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Vistulans

The Vistulans, or Vistulanians[1][2][3] (Polish: Wiślanie), were an early medieval Lechitic tribe inhabiting the western part of modern Lesser Poland.[4]

Central Europe in 870. Eastern Francia in blue, Bulgaria in orange, Great Moravia under Rastislav in green. The green line depicts the borders of Great Moravia after the territorial expansion under Svatopluk I (894). Note that some of the borders of Great Moravia are under debate

Etymology edit

Their name derives from the hydronym of the river Vistula, meaning "inhabitants of Vistula"; the region is mentioned as Uuislane by the Bavarian Geographer, v Vislè and v Vislèh in the Vita Methodii, and Visleland by Alfred the Great in the 9th century.[5][6]

Identification edit

Even though some historians, such as Przemysław Urbańczyk, claim that the Vistulans did not exist, there are three documents from the 9th century which can be tied to this tribe. First is the so-called Vita Methodii or Pannonian Legend (The Life of St. Methodius), second is the Bavarian Geographer, and third is Alfred the Great's Germania.[5] Scholars consider that the Vistulans could also have been mentioned in the Old English and Nordic epic poems. The verse in Old English poem Widsith (10th century):

Wulfhere sohte ic ond Wyrmhere; ful oft þær wig ne alæg, I visited Wulfhere and Wyrmhere; there battle often raged,
þonne Hræda here heardum sweordum, when the Hræda with their sharp swords,
ymb Wistlawudu wergan sceoldon in the Vistula woods/wooden hills had to defend
ealdne eþelstol Ætlan leodum. their ancestral seat against Attila's host.

It is considered that parts of the epic poem could be dated to the 6th century. The syntagma ymb Wistlawudu has seen different translations by the scholars depending on the consideration whether Wistla is a borrowing from a German, Latin, or Slavic language. As such *Wīstle could be identified with the people, while Wistlawudu interpreted as "by the Vistulan woods" or "by the Vistulan wooden hills" (Beskids and Western Carpathians). However, the Hræda which is genitive plural of *Hraede, gives further insight to the meaning and age of the poem. Although it is usually related with the Goths from the same poem (Hred-Gotum, Hreth-Gotan, Hreidhgotar),[5] this verse is similar to the one in Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks (13th century), where prior the battle between Goths and Huns, Heidrek died in Harvaða fjöllum (Carpathian Mountains) which is sometimes translated as "beneath the mountains of Harvathi", considered somewhere beneath Carpathian Mountains near river Dnieper.[5][7]

Tadeusz Lewicki [pl] argued that Anglo-Saxons, as in the case of Alfred the Great who called Croats Horithi, often distorted foreign Slavic names and it was not uncommon for the same Slavic tribe to be known by different names, in this case, Vistulans being another name for the White Croats.[5] Henryk Łowmiański also argued that both the Vistulans and the Lendians were tribes of White Croats,[7] but other scholars disagree.[8][9] Leontii Voitovych believed that the Vistulans were the main tribe among those Silesian and Lechitic tribes who invaded this territory, dividing the Croatian lands into Eastern and Western parts.[10]

Based on Lubor Niederle's thesis that the Vistulans are remnants of the once strong alliance of Croatian tribes which fell apart after the migration of the Croats to the Western Balkans in the 7th century, Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński additionally noted that the name Vistulans was only known among Western Slavs and Germans, while in the East, in Byzantine and Arabian sources, the older name of Croats was retained for the same territory.[11] Such an interpretation of the reference to ymb Wistlawudu ("in the Vistula woods") in the Anglo-Saxon poem Widsith argues that instead of 5th century events, the poem instead intended to refer to 6th century events contemporaneous with the Lombard king Alboin , when the Pannonian Avars led by Bayan I (Attila's people) expanded between 568 and 595 into the Pannonian Basin and extended their influence northward on the Slavs (Vistulans, Croats) in the Upper Vistula valley, seen in Avarian archaeological remains up to Gniezno in central-western Poland.[5]

History edit

Little is known about early history of the Vistulans. Their territory might have been conquered by Greater Moravia, though no conclusive evidence exists to prove this theory. According to archaeological findings, in the late 9th century several gords in southern Lesser Poland were destroyed. This might have been during the conquest of the Vistulans by Great Moravia, but it might have been the result of a conflict between the Vistulans and other tribes, like the Golensizi. In the 950s, the land of the Vistulans was probably conquered by Czech Duke Boleslaus I, which is confirmed by Abraham ben Jacob, whose work was used by Muslim geographer al-Bakri in his Book of Roads and Kingdoms.

It is not known when and how the land of the Vistulans joined into the state of the Polans. Archaeological research has not found any evidence of armed conflicts between the Polans and the Vistulans. Most likely, Bolesław I the Brave, future king of Poland, was named the ruler of Kraków by his grandfather, Boleslaus I. After the death of his father Mieszko I of Poland (992), Chrobry united Kraków with Poland, with the consent of the Vistulan ruling class.

So far historians have not been able to name any Vistulan dukes, but Vita Methodii does mention a "very powerful pagan prince settled on the Vistula" who "began mocking the Christians and doing evil" because of which was contacted by Saint Methodius who said it would be better to be baptized of one's own free will than as a prisoner in foreign land.[12] Furthermore, little is known about their religious rituals and the date of baptism of the tribe. It was possibly around the same period, c. 874, when they were subjugated by king Svatopluk I of Moravia, and the Vistulan duke was forced to accept baptism.[12]

Territory edit

The area inhabited by the Vistulans probably ranged from the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains in the south, to the sources of the Pilica and Warta in the north. In the east, it reached the Dunajec, and in the west, the Skawa. The first Slavic gords were not built here until the mid 8th century, which means that the Vistulans probably frequently migrated, changing locations.

Since the 8th century, the Vistulans began construction of spacious gords, whose areas frequently reached over 10 hectares. Most gords were ring-shaped, and located on hills. Among major ones were the gords at Kraków, Stradów, Demblin, Naszczowice, Podegrodzie, Stawy, Trzcinica, Wiślica and on Bocheniec hill in Jadowniki. Most probably, the capital of the Vistulans was located in Kraków, which is confirmed by the size of the local gord, together with a fortified stronghold, located on the Wawel hill. Furthermore, the Vistulans probably built several mounds, such as the Krakus Mound, but historians argue whether these are of earlier, Celtic origin.

In the 9th century, they created a tribal state, with probable major centers in Kraków, Wiślica, Sandomierz, and Stradów. Probably around 874 they were subjugated by king Svatopluk I of Moravia, who was a contemporary of the emperor Arnulf. After a later period of Czech domination, the Vistulan lands became controlled by the Polans in the late tenth century, and were incorporated into Poland.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Brzechczyn, Krzysztof (2009), Idealization XIII: Modeling in History. Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 9789042028319.
  2. ^ Davies, Norman (2003), God's Playground A History of Poland: Volume 1: The Origins to 1795. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199253395 .
  3. ^ Topolski, Jerzy (1976), Methodology of History.Warsaw: PWN – Polish Scientific Publishers in Jaakko Hintikka, Synthese Library. Boston: D.Reidel Publishing Company. ISBN 978-94-010-1125-9
  4. ^ "The main tribe inhabiting the reaches of the Upper Vistula and its tributaries was the Vislane (Wislanie) who, by the mid-ninth century were considered by the neighbouring Moravians as "very powerful" The expansionist policy of the Christian Moravian state led to eventual conflict with the pogan Vislane. ending in the defeat of the latter and their annexation to the Great Moravian Empire between Ad 875-879" . [in:] Trade and urban development in Poland: an economic geography of Cracow. Francis W. Carter. P. 46. 1994 op. cit. L. Hajdukiewicz and M. Karaś. The Jagiellonian University: Traditions, The Present, The Future. Cracow. 1978, p. 17.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Lewicki, Tadeusz (2006) [1951]. "Najstarije spominjanje Višljana u izvorima (Najdawniejsza wzmianka źródłowa o Wiślanach)" [The earliest mention of the Vistulans in sources]. In Nosić, Milan (ed.). Bijeli Hrvati I [White Croats I] (in Croatian). Maveda. pp. 86–99. ISBN 953-7029-04-2.
  6. ^ Łuczyński, Michal (2017). ""Geograf Bawarski" — nowe odczytania" ["Bavarian Geographer" — New readings]. Polonica (in Polish). XXXVII (37): 81. doi:10.17651/POLON.37.9. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  7. ^ a b Łowmiański, Henryk (2004) [1964]. Nosić, Milan (ed.). Hrvatska pradomovina (Chorwacja Nadwiślańska in Początki Polski) [Croatian ancient homeland] (in Croatian). Translated by Kryżan-Stanojević, Barbara. Maveda. p. 30–31, 51, 57–60, 94, 125–126. OCLC 831099194.
  8. ^ Majorov 2006, p. 48.
  9. ^ Voitovych 2011, p. 26, "H. Łowmiański also decided that at least one of the tribes of Croats named in the Prague Privilege could be without hesitation located on Vistula and identified with Vistulans, thus, without any justification, omitting the remarks of Vladislav Kentshinsky and the conclusions of J. Vidayevich, who did not admit the possibility of identifying the Vistulans with the Croats".
  10. ^ Voitovych 2011, p. 29.
  11. ^ Lehr-Spławiński, Tadeusz (1951). "Zagadnienie Chorwatów nadwiślańskich" [The problem of Vistula Croats]. Pamiętnik Słowiański (in Polish). 2: 17–32.
  12. ^ a b Kantor, Marvin (1983). Medieval Slavic Lives of Saints and Princes. University of Michigan, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. pp. 119–120, 136. ISBN 978-0-930042-44-8.

Sources edit

  • Majorov, Aleksandr Vyacheslavovich (2006). Velikaya Khorvatiya: Etnogenez i rannyaya istoriya slavyan Prikarpatskogo regiona Великая Хорватия: этногенез и ранняя история славян Прикарпатского региона [Great Croatia: Ethnogenesis and early history of the Slavs of the Carpathian region] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg University Press. ISBN 5-288-03948-8.
  • Voitovych, Leontii (2011). "Проблема "білих хорватів"". Галицько-волинські етюди (PDF). Біла Церква. ISBN 978-966-2083-97-2. Retrieved 5 July 2019.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

vistulans, vistulanians, polish, wiślanie, were, early, medieval, lechitic, tribe, inhabiting, western, part, modern, lesser, poland, central, europe, eastern, francia, blue, bulgaria, orange, great, moravia, under, rastislav, green, green, line, depicts, bord. The Vistulans or Vistulanians 1 2 3 Polish Wislanie were an early medieval Lechitic tribe inhabiting the western part of modern Lesser Poland 4 Central Europe in 870 Eastern Francia in blue Bulgaria in orange Great Moravia under Rastislav in green The green line depicts the borders of Great Moravia after the territorial expansion under Svatopluk I 894 Note that some of the borders of Great Moravia are under debate Contents 1 Etymology 2 Identification 3 History 4 Territory 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesEtymology editTheir name derives from the hydronym of the river Vistula meaning inhabitants of Vistula the region is mentioned as Uuislane by the Bavarian Geographer v Visle and v Visleh in the Vita Methodii and Visleland by Alfred the Great in the 9th century 5 6 Identification editEven though some historians such as Przemyslaw Urbanczyk claim that the Vistulans did not exist there are three documents from the 9th century which can be tied to this tribe First is the so called Vita Methodii or Pannonian Legend The Life of St Methodius second is the Bavarian Geographer and third is Alfred the Great s Germania 5 Scholars consider that the Vistulans could also have been mentioned in the Old English and Nordic epic poems The verse in Old English poem Widsith 10th century Wulfhere sohte ic ond Wyrmhere ful oft thaer wig ne alaeg I visited Wulfhere and Wyrmhere there battle often raged thonne Hraeda here heardum sweordum when the Hraeda with their sharp swords ymb Wistlawudu wergan sceoldon in the Vistula woods wooden hills had to defendealdne ethelstol AEtlan leodum their ancestral seat against Attila s host It is considered that parts of the epic poem could be dated to the 6th century The syntagma ymb Wistlawudu has seen different translations by the scholars depending on the consideration whether Wistla is a borrowing from a German Latin or Slavic language As such Wistle could be identified with the people while Wistlawudu interpreted as by the Vistulan woods or by the Vistulan wooden hills Beskids and Western Carpathians However the Hraeda which is genitive plural of Hraede gives further insight to the meaning and age of the poem Although it is usually related with the Goths from the same poem Hred Gotum Hreth Gotan Hreidhgotar 5 this verse is similar to the one in Hervarar saga ok Heidreks 13th century where prior the battle between Goths and Huns Heidrek died in Harvada fjollum Carpathian Mountains which is sometimes translated as beneath the mountains of Harvathi considered somewhere beneath Carpathian Mountains near river Dnieper 5 7 Tadeusz Lewicki pl argued that Anglo Saxons as in the case of Alfred the Great who called Croats Horithi often distorted foreign Slavic names and it was not uncommon for the same Slavic tribe to be known by different names in this case Vistulans being another name for the White Croats 5 Henryk Lowmianski also argued that both the Vistulans and the Lendians were tribes of White Croats 7 but other scholars disagree 8 9 Leontii Voitovych believed that the Vistulans were the main tribe among those Silesian and Lechitic tribes who invaded this territory dividing the Croatian lands into Eastern and Western parts 10 Based on Lubor Niederle s thesis that the Vistulans are remnants of the once strong alliance of Croatian tribes which fell apart after the migration of the Croats to the Western Balkans in the 7th century Tadeusz Lehr Splawinski additionally noted that the name Vistulans was only known among Western Slavs and Germans while in the East in Byzantine and Arabian sources the older name of Croats was retained for the same territory 11 Such an interpretation of the reference to ymb Wistlawudu in the Vistula woods in the Anglo Saxon poem Widsith argues that instead of 5th century events the poem instead intended to refer to 6th century events contemporaneous with the Lombard king Alboin when the Pannonian Avars led by Bayan I Attila s people expanded between 568 and 595 into the Pannonian Basin and extended their influence northward on the Slavs Vistulans Croats in the Upper Vistula valley seen in Avarian archaeological remains up to Gniezno in central western Poland 5 History editLittle is known about early history of the Vistulans Their territory might have been conquered by Greater Moravia though no conclusive evidence exists to prove this theory According to archaeological findings in the late 9th century several gords in southern Lesser Poland were destroyed This might have been during the conquest of the Vistulans by Great Moravia but it might have been the result of a conflict between the Vistulans and other tribes like the Golensizi In the 950s the land of the Vistulans was probably conquered by Czech Duke Boleslaus I which is confirmed by Abraham ben Jacob whose work was used by Muslim geographer al Bakri in his Book of Roads and Kingdoms It is not known when and how the land of the Vistulans joined into the state of the Polans Archaeological research has not found any evidence of armed conflicts between the Polans and the Vistulans Most likely Boleslaw I the Brave future king of Poland was named the ruler of Krakow by his grandfather Boleslaus I After the death of his father Mieszko I of Poland 992 Chrobry united Krakow with Poland with the consent of the Vistulan ruling class So far historians have not been able to name any Vistulan dukes but Vita Methodii does mention a very powerful pagan prince settled on the Vistula who began mocking the Christians and doing evil because of which was contacted by Saint Methodius who said it would be better to be baptized of one s own free will than as a prisoner in foreign land 12 Furthermore little is known about their religious rituals and the date of baptism of the tribe It was possibly around the same period c 874 when they were subjugated by king Svatopluk I of Moravia and the Vistulan duke was forced to accept baptism 12 Territory editThe area inhabited by the Vistulans probably ranged from the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains in the south to the sources of the Pilica and Warta in the north In the east it reached the Dunajec and in the west the Skawa The first Slavic gords were not built here until the mid 8th century which means that the Vistulans probably frequently migrated changing locations Since the 8th century the Vistulans began construction of spacious gords whose areas frequently reached over 10 hectares Most gords were ring shaped and located on hills Among major ones were the gords at Krakow Stradow Demblin Naszczowice Podegrodzie Stawy Trzcinica Wislica and on Bocheniec hill in Jadowniki Most probably the capital of the Vistulans was located in Krakow which is confirmed by the size of the local gord together with a fortified stronghold located on the Wawel hill Furthermore the Vistulans probably built several mounds such as the Krakus Mound but historians argue whether these are of earlier Celtic origin In the 9th century they created a tribal state with probable major centers in Krakow Wislica Sandomierz and Stradow Probably around 874 they were subjugated by king Svatopluk I of Moravia who was a contemporary of the emperor Arnulf After a later period of Czech domination the Vistulan lands became controlled by the Polans in the late tenth century and were incorporated into Poland See also editList of medieval Slavic tribesReferences edit Brzechczyn Krzysztof 2009 Idealization XIII Modeling in History Amsterdam Rodopi ISBN 9789042028319 Davies Norman 2003 God s Playground A History of Poland Volume 1 The Origins to 1795 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199253395 Topolski Jerzy 1976 Methodology of History Warsaw PWN Polish Scientific Publishers in Jaakko Hintikka Synthese Library Boston D Reidel Publishing Company ISBN 978 94 010 1125 9 The main tribe inhabiting the reaches of the Upper Vistula and its tributaries was the Vislane Wislanie who by the mid ninth century were considered by the neighbouring Moravians as very powerful The expansionist policy of the Christian Moravian state led to eventual conflict with the pogan Vislane ending in the defeat of the latter and their annexation to the Great Moravian Empire between Ad 875 879 in Trade and urban development in Poland an economic geography of Cracow Francis W Carter P 46 1994 op cit L Hajdukiewicz and M Karas The Jagiellonian University Traditions The Present The Future Cracow 1978 p 17 a b c d e f Lewicki Tadeusz 2006 1951 Najstarije spominjanje Visljana u izvorima Najdawniejsza wzmianka zrodlowa o Wislanach The earliest mention of the Vistulans in sources In Nosic Milan ed Bijeli Hrvati I White Croats I in Croatian Maveda pp 86 99 ISBN 953 7029 04 2 Luczynski Michal 2017 Geograf Bawarski nowe odczytania Bavarian Geographer New readings Polonica in Polish XXXVII 37 81 doi 10 17651 POLON 37 9 Retrieved 5 August 2020 a b Lowmianski Henryk 2004 1964 Nosic Milan ed Hrvatska pradomovina Chorwacja Nadwislanska in Poczatki Polski Croatian ancient homeland in Croatian Translated by Kryzan Stanojevic Barbara Maveda p 30 31 51 57 60 94 125 126 OCLC 831099194 Majorov 2006 p 48 Voitovych 2011 p 26 H Lowmianski also decided that at least one of the tribes of Croats named in the Prague Privilege could be without hesitation located on Vistula and identified with Vistulans thus without any justification omitting the remarks of Vladislav Kentshinsky and the conclusions of J Vidayevich who did not admit the possibility of identifying the Vistulans with the Croats Voitovych 2011 p 29 Lehr Splawinski Tadeusz 1951 Zagadnienie Chorwatow nadwislanskich The problem of Vistula Croats Pamietnik Slowianski in Polish 2 17 32 a b Kantor Marvin 1983 Medieval Slavic Lives of Saints and Princes University of Michigan Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures pp 119 120 136 ISBN 978 0 930042 44 8 Sources editMajorov Aleksandr Vyacheslavovich 2006 Velikaya Khorvatiya Etnogenez i rannyaya istoriya slavyan Prikarpatskogo regiona Velikaya Horvatiya etnogenez i rannyaya istoriya slavyan Prikarpatskogo regiona Great Croatia Ethnogenesis and early history of the Slavs of the Carpathian region in Russian St Petersburg St Petersburg University Press ISBN 5 288 03948 8 Voitovych Leontii 2011 Problema bilih horvativ Galicko volinski etyudi PDF Bila Cerkva ISBN 978 966 2083 97 2 Retrieved 5 July 2019 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vistulans amp oldid 1174419077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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