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Sorbs

Sorbs (Upper Sorbian: Serbja, Lower Sorbian: Serby, German: Sorben Czech: Lužičtí Srbové, Polish: Serbołużyczanie; also known as Lusatians, Lusatian Serbs[6] and Wends) are an indigenous West Slavic ethnic group predominantly inhabiting the parts of Lusatia located in the German states of Saxony and Brandenburg. Sorbs traditionally speak the Sorbian languages (also known as "Wendish" and "Lusatian"), which are closely related to Czech, Polish, Kashubian, Silesian, and Slovak. Upper Sorbian and Lower Sorbian are officially recognized minority languages in Germany.

Sorbs
Sorbian flag, in Pan-Slavic colors, introduced in 1842
Traditional female costume of Lower Lusatia (Spreewald)
Total population
80,000[1][page needed] (est.)
• 45,000–60,000 Upper Sorbs[citation needed]
• 15,000–20,000 Lower Sorbs[citation needed]
Regions with significant populations
 Germany60,000 Sorbs in Germany (20,000 of which still speak Sorbian) (2007 Reuters estimate)[2]
 Czech Republic2,000[3]
 Polandfewer than 1,000[citation needed]
 United States1,245 (2000)[4]
Languages
Sorbian (Upper Sorbian, Lower Sorbian), Polish, German (Lusatian dialects)
Religion
Majority Roman Catholicism,[5] Protestantism[2]
Related ethnic groups
Other West Slavs
(especially Czechs and Poles)

In the Early Middle Ages, the Sorbs formed their own principality, which later shortly became part of the early West Slavic Samo's Empire and Great Moravia, as were ultimately conquered by the East Francia (Sorbian March) and Holy Roman Empire (Saxon Eastern March, Margravate of Meissen, March of Lusatia). From the High Middle Ages, they were ruled at various times by the closely related Poles and Czechs, as well as the more distant Germans and Hungarians. Due to a gradual and increasing assimilation between the 17th and 20th centuries, virtually all Sorbs also spoke German by the early 20th century. In the newly created German nation state of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, policies were implemented in an effort to Germanize the Sorbs. These policies reached their climax under the Nazi regime, who denied the existence of the Sorbs as a distinct Slavic people by referring to them as "Sorbian-speaking Germans". The community is divided religiously between Roman Catholicism (the majority) and Lutheranism. The former Minister President of Saxony Stanislaw Tillich is of Sorbian origin.

Etymology edit

The ethnonym "Sorbs" (Serbja, Serby) derives from the medieval ethnic groups called "Sorbs" (Surbi, Sorabi). The original ethnonym, Srbi, was retained by the Sorbs and Serbs in the Balkans.[7] By the 6th century, Slavs occupied the area west of the Oder formerly inhabited by Germanic peoples.[7] The Sorbs are first mentioned in the 6th or 7th century. In their languages, the other Slavs call them the "Lusatian Serbs", and the Sorbs call the Serbs "the south Sorbs".[8] The name "Lusatia" was originally applied only to Lower Lusatia.[7] It is generally considered that their ethnonym *Sŕbъ (plur. *Sŕby) originates from Proto-Slavic with an appellative meaning of a "family kinship" and "alliance", however others argue a derivation from Iranian-Sarmatian.[9][10][11][12]

History edit

Early Middle Ages edit

 
A map of the Sorbian-Lusatian tribes between the 7th and 11th century, by Wilhelm Bogusławski, 1861

The name of the Sorbs can be traced to the 6th century or earlier when Vibius Sequester recorded Cervetiis living on the other part of the river Elbe which divided them from the Suevi (Albis Germaniae Suevos a Cerveciis dividiit).[13][14][15][16][17] According to Lubor Niederle, the Serbian district was located somewhere between Magdeburg and Lusatia, and was later mentioned by the Ottonians as Ciervisti, Zerbisti, and Kirvisti.[18] The information is in accordance with the Frankish 7th-century Chronicle of Fredegar according to which the Surbi lived in the Saale-Elbe valley, having settled in the Thuringian part of Francia since the second half of the 6th century or beginning of the 7th century and were vassals of the Merovingian dynasty.[13][19][20]

The Saale-Elbe line marked the approximate limit of Slavic westward migration.[21] Under the leadership of dux (duke) Dervan ("Dervanus dux gente Surbiorum que ex genere Sclavinorum"), they joined the Slavic tribal union of Samo, after Samo's decisive victory against Frankish King Dagobert I in 631.[19][20] Afterwards, these Slavic tribes continuously raided Thuringia.[19] The fate of the tribes after Samo's death and dissolution of the union in 658 is undetermined, but it is considered that they subsequently returned to Frankish vassalage.[22]

According to a 10th-century source De Administrando Imperio, they lived "since the beginning" in the region called by them as Boiki which was a neighbor to Francia, and when two brothers succeeded their father, one of them migrated with half of the people to the Balkans during the rule of Heraclius in the first half of the 7th century.[23][24] According to some scholars, the White Serbian Unknown Archon who led them to the Balkans was most likely a son, brother or other relative of Dervan.[25][26][27][28]

 
7th-century Sorbian Duchy of Dervan
 
Saxon Eastern March c. 1000 AD

Sorbian tribes, Sorbi/Surbi, are noted in the mid-9th-century work of the Bavarian Geographer.[9][29][30] Having settled by the Elbe, Saale, Spree, and Neisse in the 6th and early 7th century, Sorbian tribes divided into two main groups, which have taken their names from the characteristics of the area where they had settled. The two groups were separated from each other by a wide and uninhabited forest range, one around Upper Spree and the rest between the Elbe and Saale.[31] Some scholars consider that the contemporary Sorbs are descendants of the two largest Sorbian tribes, the Milceni (Upper) and Lusici [de] (Lower), and these tribes' respective dialects have developed into separate languages.[7][32] However, others emphasize differences between these two dialects and that their respective territories correspond to two different Slavic archeological cultures of Tornow group ceramics (Lower Sorbian language) and Leipzig group ceramics (Upper Sorbian language),[31] both a derivation of Prague(-Korchak) culture.[33][34]

 
The reconstructed Lusatian gord (fortification) of Raduš (Raddusch), near Vetschau, in Lower Lusatia

The Annales Regni Francorum state that in 806 Sorbian Duke Miliduch fought against the Franks and was killed. In 840, Sorbian Duke Czimislav was killed. From the 9th century was organized Sorbian March by the East Francia and from the 10th century the Saxon Eastern March (Margravate of Meissen) and March of Lusatia by the Holy Roman Empire. In 932, Henry I conquered Lusatia and Milsko. Gero, Margrave of the Saxon Eastern March, reconquered Lusatia the following year and, in 939, murdered 30 Sorbian princes during a feast. As a result, there were many Sorbian uprisings against German rule. A reconstructed castle, at Raddusch in Lower Lusatia, is the sole physical remnant from this early period.

High and Late Middle Ages edit

In 1002, the Sorbs came under the rule of their Slavic relatives, the Poles, when Bolesław I of Poland took over Lusatia. Following the subsequent German–Polish War of 1003–1018, the Peace of Bautzen confirmed Lusatia as part of Poland; but, it returned to German rule in 1031. In the 1070s, southern Lusatia, passed into the hands of the Sorbs' other Slavic relatives, the Czechs, within their Duchy of Bohemia. There was a dense network of dynastic and diplomatic relations between German and Slavic feudal lords, e.g. Wiprecht of Groitzsch (a German) rose to power through close links with the Bohemian (Czech) king and marriage to the king's daughter.

The Kingdom of Bohemia eventually became a politically influential member of the Holy Roman Empire but was in a constant power-struggle with neighbouring Poland. In the following centuries, at various times, parts of Lusatia passed to Piast-ruled fragmented Poland. In the German-ruled parts, Sorbs were ousted from guilds, the Sorbian language was banned and German colonisation and Germanisation policies were enacted.[35]

From the 11th to the 15th century, agriculture in Lusatia developed and colonization by Frankish, Flemish and Saxon settlers intensified. This can still be seen today from the names of local villages which geographically form a patchwork of typical German (ending on -dorf, -thal etc.) and typical Slavic origin (ending on -witz, -ow etc.), indicating the language originally spoken by its inhabitants, although some of the present German names may be of later origin from the time of planned name changes to erase Slavic origin, especially in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1327 the first prohibitions on using Sorbian before courts and in administrative affairs in the cities of Altenburg, Zwickau and Leipzig appeared. Speaking Sorbian in family and business contexts was, however, not banned, as it did not involve the functioning of the administration. Also the village communities and the village administration usually kept operating in Sorbian.

Early modern period edit

 
Sorbian church in Senftenberg (Zły Komorow)

From 1376 to 1469 and from 1490 to 1635 Lusatia was part of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown under the rule of the houses of Luxembourg, Jagiellon and Habsburg and other kings, whereas from 1469 to 1490 it was ruled by King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary. Under Bohemian (Czech) rule, Sorbs were allowed to return to cities, offices and crafts, Germanisation significantly reduced and the Sorbian language could be used in public.[36] From the beginning of the 16th century the whole Sorbian-inhabited area, with the exception of Bohemian-ruled Lusatia, underwent Germanization.

During the Thirty Years' War, in 1635, Lusatia became a fiefdom of Saxon electors, but it retained a considerable autonomy and largely its own legal system (see Lusatian League). The Thirty Years' War and the plague of the 17th century caused terrible devastation in Lusatia. This led to further German colonization and Germanization.

In 1667 the Prince of Brandenburg, Frederick Wilhelm, ordered the immediate destruction of all Sorbian printed materials and banned saying masses in this language. At the same time the Evangelical Church supported printing Sorbian religious literature as a means of fighting the Counterreformation. With the formation of the Polish-Saxon union in 1697, Polish-Sorbian contacts resumed, and Poles influenced the Sorbs' national and cultural activities (see Relationship with Poland below). With the Age of Enlightenment, the Sorbian national revival began and resistance to Germanization emerged.[37] In 1706 the Sorbian Seminary, the main centre for the education of Sorbian Catholic priests, was founded in Prague.[37] Sorbian preaching societies were founded by Evangelical students in Leipzig and Wittenberg in 1716 and 1749, respectively.[37]

Late modern period edit

 
First issue of the Bramborski Serbski Casnik Sorbian newspaper, 1848

The Congress of Vienna, in 1815, divided Lusatia between Prussia and Saxony. More and more bans on the use of Sorbian languages appeared from then until 1835 in Prussia and Saxony; emigration of the Sorbs, mainly to the town of Serbin in Texas and to Australia, increased. In 1848, 5000 Sorbs signed a petition to the Saxon Government, in which they demanded equality for the Sorbian language with the German one in churches, courts, schools and Government departments. From 1871 the whole of Lusatia became a part of united Germany and was divided between two parts; Prussia (Silesia and Brandenburg), and Saxony.

In 1871 the industrialization of the region and German immigration began; official Germanization intensified. Persecution of the Sorbs under German rule became increasingly harsh throughout the 19th century. Slavs were labeled inferior to Germanic peoples, and in 1875, the use of Sorbian was banned in German schools. As a result, almost the entire Sorbian population was bilingual by the end of the 19th century.[a]

 
The place where Domowina was founded in Hoyerswerda (Wojerecy) in 1912

During World War I, one of the most venerated Serbian generals was Pavle Jurišić Šturm (Paul Sturm), a Sorb from Görlitz, Province of Silesia.[citation needed]

Interbellum and World War II edit

Although the Weimar Republic guaranteed constitutional minority rights, it did not practice them.[39]

Under Nazi Germany, Sorbians were described as a German tribe who spoke a Slavic language. Sorbian costume, culture, customs, and the language was said to be no indication of a non-German origin. The Reich declared that there were truly no "Sorbs" or "Lusatians", only Wendish-speaking Germans. As such, while the Sorbs were largely safe from the Reich's policies of ethnic cleansing, the cultivation of "Wendish" customs and traditions was to be encouraged in a controlled manner and it was expected that the Slavic language would decline due to natural causes. Young Sorbs enlisted in the Wehrmacht and were sent to the front. The entangled lives of the Sorbs during World War II are exemplified by the life stories of Mina Witkojc, Měrćin Nowak-Njechorński  and Jan Skala.

Persecution of the Sorbs reached its climax under the Nazis, who attempted to completely assimilate and Germanize them. Their distinct identity and culture and Slavic origins were denied by referring to them as "Wendish-speaking Germans". Under Nazi rule, the Sorbian language and practice of Sorbian culture was banned, Sorbian and Slavic place-names were changed to German ones,[40] Sorbian books and printing presses were destroyed, Sorbian organizations and newspapers were banned, Sorbian libraries and archives were closed, and Sorbian teachers and clerics were deported to German-speaking areas and replaced with German-speaking teachers and clerics. Leading figures in the Sorbian community were forcibly isolated from their community or simply arrested.[b][c][d][e][f] The Sorbian national anthem and flag were banned.[46] The specific Wendenabteilung was established to monitor the assimilation of the Sorbs.[a]

Towards the end of World War II, the Nazis considered the deportation of the entire Sorbian population to the mining districts of Alsace-Lorraine.[b][d]

East Germany edit

 
A Sorbian dance performance at the Palace of the Republic, Berlin (East German parliament), 1976

The first Lusatian cities were captured in April 1945, when the Red Army and the Polish Second Army crossed the river Queis (Kwisa). The defeat of Nazi Germany changed the Sorbs’ situation considerably. The regions in East Germany (the German Democratic Republic) faced heavy industrialisation and a large influx of expelled Germans.[citation needed] The East German authorities tried to counteract this development by creating a broad range of Sorbian institutions. The Sorbs were officially recognized as an ethnic minority, more than 100 Sorbian schools and several academic institutions were founded, the Domowina and its associated societies were re-established and a Sorbian theatre was created. Owing to the suppression of the church and forced collectivization, however, these efforts were severely affected and consequently over time the number of people speaking Sorbian languages decreased by half.

The relationship between the Sorbs and the government of East Germany was not without occasional difficulties, mainly because of the high levels of religious observance and resistance to the nationalisation of agriculture. During the compulsory collectivization campaign, a great many unprecedented incidents were reported. Thus, throughout the Uprising of 1953 in East Germany, violent clashes with the police were reported in Lusatia. A small uprising took place in three upper communes of Błot.

Sorbs experienced greater representation in the German Democratic Republic than under any other German government. Domowina had status as a constituent member organization of the National Front, and a number of Sorbs were members of the Volkskammer and State Council of East Germany. Notable Sorbian figures of the period include Domowina Chairmen Jurij Grós and Kurt Krjeńc, State Council member Maria Schneider, and writer and three-time receipient of the National Prize of the German Democratic Republic Jurij Brězan.[47]

In 1973, Domowina reported that 2,130 municipal councillors, 119 burgomasters, and more than 3,500 members of commissions and local bodies in East Germany were ethnic Sorbs registered with the organization.[48] Additionally, there was a seat reserved for a Sorbian representative in the Central Council of the Free German Youth, the mass organization for young people in East Germany, and magazines for both the FDJ and the Ernst Thälmann Pioneer Organisation were published in the Sorbian language on a regular basis under the titles Chorhoj Měra and Plomjo, respectively.[49]

After reunification edit

 
 
"Houses of the Sorbs" (Serbski dom), chief Sorbian cultural institutions in Bautzen and Cottbus

After the reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990, Lusatians made efforts to create an autonomous administrative unit; however, Helmut Kohl’s government did not agree to it.[citation needed] After 1989, the Sorbian movement revived, however, it still encounters many obstacles. Although Germany supports national minorities, Sorbs claim that their aspirations are not sufficiently fulfilled.[citation needed] The desire to unite Lusatia in one of the federal states has not been taken into consideration. Upper Lusatia still belongs to Saxony and Lower Lusatia to Brandenburg. Liquidations of Sorbian schools, even in areas mostly populated by Sorbs, still happen, under the pretext of financial difficulties or demolition of whole villages to create lignite quarries.[citation needed]

Faced with growing threat of cultural extinction, the Domowina issued a memorandum in March 2008[50] and called for "help and protection against the growing threat of their cultural extinction, since an ongoing conflict between the German government, Saxony and Brandenburg about the financial distribution of help blocks the financing of almost all Sorbian institutions". The memorandum also demands a reorganisation of competence by ceding responsibility from the Länder to the federal government and an expanded legal status. The call has been issued to all governments and heads of state of the European Union.[51]

Population genetics edit

According to 2013 and 2015 studies, the most common Y-DNA haplogroup among the Sorbs who speak Upper Sorbian in Lusatia (n=123) is R1a with 65%, mainly its R-M458 subclade (57%). It is followed in frequency by I1 (9.8%), R1b (9.8%), E1b1b (4.9%), I2 (4.1%), J (3.3%) and G (2.4%). Other haplogroups are less than 1%.[52][53] A study from 2003 reported a similar frequency of 63.4% of haplogroup R1a among Sorbian males (n=112).[54] Other studies that covered aspects of Sorbian Y-DNA include Immel et al. 2006,[55] Rodig et al. 2007,[56] and Krawczak et al. 2008.[57] Significant percentage of R1a (25.7-38.3%), but strongly diminished in value because of high R1b (33.5-21.7%), and low I2 (5.8-5.1%) are in whole Saxony and Germania Slavica area as well.[58]

A 2011 paper on the Sorbs' autosomal DNA reported that the Upper Sorbian speakers (n=289) showed the greatest autosomal genetic similarity to Poles, followed by Czechs and Slovaks, consistent with the linguistic proximity of Sorbian to other West Slavic languages.[59] In another genome-wide paper from the same year on Upper Sorbs (n=977), which indicated their genetic isolation "which cannot be explained by over-sampling of relatives" and a closer proximity to Poles and Czechs than Germans. The researchers however question this proximity, as the German reference population was almost exclusively West-German, and the Polish and Czech reference population had many that were part of a German minority.[60] In a 2016 paper, Sorbs cluster autosomally again with Poles (from Poznań).[61]

Language and culture edit

 
Bautzen, German-Sorbian folk theatre

The oldest known relic of Sorbian literature originated in about 1530 – the Bautzen townsmen's oath. In 1548 Mikołaj Jakubica – Lower Sorbian vicar, from the village called Lubanice, wrote the first unprinted translation of the New Testament into Lower Sorbian. In 1574 the first Sorbian book was printed: Albin Mollers’ songbook. In 1688 Jurij Hawštyn Swětlik translated the Bible for Catholic Sorbs. From 1706 to 1709 the New Testament was printed in the Upper Sorbian translation was done by Michał Frencel and in Lower Sorbian by Jan Bogumił Fabricius (1681–1741). Jan Bjedrich Fryco (a.k.a. Johann Friedrich Fritze) (1747–1819), translated the Old Testament for the first time into Lower Sorbian, published in 1790.

 
 
 
 
Prominent 19th-century Sorbian writers, from top left to right: Handrij Zejler, Jan Arnošt Smoler, Mato Kósyk, Jakub Bart-Ćišinski

Other Sorbian Bible translators include Jakub Buk (1825–1895), Michał Hórnik (Michael Hornig) (1833–1894), Jurij Łušćanski (a.k.a. Georg Wuschanski) (1839–1905). In 1809 for the short period of time, there was the first printed Sorbian newspaper. In 1767 Jurij Mjeń publishes the first secular Sorbian book. Between 1841 and 1843, Jan Arnošt Smoler and Leopold Haupt (a.k.a. J. L. Haupt and J. E. Schmaler) published two-volume collection of Wendish folk-songs in Upper and Lower Lusatia. From 1842, the first Sorbian publishing companies started to appear: the poet Handrij Zejler set up a weekly magazine, the precursor of today’s Sorbian News. In 1845 in Bautzen the first festival of Sorbian songs took place. In 1875, Jakub Bart-Ćišinski, the poet and classicist of Upper Sorbian literature, and Karol Arnošt Muka created a movement of young Sorbians influencing Lusatian art, science and literature for the following 50 years. A similar movement in Lower Lusatia was organized around the most prominent Lower Lusatian poets Mato Kósyk (Mato Kosyk) and Bogumił Šwjela.

In 1904, mainly thanks to the Sorbs’ contribution, the most important Sorbian cultural centre (the Sorbian House) was built in Bautzen. In 1912, the social and cultural organization of Lusatian Sorbs was created, the Domowina Institution - the union of Sorbian organizations. In 1919 it had 180,000 members. In 1920, Jan Skala set up a Sorbian party and in 1925 in Berlin, Skala started Kulturwille- the newspaper for the protection of national minorities in Germany. In 1920, the Sokol Movement was founded (youth movement and gymnastic organization). From 1933 the Nazi party started to repress the Sorbs. At that time the Nazis also dissolved the Sokol Movement and began to combat every sign of Sorbian culture. In 1937, the activities of the Domowina Institution and other organizations were banned as anti-national. Sorbian clergymen and teachers were forcedly deported from Lusatia; Nazi German authorities confiscated the Sorbian House, other buildings and crops.

On May 10, 1945, in Crostwitz, after the Red Army's invasion, the Domowina Institution renewed its activity. In 1948, the Landtag of Saxony passed an Act guaranteeing protection to Sorbian Lusatians; in 1949, Brandenburg resolved a similar law. Article 40 of the constitution of German Democratic Republic adopted on 7 October 1949 expressly provided for the protection of the language and culture of the Sorbs. In the times of the German Democratic Republic, Sorbian organizations were financially supported by the country, but at the same time the authorities encouraged Germanization of Sorbian youth as a means of incorporating them into the system of "building Socialism". Sorbian language and culture could only be publicly presented as long as they promoted socialist ideology. For over 1000 years, the Sorbs were able to maintain and even develop their national culture, despite escalating Germanization and Polonization, mainly due to the high level of religious observance, cultivation of their tradition and strong families (Sorbian families still often have five children). In the middle of the 20th century, the revival of the Central European nations included some Sorbs, who became strong enough to attempt twice to regain their independence. After World War II, the Lusatian National Committee in Prague claimed the right to self-government and separation from Germany and the creation of a Lusatian Free State or attachment to Czechoslovakia. The majority of the Sorbs were organized in the Domowina, though, and did not wish to split from Germany.[citation needed] Claims asserted by the Lusatian National movement were postulates of joining Lusatia to Poland or Czechoslovakia. Between 1945 and 1947 they postulated about ten petitions[62] to the United Nations, the United States, Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, France, Poland and Czechoslovakia, however, it did not bring any results. On April 30, 1946, the Lusatian National Committee also postulated a petition to the Polish Government, signed by Pawoł Cyž – the minister and an official Sorbian delegate in Poland. There was also a project of proclaiming a Lusatian Free State, whose Prime Minister was supposed to be a Polish archaeologist of Lusatian origin- Wojciech Kóčka. The most radical postulates in this area (" Na swobodu so ńečeka, swobodu so beŕe!")[63] were expressed by the Lusatian youth organization- Narodny Partyzan Łužica. Similarly, in Czechoslovakia, where before the Potsdam Conference in Prague, 300,000 people demonstrated for the independence of Lusatia. The endeavours to separate Lusatia from Germany did not succeed because of various individual and geopolitical interests.

 
Bilingual names of streets in Cottbus

The following statistics indicate the progression of cultural change among Sorbs: by the end of the 19th century, about 150,000 people spoke Sorbian languages. By 1920, almost all Sorbs had mastered Sorbian and German to the same degree. Nowadays, the number of people using Sorbian languages has been estimated to be no more than 40,000.

The Israeli Slavic linguist Paul Wexler has argued that the Yiddish language structure provides "compelling evidence of an intimate Jewish contact with the Slavs in the German and Bohemian lands as early as the 9th century", and has theorized that Sorbs may have been contributors to the Ashkenazic Jewish population in Europe from the same period.[64][65]

Traditions edit

A Shrove Tuesday festival Zapust is the most popular tradition of the Sorbs, deeply linked to the working life of the community. Traditionally, festivities would last one week ahead of the spring sowing of the fields and would feature traditional dress, parade and dancing.[66]

Egg decorating (pisanici) is a Slavic Easter tradition maintained by Sorbs since the 17th century.[67][better source needed]

Religion edit

 
Sorbian translation of the New Testament by Michał Frencel [dsb], 1717

Most current speakers of Upper-Sorbian are part of the Catholic denomination. Originally, the majority of Sorbs were Lutheran Protestants, and this was still the case going into the 20th Century (with a Protestant population of 86.9% recorded in 1900).[68] Only the Sorbs of the Kamenz area – predominantly settled on the expansive former site of the Saint Marienstern Monastery [de] in Panschwitz-Kuckau – veered from the norm, with a Catholic population of 88.4%. Otherwise, the proportion of Catholics remained under 1% throughout the region of Lower Lusatia. Due to the rapid decline in language and cultural identity amongst the Protestant Sorbs – particularly during the years of the GDR – the denominational make-up of the Sorbian-speaking population of the region has now been reversed.

National symbols edit

 
Handwriting of Rjana Łužica by Handrij Zejler

The flag of the Lusatian Sorbs is a cloth of blue, red and white horizontal stripes. First used as a national symbol in 1842, the flag was fully recognized among Sorbs following the proclamation of pan-Slavic colors at the Prague Slavic Congress of 1848. Section 25 of the Constitution of Brandenburg contains a provision on the Lusatian flag. Section 2 of the Constitution of Saxony contains a provision on the use of the coat of arms and traditional national colors of the Lusatian Sorbs. The laws on the rights of the Lusatian Sorbs of Brandenburg and Saxony contain provisions on the use of Lusatian national symbols (coat of arms and national colors).[69]

The national anthem of Lusatian Sorbs since the 20th century is the song Rjana Łužica (Beautiful Lusatia).[70] Previously, the songs “Still Sorbs Have Not Perished” (written by Handrij Zejler in 1840)[71] and “Our Sorbs Rise from the Dust” (written by M. Domashka, performed until 1945)[72] served as a hymn.

Regions of Lusatia edit

There are three main regions of Lusatia that differ in language, religion, and customs.

Region of Upper Lusatia edit

 
 
Flag and coat of arms of Upper Lusatia

Catholic Lusatia encompasses 85 towns in the districts of Bautzen, Kamenz, and Hoyerswerda, where Upper Sorbian language, customs, and tradition are still thriving. In some of these places (e.g., Radibor or Radwor in Sorbian, Crostwitz or Chrósćicy, and Rosenthal or Róžant), Sorbs constitute the majority of the population, and children grow up speaking Sorbian.

On Sundays, during holidays, and at weddings, people wear regional costumes, rich in decoration and embroidery, encrusted with pearls.

Some of the customs and traditions observed include Bird Wedding (25 January), Easter Cavalcade of Riders, Witch Burning (30 April), Maik, singing on St. Martin's Day (Nicolay), and the celebrations of Saint Barbara’s Day and Saint Nicholas’s Day.

Region of Hoyerswerda (Wojerecy) and Schleife (Slepo) edit

In the area from Hoyerswerda to Schleife, a dialect of Sorbian which combines characteristic features of both Upper and Lower Sorbian is spoken. The region is predominantly Protestant, highly devastated by the brown coal mining industry, sparsely populated, and to a great extent germanicized. Most speakers of Sorbian are over 60 years old.

The region distinguishes itself through many examples of Slavic wooden architecture monuments including churches and regular houses, a diversity of regional costumes (mainly worn by elderly women) that feature white-knitting with black, cross-like embroidery, and a tradition of playing bagpipes. In several villages, residents uphold traditional festivities such as expelling of winter, Maik, Easter and Great Friday singing, and the celebration of dźěćetko (disguised child or young girl giving Christmas presents).

Region of Lower Lusatia edit

 
 
Flag and coat of arms of Lower Lusatia

There are 60 towns from the area of Cottbus belonging to this region, where most of the older people over 60 but few young people and children can speak the Lower Sorbian language[citation needed]; the local variant often incorporates many words taken from the German language, and in conversations with the younger generation, German is generally preferred. Some primary schools in the region teach bilingually, and in Cottbus there is an important Gymnasium whose main medium of instruction is Lower Sorbian. The region is predominantly Protestant, again highly devastated by the brown coal mining industry. The biggest tourist attraction of the region and in the whole Lusatia are the marshlands, with many Spreewald/Błóta canals, picturesque broads of the Spree.

Worn mainly by older but on holidays by young women, regional costumes are colourful, including a large headscarf called "lapa", rich in golden embroidering and differing from village to village.

In some villages, following traditions are observed: Shrovetide, Maik, Easter bonfires, Roosters catching/hunting. In Jänschwalde (Sorbian: Janšojce) so-called Janšojski bog (disguised young girl) gives Christmas presents.

Relationship with Poland edit

 
Lusatia was part of the Polish state between 1002 and 1031 under the rule of Bolesław I.

Bolesław I the Brave had taken control of the marches of Lusatia (Łużyce), Sorbian Meissen (Miśnia), and the cities of Budziszyn (Bautzen) and Miśnia in 1002, and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the conquered territories. The Sorbs sided with the Poles, and opened the town gates and allowed Bolesław I into Miśnia in 1002.[73] Bolesław, after the Polish-German War (1002–1018), signed the Peace of Bautzen on 30 January 1018, which made him a clear winner. The Polish ruler was able to keep the contested marches of Lusatia and Milsko not as fiefs, but as part of Polish territory.[74][75] The Polish prince Mieszko destroyed about 100 Sorbian villages in 1030 and expelled Sorbians from urban areas, with the exception of fishermen and carpenters who were allowed to live in the outskirts.[76] In the following centuries, at various times, parts of Lusatia formed part of Piast-ruled fragmented Poland.

The 18th century saw increased Polish-Sorbian contacts during the reign of Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland in Poland and Lusatia. Sorbian pastor Michał Frencel [dsb] and his son polymath Abraham Frencel [hsb] took their cues from Polish texts in their Sorbian Bible translations and philological works, respectively.[77] Also Polish-born Jan Bogumił Fabricius established a Sorbian printing house and translated the catechism and New Testament into Sorbian.[78] Polish and Sorbian students established contacts at the University of Leipzig.[77] Polish dignitaries traveled through Lusatia on several occasions on their way between Dresden and Warsaw, encountering Sorbs.[79] Some Polish nobles owned estates in Lusatia.[79]

 
Baroque Palace of Aleksander Józef Sułkowski in Neschwitz (Upper Sorbian: Njeswačidło, Polish: Nieswacidło)[80]

The first translation from Sorbian into another language was a translation of the poem Wottendzenje wot Liepska teho derje dostoineho wulze wuczeneho Knesa Jana Friedricha Mitschka by Handrij Ruška [hsb] into Polish, made by Stanisław Nałęcz Moszczyński, a Polish lecturer at the University of Leipzig, and published by the famous Polish traveler Jan Potocki.[81]

A distinct remnant of the region's ties to Poland are the 18th-century mileposts decorated with the coat of arms of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth located in various towns in the region.

Polish-Sorbian contacts continued in the 19th century. In the 1840s, Polish Romantic poet Roman Zmorski [pl] befriended the Sorbian writer Jan Arnošt Smoler in Wrocław, and then he settled in Lusatia, where he got to know other leading Sorbian national revival figures Křesćan Bohuwěr Pful [hsb], Jaroměr Hendrich Imiš [hsb] and Michał Hórnik [hsb].[82] Zmorski then issued the Polish newspaper Stadło in Budissin, translated four Smoler's poems into Polish, and published articles about the Sorbs in other Polish press.[83] Michał Hórnik declared his sympathy and admiration for the Poles, popularised knowledge of Nicolaus Copernicus and Tadeusz Kościuszko through Sorbian press, reported on the events of the Polish January Uprising of 1863–1864 and made contacts with Poles during visits to Warsaw, Kraków and Poznań.[84] Polish historian Wilhelm Bogusławski [pl] wrote the first book on Sorbian history Rys dziejów serbołużyckich, published in Saint Petersburg in 1861. The book was expanded and published again in cooperation with Michał Hórnik in 1884 in Bautzen, under a new title Historije serbskeho naroda. Polish historian and activist Alfons Parczewski [pl] was another friend of Sorbs, who from 1875 was involved in Sorbs' rights protection, participating in Sorbian meetings in Bautzen. Parczewski joined the Maćica Serbska organization in 1875, supported Sorbian publishing, wrote articles about Sorbs in Polish press and collected Sorbian magazines and books, which now form part of the Adam Asnyk Regional Public Library in Kalisz.[85] It was thanks to him, among others, that Józef Ignacy Kraszewski founded a scholarship for Sorbian students. His sister Melania Parczewska [pl] joined the Maćica Serbska in 1878, wrote articles about Sorbs in Polish press and translated Sorbian poems into Polish.[85]

 
Sacred Heart church in Klettwitz (Klěśišća), built by Polish Catholics in the 1900s[86]

In the early 20th century, Polish slavist and professor Henryk Ułaszyn [pl] met several prominent Sorbs, including Jan Skala, Jakub Bart-Ćišinski and Arnošt Muka.[87]

After World War I and the restoration of independent Poland, Polish linguist Jan Baudouin de Courtenay supported the Sorbs' right to self-determination and demanded that the League of Nations assume protection over them.[88] In the interbellum, the Poles and Sorbs in Germany closely cooperated as part of the Association of National Minorities in Germany, established at the initiative of the Union of Poles in Germany in 1924. Sorbian journalist, poet and activist Jan Skala was a member of the press headquarters of the Union of Poles in Germany, and was one of the authors of the Leksykon Polactwa w Niemczech ("Lexicon of Poles in Germany").[89] There were also notable Polish communities in Lusatia, such as Klettwitz (Upper Sorbian: Klěśišća, Polish: Kletwice).[86]

In Poland, Antoni Ludwiczak, founder of the folk high school in Dalki, Gniezno, offered Sorbs five tuition-free spots for each course at the school, however, after the Nazi Party came to power in Germany in 1933, enrollment of Sorbs in the school was almost completely halted.[90] Several Sorbs studied in Poland in the interbellum.[91] In 1930, the Association of Friends of the Sorbs was established in Poznań with Henryk Ułaszyn as its president.[92] A similar association, the Polish Association of Friends of the Sorbian Nation (Polskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Narodu Łużyckiego), was established at the University of Warsaw in 1936. It gathered people not only from the university. Its president was Professor Stanisław Słoński, and the deputy president was Julia Wieleżyńska. The association was a legal entity. The association in Warsaw issued the Polish-language Biuletyn Serbo-Łużycki ("Sorbian Newsletter"), which reported on Serbian affairs.

 
Jan Skala monument in Namysłów, Poland

During World War II, the Poles postulated that after the defeat of Germany, the Sorbs should be allowed free national development either within the borders of Poland or Czechoslovakia, or as an independent Sorbian state in alliance with Poland.[93] On 22 January 1945, Jan Skala was murdered by a Soviet soldier in Dziedzice, and his grave at the local cemetery is now a Polish protected cultural heritage monument.[94] There is also a memorial to Skala in nearby Namysłów. In 1945, Polish troops fought against German forces in several battles in Lusatia, including the largest Battle of Bautzen. There are memorials to Polish soldiers in Bautzen (Budyšin), Crostwitz (Chrósćicy) and Königswartha (Rakecy) with inscriptions in Sorbian, Polish and German.

Prołuż founded in Krotoszyn, expanded to all Poland (3000 members). It was the biggest non-communist organization that dealt with foreign affairs. This youth organization was created during the Soviet occupation and its motto was "Polish guard over Lusatia" (Polish: Nad Łużycami polska straż). Its highest activity was in the region of Greater Poland. After the creation of East Germany, Prołuż was dissolved, and its president historian from Poznań Alojzy Stanisław Matyniak was arrested.[95]

After 1945, the Sorbs that historically lived in the eastern part of Lusatia (now again part of Poland) were expelled, as they were German citizens. Eastern Lusatia was resettled by Poles expelled from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and has by now lost its Sorbian identity.[96]

In 1946, the establishment of a gymnasium for Sorbs in Zgorzelec, Poland, was initiated, and the registration of Sorbian students at Polish universities resumed.[97] Despite the readiness to accept Sorbian youth in 1946, the gymnasium was not opened as the Sorbs had not yet obtained border passes to Poland.[98] The launch of the gymnasium was postponed by a year and free boarding and scholarships were prepared for the Sorbs, but in view of the continued lack of border passes to Poland and the establishment of a Sorbian gymnasium in Bautzen, the idea was abandoned.[99]

After a proposal to rebuild a pre-war statue of Otto von Bismarck in Bautzen (Budyšin) appeared in 2021, the Sorbs objected and the Serbski Institut, in an open letter, reasoned the objection with the Bismarck government's repressions of the Sorbs, Poles, as well as Danes and French, and Bismarck's calls for the extermination of Poles.[100]

Relationship with Czechia edit

 
Golden Czech Lion at the top of the St. Mary's church in Kamenz (Upper Sorbian: Kamjenc, Czech: Kamenec)

Lusatia was partly or wholly part of the Czech Duchy or Kingdom (also known as Bohemia in the west) at various times between 1075 and 1635, and several remnants of Czech rule can be found in the region. When Lusatia returned from German to Bohemian (Czech) rule, Sorbs were allowed to return to cities, offices and crafts, and the Sorbian language could be used in public.[36] As result, it was in the lands under Czech rule that the Sorbian culture and language persisted, while the more western original Sorbian territory succumbed to Germanization policies. One of the remnants of Czech rule in the region are the many town coats of arms that include the Czech Lion, as in Drebkau (Drjowk), Görlitz (Zhorjelc), Guben (Gubin), Kamenz (Kamjenc), Löbau (Lubij) and Spremberg (Grodk).

In 1706 the Catholic Sorbian Seminary was founded in Prague.[37] In 1846, the Serbowka [hsb] organization was founded by Sorbian students in Prague, and it issued the Kwětki [hsb] magazine until 1892.

Calls for the incorporation of Lusatia into Czechoslovakia were made after Germany's defeats in both world wars. In 1945, the Czechs established a gymnasium for the Sorbs in Česká Lípa, then relocated to Varnsdorf in 1946 and to Liberec in 1949, however, the Sorbs took their high school diploma in Bautzen after a Sorbian high school was established there.[101]

Demography edit

Estimates of demographic history of the Sorb population since 1450:[1][102][103][104]

Year 1450 1700 1750 1790 1858 1861 1880 1900 1905 1945 2006 2020
Population 160,000 250,000 200,000 250,000 164,000 165,000 166,000 146,000 157,000 145,700 40,000-50,000 40,000

Sorbs are divided into two ethnographical groups:

The dialects spoken vary in intelligibility in different areas.

Diaspora edit

During the 1840s, many Sorbian émigrés travelled to Australia, along with many ethnic Germans. The first was Jan Rychtar, a Wendish Moravian Brethren missionary who settled in Sydney during 1844.[107] There were two major migrations of Upper Sorbs and Lower Sorbs to Australia, in 1848 and 1850 respectively. The diaspora settled mainly in South Australia – especially the Barossa Valley – as well as Victoria and New South Wales.

Many Wends also migrated from Lusatia to the United States, especially Texas.[108]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "[A]nti-Sorbian policies throughout the Sorbian area of settlement got increasingly aggressive and, unsurprisingly, saw their climax under Nazi rule. Sorbs were declared to be "Wendish-speaking Germans" and a "Wendenabteilung was established to monitor the process of assimilation..."[38]
  2. ^ a b "Sorbs inhabiting Upper and Lower Lusatia, whose distinct identity and culture were simply denied by the Nazis, who described them as “Wendish-speaking” Germans and who, toward the end of the war, considered moving the Sorbs en masse to the mining districts of Alsace-Lorraine.".[41]
  3. ^ "The Nazis intended to assimilate and permanently germanize these 'Wendish-speaking Germans' through integration into the 'National Socialist national community' and through the forbidding of the Sorbian language and manifestations of Sorbian culture, Sorbian and Slav place-names and local names of topographical features (fields, hills and so forth) were germanized, Sorbian books and printing presses confiscated and destroyed, Sorbian schoolteachers and clerics removed and put in German-speaking schools and parishes, and representatives of Sorbian cultural life were either forcibly isolated from their fellows or arrested."[42]
  4. ^ a b "[A]fter 1933, under the Nazi regime, the Sorbian community suffered severe repression, and their organizations were banned. Indeed, the very existence of the ethnic group was denied and replaced by the theory of the Sorbs as 'Slavic speaking Germans'. Plans were made to re-settle the Sorbian population in Alsace in order to resolve the 'Lusatian question'. The 12 years of Nazi dictatorship was a heavy blow for a separate Sorbian identity."[43]
  5. ^ "They pressed Sorbian associations to join Nazi organizations, often with Success, and the Domowina received an ultimatum to adopt a statute which defined it as a 'League of Wendish-speaking Germans'.” But the Domowina insisted upon the Slavonic character of the Sorbs. In March 1937 the Nazis forbade the Domowina and the Sorbian papers, all teaching in Sorbian was discontinued, and Sorbian books were removed from the school libraries."[44]
  6. ^ "[T]he programmatic re-invention of the Sorbian minority as wen- dischsprechende Deutsche under the Nazi regime..."[45]

References edit

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  17. ^ Moczulski, Leszek (2007). Narodziny Międzymorza: ukształtowanie ojczyzn, powstanie państw oraz układy geopolityczne wschodniej części Europy w późnej starożytności i we wczesnym średniowieczu (in Polish). Bellona. pp. 335–336. Tak jest ze wzmianką Vibiusa Sequestra, pisarza z przełomu IV—V w., którą niektórzy badacze uznali za najwcześniejszą informację o Słowianach na Polabiu: Albis Germaniae Suevon a Cervetiis dividit (Vibii Sequestris, De fluminibus, fontibus, lacubus, memoribus, paludibus, montibus, gentibus, per litteras, wyd. Al. Riese, Geographi latini minores, Heilbronn 1878). Jeśli początek nazwy Cerve-tiis odpowiadał Serbe — chodziło o Serbów, jeśli Cherue — byli to Cheruskowie, choć nie można wykluczyć, że pod tą nazwą kryje się jeszcze inny lud (por. G. Labuda, Fragmenty dziejów Słowiańszczyzny Zachodniej, t. 1, Poznań 1960, s. 91; H. Lowmiański, Początki Polski..., t. II, Warszawa 1964, s. 296; J. Strzelczyk, Vibius Sequester [w:] Slownik Starożytności Słowiańskich, t. VI, Wroclaw 1977, s. 414). Pierwsza ewentualność sygeruje, że zachodnia eks-pansja Słowian rozpoczęta się kilka pokoleń wcześniej niż się obecnie przypuszcza, druga —że rozgraniczenie pomiędzy Cheruskami a Swebami (Gotonami przez Labę względnie Semnonami przez Soławę) uksztaltowało się — być może po klęsce Marboda — dalej na południowy wschód, niżby wynikało z Germanii Tacyta (patrz wyżej). Tyle tylko, że nie będzie to sytuacja z IV w. Istnienie styku serbsko-turyńskiego w początkach VII w. potwierdza Kronika Fredegara (Chronicarum quae dicuntw; Fredegari scholastici, wyd. B., Krusch, Monu-menta Gennaniae Bisiorka, Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum, t. II, Hannover 1888, s. 130); bylby on jednak późniejszy niż styk Franków ze Slowianami (Sldawami, Winklami) w Alpach i na osi Dunaju. Tyle tylko, te o takim styku możemy mówić dopiero w końcu VI w.
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Sources edit

  • Glaser, Konstanze (2007). Minority Languages and Cultural Diversity in Europe: Gaelic and Sorbian Perspectives. Multilingual Matters. ISBN 9781853599323.
  • Golecka, Aneta (2003). "Serbołużyczanie w Niemczech". Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska. Sectio K, Politologia (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej w Lublinie. X.
  • Lewaszkiewicz, Tadeusz (2015). "Zarys dziejów sorabistyki i zainteresowań Łużycami w Wielkopolsce". In Kurowska, Hanna (ed.). Kapitał społeczno-polityczny Serbołużyczan (in Polish). Zielona Góra: Uniwersytet Zielonogórski.
  • Matyniak, Alojzy S. (1968). "Kontakty kulturalne polsko-serbołużyckie w XVIII w.". Śląski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobótka (in Polish). Wrocław: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. XXIII (2).
  • Pynsent, Robert [in Czech] (2000). The Phoney Peace: Power and Culture in Central Europe, 1945-49. School of Slavonic and East European Studies. ISBN 9780903425018.
  • Ramet, Sabrina P. (2016). Alternatives to Democracy in Twentieth-Century: Collectivist Visions of Alternative Modernity. Central European University Press. ISBN 9789633863107.
  • Remus, Thérèse (2014). Endangered minority languages. A comparison of the Upper Sorbian and North Frisian cases. GRIN Verlag. ISBN 9783656685258.
  • The Group (1993). Minority Rights Group International Report. Minority Rights. ISBN 9781897693001.
  • Zank, W. (1998). The German Melting Pot: Multiculturality in Historical Perspective. Springer. ISBN 9780230375208.
  • Stone, Gerald (2015). The Smallest Slavonic Nation: The Sorbs of Lusatia. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4742-4154-0.
  • Veeramah; et al. (2011). "Genetic variation in the Sorbs of eastern Germany in the context of broader European genetic diversity". European Journal of Human Genetics. 19 (9): 995–1001. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2011.65. PMC 3179365. PMID 21559053.
  • Žura, Slavica Vrkić (2011). "Lužički Srbi – Najmanji slavenski narod". Ethnologica Dalmatica (in Croatian). 18 (1): 93–130.

Further reading edit

  • Filip Gańczak Mniejszość w czasach popkultury, Newsweek, nr 22/2007, 03.06.2007.
  • W kręgu Krabata. Szkice o Juriju Brězanie, literaturze, kulturze i językach łużyckich, pod red. J.Zarka, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego, Katowice, 2002.
  • Mirosław Cygański, Rafał Leszczyński Zarys dziejów narodowościowych Łużyczan PIN, Instytut Śląski, Opole 1997.
  • Die Sorben in Deutschland, pod red. M.Schiemann, Stiftung für das sorbische Volk, Görlitz 1997.
  • Mały informator o Serbołużyczanach w Niemczech, pod red. J.Pětrowej, Załožba za serbski lud, 1997.
  • Dolnoserbske nałogi/Obyczaje Dolnych Łużyc, pod red. M.Stock, Załožba za serbski lud, 1997.
  • "Rys dziejów serbołużyckich" Wilhelm Bogusławski Piotrogród 1861
  • "Prołuż Akademicki Związek Przyjaciół Łużyc" Jakub Brodacki. Polska Grupa Marketingowa 2006 ISBN 83-60151-00-8.
  • "Polska wobec Łużyc w drugiej połowie XX wieku. Wybrane problemy", Mieczkowska Małgorzata, Szczecin 2006 ISBN 83-7241-487-4.
  • Wukasch, C. (2004) A Rock Against Alien Waves: A History of the Wends . Concordia University Press: Austin.
  • "Sorbs," David Zersen, in Germans and the Americas: Culture, Politics and History, 3 vols., edited by Thomas Adam. ABC-CLIO, 2005.

External links edit

  • "Sorbs" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • SERBSKE NOWINY—Sorbian newspaper
  • SERBSKI INSTITUT—Sorbian history and culture
  • Independent Sorbian internet magazine 2007-08-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sorbian emigration into Australia
  • , Electronic Library of Sorbian-Serbian Ties
  • Wendish Heritage Society of Australia

sorbs, confused, with, serbs, other, uses, disambiguation, upper, sorbian, serbja, lower, sorbian, serby, german, sorben, czech, lužičtí, srbové, polish, serbołużyczanie, also, known, lusatians, lusatian, serbs, wends, indigenous, west, slavic, ethnic, group, . Not to be confused with Serbs For other uses see Sorbs disambiguation Sorbs Upper Sorbian Serbja Lower Sorbian Serby German Sorben Czech Luzicti Srbove Polish Serboluzyczanie also known as Lusatians Lusatian Serbs 6 and Wends are an indigenous West Slavic ethnic group predominantly inhabiting the parts of Lusatia located in the German states of Saxony and Brandenburg Sorbs traditionally speak the Sorbian languages also known as Wendish and Lusatian which are closely related to Czech Polish Kashubian Silesian and Slovak Upper Sorbian and Lower Sorbian are officially recognized minority languages in Germany SorbsSorbian flag in Pan Slavic colors introduced in 1842Traditional female costume of Lower Lusatia Spreewald Total population80 000 1 page needed est 45 000 60 000 Upper Sorbs citation needed 15 000 20 000 Lower Sorbs citation needed Regions with significant populations Germany60 000 Sorbs in Germany 20 000 of which still speak Sorbian 2007 Reuters estimate 2 Czech Republic2 000 3 Polandfewer than 1 000 citation needed United States1 245 2000 4 LanguagesSorbian Upper Sorbian Lower Sorbian Polish German Lusatian dialects ReligionMajority Roman Catholicism 5 Protestantism 2 Related ethnic groupsOther West Slavs especially Czechs and Poles In the Early Middle Ages the Sorbs formed their own principality which later shortly became part of the early West Slavic Samo s Empire and Great Moravia as were ultimately conquered by the East Francia Sorbian March and Holy Roman Empire Saxon Eastern March Margravate of Meissen March of Lusatia From the High Middle Ages they were ruled at various times by the closely related Poles and Czechs as well as the more distant Germans and Hungarians Due to a gradual and increasing assimilation between the 17th and 20th centuries virtually all Sorbs also spoke German by the early 20th century In the newly created German nation state of the late 19th and early 20th centuries policies were implemented in an effort to Germanize the Sorbs These policies reached their climax under the Nazi regime who denied the existence of the Sorbs as a distinct Slavic people by referring to them as Sorbian speaking Germans The community is divided religiously between Roman Catholicism the majority and Lutheranism The former Minister President of Saxony Stanislaw Tillich is of Sorbian origin Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early Middle Ages 2 2 High and Late Middle Ages 2 3 Early modern period 2 4 Late modern period 2 5 Interbellum and World War II 2 6 East Germany 2 7 After reunification 3 Population genetics 4 Language and culture 4 1 Traditions 4 2 Religion 5 National symbols 6 Regions of Lusatia 6 1 Region of Upper Lusatia 6 2 Region of Hoyerswerda Wojerecy and Schleife Slepo 6 3 Region of Lower Lusatia 7 Relationship with Poland 8 Relationship with Czechia 9 Demography 9 1 Diaspora 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology editMain article Names of the Serbs and Serbia The ethnonym Sorbs Serbja Serby derives from the medieval ethnic groups called Sorbs Surbi Sorabi The original ethnonym Srbi was retained by the Sorbs and Serbs in the Balkans 7 By the 6th century Slavs occupied the area west of the Oder formerly inhabited by Germanic peoples 7 The Sorbs are first mentioned in the 6th or 7th century In their languages the other Slavs call them the Lusatian Serbs and the Sorbs call the Serbs the south Sorbs 8 The name Lusatia was originally applied only to Lower Lusatia 7 It is generally considered that their ethnonym Sŕb plur Sŕby originates from Proto Slavic with an appellative meaning of a family kinship and alliance however others argue a derivation from Iranian Sarmatian 9 10 11 12 History editEarly Middle Ages edit Main article Sorbs tribe nbsp A map of the Sorbian Lusatian tribes between the 7th and 11th century by Wilhelm Boguslawski 1861The name of the Sorbs can be traced to the 6th century or earlier when Vibius Sequester recorded Cervetiis living on the other part of the river Elbe which divided them from the Suevi Albis Germaniae Suevos a Cerveciis dividiit 13 14 15 16 17 According to Lubor Niederle the Serbian district was located somewhere between Magdeburg and Lusatia and was later mentioned by the Ottonians as Ciervisti Zerbisti and Kirvisti 18 The information is in accordance with the Frankish 7th century Chronicle of Fredegar according to which the Surbi lived in the Saale Elbe valley having settled in the Thuringian part of Francia since the second half of the 6th century or beginning of the 7th century and were vassals of the Merovingian dynasty 13 19 20 The Saale Elbe line marked the approximate limit of Slavic westward migration 21 Under the leadership of dux duke Dervan Dervanus dux gente Surbiorum que ex genere Sclavinorum they joined the Slavic tribal union of Samo after Samo s decisive victory against Frankish King Dagobert I in 631 19 20 Afterwards these Slavic tribes continuously raided Thuringia 19 The fate of the tribes after Samo s death and dissolution of the union in 658 is undetermined but it is considered that they subsequently returned to Frankish vassalage 22 According to a 10th century source De Administrando Imperio they lived since the beginning in the region called by them as Boiki which was a neighbor to Francia and when two brothers succeeded their father one of them migrated with half of the people to the Balkans during the rule of Heraclius in the first half of the 7th century 23 24 According to some scholars the White Serbian Unknown Archon who led them to the Balkans was most likely a son brother or other relative of Dervan 25 26 27 28 nbsp 7th century Sorbian Duchy of Dervan nbsp Saxon Eastern March c 1000 ADSorbian tribes Sorbi Surbi are noted in the mid 9th century work of the Bavarian Geographer 9 29 30 Having settled by the Elbe Saale Spree and Neisse in the 6th and early 7th century Sorbian tribes divided into two main groups which have taken their names from the characteristics of the area where they had settled The two groups were separated from each other by a wide and uninhabited forest range one around Upper Spree and the rest between the Elbe and Saale 31 Some scholars consider that the contemporary Sorbs are descendants of the two largest Sorbian tribes the Milceni Upper and Lusici de Lower and these tribes respective dialects have developed into separate languages 7 32 However others emphasize differences between these two dialects and that their respective territories correspond to two different Slavic archeological cultures of Tornow group ceramics Lower Sorbian language and Leipzig group ceramics Upper Sorbian language 31 both a derivation of Prague Korchak culture 33 34 nbsp The reconstructed Lusatian gord fortification of Radus Raddusch near Vetschau in Lower LusatiaThe Annales Regni Francorum state that in 806 Sorbian Duke Miliduch fought against the Franks and was killed In 840 Sorbian Duke Czimislav was killed From the 9th century was organized Sorbian March by the East Francia and from the 10th century the Saxon Eastern March Margravate of Meissen and March of Lusatia by the Holy Roman Empire In 932 Henry I conquered Lusatia and Milsko Gero Margrave of the Saxon Eastern March reconquered Lusatia the following year and in 939 murdered 30 Sorbian princes during a feast As a result there were many Sorbian uprisings against German rule A reconstructed castle at Raddusch in Lower Lusatia is the sole physical remnant from this early period High and Late Middle Ages edit In 1002 the Sorbs came under the rule of their Slavic relatives the Poles when Boleslaw I of Poland took over Lusatia Following the subsequent German Polish War of 1003 1018 the Peace of Bautzen confirmed Lusatia as part of Poland but it returned to German rule in 1031 In the 1070s southern Lusatia passed into the hands of the Sorbs other Slavic relatives the Czechs within their Duchy of Bohemia There was a dense network of dynastic and diplomatic relations between German and Slavic feudal lords e g Wiprecht of Groitzsch a German rose to power through close links with the Bohemian Czech king and marriage to the king s daughter The Kingdom of Bohemia eventually became a politically influential member of the Holy Roman Empire but was in a constant power struggle with neighbouring Poland In the following centuries at various times parts of Lusatia passed to Piast ruled fragmented Poland In the German ruled parts Sorbs were ousted from guilds the Sorbian language was banned and German colonisation and Germanisation policies were enacted 35 From the 11th to the 15th century agriculture in Lusatia developed and colonization by Frankish Flemish and Saxon settlers intensified This can still be seen today from the names of local villages which geographically form a patchwork of typical German ending on dorf thal etc and typical Slavic origin ending on witz ow etc indicating the language originally spoken by its inhabitants although some of the present German names may be of later origin from the time of planned name changes to erase Slavic origin especially in the 1920s and 1930s In 1327 the first prohibitions on using Sorbian before courts and in administrative affairs in the cities of Altenburg Zwickau and Leipzig appeared Speaking Sorbian in family and business contexts was however not banned as it did not involve the functioning of the administration Also the village communities and the village administration usually kept operating in Sorbian Early modern period edit nbsp Sorbian church in Senftenberg Zly Komorow From 1376 to 1469 and from 1490 to 1635 Lusatia was part of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown under the rule of the houses of Luxembourg Jagiellon and Habsburg and other kings whereas from 1469 to 1490 it was ruled by King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary Under Bohemian Czech rule Sorbs were allowed to return to cities offices and crafts Germanisation significantly reduced and the Sorbian language could be used in public 36 From the beginning of the 16th century the whole Sorbian inhabited area with the exception of Bohemian ruled Lusatia underwent Germanization During the Thirty Years War in 1635 Lusatia became a fiefdom of Saxon electors but it retained a considerable autonomy and largely its own legal system see Lusatian League The Thirty Years War and the plague of the 17th century caused terrible devastation in Lusatia This led to further German colonization and Germanization In 1667 the Prince of Brandenburg Frederick Wilhelm ordered the immediate destruction of all Sorbian printed materials and banned saying masses in this language At the same time the Evangelical Church supported printing Sorbian religious literature as a means of fighting the Counterreformation With the formation of the Polish Saxon union in 1697 Polish Sorbian contacts resumed and Poles influenced the Sorbs national and cultural activities see Relationship with Poland below With the Age of Enlightenment the Sorbian national revival began and resistance to Germanization emerged 37 In 1706 the Sorbian Seminary the main centre for the education of Sorbian Catholic priests was founded in Prague 37 Sorbian preaching societies were founded by Evangelical students in Leipzig and Wittenberg in 1716 and 1749 respectively 37 Late modern period edit nbsp First issue of the Bramborski Serbski Casnik Sorbian newspaper 1848The Congress of Vienna in 1815 divided Lusatia between Prussia and Saxony More and more bans on the use of Sorbian languages appeared from then until 1835 in Prussia and Saxony emigration of the Sorbs mainly to the town of Serbin in Texas and to Australia increased In 1848 5000 Sorbs signed a petition to the Saxon Government in which they demanded equality for the Sorbian language with the German one in churches courts schools and Government departments From 1871 the whole of Lusatia became a part of united Germany and was divided between two parts Prussia Silesia and Brandenburg and Saxony In 1871 the industrialization of the region and German immigration began official Germanization intensified Persecution of the Sorbs under German rule became increasingly harsh throughout the 19th century Slavs were labeled inferior to Germanic peoples and in 1875 the use of Sorbian was banned in German schools As a result almost the entire Sorbian population was bilingual by the end of the 19th century a nbsp The place where Domowina was founded in Hoyerswerda Wojerecy in 1912During World War I one of the most venerated Serbian generals was Pavle Jurisic Sturm Paul Sturm a Sorb from Gorlitz Province of Silesia citation needed Interbellum and World War II edit Main article Anti Slavic sentiment Although the Weimar Republic guaranteed constitutional minority rights it did not practice them 39 Under Nazi Germany Sorbians were described as a German tribe who spoke a Slavic language Sorbian costume culture customs and the language was said to be no indication of a non German origin The Reich declared that there were truly no Sorbs or Lusatians only Wendish speaking Germans As such while the Sorbs were largely safe from the Reich s policies of ethnic cleansing the cultivation of Wendish customs and traditions was to be encouraged in a controlled manner and it was expected that the Slavic language would decline due to natural causes Young Sorbs enlisted in the Wehrmacht and were sent to the front The entangled lives of the Sorbs during World War II are exemplified by the life stories of Mina Witkojc Mercin Nowak Njechornski Wikidata and Jan Skala Persecution of the Sorbs reached its climax under the Nazis who attempted to completely assimilate and Germanize them Their distinct identity and culture and Slavic origins were denied by referring to them as Wendish speaking Germans Under Nazi rule the Sorbian language and practice of Sorbian culture was banned Sorbian and Slavic place names were changed to German ones 40 Sorbian books and printing presses were destroyed Sorbian organizations and newspapers were banned Sorbian libraries and archives were closed and Sorbian teachers and clerics were deported to German speaking areas and replaced with German speaking teachers and clerics Leading figures in the Sorbian community were forcibly isolated from their community or simply arrested b c d e f The Sorbian national anthem and flag were banned 46 The specific Wendenabteilung was established to monitor the assimilation of the Sorbs a Towards the end of World War II the Nazis considered the deportation of the entire Sorbian population to the mining districts of Alsace Lorraine b d East Germany edit nbsp A Sorbian dance performance at the Palace of the Republic Berlin East German parliament 1976The first Lusatian cities were captured in April 1945 when the Red Army and the Polish Second Army crossed the river Queis Kwisa The defeat of Nazi Germany changed the Sorbs situation considerably The regions in East Germany the German Democratic Republic faced heavy industrialisation and a large influx of expelled Germans citation needed The East German authorities tried to counteract this development by creating a broad range of Sorbian institutions The Sorbs were officially recognized as an ethnic minority more than 100 Sorbian schools and several academic institutions were founded the Domowina and its associated societies were re established and a Sorbian theatre was created Owing to the suppression of the church and forced collectivization however these efforts were severely affected and consequently over time the number of people speaking Sorbian languages decreased by half The relationship between the Sorbs and the government of East Germany was not without occasional difficulties mainly because of the high levels of religious observance and resistance to the nationalisation of agriculture During the compulsory collectivization campaign a great many unprecedented incidents were reported Thus throughout the Uprising of 1953 in East Germany violent clashes with the police were reported in Lusatia A small uprising took place in three upper communes of Blot Sorbs experienced greater representation in the German Democratic Republic than under any other German government Domowina had status as a constituent member organization of the National Front and a number of Sorbs were members of the Volkskammer and State Council of East Germany Notable Sorbian figures of the period include Domowina Chairmen Jurij Gros and Kurt Krjenc State Council member Maria Schneider and writer and three time receipient of the National Prize of the German Democratic Republic Jurij Brezan 47 In 1973 Domowina reported that 2 130 municipal councillors 119 burgomasters and more than 3 500 members of commissions and local bodies in East Germany were ethnic Sorbs registered with the organization 48 Additionally there was a seat reserved for a Sorbian representative in the Central Council of the Free German Youth the mass organization for young people in East Germany and magazines for both the FDJ and the Ernst Thalmann Pioneer Organisation were published in the Sorbian language on a regular basis under the titles Chorhoj Mera and Plomjo respectively 49 After reunification edit nbsp nbsp Houses of the Sorbs Serbski dom chief Sorbian cultural institutions in Bautzen and Cottbus After the reunification of Germany on 3 October 1990 Lusatians made efforts to create an autonomous administrative unit however Helmut Kohl s government did not agree to it citation needed After 1989 the Sorbian movement revived however it still encounters many obstacles Although Germany supports national minorities Sorbs claim that their aspirations are not sufficiently fulfilled citation needed The desire to unite Lusatia in one of the federal states has not been taken into consideration Upper Lusatia still belongs to Saxony and Lower Lusatia to Brandenburg Liquidations of Sorbian schools even in areas mostly populated by Sorbs still happen under the pretext of financial difficulties or demolition of whole villages to create lignite quarries citation needed Faced with growing threat of cultural extinction the Domowina issued a memorandum in March 2008 50 and called for help and protection against the growing threat of their cultural extinction since an ongoing conflict between the German government Saxony and Brandenburg about the financial distribution of help blocks the financing of almost all Sorbian institutions The memorandum also demands a reorganisation of competence by ceding responsibility from the Lander to the federal government and an expanded legal status The call has been issued to all governments and heads of state of the European Union 51 Population genetics editAccording to 2013 and 2015 studies the most common Y DNA haplogroup among the Sorbs who speak Upper Sorbian in Lusatia n 123 is R1a with 65 mainly its R M458 subclade 57 It is followed in frequency by I1 9 8 R1b 9 8 E1b1b 4 9 I2 4 1 J 3 3 and G 2 4 Other haplogroups are less than 1 52 53 A study from 2003 reported a similar frequency of 63 4 of haplogroup R1a among Sorbian males n 112 54 Other studies that covered aspects of Sorbian Y DNA include Immel et al 2006 55 Rodig et al 2007 56 and Krawczak et al 2008 57 Significant percentage of R1a 25 7 38 3 but strongly diminished in value because of high R1b 33 5 21 7 and low I2 5 8 5 1 are in whole Saxony and Germania Slavica area as well 58 A 2011 paper on the Sorbs autosomal DNA reported that the Upper Sorbian speakers n 289 showed the greatest autosomal genetic similarity to Poles followed by Czechs and Slovaks consistent with the linguistic proximity of Sorbian to other West Slavic languages 59 In another genome wide paper from the same year on Upper Sorbs n 977 which indicated their genetic isolation which cannot be explained by over sampling of relatives and a closer proximity to Poles and Czechs than Germans The researchers however question this proximity as the German reference population was almost exclusively West German and the Polish and Czech reference population had many that were part of a German minority 60 In a 2016 paper Sorbs cluster autosomally again with Poles from Poznan 61 Language and culture edit nbsp Bautzen German Sorbian folk theatreMain article Sorbian languages The oldest known relic of Sorbian literature originated in about 1530 the Bautzen townsmen s oath In 1548 Mikolaj Jakubica Lower Sorbian vicar from the village called Lubanice wrote the first unprinted translation of the New Testament into Lower Sorbian In 1574 the first Sorbian book was printed Albin Mollers songbook In 1688 Jurij Hawstyn Swetlik translated the Bible for Catholic Sorbs From 1706 to 1709 the New Testament was printed in the Upper Sorbian translation was done by Michal Frencel and in Lower Sorbian by Jan Bogumil Fabricius 1681 1741 Jan Bjedrich Fryco a k a Johann Friedrich Fritze 1747 1819 translated the Old Testament for the first time into Lower Sorbian published in 1790 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Prominent 19th century Sorbian writers from top left to right Handrij Zejler Jan Arnost Smoler Mato Kosyk Jakub Bart Cisinski Other Sorbian Bible translators include Jakub Buk 1825 1895 Michal Hornik Michael Hornig 1833 1894 Jurij Luscanski a k a Georg Wuschanski 1839 1905 In 1809 for the short period of time there was the first printed Sorbian newspaper In 1767 Jurij Mjen publishes the first secular Sorbian book Between 1841 and 1843 Jan Arnost Smoler and Leopold Haupt a k a J L Haupt and J E Schmaler published two volume collection of Wendish folk songs in Upper and Lower Lusatia From 1842 the first Sorbian publishing companies started to appear the poet Handrij Zejler set up a weekly magazine the precursor of today s Sorbian News In 1845 in Bautzen the first festival of Sorbian songs took place In 1875 Jakub Bart Cisinski the poet and classicist of Upper Sorbian literature and Karol Arnost Muka created a movement of young Sorbians influencing Lusatian art science and literature for the following 50 years A similar movement in Lower Lusatia was organized around the most prominent Lower Lusatian poets Mato Kosyk Mato Kosyk and Bogumil Swjela In 1904 mainly thanks to the Sorbs contribution the most important Sorbian cultural centre the Sorbian House was built in Bautzen In 1912 the social and cultural organization of Lusatian Sorbs was created the Domowina Institution the union of Sorbian organizations In 1919 it had 180 000 members In 1920 Jan Skala set up a Sorbian party and in 1925 in Berlin Skala started Kulturwille the newspaper for the protection of national minorities in Germany In 1920 the Sokol Movement was founded youth movement and gymnastic organization From 1933 the Nazi party started to repress the Sorbs At that time the Nazis also dissolved the Sokol Movement and began to combat every sign of Sorbian culture In 1937 the activities of the Domowina Institution and other organizations were banned as anti national Sorbian clergymen and teachers were forcedly deported from Lusatia Nazi German authorities confiscated the Sorbian House other buildings and crops On May 10 1945 in Crostwitz after the Red Army s invasion the Domowina Institution renewed its activity In 1948 the Landtag of Saxony passed an Act guaranteeing protection to Sorbian Lusatians in 1949 Brandenburg resolved a similar law Article 40 of the constitution of German Democratic Republic adopted on 7 October 1949 expressly provided for the protection of the language and culture of the Sorbs In the times of the German Democratic Republic Sorbian organizations were financially supported by the country but at the same time the authorities encouraged Germanization of Sorbian youth as a means of incorporating them into the system of building Socialism Sorbian language and culture could only be publicly presented as long as they promoted socialist ideology For over 1000 years the Sorbs were able to maintain and even develop their national culture despite escalating Germanization and Polonization mainly due to the high level of religious observance cultivation of their tradition and strong families Sorbian families still often have five children In the middle of the 20th century the revival of the Central European nations included some Sorbs who became strong enough to attempt twice to regain their independence After World War II the Lusatian National Committee in Prague claimed the right to self government and separation from Germany and the creation of a Lusatian Free State or attachment to Czechoslovakia The majority of the Sorbs were organized in the Domowina though and did not wish to split from Germany citation needed Claims asserted by the Lusatian National movement were postulates of joining Lusatia to Poland or Czechoslovakia Between 1945 and 1947 they postulated about ten petitions 62 to the United Nations the United States Soviet Union the United Kingdom France Poland and Czechoslovakia however it did not bring any results On April 30 1946 the Lusatian National Committee also postulated a petition to the Polish Government signed by Pawol Cyz the minister and an official Sorbian delegate in Poland There was also a project of proclaiming a Lusatian Free State whose Prime Minister was supposed to be a Polish archaeologist of Lusatian origin Wojciech Kocka The most radical postulates in this area Na swobodu so neceka swobodu so beŕe 63 were expressed by the Lusatian youth organization Narodny Partyzan Luzica Similarly in Czechoslovakia where before the Potsdam Conference in Prague 300 000 people demonstrated for the independence of Lusatia The endeavours to separate Lusatia from Germany did not succeed because of various individual and geopolitical interests nbsp Bilingual names of streets in CottbusThe following statistics indicate the progression of cultural change among Sorbs by the end of the 19th century about 150 000 people spoke Sorbian languages By 1920 almost all Sorbs had mastered Sorbian and German to the same degree Nowadays the number of people using Sorbian languages has been estimated to be no more than 40 000 The Israeli Slavic linguist Paul Wexler has argued that the Yiddish language structure provides compelling evidence of an intimate Jewish contact with the Slavs in the German and Bohemian lands as early as the 9th century and has theorized that Sorbs may have been contributors to the Ashkenazic Jewish population in Europe from the same period 64 65 Traditions edit A Shrove Tuesday festival Zapust is the most popular tradition of the Sorbs deeply linked to the working life of the community Traditionally festivities would last one week ahead of the spring sowing of the fields and would feature traditional dress parade and dancing 66 Egg decorating pisanici is a Slavic Easter tradition maintained by Sorbs since the 17th century 67 better source needed Religion edit nbsp Sorbian translation of the New Testament by Michal Frencel dsb 1717Most current speakers of Upper Sorbian are part of the Catholic denomination Originally the majority of Sorbs were Lutheran Protestants and this was still the case going into the 20th Century with a Protestant population of 86 9 recorded in 1900 68 Only the Sorbs of the Kamenz area predominantly settled on the expansive former site of the Saint Marienstern Monastery de in Panschwitz Kuckau veered from the norm with a Catholic population of 88 4 Otherwise the proportion of Catholics remained under 1 throughout the region of Lower Lusatia Due to the rapid decline in language and cultural identity amongst the Protestant Sorbs particularly during the years of the GDR the denominational make up of the Sorbian speaking population of the region has now been reversed National symbols edit nbsp Handwriting of Rjana Luzica by Handrij ZejlerThe flag of the Lusatian Sorbs is a cloth of blue red and white horizontal stripes First used as a national symbol in 1842 the flag was fully recognized among Sorbs following the proclamation of pan Slavic colors at the Prague Slavic Congress of 1848 Section 25 of the Constitution of Brandenburg contains a provision on the Lusatian flag Section 2 of the Constitution of Saxony contains a provision on the use of the coat of arms and traditional national colors of the Lusatian Sorbs The laws on the rights of the Lusatian Sorbs of Brandenburg and Saxony contain provisions on the use of Lusatian national symbols coat of arms and national colors 69 The national anthem of Lusatian Sorbs since the 20th century is the song Rjana Luzica Beautiful Lusatia 70 Previously the songs Still Sorbs Have Not Perished written by Handrij Zejler in 1840 71 and Our Sorbs Rise from the Dust written by M Domashka performed until 1945 72 served as a hymn Regions of Lusatia editThere are three main regions of Lusatia that differ in language religion and customs Region of Upper Lusatia edit nbsp nbsp Flag and coat of arms of Upper Lusatia Catholic Lusatia encompasses 85 towns in the districts of Bautzen Kamenz and Hoyerswerda where Upper Sorbian language customs and tradition are still thriving In some of these places e g Radibor or Radwor in Sorbian Crostwitz or Chroscicy and Rosenthal or Rozant Sorbs constitute the majority of the population and children grow up speaking Sorbian On Sundays during holidays and at weddings people wear regional costumes rich in decoration and embroidery encrusted with pearls Some of the customs and traditions observed include Bird Wedding 25 January Easter Cavalcade of Riders Witch Burning 30 April Maik singing on St Martin s Day Nicolay and the celebrations of Saint Barbara s Day and Saint Nicholas s Day Region of Hoyerswerda Wojerecy and Schleife Slepo edit In the area from Hoyerswerda to Schleife a dialect of Sorbian which combines characteristic features of both Upper and Lower Sorbian is spoken The region is predominantly Protestant highly devastated by the brown coal mining industry sparsely populated and to a great extent germanicized Most speakers of Sorbian are over 60 years old The region distinguishes itself through many examples of Slavic wooden architecture monuments including churches and regular houses a diversity of regional costumes mainly worn by elderly women that feature white knitting with black cross like embroidery and a tradition of playing bagpipes In several villages residents uphold traditional festivities such as expelling of winter Maik Easter and Great Friday singing and the celebration of dzecetko disguised child or young girl giving Christmas presents Region of Lower Lusatia edit nbsp nbsp Flag and coat of arms of Lower Lusatia There are 60 towns from the area of Cottbus belonging to this region where most of the older people over 60 but few young people and children can speak the Lower Sorbian language citation needed the local variant often incorporates many words taken from the German language and in conversations with the younger generation German is generally preferred Some primary schools in the region teach bilingually and in Cottbus there is an important Gymnasium whose main medium of instruction is Lower Sorbian The region is predominantly Protestant again highly devastated by the brown coal mining industry The biggest tourist attraction of the region and in the whole Lusatia are the marshlands with many Spreewald Blota canals picturesque broads of the Spree Worn mainly by older but on holidays by young women regional costumes are colourful including a large headscarf called lapa rich in golden embroidering and differing from village to village In some villages following traditions are observed Shrovetide Maik Easter bonfires Roosters catching hunting In Janschwalde Sorbian Jansojce so called Jansojski bog disguised young girl gives Christmas presents Relationship with Poland edit nbsp Lusatia was part of the Polish state between 1002 and 1031 under the rule of Boleslaw I Boleslaw I the Brave had taken control of the marches of Lusatia Luzyce Sorbian Meissen Misnia and the cities of Budziszyn Bautzen and Misnia in 1002 and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the conquered territories The Sorbs sided with the Poles and opened the town gates and allowed Boleslaw I into Misnia in 1002 73 Boleslaw after the Polish German War 1002 1018 signed the Peace of Bautzen on 30 January 1018 which made him a clear winner The Polish ruler was able to keep the contested marches of Lusatia and Milsko not as fiefs but as part of Polish territory 74 75 The Polish prince Mieszko destroyed about 100 Sorbian villages in 1030 and expelled Sorbians from urban areas with the exception of fishermen and carpenters who were allowed to live in the outskirts 76 In the following centuries at various times parts of Lusatia formed part of Piast ruled fragmented Poland The 18th century saw increased Polish Sorbian contacts during the reign of Kings Augustus II the Strong and Augustus III of Poland in Poland and Lusatia Sorbian pastor Michal Frencel dsb and his son polymath Abraham Frencel hsb took their cues from Polish texts in their Sorbian Bible translations and philological works respectively 77 Also Polish born Jan Bogumil Fabricius established a Sorbian printing house and translated the catechism and New Testament into Sorbian 78 Polish and Sorbian students established contacts at the University of Leipzig 77 Polish dignitaries traveled through Lusatia on several occasions on their way between Dresden and Warsaw encountering Sorbs 79 Some Polish nobles owned estates in Lusatia 79 nbsp Baroque Palace of Aleksander Jozef Sulkowski in Neschwitz Upper Sorbian Njeswacidlo Polish Nieswacidlo 80 The first translation from Sorbian into another language was a translation of the poem Wottendzenje wot Liepska teho derje dostoineho wulze wuczeneho Knesa Jana Friedricha Mitschka by Handrij Ruska hsb into Polish made by Stanislaw Nalecz Moszczynski a Polish lecturer at the University of Leipzig and published by the famous Polish traveler Jan Potocki 81 A distinct remnant of the region s ties to Poland are the 18th century mileposts decorated with the coat of arms of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth located in various towns in the region Polish Sorbian contacts continued in the 19th century In the 1840s Polish Romantic poet Roman Zmorski pl befriended the Sorbian writer Jan Arnost Smoler in Wroclaw and then he settled in Lusatia where he got to know other leading Sorbian national revival figures Krescan Bohuwer Pful hsb Jaromer Hendrich Imis hsb and Michal Hornik hsb 82 Zmorski then issued the Polish newspaper Stadlo in Budissin translated four Smoler s poems into Polish and published articles about the Sorbs in other Polish press 83 Michal Hornik declared his sympathy and admiration for the Poles popularised knowledge of Nicolaus Copernicus and Tadeusz Kosciuszko through Sorbian press reported on the events of the Polish January Uprising of 1863 1864 and made contacts with Poles during visits to Warsaw Krakow and Poznan 84 Polish historian Wilhelm Boguslawski pl wrote the first book on Sorbian history Rys dziejow serboluzyckich published in Saint Petersburg in 1861 The book was expanded and published again in cooperation with Michal Hornik in 1884 in Bautzen under a new title Historije serbskeho naroda Polish historian and activist Alfons Parczewski pl was another friend of Sorbs who from 1875 was involved in Sorbs rights protection participating in Sorbian meetings in Bautzen Parczewski joined the Macica Serbska organization in 1875 supported Sorbian publishing wrote articles about Sorbs in Polish press and collected Sorbian magazines and books which now form part of the Adam Asnyk Regional Public Library in Kalisz 85 It was thanks to him among others that Jozef Ignacy Kraszewski founded a scholarship for Sorbian students His sister Melania Parczewska pl joined the Macica Serbska in 1878 wrote articles about Sorbs in Polish press and translated Sorbian poems into Polish 85 nbsp Sacred Heart church in Klettwitz Klesisca built by Polish Catholics in the 1900s 86 In the early 20th century Polish slavist and professor Henryk Ulaszyn pl met several prominent Sorbs including Jan Skala Jakub Bart Cisinski and Arnost Muka 87 After World War I and the restoration of independent Poland Polish linguist Jan Baudouin de Courtenay supported the Sorbs right to self determination and demanded that the League of Nations assume protection over them 88 In the interbellum the Poles and Sorbs in Germany closely cooperated as part of the Association of National Minorities in Germany established at the initiative of the Union of Poles in Germany in 1924 Sorbian journalist poet and activist Jan Skala was a member of the press headquarters of the Union of Poles in Germany and was one of the authors of the Leksykon Polactwa w Niemczech Lexicon of Poles in Germany 89 There were also notable Polish communities in Lusatia such as Klettwitz Upper Sorbian Klesisca Polish Kletwice 86 In Poland Antoni Ludwiczak founder of the folk high school in Dalki Gniezno offered Sorbs five tuition free spots for each course at the school however after the Nazi Party came to power in Germany in 1933 enrollment of Sorbs in the school was almost completely halted 90 Several Sorbs studied in Poland in the interbellum 91 In 1930 the Association of Friends of the Sorbs was established in Poznan with Henryk Ulaszyn as its president 92 A similar association the Polish Association of Friends of the Sorbian Nation Polskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciol Narodu Luzyckiego was established at the University of Warsaw in 1936 It gathered people not only from the university Its president was Professor Stanislaw Slonski and the deputy president was Julia Wielezynska The association was a legal entity The association in Warsaw issued the Polish language Biuletyn Serbo Luzycki Sorbian Newsletter which reported on Serbian affairs nbsp Jan Skala monument in Namyslow PolandDuring World War II the Poles postulated that after the defeat of Germany the Sorbs should be allowed free national development either within the borders of Poland or Czechoslovakia or as an independent Sorbian state in alliance with Poland 93 On 22 January 1945 Jan Skala was murdered by a Soviet soldier in Dziedzice and his grave at the local cemetery is now a Polish protected cultural heritage monument 94 There is also a memorial to Skala in nearby Namyslow In 1945 Polish troops fought against German forces in several battles in Lusatia including the largest Battle of Bautzen There are memorials to Polish soldiers in Bautzen Budysin Crostwitz Chroscicy and Konigswartha Rakecy with inscriptions in Sorbian Polish and German Proluz founded in Krotoszyn expanded to all Poland 3000 members It was the biggest non communist organization that dealt with foreign affairs This youth organization was created during the Soviet occupation and its motto was Polish guard over Lusatia Polish Nad Luzycami polska straz Its highest activity was in the region of Greater Poland After the creation of East Germany Proluz was dissolved and its president historian from Poznan Alojzy Stanislaw Matyniak was arrested 95 After 1945 the Sorbs that historically lived in the eastern part of Lusatia now again part of Poland were expelled as they were German citizens Eastern Lusatia was resettled by Poles expelled from former eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union and has by now lost its Sorbian identity 96 In 1946 the establishment of a gymnasium for Sorbs in Zgorzelec Poland was initiated and the registration of Sorbian students at Polish universities resumed 97 Despite the readiness to accept Sorbian youth in 1946 the gymnasium was not opened as the Sorbs had not yet obtained border passes to Poland 98 The launch of the gymnasium was postponed by a year and free boarding and scholarships were prepared for the Sorbs but in view of the continued lack of border passes to Poland and the establishment of a Sorbian gymnasium in Bautzen the idea was abandoned 99 After a proposal to rebuild a pre war statue of Otto von Bismarck in Bautzen Budysin appeared in 2021 the Sorbs objected and the Serbski Institut in an open letter reasoned the objection with the Bismarck government s repressions of the Sorbs Poles as well as Danes and French and Bismarck s calls for the extermination of Poles 100 Relationship with Czechia edit nbsp Golden Czech Lion at the top of the St Mary s church in Kamenz Upper Sorbian Kamjenc Czech Kamenec Lusatia was partly or wholly part of the Czech Duchy or Kingdom also known as Bohemia in the west at various times between 1075 and 1635 and several remnants of Czech rule can be found in the region When Lusatia returned from German to Bohemian Czech rule Sorbs were allowed to return to cities offices and crafts and the Sorbian language could be used in public 36 As result it was in the lands under Czech rule that the Sorbian culture and language persisted while the more western original Sorbian territory succumbed to Germanization policies One of the remnants of Czech rule in the region are the many town coats of arms that include the Czech Lion as in Drebkau Drjowk Gorlitz Zhorjelc Guben Gubin Kamenz Kamjenc Lobau Lubij and Spremberg Grodk In 1706 the Catholic Sorbian Seminary was founded in Prague 37 In 1846 the Serbowka hsb organization was founded by Sorbian students in Prague and it issued the Kwetki hsb magazine until 1892 Calls for the incorporation of Lusatia into Czechoslovakia were made after Germany s defeats in both world wars In 1945 the Czechs established a gymnasium for the Sorbs in Ceska Lipa then relocated to Varnsdorf in 1946 and to Liberec in 1949 however the Sorbs took their high school diploma in Bautzen after a Sorbian high school was established there 101 Demography editEstimates of demographic history of the Sorb population since 1450 1 102 103 104 Year 1450 1700 1750 1790 1858 1861 1880 1900 1905 1945 2006 2020Population 160 000 250 000 200 000 250 000 164 000 165 000 166 000 146 000 157 000 145 700 40 000 50 000 40 000Sorbs are divided into two ethnographical groups Upper Sorbs about 40 000 people 105 Lower Sorbs who speak Lower Sorbian about 15 20 000 people 106 1 The dialects spoken vary in intelligibility in different areas nbsp Map of approximate Sorb inhabited area in Germany nbsp Map of area and towns inhabited by Sorbs nbsp Detailed map of Sorb inhabited area in Germany in Lower Sorbian Diaspora edit During the 1840s many Sorbian emigres travelled to Australia along with many ethnic Germans The first was Jan Rychtar a Wendish Moravian Brethren missionary who settled in Sydney during 1844 107 There were two major migrations of Upper Sorbs and Lower Sorbs to Australia in 1848 and 1850 respectively The diaspora settled mainly in South Australia especially the Barossa Valley as well as Victoria and New South Wales Many Wends also migrated from Lusatia to the United States especially Texas 108 See also editList of Sorbs Lusatia Polabian Slavs Serbs Wends Milceni Pavle Jurisic Sturm Wendish People s Party Wends of Texas List of ancient Slavic peoples and tribesNotes edit a b A nti Sorbian policies throughout the Sorbian area of settlement got increasingly aggressive and unsurprisingly saw their climax under Nazi rule Sorbs were declared to be Wendish speaking Germans and a Wendenabteilung was established to monitor the process of assimilation 38 a b Sorbs inhabiting Upper and Lower Lusatia whose distinct identity and culture were simply denied by the Nazis who described them as Wendish speaking Germans and who toward the end of the war considered moving the Sorbs en masse to the mining districts of Alsace Lorraine 41 The Nazis intended to assimilate and permanently germanize these Wendish speaking Germans through integration into the National Socialist national community and through the forbidding of the Sorbian language and manifestations of Sorbian culture Sorbian and Slav place names and local names of topographical features fields hills and so forth were germanized Sorbian books and printing presses confiscated and destroyed Sorbian schoolteachers and clerics removed and put in German speaking schools and parishes and representatives of Sorbian cultural life were either forcibly isolated from their fellows or arrested 42 a b A fter 1933 under the Nazi regime the Sorbian community suffered severe repression and their organizations were banned Indeed the very existence of the ethnic group was denied and replaced by the theory of the Sorbs as Slavic speaking Germans Plans were made to re settle the Sorbian population in Alsace in order to resolve the Lusatian question The 12 years of Nazi dictatorship was a heavy blow for a separate Sorbian identity 43 They pressed Sorbian associations to join Nazi organizations often with Success and the Domowina received an ultimatum to adopt a statute which defined it as a League of Wendish speaking Germans But the Domowina insisted upon the Slavonic character of the Sorbs In March 1937 the Nazis forbade the Domowina and the Sorbian papers all teaching in Sorbian was discontinued and Sorbian books were removed from the school libraries 44 T he programmatic re invention of the Sorbian minority as wen dischsprechende Deutsche under the Nazi regime 45 References edit a b c Gebel K 2002 Language and ethnic national identity in Europe the importance of Gaelic and Sorbian to the maintenance of associated cultures and ethno cultural identities PDF London Middlesex University a b Chambers Madeline 26 November 2007 Germany s Sorb minority struggles for survival Reuters Retrieved 18 August 2022 Spolecnost pratel Luzice luzice cz Retrieved 18 March 2015 census gov PDF United States Census Bureau https www2 census gov programs surveys decennial 2000 phc phc t 43 tab01 pdf Retrieved 18 October 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Sparrow Thomas 16 June 2021 Sorbs The ethnic minority inside Germany BBC Retrieved 3 April 2022 Oldrich Tuma Jaroslav Panek 2018 History of the Czech Lands p 237 a b c d Stone 2015 p 9 Deutsche Welle Luzicki Srbi njemacki Slaveni protestantske vjere in Croatian Retrieved 6 December 2014 a b Luczynski Michal 2017 Geograf Bawarski nowe odczytania Bavarian Geographer New readings Polonica in Polish XXXVII 37 73 doi 10 17651 POLON 37 9 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Rudnicki Mikolaj 1959 Praslowianszczyzna Lechia Polska in Polish Panstwowe wydawn naukowe Oddzia w Poznaniu p 182 Pohl Heinz Dieter 1970 Die slawischen Sprachen in Jugoslawien The Slavic languages in Yugoslavia Der Donauraum in German 15 1 2 72 doi 10 7767 dnrm 1970 15 12 63 S2CID 183316961 Srbin Plural Srbi Serbe wird zum urslawischen sirbŭ Genosse gestellt und ist somit slawischen Ursprungs41 Hrvat Kroate ist iranischer Herkunft uber urslawisches chŭrvatŭ aus altiranischem fsu haurvata Viehhuter 42 Popowska Taborska Hanna 1993 Slady etnonimow slowianskich z elementem obcym w nazewnictwie polskim Acta Universitatis Lodziensis Folia Linguistica in Polish 27 225 230 doi 10 18778 0208 6077 27 29 hdl 11089 16320 Retrieved 16 August 2020 a b Simek Emanuel 1955 Chebsko V Stare Dobe Dnesni Nejzapadnejsi Slovanske Uzemi in Czech Vydava Masarykova Universita v Brne pp 47 269 O Srbech mame zachovan prvni historicky zaznam ze VI stoleti u Vibia Sequestra ktery pravi ze Labe deli v GermaniinSrby od Suevu65 Tim ovsem nemusi byt receno ze v koncinach severne od ceskych hor nemohli byti Srbove jiz i za Labem zapadne od Labe nebot nevime koho Vibius Sequester svymi Suevy minil At jiz tomu bylo jakkoli vime bezpecne ze zprav kroniky Fredegarovy ze Srbove meli celou oblast mezi Labem a Salou osidlenu jiz delsi dobu pred zalozenim rise Samovy66 tedy nejmene jiz v druhe polovici VI stoleti67 Jejich knize Drevan se osvobodil od nadvlady francke a pripojil se nekdy kolem roku 630 se svou drzavou k risi Samove68 V nasledujicich letech podnikali Srbove opetovne vpady pres Salu do Durinska 69 67 Schwarz ON 48 dospel k zaveru ze se zeme mezi Labem a Salou stala srbskou asi r 595 a kolem roku 600 ze bylo slovanske stehovani do koncin zapadne od Labe urcite jiz skonceno R Fischer GSl V 58 Heimatbildung XVIII 298 ON Falk 59 NK 69 datuje prichod Slovanu na Chebsko do druhe polovice VI stoleti G Fischer ova Flurnamen 218 do VI stoleti Chebsky historik Sieg1 dospel v poslednim svem souhrnnem dile o dejinach Chebska Eger u Egerland 4 k zaveru ze Slovane myslil na Srby prisli do Chebska jiz kolem roku 490 tedy pred koncem V stoleti Sulowski Zygmunt 1961 Migracja Slowian na zachod w pierwszym tysiacleciu n e Roczniki Historyczne in Polish 27 50 52 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Tyszkiewicz Lech A 1990 Slowianie w historiografii antycznej do polowy VI wieku in Polish Wydawn Uniwersytetu Wroclawskiego p 124 ISBN 978 83 229 0421 3 Germaniae Suevos a Cervetiis dividit mergitur in oceanum Wedlug Szafarzyka ktory odrzucil emendacje Oberlina Cervetiis na Cheruscis zagadkowy lud Cervetti to nikt inny jak tylko Serbowie polabscy Dulinicz Marek 2001 Ksztaltowanie sie Slowianszczyzny Polnocno Zachodniej studium archeologiczne in Polish Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk p 17 ISBN 978 83 85463 89 4 Moczulski Leszek 2007 Narodziny Miedzymorza uksztaltowanie ojczyzn powstanie panstw oraz uklady geopolityczne wschodniej czesci Europy w poznej starozytnosci i we wczesnym sredniowieczu in Polish Bellona pp 335 336 Tak jest ze wzmianka Vibiusa Sequestra pisarza z przelomu IV V w ktora niektorzy badacze uznali za najwczesniejsza informacje o Slowianach na Polabiu Albis Germaniae Suevon a Cervetiis dividit Vibii Sequestris De fluminibus fontibus lacubus memoribus paludibus montibus gentibus per litteras wyd Al Riese Geographi latini minores Heilbronn 1878 Jesli poczatek nazwy Cerve tiis odpowiadal Serbe chodzilo o Serbow jesli Cherue byli to Cheruskowie choc nie mozna wykluczyc ze pod ta nazwa kryje sie jeszcze inny lud por G Labuda Fragmenty dziejow Slowianszczyzny Zachodniej t 1 Poznan 1960 s 91 H Lowmianski Poczatki Polski t II Warszawa 1964 s 296 J Strzelczyk Vibius Sequester w Slownik Starozytnosci Slowianskich t VI Wroclaw 1977 s 414 Pierwsza ewentualnosc sygeruje ze zachodnia eks pansja Slowian rozpoczeta sie kilka pokolen wczesniej niz sie obecnie przypuszcza druga ze rozgraniczenie pomiedzy Cheruskami a Swebami Gotonami przez Labe wzglednie Semnonami przez Solawe uksztaltowalo sie byc moze po klesce Marboda dalej na poludniowy wschod nizby wynikalo z Germanii Tacyta patrz wyzej Tyle tylko ze nie bedzie to sytuacja z IV w Istnienie styku serbsko turynskiego w poczatkach VII w potwierdza Kronika Fredegara Chronicarum quae dicuntw Fredegari scholastici wyd B Krusch Monu menta Gennaniae Bisiorka Scriptores rerum Merovingicarum t II Hannover 1888 s 130 bylby on jednak pozniejszy niz styk Frankow ze Slowianami Sldawami Winklami w Alpach i na osi Dunaju Tyle tylko te o takim styku mozemy mowic dopiero w koncu VI w Fomina Z Ye 2016 Slavyanskaya toponimiya v sovremennoj Germanii v lingvokulturolo gicheskomi lingvo istoricheskom aspek Slavonic Toponymy in Linguoculturological and Linguo historical Aspects in Germany Sovremennye lingvisticheskie i metodiko didakticheskie issledovaniya in Russian 1 12 30 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Kak sleduet iz mnogotomnogo izdaniya Slavyanskie drevnosti 1953 izvestnogo cheshskogo uchenogo Lyubora Niderle pervym istoricheskim izvestiem o slavyanah na Elbe yavlyaetsya zapis Vibiya Sekvestra De fluminibus VI vek v kotoroj ob Elbe govoritsya Albis Suevos a Cervetiis dividit Cervetii oznachaet zdes naimenovanieserbskogookruga pagus na pravom beregu Elby mezhdu Magdeburgom i Luzhicami kotoryj v pozdnejshih gramotah Ottona I Ottona II i Genriha II upominaetsya pod terminomCiervisti Zerbisti Kirvisti nyneshnij Cerbst 8 V tot period kak pishet Lyubor Niderle a imenno v 782 godu nachalos bolshoe imevshee mirovoe znachenie nastuplenie germancev protiv sla vyan PerejdyaElbu slavyane predstavlyali bolshuyu opasnost dlya imperii Karla Veli kogo Dlya togo chtoby sozdat kakoj to poryadok na vostoke Karl Velikij v 805 godu soz dal tak nazyvaemyj limes Sorabicus kotoryj dolzhen byl stat granicej ekonomicheskih torgovyh svyazejmezhdu germancami i slavyanami 8 a b c Sigfried J de Laet Joachim Herrmann 1 January 1996 History of Humanity From the seventh century B C to the seventh century A D UNESCO pp 282 284 ISBN 978 92 3 102812 0 a b Gerald Stone 2015 Slav Outposts in Central European History The Wends Sorbs and Kashubs Bloomsbury Publishing p 6 ISBN 978 1 4725 9211 8 Vlasto 1970 p 142 sfn error no target CITEREFVlasto1970 help Saskia Pronk Tiethoff 2013 The Germanic loanwords in Proto Slavic Rodopi pp 68 69 ISBN 978 94 012 0984 7 Zivkovic Tibor 2002 Јuzhni Sloveni pod vizantiјskom vlashћu 600 1025 Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts p 198 ISBN 9788677430276 Zivkovic Tibor 2012 De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History pp 152 185 Sava S Vujic Bogdan M Basaric 1998 Severni Srbi ne zaboravljeni narod Beograd p 40 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Milos S Milojevic 1872 Odlomci Istorije Srba i srpskih jugoslavenskih zemalja u Turskoj i Austriji U drzavnoj stampariji p 1 Relja Novakovic 1977 Odakle su Sebl dos il na Balkansko poluostrvo Istorijski institut p 337 Kardaras Georgios 2018 Florin Curta Dusan Zupka eds Byzantium and the Avars 6th 9th Century AD political diplomatic and cultural relations BRILL p 95 ISBN 978 90 04 38226 8 V von Keltsch Der bairische Geograph Alpreussische Monatsschr 23 1886 Gerhard Billig Zur Rekonstruktion der altesten slawischen Burgbezirke im obersachsisch meissnischen Raum auf der Grundlage des Bayerischen Geographen Neues Archiv fur sachsische Geschichte 66 1995 s 27 67 a b Sedov Valentin Vasilyevich 2013 1995 Slavyane v rannem Srednevekove Sloveni u ranom srednjem veku Slavs in Early Middle Ages Novi Sad Akademska knjiga pp 191 205 ISBN 978 86 6263 026 1 John Sandford 3 April 2013 Encyclopedia of Contemporary German Culture Routledge p 412 ISBN 978 1 136 81603 1 Paul M Barford 2001 The Early Slavs Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe Cornell University Press pp 64 65 77 78 104 105 ISBN 9780801439773 Brather Sebastian 2004 The beginnings of Slavic settlement east of the river Elbe Antiquity 78 300 314 329 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00112980 S2CID 163828473 Golecka 2003 p 57 a b Golecka 2003 p 58 a b c d Matyniak 1968 p 241 Remus 2014 p 4 Schonwalder Karen 1996 The Constitutional Protection of Minorities in Germany Weimar Revisited The Slavonic and East European Review 74 1 38 65 ISSN 0037 6795 JSTOR 4211979 Golecka 2003 p 61 Ramet 2016 p 227 Pynsent 2000 p 115 The Group 1993 p Zank 1998 p 173 Glaser 2007 p 275 Golecka 2003 p 60 Absees Soviet and East European Abstracts Series Volume 4 Oxford Microform Publications Limited 1973 p 182 Absees Soviet and East European Abstracts Series Volume 4 Oxford Microform Publications Limited 1973 p 182 Plum Catherine 2015 Antifascism After Hitler East German Youth and Socialist Memory 1949 1989 Routledge p 51 ISBN 978 1317599289 DOMOWINA Medijowe wozjewjenje Pressemitteilung Press release sorben com Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Kulturhoheit Sorben bitten Europa um Hilfe International Politik Tagesspiegel tagesspiegel de 7 March 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Rebala Martinez Cruz et al 2013 Contemporary paternal genetic landscape of Polish and German populations from early medieval Slavic expansion to post World War II resettlements European Journal of Human Genetics 21 4 415 422 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2012 190 PMC 3598329 PMID 22968131 Kushniarevich Utevska et al 2015 Genetic Heritage of the Balto Slavic Speaking Populations A Synthesis of Autosomal Mitochondrial and Y Chromosomal Data PLOS One 10 9 Table K in S1 File Frequencies of the NRY haplogroups in Balto Slavic populations Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1035820K doi 10 1371 journal pone 0135820 PMC 4558026 PMID 26332464 Behar DM Thomas MG Skorecki K et al October 2003 Multiple origins of Ashkenazi Levites Y chromosome evidence for both Near Eastern and European ancestries American Journal of Human Genetics 73 4 768 779 doi 10 1086 378506 PMC 1180600 PMID 13680527 Immel UD et al January 2006 Y chromosomal STR haplotype analysis reveals surname associated strata in the East German population European Journal of Human Genetics 14 pages 577 582 2006 5 577 82 doi 10 1038 sj ejhg 5201572 PMID 16435000 Rodig Heike et al January 2007 Population study and evaluation of 20 Y chromosome STR loci in Germans Int J Legal Med 2007 121 24 https doi org 10 1007 s00414 005 0075 5 1 24 27 doi 10 1007 s00414 005 0075 5 PMID 16710736 S2CID 40129551 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a External link in code class cs1 code volume code help Krawczak M et al April 2008 Genetic Diversity in the German Population eLS doi 10 1002 9780470015902 a0020801 ISBN 978 0470016176 via Wiley Online Library Kowalski Kowalski December 2020 The Early Mediaeval Slav German border Limes Sorabicus in the light of research into Y chromosome polymorphism in contemporary and historical German populations Geographia Polonica 93 4 569 596 doi 10 7163 GPol 0190 Veeramah Krishna R May 2011 Genetic variation in the Sorbs of eastern Germany in the context of broader European genetic diversity European Journal of Human Genetics v 19 9 935 1018 2011 Sep 9 995 1001 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2011 65 PMC 3179365 PMID 21559053 Gross Arnd July 2011 Population genetic comparison of the Sorbian isolate population in Germany with the German KORA population using genome wide SNP arrays BMC Genetics 12 67 67 doi 10 1186 1471 2156 12 67 PMC 3199861 PMID 21798003 Lazaridis Iosif August 2016 Genomic insights into the origin of farming in the ancient Near East Nature 536 7617 414 429 Bibcode 2016Natur 536 419L doi 10 1038 nature19310 PMC 5003663 PMID 27459054 Administrator Dzialalnosc Wojciecha Wojcecha Kocki w serboluzyckim ruchu narodowym w latach 1945 1950 prolusatia pl Retrieved 18 March 2015 Administrator Akcja Narodny Partyzan Luzica 1946 1947 i jej reperkusje w serboluzyckim ruchu narodowym prolusatia pl Retrieved 18 March 2015 Paul Wexler The Ashkenazic Jews Slavica Publishers 1993 Paul Wexler 1992 From Serb Lands to Sorb Lands in The Balkan Substratum of Yiddish A Reassessment of the Unique Romance and Greek Components Harrassowitz Verlag 1992 p 111 Germany s Sorbs celebrate Zapust festival The local Germany s News in English March 12 2010 German Slavic minority cultivates a colorful Easter tradition Archived 2011 10 01 at the Wayback Machine Ethiopian Review March 31 2010 According to the 1900 Census See Ernst Tschernik Die Entwicklung der Sorbischen Bevolkerung Akademie Verlag Berlin 1954 P 34 Andreeva G N 2005 Sorby v FRG cennyj opyt pravovogo regulirovaniya statusa nacionalnogo menshinstva v nemeckoj i rossijskoj literature zhurnal 1 Socialnye i gumanitarnye nauki ed 40 42 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Gugnin A A 1997 Vvedenie v istoriyu serboluzhickoj slovesnosti i literatury ot istokov do nashih dnej PDF M p 90 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Slovansky prehled 26 1934 152 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Solta Jan 1984 Nowy biografiski slownik k stawiznam a kulture Serbow p 115 Wojciechowski Zygmunt 1948 Boleslaw Chrobry i rok 1000 Przeglad Zachodni in Polish 3 248 Jasienica Pawel 2007 in Polish Polska Piastow Proszynski Media ISBN 978 83 7648 284 2 Bernhardt John W 1993 Itinerant Kingship and Royal Monasteries in Early Medieval Germany c 936 1075 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 52183 1 Luzhichki Srbi њihova istoriјa i kultura rastko rs Retrieved 2016 10 24 a b Matyniak 1968 p 240 Matyniak 1968 p 242 a b Matyniak 1968 p 243 Slownik geograficzny Krolestwa Polskiego i innych krajow slowianskich Tom VII in Polish Warszawa 1886 p 117 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Matyniak 1968 p 244 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 p 88 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 pp 88 89 Wojtal Jozef 1973 Michal Hornik budziszynski przyjaciel Polski i popularyzator dziel Kopernika Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka in Polish Wroclaw Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich XXVIII 2 184 186 a b Lewaszkiewicz 2015 p 91 a b Leksykon Polactwa w Niemczech in Polish Opole Zwiazek Polakow w Niemczech 1939 p 364 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 pp 91 92 Orzechowski Marian 1976 Kwestia serboluzycka w polskiej mysli politycznej w latach 1939 1947 Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka in Polish Wroclaw Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich Wydawnictwo Polskiej Akademii Nauk XXXI 2 379 Smolka Leonard 1978 Centrala prasowa Zwiazku Polakow w Niemczech 1923 1939 Kwartalnik Historii Prasy Polskiej in Polish XVII 2 52 59 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 p 93 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 p 94 Lewaszkiewicz 2015 p 92 Orzechowski pp 380 381 Joanna Banik Grob Jana Skali Zabytek pl in Polish Retrieved 5 November 2023 Proluz Akademicki Zwiazek Przyjaciol Luzyc Jakub Brodacki Polska Grupa Marketingowa 2006 ISBN 83 60151 00 8 Verwaistes Erbe 31 January 2020 Palys Piotr 2002 Proby utworzenia w Zgorzelcu w latach 1946 1948 gimnazjum luzyckiego Rocznik Lubuski in Polish Vol XXVIII no 1 Zielona Gora p 90 ISSN 0485 3083 Palys p 92 Palys pp 94 95 Joanna Banik 11 October 2021 Offener Brief zum Beschluss des Hauptausschusses des Bautzener Stadtrats vom 6 Oktober 2021 zur Wiedererrichtung eines Bismarck Denkmals Serbski institut in German Retrieved 15 October 2023 Palys pp 89 90 Visek Zdenek Luzicti Srbove a cesko luzickosrbske vztahy Listy in Czech Retrieved 29 September 2014 Henning Hahn Hans Kunze Peter 1999 Nationale Minderheiten und staatliche Minderheitenpolitik in Deutschland im 19 Jahrhundert Berlin Akademie Verlag GmbH ISBN 978 3 05 003343 3 Kaleta Petr 2006 Cesi o Luzickych Srbech Prague Masarykuv ustav AV CR p 15 ISBN 9788086495415 Petr Kaleta Cesi o Luzickych Srbech Prague 2006 Page 15 Sorben sachsen de Retrieved 18 March 2015 Nielsen Georg R In Search of a Home 1977 Birmingham Slavonic Monographs ISBN 0 70440236 X Texas Wendish Heritage Archived from the original on 23 February 2015 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Sources editGlaser Konstanze 2007 Minority Languages and Cultural Diversity in Europe Gaelic and Sorbian Perspectives Multilingual Matters ISBN 9781853599323 Golecka Aneta 2003 Serboluzyczanie w Niemczech Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie Sklodowska Sectio K Politologia in Polish Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie Sklodowskiej w Lublinie X Lewaszkiewicz Tadeusz 2015 Zarys dziejow sorabistyki i zainteresowan Luzycami w Wielkopolsce In Kurowska Hanna ed Kapital spoleczno polityczny Serboluzyczan in Polish Zielona Gora Uniwersytet Zielonogorski Matyniak Alojzy S 1968 Kontakty kulturalne polsko serboluzyckie w XVIII w Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka in Polish Wroclaw Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich XXIII 2 Pynsent Robert in Czech 2000 The Phoney Peace Power and Culture in Central Europe 1945 49 School of Slavonic and East European Studies ISBN 9780903425018 Ramet Sabrina P 2016 Alternatives to Democracy in Twentieth Century Collectivist Visions of Alternative Modernity Central European University Press ISBN 9789633863107 Remus Therese 2014 Endangered minority languages A comparison of the Upper Sorbian and North Frisian cases GRIN Verlag ISBN 9783656685258 The Group 1993 Minority Rights Group International Report Minority Rights ISBN 9781897693001 Zank W 1998 The German Melting Pot Multiculturality in Historical Perspective Springer ISBN 9780230375208 Stone Gerald 2015 The Smallest Slavonic Nation The Sorbs of Lusatia Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4742 4154 0 Veeramah et al 2011 Genetic variation in the Sorbs of eastern Germany in the context of broader European genetic diversity European Journal of Human Genetics 19 9 995 1001 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2011 65 PMC 3179365 PMID 21559053 Zura Slavica Vrkic 2011 Luzicki Srbi Najmanji slavenski narod Ethnologica Dalmatica in Croatian 18 1 93 130 Further reading editSee also List of Slavic studies journals Filip Ganczak Mniejszosc w czasach popkultury Newsweek nr 22 2007 03 06 2007 W kregu Krabata Szkice o Juriju Brezanie literaturze kulturze i jezykach luzyckich pod red J Zarka Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Slaskiego Katowice 2002 Miroslaw Cyganski Rafal Leszczynski Zarys dziejow narodowosciowych Luzyczan PIN Instytut Slaski Opole 1997 Die Sorben in Deutschland pod red M Schiemann Stiftung fur das sorbische Volk Gorlitz 1997 Maly informator o Serboluzyczanach w Niemczech pod red J Petrowej Zalozba za serbski lud 1997 Dolnoserbske nalogi Obyczaje Dolnych Luzyc pod red M Stock Zalozba za serbski lud 1997 Rys dziejow serboluzyckich Wilhelm Boguslawski Piotrogrod 1861 Proluz Akademicki Zwiazek Przyjaciol Luzyc Jakub Brodacki Polska Grupa Marketingowa 2006 ISBN 83 60151 00 8 Polska wobec Luzyc w drugiej polowie XX wieku Wybrane problemy Mieczkowska Malgorzata Szczecin 2006 ISBN 83 7241 487 4 Wukasch C 2004 A Rock Against Alien Waves A History of the Wends Concordia University Press Austin Sorbs David Zersen in Germans and the Americas Culture Politics and History 3 vols edited by Thomas Adam ABC CLIO 2005 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sorbs nbsp Upper Sorbian edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia Sorbs Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed 1911 The Domowina Institution SERBSKE NOWINY Sorbian newspaper SERBSKI INSTITUT Sorbian history and culture Independent Sorbian internet magazine Archived 2007 08 26 at the Wayback Machine Sorbian emigration into Australia Project Rastko Lusatia Electronic Library of Sorbian Serbian Ties Texas Wendish Heritage Society Wendish Heritage Society of Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sorbs amp oldid 1201206489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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