ancient Slavs knew human anatomy well, which is evident from the existence of numerous old names for body parts. Due to the lack of sources, we do not know for sure what they suffered from, but it is assumed that they were plague, malaria and dysentery. [147]The medicines they used were mostly of animal and plant origin. Less commonly, minerals, sulfur and salt were used for medicinal purposes. [147] The Slavs cleansed themselves in log cabin saunas[124] and bathed in rivers.[148] The early medieval Muslim traveller Ibrahim ibn Yaqub wrote: "The cold even when it is intense, is healthful to them, but the heat destroys them. They are unable to travel to the country of the Lombards because of the heat."[124]

Craftsmanship

 
Slavic fibula brooch, c. 7th century AD

Wood, leather, metal and ceramic work were all skillfully practiced by the Early Slavs. Pottery was made by craftsmen, or women, possibly in domestic workshops. Clay was mixed with course material, such as sand, crushed rock, to improve the qualities. Clay was worked by hand and roughly smoothed after completion, clay vessels also made with assistance of pottery wheels. After they were dried they were baked at a low temperature in bone-fire kilns. Pottery was produced not only by craftsmen, but also ordinary people as it did not require extensive practice, other crafts however were produced by professional craftsmen.

Metalworking was very important, as it was required to make tools and weapons. Iron was needed by every tribe, and it was produced by smiths using local ore, which was primarily bog ore. Once the ore had been turned into usable iron and slag removed, it was made into bars. Smiths made many types of products such as knives, tools, decorative items as well as weapons, which were not always made by separate weapon smiths. Broken tools were reforged, as iron was a valuable resource.

Houses, as well as their inside fittings and everyday items were made from wood. Carved bowls, vessels and beautifully made dippers were common in most homes. Leather and textiles, made of both linen and wool were made into carpets, blankets, overcoats and other clothing. Spindlewhorls were used to make thread in the home. Glass beads were crafted, and were often used as trade goods.[149][page needed]

Clothing

Most of the knowledge we have on Early Slavic clothing comes from iconographic sources and cemeteries. Although clothing differed according to region, season of year and social status, a general picture can be reconstructed.

Men wore long sleeved tunics made of linen or wool, extending to about the knee, under these breeches were worn. wool cloaks were sometimes worn over the tunic, fastened at the right shoulder leaving the right arm free. Cloaks were occasionally also made of leather, and lined with fir or other material. Hats and mittens were worn for the winter, some trimmed with fur. Leather boots and shoes were also worn by both men and women, as well as a belt carrying a knife and whetstone for sharpening.

Some women wore long patterned dresses, made from linen, sometimes with an apron tied over the dress. Dresses or tunic were sometimes made from one piece. Unmarried women wore their hair braided or loose, but covered it after they were wedded. Ornaments and jewelry such as beads and earrings and twisted wire bracelets were also worn, especially by wealthier women.[149][page needed]

Musical instruments and burial practices

 
A square Slavic burial site in Löcknitz, Germany

The Slavs had many musical instruments as recorded in historical chronicles:

"They have different kinds of lutes, pan pipes and flutes a cubit long. Their lutes have eight strings. They drink mead. They play their instruments during the incineration of their dead and claim that their rejoicing attests the mercy of the Lord to the dead."[144] -Ibn Rusta

"They have different kinds of wind and string instruments. They have a wind instrument more than two cubits long, and an eight-stringed instrument whose sounding board is flat, not convex."[124] -Ibrahim Ibn Ya'qub

Theophylact Simocatta mentioned of Slavs bearing lyres: "Lyres were their baggage"[150]

The Slavs burned their dead. Although the Slavic funeral pyre was seen as a means of freeing the soul from the body rapidly, visibly and publicly,[151][failed verification] archaeological evidence suggests that the South Slavs quickly adopted the burial practices of their post-Roman Balkan neighbours.[citation needed]

"They burn their dead...The day after the funeral of a man, after he has been burned, they collect the ashes and put them in an urn, which is buried on a hill. After a year, they place twenty hives, more or less, on the hill. The family gathers and eats and drinks there and then everyone goes home."[144] -Ibn Rusta

Marriage

Capturing wives and exogamy were traditions among the tribes and continued until the early medieval era. However, on some occasions in Bohemia and Ukraine, it was women who chose the spouse.[152] Fornication had a sentence in Pagan Slavs that was described as capital punishment by travelers, Ibn-Fadlan: "Men and women go to the river and bathe together naked... but they do not fornicate and if anyone would be guilty of it, no matter who is he and she... he and she would be pinked by pole-axe... then they hang out each part both of them on a tree", Gardizi: "If someone makes fornication, he or she would be killed, without accepting any apologies".[148]

The Byzantine Emperor Maurice wrote: "Their women are more sensitive than any others in the world. When, for example, their husband dies, many look upon it as their own death and freely smother themselves, not wanting to continue their lives as widows."[133]

Law

 
First page of the oldest surviving copy of Russkaya Pravda (old Rus law) (Vast edition) from Synodic Kormchaia of 1282 (Novgorod)

Rus law was based on Early Slavic customary law, which was partially recorded in the Rus-Byzantine treaties. However the Early Slavs did not have written laws, but relied on customs that dictated what was acceptable and not. The East Slavs did not have written law until the rule of Yaroslav the Wise.[153][154] One such customary law was the law of hospitality, which was very important to the tribal Slavs. If a tribe mistreated any guest, they would be attacked by a neighbouring tribe for their dishonour.[155]

Ibn Rusta wrote of Slavic law in c 903-918: "The ruler levies fixed taxes every year. Every man must supply one of his daughter's gowns. If he has a son, his clothing must be offered. If he has no children, he gives one of his wife's robes. In this country thieves are strangled or exiled to Jira [Yura by the Urals?], the region most remote from this principality."[156]

Warfare

 
Example of early Slavic armour

Our understanding of Early Slavic warfare is based on both the writings of ancient authors and archeological discoveries.[157]

Early barbarian warrior bands, typically numbering 200 or less, were intended for fast penetration into enemy territory and an equally-quick withdrawal.[145] The Slavs favoured ambush and guerrilla tactics, preferring to fight in dense woodland or marsh.[158] However, victories in the open, sieges and hand-to-hand fighting were also achieved.[157] They often attacked their enemy's flank, and were cunning in devising stratagems.[133] The Slavs also used siege engines, such as siege towers and ladders as described by Procopius and St. Demetrius.

Ibn Rusta wrote: "They have very few horses...Their weapons are javelins, shields and lances...They obey a chief whom they call the Župan and carry out his orders...Their supreme lord, however, is called 'chief of chiefs'...this king has many effective and finely woven coats of mail...The Župan is his lieutenant."[144]

Weapons were usually spears, javelins and bows and arrows. Swords and body armour were rare and reserved for chiefs and their inner circle of warriors. Shields were round in shape[145] with a central boss grip in the middle.[159] Axes and slings were also in use.[145]

Although the Slavs fought mostly on foot, they were also proficient cavalry fighters as historical sources mentioned. Procopius wrote that Slav and "Hun" horsemen were Byzantine mercenaries, serving as horsearchers.[160] In their dealings with the Sarmatians and Huns, the Slavs may have become skilled horsemen, an explanation for their expansion.[161]

Menander Protector mentions a Slavic chief Dobret (circa 577–579) who slew an Avar envoy of Khagan Bayan I for asking the Slavs to accept the suzerainty of the Avars; Dobret declined and is reported as saying: "Others do not conquer our land, we conquer theirs – so it shall always be for us as long as there are wars and weapons".[162]

Writing

 
The bone with elder futhark runic inscription found in the early Slavic settlement in Lány (near Břeclav) in the Czech Republic

The existence of writing among the Early Slavs is a disputed topic. The Slavs passed down their stories and legends orally like most other tribal peoples in Europe. But in addition to this, a runic script was used.[163]

The 9th-century Bulgarian writer [164]Chernorizets Hrabar, in his work "An Account of Letters", briefly mentions that, before becoming Christian, Slavs used a system of strokes and incisions or tallies and sketches: "Before, the Slavs did not have their own books, but counted and divined by means of strokes and incisions, being pagan. Having become Christian, they had to make do with the use of Roman and Greek letters without order [unsystematically], but how can one write [Slavic] well with Greek letters...[note 1] and thus it was for many years."[165]

Symbols

 
Gromoviti znaci, symbols associated with Perun Identical symbols were discovered on Slavic pottery of 4th century Chernyakhov culture.[166]

The Slavs and Balts had many symbols representing concepts, beliefs and Gods. They had many types of swastikas and similar symbols, such as the Kolovrat.(meaning spinning wheel) The kolovrat symbolized the sun, and the ever going cycle of life, death and birth. It was often carved on markers near the graves of fallen Slavs to represent eternal life.[167]

Gromovitit Znaci, were symbols associated with Perun, the Slavic thunder and sky god. Early Slavic homes often had the symbols carved into a beam to protect them from lightning. The circular shape of the Gromoviti symbolize ball lightning. Such symbols were also found on Slavic pottery from the 4th century.[166] Another symbol associated with Perun is the Perunika, which resmebles a six pettled rose. Today it is the name for a flower in some Slavic languages.

The hands of God were another ancient symbol, associated with the god Svarog.[168]

Ancient symbols such as these are still sometimes shown on clothing and the like, especially Russia.[169] Many samples are described on the instance of a women's folk costume at the Meshchera Lowlands.[169] Modern Rodonovers have developed some new symbols, that were not used by the Early Slavs, but many were.

Religion

Little is known about Slavic religion before the Christianization of Bulgaria and of Kievan Rus. After Christianization, Slavic authorities destroyed many records of the old religion. Some evidence remains in apocryphal and devotional texts,[170] the etymology of Slavic religious terms[171] and the Primary Chronicle.[172]

Ancestor worship was an important part of the pre Christian Slavic religion.[173]

Early Slavic religion was relatively uniform:[174] animistic, anthropomorphic[175] and inspired by nature.[176] The Slavs developed cults around natural objects, such as springs, trees or stones, out of respect for the spirit (or demon) within.[177] Slavic pre-Christian religion was originally polytheistic, with no organised pantheon.[178] Although the earliest Slavs seemed to have a weak concept of God, the concept evolved[179] into a form of monotheism in which a "supreme god [ruled] in heaven over the others".[180] There is no evidence of a belief in fate[181] or predestination.[182]

Slavic paganism was syncretistic[183] and combined and shared with other religions.[184] Linguistic evidence indicates that part of Slavic paganism developed when the Balts and Slavs shared a common language[174] since pre-Christian Slavic beliefs contained elements also found in Baltic religions. After the Slavic and the Baltic languages diverged, the early Slavs interacted with Iranian peoples and incorporated elements of Iranian spirituality. Early Iranian and Slavic supreme gods were considered givers of wealth, unlike the supreme thunder gods of other European religions. Both Slavs and Iranians had demons, with names from similar linguistic roots (Iranian Daêva and Slavic Divŭ) and a concept of dualism: good and evil.[180][185]

Pre-Christian Slavic spirits and demons could be entities in their own right or spirits of the dead and were associated with home or nature. Forest spirits, entities in their own right, were venerated as the counterparts of home spirits, which were usually related to ancestors.[186] Demons and spirits were good or evil, which suggests that the Slavs had a dualistic cosmology and are known to have revered them with sacrifices and gifts.[187] Spirits included Leshy the spirit of the forest, Domovoy spirit of the home, Rusalka the female spirit of waters, Rarog the Slavic variant of phoenix, and other creature such as vilas, vampires and Baba Yaga or Roga.

Although evidence of pre-Christian Slavic worship is scarce (suggesting that it was aniconic), religious sites and idols are most plentiful in Ukraine and Poland. Slavic temples and indoor places of worship are rare since outdoor places of worship are more common, especially in Kievan Rus'. The outdoor cultic sites were often on hills and included ringed ditches.[188] Indoor shrines existed: "Early Russian sources... refer to pagan shrines or altars known as kapishcha" and were small, enclosed structures with an altar inside. One was found in Kiev, surrounded by the bones of sacrificed animals.[189] Pagan temples were documented as destroyed during Christianization.[190]

Records of pre-Christian Slavic priests, like the pagan temples, appeared later.[190] Although no early evidence of Slavic pre-Christian priests has been found, the prevalence of sorcerers and magicians after Christianization suggests that the pre-Christian Slavs had religious leaders.[191] Slavic pagan priests were believed to commune with the gods, to predict the future[182] and to prepare for religious rituals. The pagan priests, or magicians (known as volkhvy by the Rus' people),[172] resisted Christianity[192] after Christianization. The Primary Chronicle describes a campaign against Christianity in 1071 during a famine. The volkhvy were well-received nearly 100 years after Christianization, which suggested that pagan priests had an esteemed position in 1071 and in pre-Christian times.[193]

Later history

Christianization

 
Fresco of Saints Cyril and Methodius, both Byzantine Christian missionaries to the Southern Slavs
 
Page of the Gospel of Mark from Codex Zographensis, an Old Church Slavonic manuscript written in Glagolitic script

Christianization began in the 7th century and was not completed until the second half of the 12 century. Later, as the Empire of Constantinople ("Byzantium") reclaimed some of the areas of the Balkans occupied by Slavs ("Byzantine Reconquista"), slight parts population of Slavs were Hellenised, including conversion to Eastern Orthodox Christianity, for example under the reign of Nicephorus I (802-811). However, the most significant missionary work was in the mid-ninth century. The Christianization of Bulgaria was made official in 864, during the reign of Knyaz Boris I during shifting political alliances both with the Byzantine Empire and the kingdom of the East Franks and the communication with the Pope.

Because of the Bulgarian Empire's strategic position, the Greek East and the Latin West wanted their people to adhere to their liturgies and to ally with them politically. After overtures from each side, Boris aligned with Constantinople and secured an autocephalous Bulgarian national church in 870, the first for the Slavs. In 918/919, the Bulgarian Patriarchate became the fifth autocephalous Eastern Orthodox patriarchate, after the patriarchates of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. That status was officially recognised by the Patriarchate of Constantinople in 927.[194] The Bulgarian Empire developed into the cultural and literary centre of Slavic Europe. The development of the Cyrillic script at the Preslav Literary School, which was declared official in Bulgaria in 893, was also declared the official liturgy in Old Church Slavonic, also called Old Bulgarian.[195][196][197]

 
Map of Europe in 814 showing the distribution of the Slavic tribes and the First Bulgarian Empire in relation to the Carolingian Empire and the Byzantine Empire

Although there is some evidence of early Christianization of the East Slavs, Kievan Rus' either remained largely pagan or relapsed into paganism before the baptism of Vladimir the Great in the 980s. The Christianization of Poland began with the Catholic baptism of King Mieszko I in 966. Slavic paganism persisted into the 12th century in Pomerania, which began to be Christianized after the creation of the Duchy of Pomerania as part of the Holy Roman Empire in 1121. The process was mostly completed by the Wendish Crusade in 1147. The final stronghold of Slavic paganism was the Rani, with a temple to their god Svetovid on Cape Arkona, which was taken in a campaign by Valdemar I of Denmark in 1168.[citation needed]

Medieval states

After Christianisation, the Slavs established a number of kingdoms, or feudal principalities, which persisted throughout the High Middle Ages. The First Bulgarian Empire was founded in 681 as an alliance between the ruling Bulgars and the numerous Slavs in Lower Moesia. Not long after the Slavic incursion, Scythia Minor was once again invaded, this time by the Bulgars, under Khan Asparukh.[198] Their horde was a remnant of Old Great Bulgaria, an extinct tribal confederacy that was north of the Black Sea in what is now Ukraine. Asparukh attacked Byzantine territories in Eastern Moesia and conquered its Slavic tribes in 680.[199] A peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire was signed in 681 and marked the foundation of the First Bulgarian Empire. The minority Bulgars formed a close-knit ruling caste.[200]

The South Slavs established also the Duchy of Croatia in the early 7-8th century (Kingdom of Croatia since 925) and short-lived Duchy of Lower Pannonia. Roughly in the same time Principality of Serbia (later Grand Principality and Kingdom of Serbia), while Banate of Bosnia emerged from the 10th century by merging localities called župas, which were remnants of Early Christianity ecclesiastical divisions.[201][202] Duklja, Zachlumia, Pagania, Travunia and Kanalites similarly started emerging in the south.[200][203] The West Slavs were distributed in Samo's Empire, which was the first Slavic state to form in the west, followed by the Great Moravia and, after its decline, the Kingdom of Poland, the Obotritic confederation (now eastern Germany) the Principality of Nitra (modern Slovakia) a vassal of the Kingdom of Hungary, and the Duchy of Bohemia (now the Czech Republic).

After the 1054 death of Yaroslav the Wise and the breakup of Kievan Rus', the East Slavs fragmented into a number of principalities from which Muscovy would emerge after 1300 as the most powerful one. The western principalities of the former Kievan Rus' were absorbed by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[citation needed]

Slavic studies

The debate between proponents of autochthonism and allochthonism began in 1745, when Johann Christoph de Jordan published De Originibus Slavicis. The 19th-century Slovak philologist and poet Pavel Jozef Šafárik, whose theory was founded on Jordanes' Getica, has influenced generations of scholars. Jordanes equated the Sclavenes, the Antes and the Venethi (or Venedi) based on earlier sources such as Pliny the Elder, Tacitus and Ptolemy. Šafárik's legacy was his vision of a Slavic history and the use of linguistics for its study.[161]

The Polish scholar Tadeusz Wojciechowski (1839–1919) was the first to use place names to study Slavic history and was followed by A. L. Pogodin and the botanist J. Rostafinski. The first scholar to introduce archaeological data into the discourse on the early Slavs, Lubor Niederle (1865–1944), endorsed Rostafinski's theory in his multi-volume Antiquities of the Slavs. Vykentyi V. Khvoika (1850–1914), a Ukrainian archaeologist of Czech origin, linked the Slavs with the Neolithic Cucuteni culture. A. A. Spicyn (1858–1931) attributed finds of silver and bronze in central and southern Ukraine to the Antes. Czech archaeologist Ivan Borkovsky (1897–1976) postulated the existence of a Slavic "Prague type" of pottery. Boris Rybakov has linked Spicyn's "Antian antiquities" with Chernyakhov culture remains excavated by Khvoika and theorised that the former should be attributed to the Slavs.[161] The debate became politically charged during the 19th century, particularly in connection with the partitions of Poland and the German Drang nach Osten, and the question of whether Germanic or Slavic peoples were indigenous east of the Oder was used to pursue both German and Polish claims to the region.[citation needed]

Some modern scholars debate the meaning and the usage of the term "Slav" depending on the context in which it is used. The word can refer to a culture (or cultures) living north of the River Danube, east of the River Elbe, and west of the River Vistula during the 530s CE.[204] "Slav" is also an identifier for the ethnic group shared by the cultures[205] and denotes any language with linguistic ties to the modern Slavic language family, which may have no connection to either a common culture or a shared ethnicity.[206]

Despite the concepts of "Slav", such scholars argue that it is unclear whether any of the descriptions add to an accurate representation of the group's history. Historians such as George Vernadsky, Florin Curta and Michael Karpovich have questioned how, why and to what degree, the Slavs were a cohesive society between the 6th and the 9th centuries.[161][207] The Austrian historian Walter Pohl wrote, "Apparently ethnicity operated on at least two levels: the 'common Slavic' identity, and the identity of single Slavic groups, tribes, or peoples of different sizes that gradually developed, very often taking their name from the territory they lived in. These regional ethnogeneses inspired by Slavic tradition incorporated considerable remnants of Roman and Germanic population ready enough to give up ethnic identities that had lost their cohesion".[118]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ In this place are listed eleven examples of Slavic words, such as живѣтъ /živět/ "life", which can hardly be written using the unadapted Roman or Greek letters (i.e. without diacritics changing their sound-values).

References

Citations

  1. ^ Barford 2001, p. vii, Preface.
  2. ^ "Slav | people". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  3. ^ a b Kobyliński 2005, pp. 525–526.
  4. ^ Brzezinski, Richard; Mielczarek, Mariusz (2002). The Sarmatians, 600 BC-AD 450. Osprey Publishing. p. 39. [...] Indeed, it is now accepted that the Sarmatians merged in with pre-Slavic populations.
  5. ^ Adams, Douglas Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. Taylor & Francis. p. 523. [...] In their Ukrainian and Polish homeland the Slavs were intermixed and at times overlain by Germanic speakers (the Goths) and by Iranian speakers (Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans) in a shifting array of tribal and national configurations.
  6. ^ Atkinson, Dorothy; Dallin, Alexander; Warshofsky Lapidus, Gail, eds. (1977). Women in Russia. Stanford University Press. p. 3. [...] Ancient accounts link the Amazons with the Scythians and the Sarmatians, who successively dominated the Pontic steppe for a millennium extending back to the seventh century B.C. The descendants of these peoples were absorbed by the Slavs who came to be known as Russians.
  7. ^ Slovene Studies. Vol. 9–11. Society for Slovene Studies. 1987. p. 36. [...] For example, the ancient Scythians, Sarmatians (amongst others), and many other attested but now extinct peoples were assimilated in the course of history by Proto-Slavs.
  8. ^ Stanaszek, Łukasz Maurycy (2001). Fenotyp dawnych Słowian (VI-X w.) (PDF). Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  9. ^ Geary 2003, p. 144: [B]etween the sixth and seventh centuries, large parts of Europe came to be controlled by Slavs, a process less understood and documented than that of the Germanic ethnogenesis in the west. Yet the effects of Slavicization were far more profound
  10. ^ Langer, William L. An Encyclopedia of World History. Harvard University. 1940 & 1948.
  11. ^ Frank A. Kmietowicz (1976). Ancient Slavs. Worzalla Publishing Company. Jordanes left no doubt that the Antes were of Slavic origin, when he wrote: 'ab unastirpe exorti, tria nomina ediderunt, id est Veneti, Antes, Sclaveni' (although they derive from one nation, now they are known under three names, the Veneti, Antes and Sclaveni). The Veneti were the West Slavs, the Antes the East Slavs and the Sclaveni, the South or Balkan Slavs.
  12. ^ "Procopius, History of the Wars, VII. 14. 22–30".
  13. ^ Gołąb, Zbigniew (1992), The Origins of the Slavs: A Linguist's View, Columbus: Slavica, pp. 291–293, ISBN 9780893572310
  14. ^ Bojtár, Endre (1999), Foreword to the Past: A Cultural History of the Baltic People, Central European University Press, p. 107, ISBN 9789639116429
  15. ^ Campbell, Lyle (2004). Historical Linguistics. MIT Press. p. 418. ISBN 978-0-262-53267-9.
  16. ^ Bojtár, Endre (1999). Foreword to the Past. Central European University Press. p. 88. ISBN 978-9639116429.
  17. ^ Brather, Sebastian (2004). "The Archaeology of the Northwestern Slavs (Seventh To Ninth Centuries)". East Central Europe. 31 (1): 78–81. doi:10.1163/187633004x00116.
  18. ^ a b Barford 2001, p. 37.
  19. ^ Kobyliński 2005, p. 526.
  20. ^ Barford 2001, p. 332.
  21. ^ Curta, Florin (2019). Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages (500-1300) (2 Vols). Boston: BRILL. p. 44. ISBN 978-90-04-39519-0. OCLC 1111434007.
  22. ^ F. Kortlandt, The spread of the Indo-Europeans, pp. 2–3.
  23. ^ Goffart 2006, p. 95.
  24. ^ Wolfram 2006, p. 78.
  25. ^ Peter Heather (17 December 2010). Empires and Barbarians: Migration, Development and the Birth of Europe. Pan Macmillan. pp. 389–396. ISBN 978-0-330-54021-6.
  26. ^ Wstęp. W: Gerard Labuda: Słowiańszczyna starożytna i wczesnośredniowieczna. Poznań: WPTPN, 2003, s. 16. ISBN 8370633811
  27. ^ Trubačev, O. N. 1985. Linguistics and Ethnogenesis of the Slavs: The Ancient Slavs as Evidenced by Etymology and Onomastics. Journal of Indo-European Studies (JIES), 13: 203–256.
  28. ^ Florin Curta, "The Making of the Slavs between ethnogenesis, invention, and migration", Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana, 2 (4), 2008, pp. 155–172
  29. ^ Rebała K, Mikulich A, Tsybovsky I, Siváková D, Dzupinková Z, Szczerkowska-Dobosz A, Szczerkowska Z. "Y-STR variation among Slavs: evidence for the Slavic homeland in the Middle Dnieper Basin". Journal of Human Genetics 52(5):406-14 · February 2007 [1]
  30. ^ Underhill, Peter A. (2015), "The phylogenetic and geographic structure of Y-chromosome haplogroup R1a", European Journal of Human Genetics, 23 (1): 124–131, doi:10.1038/ejhg.2014.50, PMC 4266736, PMID 24667786, R1a-M458 exceeds 20% in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, and Western Belarus. The lineage averages 11–15% across Russia and Ukraine and occurs at 7% or less elsewhere (Figure 2d). Unlike hg R1a-M458, the R1a-M558 clade is also common in the Volga-Uralic populations. R1a-M558 occurs at 10–33% in parts of Russia, exceeds 26% in Poland and Western Belarus, and varies between 10 and 23% in the Ukraine, whereas it drops 10-fold lower in Western Europe. In general, both R1a-M458 and R1a-M558 occur at low but informative frequencies in Balkan populations with known Slavonic heritage.
  31. ^ Pamjav, Horolma; Fehér, Tibor; Németh, Endre; Koppány Csáji, László (2019). Genetika és őstörténet (in Hungarian). Napkút Kiadó. p. 58. ISBN 978-963-263-855-3. Az I2-CTS10228 (köznevén „dinári-kárpáti") alcsoport legkorábbi közös őse 2200 évvel ezelőttre tehető, így esetében nem arról van szó, hogy a mezolit népesség Kelet-Európában ilyen mértékben fennmaradt volna, hanem arról, hogy egy, a mezolit csoportoktól származó szűk család az európai vaskorban sikeresen integrálódott egy olyan társadalomba, amely hamarosan erőteljes demográfiai expanzióba kezdett. Ez is mutatja, hogy nem feltétlenül népek, mintsem családok sikerével, nemzetségek elterjedésével is számolnunk kell, és ezt a jelenlegi etnikai identitással összefüggésbe hozni lehetetlen. A csoport elterjedése alapján valószínűsíthető, hogy a szláv népek migrációjában vett részt, így válva az R1a-t követően a második legdominánsabb csoporttá a mai Kelet-Európában. Nyugat-Európából viszont teljes mértékben hiányzik, kivéve a kora középkorban szláv nyelvet beszélő keletnémet területeket.
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Further reading

  • Nowakowski, Wojciech; Bartkiewicz, Katarzyna. "Baltes et proto-Slaves dans l'Antiquité. Textes et archéologie". In: Dialogues d'histoire ancienne, vol. 16, n°1, 1990. pp. 359–402. [DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/dha.1990.1472];[www.persee.fr/doc/dha_0755-7256_1990_num_16_1_1472]

early, slavs, early, slavs, were, diverse, group, tribal, societies, lived, during, migration, period, early, middle, ages, approximately, 10th, centuries, central, eastern, europe, established, foundations, slavic, nations, through, slavic, states, high, midd. The early Slavs were a diverse group of tribal societies who lived during the Migration Period and the Early Middle Ages approximately the 5th to the 10th centuries AD in Central and Eastern Europe and established the foundations for the Slavic nations through the Slavic states of the High Middle Ages 1 The Slavs original homeland is still a matter of debate due to a lack of historical records however scholars believe that it was in Eastern Europe 2 with Polesia being the most commonly accepted location 3 Battle between the Slavs and the Scythians painting by Viktor Vasnetsov 1881 The first written use of the name Slavs dates to the 6th century when the Slavic tribes inhabited a large portion of Central and Eastern Europe By then the nomadic Iranian speaking ethnic groups living on the Eurasian Steppe the Scythians Sarmatians Alans etc had been absorbed by the region s Slavic speaking population 4 5 6 7 Over the next two centuries the Slavs expanded west to the Elbe river and south towards the Alps and the Balkans absorbing the Celtic Germanic Illyrian and Thracian peoples in the process 8 and also moved east in the direction of the Volga River 9 Beginning in the 7th century the Slavs were gradually Christianized both Byzantine Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism By the 12th century they were the core population of a number of medieval Christian states East Slavs in the Kievan Rus South Slavs in the Bulgarian Empire the Principality of Serbia the Duchy of Croatia and the Banate of Bosnia and West Slavs in the Principality of Nitra Great Moravia the Duchy of Bohemia and the Kingdom of Poland The oldest known Slavic principality in history was Carantania established in the 7th century by the Eastern Alpine Slavs the ancestors of present day Slovenes Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps comprised modern day Slovenia Eastern Friul and large parts of modern day Austria Contents 1 Beginnings 2 Homeland 3 Linguistics 4 Historiography 5 Archaeology 6 Ethnogenesis 7 Appearance 8 Society 8 1 Tribal and territorial organisation 9 Culture 9 1 Settlements 9 2 Food and agriculture 9 3 Medicine 9 4 Craftsmanship 9 5 Clothing 9 6 Musical instruments and burial practices 9 7 Marriage 9 8 Law 9 9 Warfare 9 10 Writing 9 11 Symbols 9 12 Religion 10 Later history 10 1 Christianization 10 2 Medieval states 11 Slavic studies 12 See also 13 Footnotes 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 Sources 15 Further readingBeginnings EditMain articles Slavs ethnonym Vistula Veneti Spori Antes people Sclaveni and Wends Distribution of Venedi Slavic Sarmatian Iranian and Germanic tribes on the frontier of the Roman empire in 125 AD Byzantine sources describe the Veneti as the ancestors of the Sclaveni Slavs The early Slavs were known to the Roman writers of the 1st and 2nd centuries AD under the name of Veneti 10 Authors such as Pliny the Elder Tacitus and Ptolemy described the Veneti as inhabiting the lands east of the Vistula river and along the Venedic Bay Gdansk Bay Later having split into three groups during the migration period the early Slavs were known to the Byzantine writers as Veneti Antes and Sclaveni The 6th century historian Jordanes referred to the Slavs Sclaveni in his 551 work Getica noting that although they derive from one nation now they are known under three names the Veneti Antes and Sclaveni ab una stirpe exorti tria nomina ediderunt id est Veneti Antes Sclaveni 11 Procopius wrote that the Sclaveni and the Ante actually had a single name in the remote past for they were both called Sporoi in olden times 12 Possibly the oldest mention of Slavs in historical writing Slovene is attested in Ptolemy s Geography 2nd century as Stayanoi Stavanoi and Soyobhnoi Souobenoi Sovobenoi Suobeni Suoweni likely referring to early Slavic tribes in a close alliance with the nomadic Alanians who may have migrated east of the Volga River 13 14 In the 8th century during the Early Middle Ages early Slavs living on the borders of the Carolingian Empire were referred to as Wends Vender with the term being a corruption of the earlier Roman era name 15 16 The earliest archaeological findings connected to the early Slavs are associated with the Zarubintsy Przeworsk and Chernyakhov cultures from around the 3rd century BC to the 5th century AD However in many areas archaeologists face difficulties in distinguishing between Slavic and non Slavic findings as in the case of Przeworsk and Chernyakhov since the cultures were also attributed to Germanic peoples and were not exclusively connected with a single ancient ethnic or linguistic group 17 Later beginning in the 6th century Slavic material cultures included the Prague Korchak Penkovka Ipotești Candești and the Sukow Dziedzice group cultures With evidence ranging from fortified settlements gords ceramic pots weapons jewellery and open abodes Homeland EditSee also Lech Cech and Rus Map of the Slavic homeland Early Slavic artifacts are most often linked to the Przeworsk and Zarubintsy cultures The Proto Slavic homeland is the area of Slavic settlement in Central and Eastern Europe during the first millennium AD with its precise location debated by archaeologists ethnographers and historians 18 Most scholars consider Polesia the homeland of the Slavs 3 Theories attempting to place Slavic origin in the Near East have been discarded 18 None of the proposed homelands reaches the Volga River in the east over the Dinaric Alps in the southwest or the Balkan Mountains in the south or past Bohemia in the west 19 20 One of the earliest mention of the Slavs original homeland is in the Bavarian Geographer circa 900 which associates the homeland of the Slavs with the Zeriuani which some equate to the Cherven lands 21 Frederik Kortlandt has suggested that the number of candidates for Slavic homeland may rise from a tendency among historians to date proto languages farther back in time than is warranted by the linguistic evidence Although all spoken languages change gradually over time the absence of written records allows change to be identified by historians only after a population has expanded and separated long enough to develop daughter languages 22 The existence of an original home is sometimes rejected as arbitrary 23 because the earliest origin sources always speak of origins and beginnings in a manner which presupposes earlier origins and beginnings 24 According to historical records the Slavic homeland would have been somewhere in Central Europe The Prague Penkova Kolochin complex of cultures of the 6th and the 7th centuries AD is generally accepted to reflect the expansion of Slavic speakers at the time 25 Core candidates are cultures within the territories of modern Belarus Poland and Ukraine According to the Polish historian Gerard Labuda the ethnogenesis of Slavic people is the Trzciniec culture 26 from about 1700 to 1200 BC The Milograd culture hypothesis posits that the pre Proto Slavs or Balto Slavs originated in the 7th century BC 1st century AD culture of northwestern Ukraine and southern Belarus According to the Chernoles culture theory the pre Proto Slavs originated in the 1025 700 BC culture of northwestern Ukraine and the 3rd century BC 1st century AD Zarubintsy culture According to the Lusatian culture hypothesis they were present in northeastern Central Europe in the 1300 500 BC culture and the 2nd century BC 4th century AD Przeworsk culture The Danube basin hypothesis postulated by Oleg Trubachyov 27 and supported by Florin Curta and Nestor s Chronicle theorises that the Slavs originated in central and southeastern Europe 28 The latest attempt to identify the origin of Slavic language studied the paternal and maternal genetic lineages as well as autosomal DNA of all existing modern Slavic populations Besides confirming their common origin and medieval expansion the variance and frequency of the Y DNA haplogroups R1a and I2 subclades R M558 R M458 and I CTS10228 correlate with the medieval spread of Slavic language from Eastern Europe most probably from the territory of present day Ukraine within the area of the middle Dnieper basin and Southeastern Poland 29 30 31 32 33 34 Linguistics EditMain articles History of Proto Slavic and Proto Balto Slavic language Slavic language distribution with the Prague Penkov Kolochin complex in pink and the area of Slavic river names in red 35 Proto Slavic began to evolve from Proto Indo European 36 the reconstructed language from which originated a number of languages spoken in Eurasia 37 38 The Slavic languages share a number of features with the Baltic languages including the use of genitive case for the objects of negative sentences Proto Indo European kʷ and other labialized velars which may indicate a common Proto Balto Slavic phase in the development of those two linguistic branches of Indo European 37 38 Frederik Kortlandt places the territory of the common language near the Proto Indo European homeland The Indo Europeans who remained after the migrations became speakers of Balto Slavic 39 According to the prevailing Kurgan hypothesis the original homeland of the Proto Indo Europeans may have been in the Pontic Caspian steppe of eastern Europe 40 However geographical contiguity parallel development and interaction may explain the existence of the characteristics of both language groups 38 Proto Slavic developed into a separate language during the first half of the 2nd millennium BC 36 The Proto Slavic vocabulary which was inherited by its daughter languages described its speakers physical and social environment feelings and needs 41 42 Proto Slavic had words for family connections including svekry husband s mother and zly sister in law 43 The inherited Common Slavic vocabulary lacks detailed terminology for physical surface features that are peculiar to mountains or the steppe the sea coastal features littoral flora or fauna or saltwater fish 44 Proto Slavic hydronyms have been preserved between the source of the Vistula and the middle basin of the Dnieper 45 Its northern regions adjoin territory in which river names of Baltic origin Daugava Neman and others abound 46 47 On the south and east it borders the area of Iranian river names including the Dniester the Dnieper and the Don 48 A connection between Proto Slavic and Iranian languages is also demonstrated by the earliest layer of loanwords in the former 41 the Proto Slavic words for god bog demon div house xata axe topor and dog sobaka are of Scythian origin 49 unreliable source The Iranian dialects of the Scythians and the Sarmatians influenced Slavic vocabulary during the millennium of contact between them and early Proto Slavic 50 A longer more intensive connection between Proto Slavic and the Germanic languages can be assumed from the number of Germanic loanwords such as kupiti to buy 51 xǫdog beautiful 52 selm helmet 53 and xlev barn 54 The Common Slavic words for beech larch and yew were also borrowed from Germanic which led Polish botanist Jozef Rostafinski to place the Slavic homeland in the Pripet Marshes which lacks those plants 55 Germanic languages were a mediator between Common Slavic and other languages the Proto Slavic word for emperor cĕsar was transmitted from Latin through a Germanic language and the Common Slavic word for church crky came from Greek 56 Common Slavic dialects before the 4th century AD cannot be detected since all of the daughter languages emerged from later variants 57 Tonal word stress a 9th century AD change is present in all Slavic languages and Proto Slavic reflects the language that was probably spoken at the end of the 1st millennium AD 57 Historiography EditFurther information Baltic Slavic piracy Slavic migrations to the Balkans Maurice s Balkan campaigns Strategicon of Maurice Limes Saxoniae and Sorbian March The origin and migration of Slavs in Europe in the 5th to the 10th centuries AD Original Slavic homeland modern day southeastern Poland northwestern Ukraine and southern Belarus Expansion of the Slavic migration in Europe Southeastern Europe in 520 showing the Byzantine Empire under Justin I and the Ostrogothic Kingdom with Migration Period peoples along their borders Jordanes Procopius and other Late Roman authors provide the probable earliest references to the southern Slavs in the second half of the 6th century AD 58 Jordanes completed his Gothic History an abridgement of Cassiodorus s longer work in Constantinople in 550 or 551 59 60 He also used additional sources books maps or oral tradition 61 Jordanes wrote that the Venethi Sclavenes and Antes were ethnonyms that referred to the same group 62 His claim was accepted more than a millennium later by Wawrzyniec Surowiecki Pavel Jozef Safarik and other historians 63 who searched the Slavic Urheimat in the lands that the Venethi a people named in Tacitus s Germania 64 lived during the last decades of the 1st century AD 65 Pliny the Elder wrote that the territory extending from the Vistula to Aeningia probably Feningia or Finland was inhabited by the Sarmati Wends Sciri and Hirri 66 Procopius completed his three works on Emperor Justinian I s reign Buildings History of the Wars and Secret History during the 550s 67 68 Each book contains detailed information on raids by Sclavenes and Antes on the Eastern Roman Empire 69 and the History of the Wars has a comprehensive description of their beliefs customs and dwellings 70 71 Although not an eyewitness Procopius had contacts among the Sclavene mercenaries who were fighting on the Roman side in Italy 70 Agreeing with Jordanes s report Procopius wrote that the Sclavenes and Antes spoke the same languages but traced their common origin not to the Venethi but to a people he called Sporoi 72 Sporoi seeds in Greek compare spores is equivalent to the Latin semnones and germani germs or seedlings and the German linguist Jacob Grimm believed that Suebi meant Slav 73 Jordanes and Procopius called the Suebi Suavi The end of the Bavarian Geographer s list of Slavic tribes contains a note Suevi are not born they are sown seminati 74 The language spoken by Tacitus s Suevi is unknown In his description of the emigration c 512 of the Heruli to Scandinavia Procopius places the Slavs in Central Europe citation needed A similar description of the Sclavenes and Antes is found in the Strategikon of Maurice a military handbook written between 592 and 602 and attributed to Emperor Maurice 75 Its author an experienced officer participated in the Eastern Roman campaigns against the Sclavenes on the lower Danube at the end of the century 76 A military staff member was also the source of Theophylact Simocatta s narrative of the same campaigns 77 Although Martin of Braga was the first western author to refer to a people known as Sclavus before 580 Jonas of Bobbio included the earliest lengthy record of the nearby Slavs in his Life of Saint Columbanus written between 639 and 643 78 Jonas referred to the Slavs as Veneti and noted that they were also known as Sclavi 79 Western authors including Fredegar and Boniface preserved the term Venethi 80 The Franks in the Life of Saint Martinus the Chronicle of Fredegar and Gregory of Tours Lombards Paul the Deacon and Anglo Saxons Widsith referred to Slavs in the Elbe Saale region and Pomerania as Wenden or Winden see Wends The Franks and the Bavarians of Styria and Carinthia called their Slavic neighbours Windische citation needed The unknown author of the Chronicle of Fredegar used the word Venedi and variants to refer to a group of Slavs who were subjugated by the Avars 79 In the chronicle Venedi formed a state that emerged from a revolt 79 led by the Frankish merchant Samo against the Avars around 623 81 A change in terminology the replacement of Slavic tribal names for the collective Sclavenes and Antes occurred at the end of the century 82 the first tribal names were recorded in the second book of the Miracles of Saint Demetrius around 690 83 The unknown Bavarian Geographer listed Slavic tribes in the Frankish Empire around 840 69 and a detailed description of 10th century tribes in the Balkan Peninsula was compiled under the auspices of Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus in Constantinople around 950 84 Archaeology Edit 7th century Slavic cultures the Prague Penkov Kolochin complex The Prague and the Mogilla cultures reflect the separation of the early Western Slavs the Sukow Dziedzice group in the northwest may be the earliest Slavic expansion to the Baltic Sea the Kolochin culture represents the early East Slavs the Penkovka culture and its southwestward extension the Ipotesti Candesti culture demonstrate early Slavic expansion into the Balkans which would later result in the separation of the South Slavs associated with the Antes people of Byzantine historiography In the Carpathian basin the Eurasian Avars began to be Slavicized during the Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps In the archaeological literature attempts have been made to assign an early Slavic character to several cultures in a number of time periods and regions 85 The Prague Korchak cultural horizon encompasses postulated early Slavic cultures from the Elbe to the Dniester in contrast with the Dniester to Dnieper Prague Penkovka 86 Prague culture in a narrow sense 86 refers to western Slavic material grouped around Bohemia Moravia and western Slovakia distinct from the Mogilla southern Poland and Korchak central Ukraine and southern Belarus groups further east The Prague and Mogilla groups are seen as the archaeological reflection of the 6th century Western Slavs 87 The 2nd to 5th century Chernyakhov culture encompassed modern Ukraine Moldova and Wallachia Chernyakov finds include polished black pottery vessels fine metal ornaments and iron tools 88 Soviet scholars such as Boris Rybakov saw it as the archaeological reflection of the proto Slavs 89 The Chernyakov zone is now seen as representing the cultural interaction of several peoples one of which was rooted in Scytho Sarmatian traditions which were modified by Germanic elements that were introduced by the Goths 88 90 The semi subterranean dwelling with a corner hearth later became typical of early Slavic sites 91 with Volodymir Baran calling it a Slavic ethnic badge 91 In the Carpathian foothills of Podolia at the northwestern fringes of the Chernyakov zone the Slavs gradually became a culturally unified people the multiethnic environment of the Chernyakhov zone presented a need for self identification in order to manifest their differentiation from other groups 92 The Przeworsk culture northwest of the Chernyakov zone extended from the Dniester to the Tisza valley and north to the Vistula and Oder 93 It was an amalgam of local cultures most with roots in earlier traditions modified by influences from the Celtic La Tene culture Germanic Jastorf culture beyond the Oder and the Bell Grave culture of the Polish plain The Venethi may have played a part other groups included the Vandals Burgundians and Sarmatians 93 East of the Przeworsk zone was the Zarubinets culture which is sometimes considered part of the Przeworsk complex 94 Early Slavic hydronyms are found in the area occupied by the Zarubinets culture 94 and Irena Rusinova proposed that the most prototypical examples of Prague type pottery later originated there 91 The Zarubinets culture is identified as proto Slavic 95 or an ethnically mixed community that became Slavicized 86 With increasing age the confidence with which archaeological connections can be made to known historic groups lessens 96 The Chernoles culture has been seen as a stage in the evolution of the Slavs 94 and Marija Gimbutas identified it as the proto Slavic homeland 97 According to many pre historians ethnic labels are inappropriate for European Iron Age peoples 98 The Globular Amphora culture stretched from the middle Dnieper to the Elbe during the late 4th and early 3rd millennia BC It has been suggested as the locus of a Germano Balto Slavic continuum the Germanic substrate hypothesis but the identification of its bearers as Indo Europeans is uncertain The area of the culture contains a number of tumuli which are typical of Indo Europeans citation needed The 8th to 3rd century BC Chernoles culture sometimes associated with Herodotus Scythian farmers is sometimes portrayed as either a state in the development of the Slavic languages or at least some form of late Indo European ancestral to the evolution of the Slavic stock 99 The Milograd culture 700 BC 100 AD centred roughly in today s Belarus and north of the Chernoles culture has also been proposed as ancestral for the Slavs or the Balts The ethnic composition of the Przeworsk culture 2nd century BC to 4th century AD associated with the Lugii of central and southern Poland northern Slovakia and Ukraine including the Zarubintsy culture 2nd century BC to 2nd century AD and connected with the Bastarnae tribe and the Oksywie culture are other candidates citation needed Southern Ukraine is known to have been inhabited by Scythian and Sarmatian tribes before the Goths Early Slavic stone stelae that are found in the middle Dniester region are markedly different from the Scythian and Sarmatian stelae of the Crimea citation needed The Wielbark culture displaced the eastern Oksywie culture during the 1st century AD Although the 2nd to 5th century Chernyakhov culture triggered the decline of the late Sarmatian culture from the 2nd to the 4th centuries the western part of the Przeworsk culture remained intact until the 4th century and the Kiev culture flourished from the 2nd to the 5th centuries and is recognised as the predecessor of the 6th and 7th century Prague Korchak and Pen kovo cultures the first archaeological cultures that are identified as Slavic Although Proto Slavic probably reached its final stage in the Kiev area the scientific community disagrees on the Kiev culture s predecessors Some scholars trace them from the Ruthenian Milograd culture others from the Ukrainian Chernoles and Zarubintsy cultures and still others from the Polish Przeworsk culture citation needed Ethnogenesis EditAccording to the mainstream and culture historical viewpoint which emphasizes the primordial model of ethnogenesis the Slavic homeland in the forests enabled them to preserve their ethnic identity language except for phonetic and some lexical constituents and their patrilineal agricultural customs 100 However it was a complex process that involved Scythian Zarubintsy and Cherniakhovo influences on at least two groups of Indo European population living in the middle Dnieper southeast Poland and the area in between along the Pripiat and the Bug 86 After a millennium when the Hunnic Empire collapsed and the Avars arrived shortly afterwards an eastern Slavic culture re emerged and spread rapidly in south and central eastern Europe bringing their customs and language 86 Russian archaeologist Valentin Sedov using the Herderian concept of nationhood 101 proposed that the Venethi were the proto Slavic bearers of the Przeworsk culture Their expansion began during the second century AD and they occupied a large area of eastern Europe between the Vistula and the middle Dnieper The Venethi slowly expanded south and east by the fourth century assimilating the neighbouring Zarubinec culture which Sedov considered partly Baltic and continuing southeast to become part of the Chernyakhov culture The Antes separated themselves from the Venethi by 300 followed by the Sclaveni by 500 in the areas of the Prague Penkovka and Prague Korchak cultures respectively 102 Paul Barford suggested that Slavic groups might have existed in a wide area of central eastern Europe in the Chernyakov and Zarubintsy Przeworsk cultural zones before the documented Slavic migrations from the sixth to the ninth centuries Serving as auxiliaries in the Sarmatian Goth and Hun armies small numbers of Slavic speakers might have reached the Balkans before the sixth century 103 According to Marija Gimbutas n either Bulgars nor Avars colonized the Balkan Peninsula after storming Thrace Illyria and Greece they went back to their territory north of the Danube It was the Slavs who did the colonizing entire families or even whole tribes infiltrated lands As an agricultural people they constantly sought an outlet for the population surplus Suppressed for over a millennium by foreign rule of Scythians Sarmatians and Goths they had been restricted to a small territory now the barriers were down and they poured out 104 In addition to their demographic growth the depopulation of central eastern Europe due in part to Germanic emigration the lack of Roman imperial defenses on the frontiers which were decimated after centuries of conflicts and especially the Plague of Justinian and the Late Antique Little Ice Age 536 660 CE encouraged Slavic expansion and settlement to the west and the south of the Carpathian Mountains 86 105 106 The migrationist model remains the most acceptable and logical explanation of the spread of Slavs and Slavic culture including language 107 108 109 110 111 112 According to the processual viewpoint which emphasizes the culture social model of ethnogenesis there is no need to explain culture change exclusively in terms of migration and population replacement 113 It argues that the Slavic expansion was primarily a linguistic spread 114 One of the theories used to explain language replacement is that a dominant Slavic elite diaspora managed to spread conquer and slavicize various communities 115 116 117 118 A more extreme hypothesis is argued by Florin Curta who considers that the Slavs as an ethno political category were invented by an external source the Byzantines through political instrumentation and interaction on the Roman frontiers where a barbarian elite culture flourished 119 120 Horace Lunt attributes the spread of Slavic to the success and mobility of the Slavic special border guards of the Avar khanate 121 who used it as a lingua franca in the Avar Khaganate According to Lunt only as a lingua franca could Slavic supplant other languages and dialects whilst remaining relatively uniform Although it could explain the formation of regional Slavic groups in the Balkans the Eastern Alps and the Morava Danube basin Lunt s theory does not account for the spread of Slavic to the Baltic region and the territory of the Eastern Slavs which are areas with no historical links to the Pannonian Avars 122 A concept related to elite dominance is the notion of system collapse in which a power vacuum created by the fall of the Hun and Roman Empires allowed a minority group to impose their customs and language 115 However Michel Kazanski concludes that although both the movement of the populations of the Slavic cultural model and the diffusion of this model amid non Slavic populations occurred a pure diffusion of the Slavic model would hardly be possible in any case in which a long period of time when the populations of different cultural traditions lived close to one another is assumed Moreover archaeologists researching Slavic antiquities do not accept the ideas produced by the diffusionists because most of the champions of the diffusion model know the specific archaeological materials poorly so their works leave room for a number of arbitrary interpretations 112 Appearance Edit Depiction of an early Slav as a personification of Sclavinia from Otto s Gospel Book 990 AD In the Chronica Slavorum Helmold writes on the Wends These men have blue eyes ruddy faces and long hair 123 Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub mentioned the Slavs were bearded 124 Procopius wrote that the Slavs are all tall and especially strong their skin is not very white and their hair is neither blond nor black but all have reddish hair 125 Jordanes wrote all of them are tall and very strong their skin and hair are neither very dark nor light but are ruddy of face 126 Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub wrote They wear ample robes although the ends of their sleeves are narrow 124 Procopious wrote that the men also wear a kind of breeches pulled up to the waist 127 Theophylact Simocatta wrote about the Slavs that The Emperor was with great curiosity listening to stories about this tribe he has welcomed these newcomers from the land of barbarians and after being amazed by their height and mighty stature he sent these men to Heraclea Hisham ibn al Kalbi described the slavs as a numerous nation fair haired and of ruddy complexion and Al Baladuri made reference to the Slavs writing If the Prince so willed outside of his doors would be black Sudanians or ruddy Slavs 128 Society EditEarly Slavic society was a typical decentralised tribal society of Iron Age Europe and was organised into local chiefdoms A slow consolidation occurred between the 7th and the 9th when the previously uniform Slavic cultural area evolved into discrete zones Slavic groups were influenced by neighbouring cultures like Byzantium the Khazars the Vikings and the Carolingians and influenced their neighbours in return 129 these nations the Sclaveni and the Antes are not ruled by one man but they have lived from of old under a democracy and consequently everything which involves their welfare whether for good or ill is referred to the people Procopius 130 Differences in status gradually developed in the chiefdoms which led to the development of centralized socio political organisations The first centralized organisations may have been temporary pantribal warrior associations the greatest evidence being in the Danubian area where barbarian groups organised around military chiefs to raid Byzantine territory and to defend themselves against the Pannonian Avars 131 Social stratification gradually developed in the form of fortified hereditary chiefdoms which were first seen in the West Slavs areas The chief was supported by a retinue of warriors who owed their position to him As chiefdoms became powerful and expanded centres of subsidiary power ruled by lesser chiefs were created and the line between powerful chiefdoms and centralised medieval states is blurred By the mid 9th century the Slavic elite had become sophisticated it wore luxurious clothing rode horses hunted with falcons and travelled with retinues of soldiers 132 These chiefs were often at war with one another 133 Tribal and territorial organisation Edit Main article List of ancient Slavic peoples and tribes Reconstruction of a Slavic gatehouse in Thunau am Kamp Austria The site excavated in the 1980s dates back to the era of the Great Moravian Empire in the 9th and 10th centuries There is no indication of Slavic chiefs in any of the Slavic raids before AD 560 when Pseudo Caesarius s writings mentioned their chiefs but described the Slavs as living by their own law and without the rule of anyone 134 The Sclaveni and the Antes were reported to have lived under a democracy for a long time 135 The 6th century historian Procopius who was in contact with Slavic mercenaries 136 reported For these nations the Sclaveni and the Antes are not governed by one man but from ancient times have lived in democracy and consequently everything which involves their welfare whether for good or for ill is referred to the people 137 The 6th century Strategikon of Maurice is considered an eyewitness of the Slavs and recommended the Roman generals to use any possible means to prevent the Sclaveni from uniting under one ruler and added that the Sclaveni and Antes were both independent absolutely refused to be enslaved or governed least of all in their own land 138 Settlements were not uniformly distributed but were in clusters separated by areas of lower settlement density 139 The clusters resulted from the expansion of single settlements and the settlement cells were linked by familial or clan relationships Settlement cells were the basis of the simplest form of territorial organization known as a zupa in South Slavic and opole in Polish According to the Primary Chronicle The men of the Polanie lived each with his own clan in his own place Several zupas encompassing individual clan territories formed the known tribes The complex processes initiated by the Slav expansion and subsequent demographic and ethnic consolidation culminated in the formation of tribal groups which later coalesced to create state which form the framework of the ethnic make up of modern eastern Europe 140 The root of many tribal names denotes the territory in which they inhabited such as the Milczanie who lived in areas with mel loess Moravians along the Morava Diokletians near the former Roman city of Doclea and Severiani northerners Other names have more general meanings such as the Polanes pola field and Drevlyans drevo tree Others appear to have a non Slavic possibly Iranian root such as the Antes and Croats Some geographically distant tribes appear to share names The Dregoviti appear north of the Pripyat River and in the Vardar valley the Croats in Galicia and northern Dalmatia and the Obodrites near Lubeck and their further south in Pannonia The root Slav was retained in the modern names of the Slovenes Slovaks and Slavonians There is little evidence of migratory links between tribes sharing the same name The common names may reflect names given the tribes by historians or a common tongue as a distinction between Slavs slovo word letter and others Nemci mutes being a Slavic name for Germans citation needed Culture EditSettlements Edit Further information Gord archaeology Reconstruction of a Slavic hilltop Grod in Birow Poland Reconstruction of a Slavic settlement in Torgelow Germany Early Slavic settlements were no bigger than 0 5 to 2 hectares 1 2 to 4 9 acres Settlements were often temporary perhaps reflected their itinerant form of agriculture 141 and were often along rivers They were characterised by sunken buildings known as Grubenhauser in German or poluzemlianki in Russian Built over a rectangular pit they varied from 4 to 20 m2 43 to 215 sq ft in area and could accommodate a typical nuclear family Each house had a stone or clay oven in a corner a defining feature of Eastern European dwellings and a settlement had a population of fifty to seventy 142 Settlements had a central open area in which communal activities and ceremonies were conducted and they were divided into production and settlement zones 143 The Slavs also built underground shelters roofed with wood to keep out the cold during winter 144 Log cabin saunas were also used as recorded by Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub They have no baths but they use log cabins in which gaps are stuffed with something that appears on their trees and looks like seaweed they call it mech original mh moss In one corner they put up a stone stove and above it they open up a hole to let the smoke from the stove escape When the stove is good and hot they close up the opening and close the door of the hut Inside are vessels with water and they pour out of them water onto the hot stove and steam comes from it Each of them has in his hand a tuft of grass with which they make air circulate and draw it to themselves Then their pores open up and the unneeded substances from their bodies come out 124 Fortified strongholds grods appeared in significant numbers during the 9th century especially the Western Slavic territories and were often found in the centre of a group of settlements The South Slavs did not form enclosed strongholds but lived in open rural settlements that were adopted from the social models of the indigenous populations they encountered citation needed The Slavs preferred to live in hard to reach places to avoid attack as recorded in Maurice s Strategikon They live among nearly impenetrable forests rivers lakes and marshes and have made the exits from their settlements branch outing many directions because of the dangers they might face 133 Food and agriculture Edit Slavic ceramic pottery vessel c 8th century AD The Slavs practiced hunting farming herding and beekeeping They often settled in valley bottoms with rich soil along rivers to provide water for livestock 145 The early Slavs also had knowledge of crop rotation and developed a new sort of plow known as the moldboard plow this plough was very efficient in breaking up the clay full soil of northern Europe and it helped drastically increase the Slavic population 146 Other tools common throughout the rest of Europe were also used such as iron hoes sickles wooden spades and others Some were made from wood Selective breeding was also done When crops were ripe they were cut with sickles and threshing was then done with a wooden flail The grain was then milled by stone querns which were very valuable and difficult to come by Cereal crops wheat millet and barley were common as they could thrive in even poor soil Vegetables were grown in gardens onions carrots radishes turnip parsnip cucumber pumpkins cabbage pea and beans were all grown Herbs were mostly garlic and parsnip hops were also grown for making beer Fruit trees were cultivated in orchards including cherry apple pear plums and peaches Walnuts were also loved Animal were tended not only for meat leather or milk but also to fertilize the soil Several breeds of cattle were bred and kept in large herds as draught animals and for meat female cattle provided milk Pigs were prized for their meat Goats and sheep were more rare but still bred Horses were very rarely eaten mostly used as draught or riding animals Fowl were also kept especially ducks and geese Animals in the forest were hunted prey included boar deer hare elk and occasionally bear Beavers and marten were trapped for their fur 145 They sow during two seasons of the year in summer and in spring and harvest two crops Their principal crop is millet They refrain from eating chicken asserting that it exacerbates erysipelas but they eat beef and goose both of which agree with them Their drinks and wine are made out of honey 124 Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub They have a sort of wooden box provided with holes in which bees live and make their honey in their language they are called the ulishaj They collect around ten jars of honey from each box They herd pigs as if they were sheep They drink mead 144 Ibn Rusta Medicine Edit The ancient Slavs knew human anatomy well which is evident from the existence of numerous old names for body parts Due to the lack of sources we do not know for sure what they suffered from but it is assumed that they were plague malaria and dysentery 147 The medicines they used were mostly of animal and plant origin Less commonly minerals sulfur and salt were used for medicinal purposes 147 The Slavs cleansed themselves in log cabin saunas 124 and bathed in rivers 148 The early medieval Muslim traveller Ibrahim ibn Yaqub wrote The cold even when it is intense is healthful to them but the heat destroys them They are unable to travel to the country of the Lombards because of the heat 124 Craftsmanship Edit Slavic fibula brooch c 7th century AD Wood leather metal and ceramic work were all skillfully practiced by the Early Slavs Pottery was made by craftsmen or women possibly in domestic workshops Clay was mixed with course material such as sand crushed rock to improve the qualities Clay was worked by hand and roughly smoothed after completion clay vessels also made with assistance of pottery wheels After they were dried they were baked at a low temperature in bone fire kilns Pottery was produced not only by craftsmen but also ordinary people as it did not require extensive practice other crafts however were produced by professional craftsmen Metalworking was very important as it was required to make tools and weapons Iron was needed by every tribe and it was produced by smiths using local ore which was primarily bog ore Once the ore had been turned into usable iron and slag removed it was made into bars Smiths made many types of products such as knives tools decorative items as well as weapons which were not always made by separate weapon smiths Broken tools were reforged as iron was a valuable resource Houses as well as their inside fittings and everyday items were made from wood Carved bowls vessels and beautifully made dippers were common in most homes Leather and textiles made of both linen and wool were made into carpets blankets overcoats and other clothing Spindlewhorls were used to make thread in the home Glass beads were crafted and were often used as trade goods 149 page needed Clothing Edit Most of the knowledge we have on Early Slavic clothing comes from iconographic sources and cemeteries Although clothing differed according to region season of year and social status a general picture can be reconstructed Men wore long sleeved tunics made of linen or wool extending to about the knee under these breeches were worn wool cloaks were sometimes worn over the tunic fastened at the right shoulder leaving the right arm free Cloaks were occasionally also made of leather and lined with fir or other material Hats and mittens were worn for the winter some trimmed with fur Leather boots and shoes were also worn by both men and women as well as a belt carrying a knife and whetstone for sharpening Some women wore long patterned dresses made from linen sometimes with an apron tied over the dress Dresses or tunic were sometimes made from one piece Unmarried women wore their hair braided or loose but covered it after they were wedded Ornaments and jewelry such as beads and earrings and twisted wire bracelets were also worn especially by wealthier women 149 page needed Musical instruments and burial practices Edit A square Slavic burial site in Locknitz Germany The Slavs had many musical instruments as recorded in historical chronicles They have different kinds of lutes pan pipes and flutes a cubit long Their lutes have eight strings They drink mead They play their instruments during the incineration of their dead and claim that their rejoicing attests the mercy of the Lord to the dead 144 Ibn Rusta They have different kinds of wind and string instruments They have a wind instrument more than two cubits long and an eight stringed instrument whose sounding board is flat not convex 124 Ibrahim Ibn Ya qubTheophylact Simocatta mentioned of Slavs bearing lyres Lyres were their baggage 150 The Slavs burned their dead Although the Slavic funeral pyre was seen as a means of freeing the soul from the body rapidly visibly and publicly 151 failed verification archaeological evidence suggests that the South Slavs quickly adopted the burial practices of their post Roman Balkan neighbours citation needed They burn their dead The day after the funeral of a man after he has been burned they collect the ashes and put them in an urn which is buried on a hill After a year they place twenty hives more or less on the hill The family gathers and eats and drinks there and then everyone goes home 144 Ibn Rusta Marriage Edit Capturing wives and exogamy were traditions among the tribes and continued until the early medieval era However on some occasions in Bohemia and Ukraine it was women who chose the spouse 152 Fornication had a sentence in Pagan Slavs that was described as capital punishment by travelers Ibn Fadlan Men and women go to the river and bathe together naked but they do not fornicate and if anyone would be guilty of it no matter who is he and she he and she would be pinked by pole axe then they hang out each part both of them on a tree Gardizi If someone makes fornication he or she would be killed without accepting any apologies 148 The Byzantine Emperor Maurice wrote Their women are more sensitive than any others in the world When for example their husband dies many look upon it as their own death and freely smother themselves not wanting to continue their lives as widows 133 Law Edit First page of the oldest surviving copy of Russkaya Pravda old Rus law Vast edition from Synodic Kormchaia of 1282 Novgorod Main article Old Rus Law See also Medieval Serbian law Rus law was based on Early Slavic customary law which was partially recorded in the Rus Byzantine treaties However the Early Slavs did not have written laws but relied on customs that dictated what was acceptable and not The East Slavs did not have written law until the rule of Yaroslav the Wise 153 154 One such customary law was the law of hospitality which was very important to the tribal Slavs If a tribe mistreated any guest they would be attacked by a neighbouring tribe for their dishonour 155 Ibn Rusta wrote of Slavic law in c 903 918 The ruler levies fixed taxes every year Every man must supply one of his daughter s gowns If he has a son his clothing must be offered If he has no children he gives one of his wife s robes In this country thieves are strangled or exiled to Jira Yura by the Urals the region most remote from this principality 156 Warfare Edit Example of early Slavic armour Our understanding of Early Slavic warfare is based on both the writings of ancient authors and archeological discoveries 157 Early barbarian warrior bands typically numbering 200 or less were intended for fast penetration into enemy territory and an equally quick withdrawal 145 The Slavs favoured ambush and guerrilla tactics preferring to fight in dense woodland or marsh 158 However victories in the open sieges and hand to hand fighting were also achieved 157 They often attacked their enemy s flank and were cunning in devising stratagems 133 The Slavs also used siege engines such as siege towers and ladders as described by Procopius and St Demetrius Ibn Rusta wrote They have very few horses Their weapons are javelins shields and lances They obey a chief whom they call the Zupan and carry out his orders Their supreme lord however is called chief of chiefs this king has many effective and finely woven coats of mail The Zupan is his lieutenant 144 Weapons were usually spears javelins and bows and arrows Swords and body armour were rare and reserved for chiefs and their inner circle of warriors Shields were round in shape 145 with a central boss grip in the middle 159 Axes and slings were also in use 145 Although the Slavs fought mostly on foot they were also proficient cavalry fighters as historical sources mentioned Procopius wrote that Slav and Hun horsemen were Byzantine mercenaries serving as horsearchers 160 In their dealings with the Sarmatians and Huns the Slavs may have become skilled horsemen an explanation for their expansion 161 Menander Protector mentions a Slavic chief Dobret circa 577 579 who slew an Avar envoy of Khagan Bayan I for asking the Slavs to accept the suzerainty of the Avars Dobret declined and is reported as saying Others do not conquer our land we conquer theirs so it shall always be for us as long as there are wars and weapons 162 Writing Edit The bone with elder futhark runic inscription found in the early Slavic settlement in Lany near Breclav in the Czech Republic The existence of writing among the Early Slavs is a disputed topic The Slavs passed down their stories and legends orally like most other tribal peoples in Europe But in addition to this a runic script was used 163 The 9th century Bulgarian writer 164 Chernorizets Hrabar in his work An Account of Letters briefly mentions that before becoming Christian Slavs used a system of strokes and incisions or tallies and sketches Before the Slavs did not have their own books but counted and divined by means of strokes and incisions being pagan Having become Christian they had to make do with the use of Roman and Greek letters without order unsystematically but how can one write Slavic well with Greek letters note 1 and thus it was for many years 165 Symbols Edit Gromoviti znaci symbols associated with Perun Identical symbols were discovered on Slavic pottery of 4th century Chernyakhov culture 166 The Slavs and Balts had many symbols representing concepts beliefs and Gods They had many types of swastikas and similar symbols such as the Kolovrat meaning spinning wheel The kolovrat symbolized the sun and the ever going cycle of life death and birth It was often carved on markers near the graves of fallen Slavs to represent eternal life 167 Gromovitit Znaci were symbols associated with Perun the Slavic thunder and sky god Early Slavic homes often had the symbols carved into a beam to protect them from lightning The circular shape of the Gromoviti symbolize ball lightning Such symbols were also found on Slavic pottery from the 4th century 166 Another symbol associated with Perun is the Perunika which resmebles a six pettled rose Today it is the name for a flower in some Slavic languages The hands of God were another ancient symbol associated with the god Svarog 168 Ancient symbols such as these are still sometimes shown on clothing and the like especially Russia 169 Many samples are described on the instance of a women s folk costume at the Meshchera Lowlands 169 Modern Rodonovers have developed some new symbols that were not used by the Early Slavs but many were Religion Edit Main articles Slavic mythology List of Slavic mythological figures and Christianization of the Slavs The Zbruch Idol Little is known about Slavic religion before the Christianization of Bulgaria and of Kievan Rus After Christianization Slavic authorities destroyed many records of the old religion Some evidence remains in apocryphal and devotional texts 170 the etymology of Slavic religious terms 171 and the Primary Chronicle 172 Ancestor worship was an important part of the pre Christian Slavic religion 173 Early Slavic religion was relatively uniform 174 animistic anthropomorphic 175 and inspired by nature 176 The Slavs developed cults around natural objects such as springs trees or stones out of respect for the spirit or demon within 177 Slavic pre Christian religion was originally polytheistic with no organised pantheon 178 Although the earliest Slavs seemed to have a weak concept of God the concept evolved 179 into a form of monotheism in which a supreme god ruled in heaven over the others 180 There is no evidence of a belief in fate 181 or predestination 182 Slavic paganism was syncretistic 183 and combined and shared with other religions 184 Linguistic evidence indicates that part of Slavic paganism developed when the Balts and Slavs shared a common language 174 since pre Christian Slavic beliefs contained elements also found in Baltic religions After the Slavic and the Baltic languages diverged the early Slavs interacted with Iranian peoples and incorporated elements of Iranian spirituality Early Iranian and Slavic supreme gods were considered givers of wealth unlike the supreme thunder gods of other European religions Both Slavs and Iranians had demons with names from similar linguistic roots Iranian Daeva and Slavic Divŭ and a concept of dualism good and evil 180 185 Pre Christian Slavic spirits and demons could be entities in their own right or spirits of the dead and were associated with home or nature Forest spirits entities in their own right were venerated as the counterparts of home spirits which were usually related to ancestors 186 Demons and spirits were good or evil which suggests that the Slavs had a dualistic cosmology and are known to have revered them with sacrifices and gifts 187 Spirits included Leshy the spirit of the forest Domovoy spirit of the home Rusalka the female spirit of waters Rarog the Slavic variant of phoenix and other creature such as vilas vampires and Baba Yaga or Roga Although evidence of pre Christian Slavic worship is scarce suggesting that it was aniconic religious sites and idols are most plentiful in Ukraine and Poland Slavic temples and indoor places of worship are rare since outdoor places of worship are more common especially in Kievan Rus The outdoor cultic sites were often on hills and included ringed ditches 188 Indoor shrines existed Early Russian sources refer to pagan shrines or altars known as kapishcha and were small enclosed structures with an altar inside One was found in Kiev surrounded by the bones of sacrificed animals 189 Pagan temples were documented as destroyed during Christianization 190 Records of pre Christian Slavic priests like the pagan temples appeared later 190 Although no early evidence of Slavic pre Christian priests has been found the prevalence of sorcerers and magicians after Christianization suggests that the pre Christian Slavs had religious leaders 191 Slavic pagan priests were believed to commune with the gods to predict the future 182 and to prepare for religious rituals The pagan priests or magicians known as volkhvy by the Rus people 172 resisted Christianity 192 after Christianization The Primary Chronicle describes a campaign against Christianity in 1071 during a famine The volkhvy were well received nearly 100 years after Christianization which suggested that pagan priests had an esteemed position in 1071 and in pre Christian times 193 Later history EditChristianization Edit See also Saints Cyril and Methodius Fresco of Saints Cyril and Methodius both Byzantine Christian missionaries to the Southern Slavs Page of the Gospel of Mark from Codex Zographensis an Old Church Slavonic manuscript written in Glagolitic script Christianization began in the 7th century and was not completed until the second half of the 12 century Later as the Empire of Constantinople Byzantium reclaimed some of the areas of the Balkans occupied by Slavs Byzantine Reconquista slight parts population of Slavs were Hellenised including conversion to Eastern Orthodox Christianity for example under the reign of Nicephorus I 802 811 However the most significant missionary work was in the mid ninth century The Christianization of Bulgaria was made official in 864 during the reign of Knyaz Boris I during shifting political alliances both with the Byzantine Empire and the kingdom of the East Franks and the communication with the Pope Because of the Bulgarian Empire s strategic position the Greek East and the Latin West wanted their people to adhere to their liturgies and to ally with them politically After overtures from each side Boris aligned with Constantinople and secured an autocephalous Bulgarian national church in 870 the first for the Slavs In 918 919 the Bulgarian Patriarchate became the fifth autocephalous Eastern Orthodox patriarchate after the patriarchates of Constantinople Alexandria Antioch and Jerusalem That status was officially recognised by the Patriarchate of Constantinople in 927 194 The Bulgarian Empire developed into the cultural and literary centre of Slavic Europe The development of the Cyrillic script at the Preslav Literary School which was declared official in Bulgaria in 893 was also declared the official liturgy in Old Church Slavonic also called Old Bulgarian 195 196 197 Map of Europe in 814 showing the distribution of the Slavic tribes and the First Bulgarian Empire in relation to the Carolingian Empire and the Byzantine Empire Although there is some evidence of early Christianization of the East Slavs Kievan Rus either remained largely pagan or relapsed into paganism before the baptism of Vladimir the Great in the 980s The Christianization of Poland began with the Catholic baptism of King Mieszko I in 966 Slavic paganism persisted into the 12th century in Pomerania which began to be Christianized after the creation of the Duchy of Pomerania as part of the Holy Roman Empire in 1121 The process was mostly completed by the Wendish Crusade in 1147 The final stronghold of Slavic paganism was the Rani with a temple to their god Svetovid on Cape Arkona which was taken in a campaign by Valdemar I of Denmark in 1168 citation needed Medieval states Edit See also Great Moravia Samo s Empire and Kievan Rus After Christianisation the Slavs established a number of kingdoms or feudal principalities which persisted throughout the High Middle Ages The First Bulgarian Empire was founded in 681 as an alliance between the ruling Bulgars and the numerous Slavs in Lower Moesia Not long after the Slavic incursion Scythia Minor was once again invaded this time by the Bulgars under Khan Asparukh 198 Their horde was a remnant of Old Great Bulgaria an extinct tribal confederacy that was north of the Black Sea in what is now Ukraine Asparukh attacked Byzantine territories in Eastern Moesia and conquered its Slavic tribes in 680 199 A peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire was signed in 681 and marked the foundation of the First Bulgarian Empire The minority Bulgars formed a close knit ruling caste 200 The South Slavs established also the Duchy of Croatia in the early 7 8th century Kingdom of Croatia since 925 and short lived Duchy of Lower Pannonia Roughly in the same time Principality of Serbia later Grand Principality and Kingdom of Serbia while Banate of Bosnia emerged from the 10th century by merging localities called zupas which were remnants of Early Christianity ecclesiastical divisions 201 202 Duklja Zachlumia Pagania Travunia and Kanalites similarly started emerging in the south 200 203 The West Slavs were distributed in Samo s Empire which was the first Slavic state to form in the west followed by the Great Moravia and after its decline the Kingdom of Poland the Obotritic confederation now eastern Germany the Principality of Nitra modern Slovakia a vassal of the Kingdom of Hungary and the Duchy of Bohemia now the Czech Republic After the 1054 death of Yaroslav the Wise and the breakup of Kievan Rus the East Slavs fragmented into a number of principalities from which Muscovy would emerge after 1300 as the most powerful one The western principalities of the former Kievan Rus were absorbed by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania citation needed Slavic studies EditSee also List of Slavic studies journals The debate between proponents of autochthonism and allochthonism began in 1745 when Johann Christoph de Jordan published De Originibus Slavicis The 19th century Slovak philologist and poet Pavel Jozef Safarik whose theory was founded on Jordanes Getica has influenced generations of scholars Jordanes equated the Sclavenes the Antes and the Venethi or Venedi based on earlier sources such as Pliny the Elder Tacitus and Ptolemy Safarik s legacy was his vision of a Slavic history and the use of linguistics for its study 161 The Polish scholar Tadeusz Wojciechowski 1839 1919 was the first to use place names to study Slavic history and was followed by A L Pogodin and the botanist J Rostafinski The first scholar to introduce archaeological data into the discourse on the early Slavs Lubor Niederle 1865 1944 endorsed Rostafinski s theory in his multi volume Antiquities of the Slavs Vykentyi V Khvoika 1850 1914 a Ukrainian archaeologist of Czech origin linked the Slavs with the Neolithic Cucuteni culture A A Spicyn 1858 1931 attributed finds of silver and bronze in central and southern Ukraine to the Antes Czech archaeologist Ivan Borkovsky 1897 1976 postulated the existence of a Slavic Prague type of pottery Boris Rybakov has linked Spicyn s Antian antiquities with Chernyakhov culture remains excavated by Khvoika and theorised that the former should be attributed to the Slavs 161 The debate became politically charged during the 19th century particularly in connection with the partitions of Poland and the German Drang nach Osten and the question of whether Germanic or Slavic peoples were indigenous east of the Oder was used to pursue both German and Polish claims to the region citation needed Some modern scholars debate the meaning and the usage of the term Slav depending on the context in which it is used The word can refer to a culture or cultures living north of the River Danube east of the River Elbe and west of the River Vistula during the 530s CE 204 Slav is also an identifier for the ethnic group shared by the cultures 205 and denotes any language with linguistic ties to the modern Slavic language family which may have no connection to either a common culture or a shared ethnicity 206 Despite the concepts of Slav such scholars argue that it is unclear whether any of the descriptions add to an accurate representation of the group s history Historians such as George Vernadsky Florin Curta and Michael Karpovich have questioned how why and to what degree the Slavs were a cohesive society between the 6th and the 9th centuries 161 207 The Austrian historian Walter Pohl wrote Apparently ethnicity operated on at least two levels the common Slavic identity and the identity of single Slavic groups tribes or peoples of different sizes that gradually developed very often taking their name from the territory they lived in These regional ethnogeneses inspired by Slavic tradition incorporated considerable remnants of Roman and Germanic population ready enough to give up ethnic identities that had lost their cohesion 118 See also EditSlavic paganism Sclaveni Antes people Kievan Rus Serbia in the Middle AgesFootnotes Edit In this place are listed eleven examples of Slavic words such as zhivѣt zivet life which can hardly be written using the unadapted Roman or Greek letters i e without diacritics changing their sound values References EditCitations Edit Barford 2001 p vii Preface Slav people Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b Kobylinski 2005 pp 525 526 Brzezinski Richard Mielczarek Mariusz 2002 The Sarmatians 600 BC AD 450 Osprey Publishing p 39 Indeed it is now accepted that the Sarmatians merged in with pre Slavic populations Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis p 523 In their Ukrainian and Polish homeland the Slavs were intermixed and at times overlain by Germanic speakers the Goths and by Iranian speakers Scythians Sarmatians Alans in a shifting array of tribal and national configurations Atkinson Dorothy Dallin Alexander Warshofsky Lapidus Gail eds 1977 Women in Russia Stanford University Press p 3 Ancient accounts link the Amazons with the Scythians and the Sarmatians who successively dominated the Pontic steppe for a millennium extending back to the seventh century B C The descendants of these peoples were absorbed by the Slavs who came to be known as Russians Slovene Studies Vol 9 11 Society for Slovene Studies 1987 p 36 For example the ancient Scythians Sarmatians amongst others and many other attested but now extinct peoples were assimilated in the course of history by Proto Slavs Stanaszek Lukasz Maurycy 2001 Fenotyp dawnych Slowian VI X w PDF Retrieved 11 April 2021 Geary 2003 p 144 B etween the sixth and seventh centuries large parts of Europe came to be controlled by Slavs a process less understood and documented than that of the Germanic ethnogenesis in the west Yet the effects of Slavicization were far more profound Langer William L An Encyclopedia of World History Harvard University 1940 amp 1948 Frank A Kmietowicz 1976 Ancient Slavs Worzalla Publishing Company Jordanes left no doubt that the Antes were of Slavic origin when he wrote ab unastirpe exorti tria nomina ediderunt id est Veneti Antes Sclaveni although they derive from one nation now they are known under three names the Veneti Antes and Sclaveni The Veneti were the West Slavs the Antes the East Slavs and the Sclaveni the South or Balkan Slavs Procopius History of the Wars VII 14 22 30 Golab Zbigniew 1992 The Origins of the Slavs A Linguist s View Columbus Slavica pp 291 293 ISBN 9780893572310 Bojtar Endre 1999 Foreword to the Past A Cultural History of the Baltic People Central European University Press p 107 ISBN 9789639116429 Campbell Lyle 2004 Historical Linguistics MIT Press p 418 ISBN 978 0 262 53267 9 Bojtar Endre 1999 Foreword to the Past Central European University Press p 88 ISBN 978 9639116429 Brather Sebastian 2004 The Archaeology of the Northwestern Slavs Seventh To Ninth Centuries East Central Europe 31 1 78 81 doi 10 1163 187633004x00116 a b Barford 2001 p 37 Kobylinski 2005 p 526 Barford 2001 p 332 Curta Florin 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 2 Vols Boston BRILL p 44 ISBN 978 90 04 39519 0 OCLC 1111434007 F Kortlandt The spread of the Indo Europeans pp 2 3 Goffart 2006 p 95 Wolfram 2006 p 78 Peter Heather 17 December 2010 Empires and Barbarians Migration Development and the Birth of Europe Pan Macmillan pp 389 396 ISBN 978 0 330 54021 6 Wstep W Gerard Labuda Slowianszczyna starozytna i wczesnosredniowieczna Poznan WPTPN 2003 s 16 ISBN 8370633811 Trubacev O N 1985 Linguistics and Ethnogenesis of the Slavs The Ancient Slavs as Evidenced by Etymology and Onomastics Journal of Indo European Studies JIES 13 203 256 Florin Curta The Making of the Slavs between ethnogenesis invention and migration Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 2 4 2008 pp 155 172 Rebala K Mikulich A Tsybovsky I Sivakova D Dzupinkova Z Szczerkowska Dobosz A Szczerkowska Z Y STR variation among Slavs evidence for the Slavic homeland in the Middle Dnieper Basin Journal of Human Genetics 52 5 406 14 February 2007 1 Underhill Peter A 2015 The phylogenetic and geographic structure of Y chromosome haplogroup R1a European Journal of Human Genetics 23 1 124 131 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2014 50 PMC 4266736 PMID 24667786 R1a M458 exceeds 20 in the Czech Republic Slovakia Poland and Western Belarus The lineage averages 11 15 across Russia and Ukraine and occurs at 7 or less elsewhere Figure 2d Unlike hg R1a M458 the R1a M558 clade is also common in the Volga Uralic populations R1a M558 occurs at 10 33 in parts of Russia exceeds 26 in Poland and Western Belarus and varies between 10 and 23 in the Ukraine whereas it drops 10 fold lower in Western Europe In general both R1a M458 and R1a M558 occur at low but informative frequencies in Balkan populations with known Slavonic heritage Pamjav Horolma Feher Tibor Nemeth Endre Koppany Csaji Laszlo 2019 Genetika es ostortenet in Hungarian Napkut Kiado p 58 ISBN 978 963 263 855 3 Az I2 CTS10228 kozneven dinari karpati alcsoport legkorabbi kozos ose 2200 evvel ezelottre teheto igy eseteben nem arrol van szo hogy a mezolit nepesseg Kelet Europaban ilyen mertekben fennmaradt volna hanem arrol hogy egy a mezolit csoportoktol szarmazo szuk csalad az europai vaskorban sikeresen integralodott egy olyan tarsadalomba amely hamarosan eroteljes demografiai expanzioba kezdett Ez is mutatja hogy nem feltetlenul nepek mintsem csaladok sikerevel nemzetsegek elterjedesevel is szamolnunk kell es ezt a jelenlegi etnikai identitassal osszefuggesbe hozni lehetetlen A csoport elterjedese alapjan valoszinusitheto hogy a szlav nepek migraciojaban vett reszt igy valva az R1a t kovetoen a masodik legdominansabb csoportta a mai Kelet Europaban Nyugat Europabol viszont teljes mertekben hianyzik kiveve a kora kozepkorban szlav nyelvet beszelo keletnemet teruleteket Fothi E Gonzalez A Feher T et al 2020 Genetic analysis of male Hungarian Conquerors European and Asian paternal lineages of the conquering Hungarian tribes Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 12 1 doi 10 1007 s12520 019 00996 0 Based on SNP analysis the CTS10228 group is 2200 300 years old The group s demographic expansion may have begun in Southeast Poland around that time as carriers of the oldest subgroup are found there today The group cannot solely be tied to the Slavs because the proto Slavic period was later around 300 500 CE The SNP based age of the Eastern European CTS10228 branch is 2200 300 years old The carriers of the most ancient subgroup live in Southeast Poland and it is likely that the rapid demographic expansion which brought the marker to other regions in Europe began there The largest demographic explosion occurred in the Balkans where the subgroup is dominant in 50 5 of Croatians 30 1 of Serbs 31 4 of Montenegrins and in about 20 of Albanians and Greeks As a result this subgroup is often called Dinaric It is interesting that while it is dominant among modern Balkan peoples this subgroup has not been present yet during the Roman period as it is almost absent in Italy as well see Online Resource 5 ESM 5 Kushniarevich Alena Kassian Alexei 2020 Genetics and Slavic languages in Marc L Greenberg ed Encyclopedia of Slavic Languages and Linguistics Online Brill doi 10 1163 2589 6229 ESLO COM 032367 retrieved 10 December 2020 The geographic distributions of the major eastern European NRY haplogroups R1a Z282 I2a P37 overlap with the area occupied by the present day Slavs to a great extent and it might be tempting to consider both haplogroups as Slavic specic patrilineal lineages Altogether long genomic segments distribution in eastern Europe where Slavs predominate today but are not an exclusive linguistic group are compatible with actual movements of people across this region presumably within historical time Jiri Machacek Robert Nedoma Petr Dresler Ilektra Schulz Elias Lagonik Stephen M Johnson Ludmila Kanakova Alena Slamova Bastien Llamas Daniel Wegmann Zuzana Hofmanova Runes from Lany Czech Republic The oldest inscription among Slavs A new standard for multidisciplinary analysis of runic bones Journal of Archaeological Science Vol 127 March 2021 quote At the continental scale modern Slavic speakers were found to share more haplotypes among each other than with other Europeans This was initially also interpreted as evidence for a demic expansion Hellenthal et al 2014 Ralph and Coop 2013 but might be equally consistent with low population size Al Asadi et al 2019 Ringbauer et al 2017 Nevertheless in some regions a physical replacement of the population after the Migration Period is more obvious In Northern Germany Schleswig Holstein for instance the Angles Jutes and other Germanic tribes initially inhabiting the region left during the Migration Period Brugmann 2011 as confirmed by ancient DNA research for their migration to the British Isles Schiffels et al 2016 As confirmed by palaeobotany and archaeology Wieckowska et al 2012 Wiethold 1998 the region remained not or only sparsely occupied for at least 200 years after which it was settled by various groups Some of those are connected with Slavs based on archaeological finds and written records of later periods as well as linguistic toponomastic evidence Herrmann 1985 Mallory amp Adams 1997 a b Sussex amp Cubberley 2011 p 19 a b Schenker 2008 pp 61 62 a b c Sussex amp Cubberley 2011 p 22 F Kortlandt The spread of the Indo Europeans p 4 Fortson 2004 p 16 a b Sussex amp Cubberley 2011 p 109 Schenker 2008 p 109 Schenker 2008 p 113 cf Novotna amp Blazek 2007 with references full citation needed Classical glottochronology conducted by Czech Slavist M Cejka in 1974 dates the Balto Slavic split to 910 340 BC Sergei Starostin in 1994 dates it to the 1210s BC and recalibrated glottochronology conducted by Novotna amp Blazek dates it to 1400 1340 BC That agrees well with Trziniec Komarov culture localised from Silesia to Central Ukraine which is dated to 1500 1200 BC Mallory 1994 p 80 Mallory 1994 pp 82 83 Barford 2001 p 14 Mallory 1994 p 78 Sussex amp Cubberley 2011 pp 111 112 The Journal of Indo European Studies Volume 21 Number 1 2 1993 p 180 ISBN 9780941694407 via books google nl Pronk amp Tiethoff S 2013 p 112 113 sfn error no target CITEREFPronkTiethoff S 2013 help Pronk amp Tiethoff S 2013 p 155 156 sfn error no target CITEREFPronkTiethoff S 2013 help Pronk amp Tiethoff S 2013 p 95 sfn error no target CITEREFPronkTiethoff S 2013 help Pronk amp Tiethoff S 2013 p 107 108 sfn error no target CITEREFPronkTiethoff S 2013 help Curta 2001 pp 7 8 Sussex amp Cubberley 2011 p 110 a b Kortlandt 1990 p 133 Curta 2001 pp 71 73 Barford 2001 p 6 Curta 2001 pp 39 40 Curta 2001 pp 40 43 Curta 2001 p 41 Barford 2001 pp 35 35 Curta 2001 p 7 Kobylinski 2005 p 527 Nec minor opinione Eningia Quidam haec habitari ad Vistulam a Sarmatis Venedis Sciris Hirris tradunt Plinius IV 27 Barford 2001 pp 6 7 Curta 2001 pp 36 37 a b Barford 2001 p 7 a b Curta 2001 p 37 Kobylinski 2005 p 524 Barford 2001 p 36 Grimm Jacob 1853 Geschichte der deutschen Sprache S Hirzel p 226 jacob grimm suevi slawen Metzner Ernst Erich 31 December 2011 Textgestutzte Nachtrage zu Namen und Abkunft der Bohmer und Mahrer und der zweierlei Baiern des fruhen Mittelalters Die sprachliche politische und religiose Grenzerfahrung und Bruckenfunktion alteuropaischer Gesellschaften nordlich und sudlich der Donau In Fiala Furst Ingeborg Czmero Jaromir eds Amici amico III Festschrift fur Ludvik E Vaclavek Beitrage zur deutschmahrischen Literatur in German Vol 17 Olomouc Univerzita Palackeho v Olomouci pp 321 347 ISBN 9788024427041 Curta 2001 pp 51 52 Curta 2001 p 51 Curta 2001 p 56 Curta 2001 pp 46 60 a b c Curta 2001 p 60 Barford 2001 p 29 Barford 2001 p 79 Curta 2001 p 118 Curta 2001 pp 73 118 Barford 2001 pp 7 8 Kobylinski 2005 p 528 a b c d e f Bell Fialkoff Andrew 2000 The Slavs In Bell Fialkoff Andrew ed The Role of Migration in the History of the Eurasian Steppe Sedentary Civilization vs Barbarian and Nomad Palgrave Macmillan pp 138 140 148 149 ISBN 0 312 21207 0 Barford 2001 chapters 2 4 a b Todd 1995 p 27 Barford 2001 p 40 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 104 a b c Curta 2001 p 284 Kobylinski 2005 p 529 a b Todd 1995 p 26 a b c Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 637 New Cambridge Medieval History pg 529 Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 524 Gimbutas 1971 p 42 Green 1996 p 3 Many pre historians argue it is spurious to identify Iron Age Europeans as Celts or other such labels Adams Douglas Q January 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis pp 104 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Magocsi 1996 p 36 Curta 2001 pp 6 7 11 Curta 2001 p 11 Barford 2001 p 43 An indirect piece of evidence might be the Slavic word strava which was used to describe Attila s funerary feast Priscus noted that communities with a language and customs distinct from Gothic Hun or Latin existed in the Hun confederacy They drank medos and could sail in boats crafted from hollowed out trees monoxyla Gimbutas 1971 p 98 Lester K Little ed 2007 Plague and the End of Antiquity The Pandemic of 541 750 Cambridge University Press pp 15 24 116 118 125 286 287 ISBN 978 0 521 84639 4 Ulf Buntgen Vladimir S Myglan Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist Michael McCormick Nicola Di Cosmo Michael Sigl Johann Jungclaus Sebastian Wagner Paul J Krusic Jan Esper Jed O Kaplan Michiel A C de Vaan Jurg Luterbacher Lukas Wacker Willy Tegel amp Alexander V Kirdyanov 2016 Cooling and societal change during the Late Antique Little Ice Age from 536 to around 660 AD Nature Geoscience 9 3 231 236 Bibcode 2016NatGe 9 231B doi 10 1038 ngeo2652 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Felix Biermann Kommentar zum Aufsatz von Florin Curta Utvareni Slovanu se zvlastnim zretelem k Cecham a Morave The Making of the Slavs with a special emphasis on Bohemia and Moravia Archeologicke rozhledy 61 2 2009 pp 337 349 Petr V Shuvalov The invention of the problem on Florin Curta s book Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 2 4 2008 pp 13 20 Andrej Pleterski The Ethnogenesis of the Slavs the Methods and the Process Starohrvatska prosvjeta 3 40 2013 pp 8 10 22 25 Lindstedt Jouko 19 22 October 2017 How the early Slavs existed A short essay on ontology and methodology Language contact and the Early Slavs PDF Prague Faculty of Arts Charles University in Prague retrieved 10 August 2022 Despite Florin Curta 2015 declaring the prehistoric Slavs as a fairy tale they certainly existed at least in a linguistic sense the Slavic language family is unexplainable without an earlier protolanguage this Proto Slavic must have had speakers and Slav is the name that mediaeval sources mainly propose as the designation of those but there is also no reason to argue that they are totally unrelated groups of people Linguistics shows the spread of the Slavic language in Eastern Europe in the second half of the first millennium CE history and archaeology tell us about at least some major migrations in this same period of worsening living conditions due to the Late Antique Little Ice Age and Justinian s Plague population genetics shows the relatively recent common ancestry of most of the population in this area These are distinct stories but not unrelated stories and the challenge is to construct an integrated view of the early speakers of Slavic on their basis not to bury the Slavs under ontological doubts and methodological scruples Koder Johannes 2020 On the Slavic Immigration in the Byzantine Balkans In Johannes Preiser Kapeller Lucian Reinfandt Yannis Stouraitis eds Migration Histories of the Medieval Afroeurasian Transition Zone Aspects of Mobility Between Africa Asia and Europe 300 1500 C E Brill pp 81 100 doi 10 1163 9789004425613 004 ISBN 978 90 04 42561 3 S2CID 218997565 a b Michel Kazanski Archaeology of the Slavic Migrations in Encyclopedia of Slavic Languages and Linguistics Online Editor in Chief Marc L Greenberg BRILL 2020 quote There are two specific aspects of the archaeology of Slavic migrations the movement of the populations of the Slavic cultural model and the diffusion of this model amid non Slavic populations Certainly both phenomena occurred however a pure diffusion of the Slavic model would hardly be possible in any case in which a long period of time when the populations of different cultural traditions lived close to one another is assumed Moreover archaeologists researching Slavic antiquities do not accept the ideas produced by the diffusionists because most of the champions of the diffusion model know the specific archaeological materials poorly so their works leave room for a number of arbitrary interpretations for details see Pleterski 2015 232 From Roman Provinces to Medieval Kingdoms Archaeologists and Migrations p 264 Russian Identities A Historical Survey N V Riasonovsky Pg 10 Oxford University Press quoting Johanna Nichols a b Renfrew 1987 p 131 136 Dolukhanov 2013 p 167 Geary 2003 p 145 a b Pohl 1998 p 20 Florin Curta The Making of the Slavs between ethnogenesis invention and migration Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana 2 4 2008 pp 155 172 Tomas Gabris Robert Jager Back to Slavic Legal History On the Use of Historical Linguistics in the History of Slavic Law Fruhmittelalterliche Studien 53 1 2019 pp 41 42 Curta 2004 p 133 Curta 2004 p 148 It is possible that the expansion of the Avar khanate during the second half of the eighth century coincided with the spread of Slavic into the neighbouring areas of Bohemia Moravia and southern Poland but could hardly explain the spread of Slavic into Poland Ukraine Belarus and Russia all regions that produced so far almost no archaeological evidence of Avar influence Helmold 1120 Chronica Slavorum a b c d e f g Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub 961 976 Book of Roads and Kingdoms Barford 2001 p 59 they are all tall and especially strong their skin is not very white and their hair is neither blond nor black but all have reddish hair Dolukhanov Pavel 2013 The Early Slavs Eastern Europe from the Initial Settlement to the Kievan Rus New York Routledge p 137 ISBN 978 0 582 23618 9 Barford 2001 p 59 citing Procopius Stanaszek Lukasz Maurycy 2001 Fenotyp dawnych Slowian VI X w PDF Retrieved 11 April 2021 Barford 2001 pp 89 90 Procopius 550s History of Wars full citation needed Barford 2001 p 128 Goldberg Eric J 2006 Struggle for Empire Kingship and Conflict Under Louis the German 817 876 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press pp 83 85 ISBN 978 0 8014 3890 5 a b c d Maurice 500s Strategikon of Maurice Curta 2001 pp 44 332 333 Fouracre Paul McKitterick Rosamond Reuter Timothy Abulafia David Luscombe David Edward Allmand C T Riley Smith Jonathan Jones Michael 1995 The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 1 C 500 c 700 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521362917 Zivkovic Tibor 2008 Forging unity The South Slavs between East and West 550 1150 The Institute of History p 58 ISBN 9788675585732 Riha Thomas Division University of Chicago College Syllabus 1963 Readings for Introduction to Russian civilization Syllabus Division University of Chicago Press p 370 Curta 2001 pp 71 320 321 Barford 2001 p 129 Barford 2001 p 124 Curta 2001 p 276 Curta 2001 p 283 Curta 2001 pp 297 307 a b c d e Ibn Rusta 903 The book of Precious Records a b c d e Barford 2001 p page needed Nofi Albert A Dunnigan James F 1994 Medieval Life and the Hundred Years War a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Radic 2011 p 23 sfn error no target CITEREFRadic2011 help a b Alla Alcenko THE MORAL VALUES East Slavic Paganism a b Barford 2001 Theophylact Simocatta 630 the Universal History Curta 2001 p 200 Marriage among the Early Slavs Folk Lore Volume 1 David Nutt for The Folk Lore Society 1890 Dyakonov Mikhail Essays on Social and Political System of Old Rus 4th edition corrected and supplemented Saint Petersburg 1912 XVI 489 p Russian Dyakonov M A Ocherki obshestvennogo i gosudarstvennogo stroya Drevnej Rusi Izd 4 e ispr i dop SPb Yuridich kn sklad Pravo 1912 XVI 489 s Sarkic Srđan Maurice 500s Strategikon of Maurice full citation needed Ibn Rusta 903 The book of Precious Records full citation needed a b Georgios Kardaras 2017 a re approach of Procopius Ethnographic account on the Early Slavs Maurice 500s Strategikon of Maurice Kevin F Kiley 2013 Uniforms of the Roman world Procopius 550s History of Wars a b c d Curta 2001 p page needed Curta 2001 pp 91 92 315 Radic 2011 p 4 5 sfn error no target CITEREFRadic2011 help Chernorizec Hrabr IX X vek in Bulgarian Old Church Slavonic text of An Account of Letters in Russian 13 March 2012 Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 a b Encyclopedia of Ukraine vol 3 1993 Praslowianskie motywy architektoniczne 1923 Retrieved 19 May 2014 Grzegorzewic Ziemislaw 2016 O Bogach i ludziach Praktyka i teoria Rodzimowierstwa Slowianskiego About the Gods and people Practice and theory of Slavic Heathenism in Polish Olsztyn Stowarzyszenie Kolomir p 57 ISBN 978 83 940180 8 5 a b Kuftin Boris A 1926 Materialnaya kultura Russkoj Meshery Ch 1 Zhenskaya odezhda rubaha poneva sarafan Material culture of Russian Meshchera Part 1 Women s clothing shirt poniova sarafan Proceedings of the State Museum of the Central Industrial Region 3 in Russian Moscow pp 62 64 OCLC 490308640 Cross 1946 pp 77 78 Dvornik 1956 p page needed a b Zguta Russell 1974 The Pagan Priests of Early Russia Some New Insights Slavic Review 33 2 page needed doi 10 2307 2495793 JSTOR 2495793 S2CID 163227613 Sommer Petr Dusan Trestik Josef Zemlicka 2007 Bohemia and Moravia In Berend Nora ed Christianization and the rise of Christian monarchy Scandinavia Central Europe and Rus c 900 1200 Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press pp 214 262 a b Dvornik 1956 p 47 Cross 1946 pp 83 87 Andreyev Nikolay 1962 Pagan and Christian Elements in Old Russia Slavic Review 21 1 17 doi 10 2307 3000540 JSTOR 3000540 S2CID 163384871 Barford 2001 p 189 Cross 1946 pp 78 87 Barford 2001 p 193 a b Dvornik 1956 p 48 Cross 1946 p 82 a b Barford 2001 p 209 Barford 2001 p 194 Leeper Allen 1933 Germans Avars and Slavs Slavonic and East European Review 12 34 125 Cross 1946 p 79 Barford 2001 pp 189 191 Dvornik 1956 pp 48 51 Barford 2001 pp 195 198 Cross 1946 p 84 a b Barford 2001 p 198 Cross 1946 p 83 Andreyev 1962 p 18 Zguta 1974 p 263 Kiminas 2009 p 15 Dvornik 1956 p 179 The Psalter and the Book of Prophets were adapted or modernized with special regard to their use in Bulgarian churches and it was in this school that glagolitic writing was replaced by the so called Cyrillic writing which was more akin to the Greek uncial simplified matters considerably and is still used by the Orthodox Slavs Florin Curta 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Medieval Textbooks Cambridge University Press pp 221 222 ISBN 978 0 521 81539 0 Cyrillic preslav J M Hussey Andrew Louth 2010 The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire Oxford History of the Christian Church Oxford University Press p 100 ISBN 978 0 19 161488 0 Zlatarski Vasil 1938 Istoriya na Prvoto blgarsko Carstvo I Epoha na huno blgarskoto nadmoshie 679 852 History of the First Bulgarian Empire Period of Hunnic Bulgarian domination 679 852 in Bulgarian Marin Drinov Publishing House p 188 ISBN 978 9544302986 Retrieved 23 May 2012 Bulgar Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 28 July 2018 a b Fine John V A Fine John Van Antwerp 1991 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century University of Michigan Press pp 53 68 70 ISBN 978 0472081493 Hadzijahic Muhamed 2004 Povijest Bosne u IX i X stoljecu in Bosnian Preporod from original and previously unpublished script written in 1986 p 11 ISBN 9789958820274 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Fine John V A 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press pp 1 17 ISBN 978 0472082605 Retrieved 19 October 2018 Fine John V A 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press pp 2 58 ISBN 978 0472082605 Retrieved 20 October 2018 Curta 2001 pp 335 337 Curta 2001 pp 6 35 Paul M Barford 2004 Identity And Material Culture Did The Early Slavs Follow The Rules Or Did They Make Up Their Own East Central Europe 31 no 1 102 103 Pots Slavs and Imagined Communities Slavic Archaeologies And The History of The Early Slavs European Journal of Archaeology 4 no 3 367 384 George Verdansky and Michael Karpovich Ancient Russia vol 1 of History of Russia New Haven Yale University Press 1943 Sources Edit Main article Bibliography of the history of the Early Slavs and Rus Barford Paul M 2001 The Early Slavs Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3977 3 Cohen Abner 1974 Two dimensional Man An Essay on the Anthropology of Power and Symbolism in Complex Society University of California Press Cross S H 1946 Primitive Civilization of the Eastern Slavs American Slavic and East European Review 5 1 2 51 87 doi 10 2307 2491581 JSTOR 2491581 Curta Florin 2001 The Making of the Slavs History and Archaeology of the Lower Danube Region c 500 700 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139428880 Curta Florin 2004 The Slavic Lingua Franca Linguistic Notes of an Archaeologist Turned Historian PDF East Central Europe 31 1 125 148 doi 10 1163 187633004x00134 Archived from the original PDF on 4 July 2009 Retrieved 24 July 2009 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521815390 Dvornik Francis 1956 The Slavs Their Early History and Civilization Boston American Academy of Arts and Sciences OCLC 459280624 Fortson Benjamin W 2004 Indo European language and culture an introduction Malden Mass Blackwell ISBN 1405103159 OCLC 54529041 Geary Patrick 2003 Myth of Nations The Medieval Origins of Europe Princeton Paperbacks ISBN 978 0 691 11481 1 Gimbutas Marija Alseikaite 1971 The Slavs Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 02072 2 Pohl Walter 2003 A Non Roman Empire in Central Europe the Avars In Goetz H W Jarnut Jorg Pohl Walter eds Regna and gentes the relationship between late antique and early medieval peoples and kingdoms in the transformation of the Roman world BRILL pp 571 595 ISBN 978 90 04 12524 7 Goffart Walter 2006 Does the Distant Past Impinge on the Invasion Age Germans In Noble Thomas F X ed From Roman Provinces to Medieval Kingdoms pp 91 109 ISBN 978 0 415 32741 1 Green Miranda 1996 The Celtic world Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 14627 2 Heather Peter 2006 The Fall of the Roman Empire A New History of Rome and the Barbarians Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515954 7 Kiminas Demetrius 2009 The Ecumenical Patriarchate A History of Its Metropolitanates with Annotated Hierarch Catalogs Wildside Press LLC ISBN 978 1434458766 Kmietowicz Frank A 1976 Ancient Slavs Worzalla Publishing Company Kobylinski Zbigniew 2005 The Slavs In Fouracre Paul ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 1 c 500 c 700 Cambridge University Press pp 524 546 ISBN 978 0 521 36291 7 Kortlandt Frederick 1990 The spread of the Indo Europeans PDF Journal of Indo European Studies 18 131 140 Magocsi Paul R 1996 A History of Ukraine University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 7820 9 Mallory James P 1994 In Search of the Indo Europeans Language Archaeology and Myth Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 27616 7 Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Paliga Sorin 2014 A New Synthesis on the Slavic Glotto and Ethnogenesis and on the Earliest Slavic Romanian Relations in the 6th century CE Romanoslavica 49 4 doi 10 13140 RG 2 1 4537 4563 Pronk Tiethoff S 2013 The Germanic loanwords in Proto Slavic Amsterdam New York Rodopi pp 112 113 ISBN 978 90 420 3732 8 Renfrew Colin 1987 Archaeology and language the puzzle of Indo European origins London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0 521 38675 6 Richards Ronald O 2003 The Pannonian Slavic Dialect of the Common Slavic Proto language The View from Old Hungarian Los Angeles University of California ISBN 9780974265308 Rona Tas Andras 1999 Hungarians and Europe in the Early Middle Ages An Introduction to Early Hungarian History Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 9116 48 1 Pohl Walter 1998 Conceptions of ethnicity in Early Medieval Studies In Rosenwein Barbara Little Lester K eds Debating the Middle Ages issues and readings Wiley Blackwell pp 15 24 ISBN 978 1 57718 008 1 Schenker Alexander M 2008 Proto Slavonic In Comrie Bernard Corbett Greville G eds The Slavonic Languages Routledge pp 60 121 ISBN 978 0 415 28078 5 Sussex Roland Cubberley Paul 2011 The Slavic Languages Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29448 5 Todd Malcolm 1995 The Early Germans Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 19904 7 Wolfram Herwig 2006 Origo et Religio Ethnic traditions and literature in early medieval texts In Noble Thomas F X ed From Roman Provinces to Medieval Kingdoms pp 57 74 ISBN 978 0 415 32741 1 Maurice 500s Strategikon of Maurice full citation needed Helmold 1120 Chronica Slavorum full citation needed Procopius 550s History of Wars full citation needed Georgios Kardaras 2017 a re approach of Procopius Ethnographic account on the Early Slavs full citation needed Jordanes 551 Jordanes Getica full citation needed Theophylact Simocatta 630 the Universal History full citation needed Ibn Rusta 903 The book of Precious Records full citation needed Ibrahim Ibn Ya qub 961 976 Book of Roads and Kingdoms full citation needed Kevin F Kiley 2013 Uniforms of the Roman world full citation needed Further reading EditNowakowski Wojciech Bartkiewicz Katarzyna Baltes et proto Slaves dans l Antiquite Textes et archeologie In Dialogues d histoire ancienne vol 16 n 1 1990 pp 359 402 DOI https doi org 10 3406 dha 1990 1472 www persee fr doc dha 0755 7256 1990 num 16 1 1472 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Early Slavs amp oldid 1131168432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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