A message on the topic of the origin of the ancient Slavs. The silent history of the Slavs (scientific facts)

11.11.2021 Complications

The ancestors of the modern Slavs, the so-called ancient Slavs, separated from the vast Indo-European group that inhabited the entire territory of Eurasia. Over time, tribes similar in economic management, social structure and language united into the Slavic group. We find the first mention of them in Byzantine documents of the 6th century.

In the 4th-6th centuries BC. the ancient Slavs participated in the great migration of peoples - a large one, as a result of which they populated vast territories of Central, Eastern and South- of Eastern Europe. Gradually they divided into three branches: Eastern, Western and Southern Slavs.

Thanks to the chronicler Nestor, we know the main and places of their settlements: in the upper reaches of the Volga, Dnieper, and higher to the north lived the Krivichi; from Volkhov to Ilmen there were Slovenians; Dregovichi inhabited the lands of Polesie, from Pripyat to Berezina; Radimichi lived between Iput and Sozh; near the Desna one could meet northerners; from the upper reaches of the Oka and downstream stretched the lands of the Vyatichi; in the area of ​​the Middle Dnieper and Kyiv there were clearings; the Drevlyans lived along the Teterev and Uzh rivers; Dulebs (or Volynians, Buzhans) settled in Volyn; the Croats occupied the slopes of the Carpathians; the tribes of the Ulichs and Tiverts settled from the lower reaches of the Dnieper, the Bug region to the mouth of the Danube.

The life of the ancient Slavs, their customs and beliefs became clearer during numerous archaeological excavations. Thus, it became known that for a long time they did not depart from the patriarchal way of life: each tribe was divided into several clans, and the clan consisted of several families who all lived together and owned common property. The elders ruled the clans and tribes. To resolve important issues, a veche was convened - a meeting of elders.

Gradually, the economic activities of families became isolated, and the clan structure was replaced (by ropes).

The ancient Slavs were settled farmers who grew useful plants, raised livestock, hunted and fished, and knew some crafts. When trade began to develop, cities began to emerge. The glades were built by Kyiv, the northerners - Chernigov, the Radimichi - Lyubech, the Krivichi - Smolensk, the Ilmen Slavs - Novgorod. Slavic warriors created squads to protect their cities, and princes - mainly Varangians - became the leaders of the squads. Gradually, the princes seize power and actually become the masters of the lands.

The same one tells that similar principalities were founded by the Varangians in Kyiv, Rurik - in Novgorod, Rogvold - in Polotsk.

The ancient Slavs settled mainly in settlements - settlements near rivers and lakes. The river not only helped to reach neighboring settlements, but also fed local residents. However, the main occupation of the Slavs was agriculture. They plowed plows on oxen or horses.

Cattle breeding was also important in the economy, but due to climatic conditions wasn't too developed. The ancient Slavs were much more active in hunting and beekeeping - extracting wild honey and wax.

In their beliefs, these tribes were pagan - they deified nature and dead ancestors. They called the sky the god Svarog, and all celestial phenomena were considered the children of this god - Svarozhich. For example, Svarozhich Perun was especially revered by the Slavs, because he sent thunder and lightning, and also gave his protection to the tribes during the war.

Fire and the Sun showed their destructive or beneficial power, and depending on this, they were personified by the good Dazhdbog, who gives life-giving light and warmth, or the evil Horse, who burns nature with heat and fires. Stribog was considered the god of storms and wind.

The ancient Slavs attributed any natural phenomena and changes in nature to the will of their gods. They tried in every possible way to appease them with various festivals and sacrifices. It is interesting that any person who wanted to do so could make a sacrifice. But each tribe had its own sorcerer or sorcerer who knew how to perceive the changeable will of the gods.

The ancient Slavs did not build temples and for a long time did not create images of gods. Only later did they begin to make idols - crudely made wooden figures. With the adoption of Christianity, paganism and idolatry were gradually eradicated. Nevertheless, the religion of our ancestors has survived to this day in the form of folk signs and agricultural natural holidays.

Slavic peoples occupy more space on earth than in history. The Italian historian Mavro Orbini, in his book “The Slavic Kingdom,” published back in 1601, wrote: “ The Slavic family is older than the pyramids and so numerous that it populated half the world».

Written history about the Slavs BC does not say anything. Traces of ancient civilizations in the Russian North are a scientific question that has not been resolved by historians. The country is a utopia, described by the ancient Greek philosopher and scientist Plato Hyperborea - presumably the Arctic ancestral home of our civilization.

Hyperborea, also known as Daaria or Arctida, is the ancient name of the North. Judging by the chronicles, legends, myths and traditions that existed among different nations world in ancient times, Hyperborea was located in the north of today's Russia. It is quite possible that it also affected Greenland, Scandinavia, or, as shown on medieval maps, generally spread out on the islands around North Pole. That land was inhabited by people who were genetically related to us. The real existence of the continent is evidenced by a map copied by the greatest cartographer of the 16th century, G. Mercator, in one of the Egyptian pyramids in Giza.

Map of Gerhard Mercator, published by his son Rudolf in 1535. In the center of the map is the legendary Arctida. Cartographic materials of this kind before the flood could only be obtained using aircraft, highly developed technologies and the presence of a powerful mathematical apparatus necessary to create specific projections.

In the calendars of the Egyptians, Assyrians and Mayans, the catastrophe that destroyed Hyperborea dates back to 11542 BC. e. Climate change and the Great Flood 112 thousand years ago forced our Ancestors to leave their ancestral home of Daaria and migrate through the only isthmus of the now Arctic Ocean (the Ural Mountains).

“...the whole world turned upside down and the stars fell from the sky. This happened because a huge planet fell to Earth... at that moment “the heart of Leo reached the first minute of the head of Cancer.” The great Arctic civilization was destroyed by a planetary catastrophe.

As a result of an asteroid impact 13,659 years ago, the Earth made a “leap in time.” The leap affected not only the astrological clock, which began to show a different time, but also the planetary energy clock, which sets the life-giving rhythm for all life on Earth.

The ancestral home of the peoples of the White race of clans did not completely sink.

From the vast territory of the north of the Eurasian Plateau, which was once dry land, today only Spitsbergen, Franz Josef Land, Novaya Zemlya, Severnaya Zemlya and the New Siberian Islands are visible above the water.

Astronomers and astrophysicists studying the problems of asteroid safety claim that every hundred years the Earth collides with cosmic bodies less than a hundred meters in size. More than a hundred meters - every 5000 years. Impacts from asteroids a kilometer across are possible once every 300 thousand years. Once every million years, collisions with bodies with a diameter of more than five kilometers cannot be ruled out.

Preserved ancient historical records and research show that over the past 16,000 years, large asteroids measuring tens of kilometers across struck the Earth twice: 13,659 years ago and 2,500 years before that.

If scientific texts are missing, material monuments are hidden under Arctic ice or are not recognized, language reconstruction comes to the rescue. Tribes, settling, turned into peoples, and marks remained on their chromosome sets. Such marks remained on Aryan words, and they can be recognized in any Western European language. Mutations of words coincide with mutations of chromosomes! Daaria or Arctida, called Hyperborea by the Greeks, is the ancestral home of all Aryan peoples and representatives of the racial type of white people in Europe and Asia.

Two branches of Aryan peoples are evident. Approximately 10 thousand years BC. one spread to the east, and the other moved from the territory of the Russian Plain to Europe. DNA genealogy shows that these two branches sprouted from one root from the depths of thousands of years, from ten to twenty thousand years BC, it is much older than the one about which today's scientists write, suggesting that the Aryans spread from the south. Indeed, there was an Aryan movement in the south, but it was much later. At first there was a migration of people from north to south and to the center of the continent, where future Europeans, that is, representatives of the white race, appeared. Even before moving south, these tribes lived together in the territories adjacent to the Southern Urals.

The fact that the predecessors of the Aryans lived on the territory of Russia in ancient times and there was a developed civilization is confirmed by one of the oldest cities discovered in the Urals in 1987, an observatory city that existed already at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC. uh... Named after the nearby village of Arkaim. Arkaim (XVIII-XVI centuries BC) is a contemporary of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom, Cretan-Mycenaean culture and Babylon. Calculations show that Arkaim is older than the Egyptian pyramids, its age is at least five thousand years, like Stonehenge.

Based on the type of burials in Arkaim, it can be argued that proto-Aryans lived in the city. Our ancestors, who lived on Russian soil, already 18 thousand years ago had the most accurate lunar-solar calendar, solar-stellar observatories of amazing accuracy, ancient temple cities; they gave humanity perfect tools and started animal husbandry.

Today, Aryans can be distinguished

  1. by language - Indo-Iranian, Dardic, Nuristan groups
  2. Y chromosome - carriers of some R1a subclades in Eurasia
  3. 3) anthropologically - the Proto-Indo-Iranians (Aryans) were carriers of the Cro-Magnoid ancient Eurasian type, which is not represented in the modern population.

The search for modern “Aryans” encounters a number of similar difficulties - it is impossible to reduce these 3 points to one meaning.

In Russia, there has been interest in the search for Hyperborea for a long time, starting with Catherine II and her envoys to the north. With the help of Lomonosov, she organized two expeditions. On May 4, 1764, the Empress signed a secret decree.

The Cheka and Dzerzhinsky personally also showed interest in the search for Hyperborea. Everyone was interested in the secret of the Absolute Weapon, similar in power to nuclear weapons. Expedition of the 20th century

under the leadership of Alexander Barchenko, she was looking for him. Even the Hitlerite expedition, consisting of members of the Ahnenerbe organization, visited the territories of the Russian North.

Doctor of Philosophy Valery Demin, defending the concept of the polar ancestral home of humanity, gives versatile arguments in favor of the theory according to which in the North in the distant past there was a highly developed Hyperborean civilization: the roots of Slavic culture go back to it.

The Slavs, like all modern peoples, arose as a result of complex ethnic processes and are a mixture of previous heterogeneous ethnic groups. The history of the Slavs is inextricably linked with the history of the emergence and settlement of Indo-European tribes. Four thousand years ago, the single Indo-European community began to disintegrate. The formation of the Slavic tribes occurred in the process of separating them from among the numerous tribes of the large Indo-European family. In Central and Eastern Europe, a linguistic group is separated, which, as genetic data has shown, included the ancestors of the Germans, Balts and Slavs. They occupied a vast territory: from the Vistula to the Dnieper, some tribes even reached the Volga, pushing out the Finno-Ugric peoples. In the 2nd millennium BC. The German-Balto-Slavic language group also experienced fragmentation processes: Germanic tribes go to the West, beyond the Elbe, and the Balts and Slavs remain in Eastern Europe.

From the middle of the 2nd millennium BC. over large areas from the Alps to the Dnieper, Slavic or speech understandable to the Slavs predominates. But other tribes continue to be in this territory, some of them leaving these territories, others appearing from non-contiguous areas. Several waves from the south, and then the Celtic invasion, encouraged the Slavs and related tribes to move north and northeast. Apparently, this was often accompanied by a certain decline in the level of culture and hampered development. Thus, the Baltoslavs and the isolated Slavic tribes found themselves excluded from the cultural and historical community, which was formed at that time on the basis of the synthesis of Mediterranean civilization and the cultures of alien barbarian tribes.

IN modern science The most widely recognized views were those according to which the Slavic ethnic community originally formed in an area either between the Oder (Odra) and the Vistula (Oder-Vistula theory), or between the Oder and the Middle Dnieper (Oder-Dnieper theory). The ethnogenesis of the Slavs developed in stages: Proto-Slavs, Proto-Slavs and the Early Slavic ethnolinguistic community, which subsequently split into several groups:

  • Romanesque - from it the French, Italians, Spaniards, Romanians, Moldovans will descend;
  • Germanic - Germans, English, Swedes, Danes, Norwegians; Iranian - Tajiks, Afghans, Ossetians;
  • Baltic - Latvians, Lithuanians;
  • Greek - Greeks;
  • Slavic - Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians.

The assumption about the existence of the ancestral home of the Slavs, Balts, Celts, and Germans is quite controversial. Craniological materials do not contradict the hypothesis that the ancestral home of the Proto-Slavs was located between the Vistula and Danube, Western Dvina and Dniester rivers. Nestor considered the Danube lowlands to be the ancestral home of the Slavs. Anthropology could provide a lot for the study of ethnogenesis. During the 1st millennium BC and 1st millennium AD, the Slavs burned their dead, so researchers do not have such material at their disposal. And genetic and other research is a matter of the future. Taken separately, various information about the Slavs in the ancient period - historical data, archaeological data, toponymic data, and linguistic contact data - cannot provide reliable grounds for determining the ancestral homeland of the Slavs.

Hypothetical ethnogenesis of proto-peoples around 1000 BC. e. (Proto-Slavs are highlighted in yellow)

Ethnogenetic processes were accompanied by migrations, differentiation and integration of peoples, assimilation phenomena in which various ethnic groups, both Slavic and non-Slavic, took part. Contact zones emerged and changed. Further settlement of the Slavs, especially intensive in the middle of the 1st millennium AD, occurred in three main directions: to the south (to the Balkan Peninsula), to the west (to the region of the Middle Danube and between the Oder and Elbe rivers) and to the northeast along the East European plain. Written sources did not help scientists determine the boundaries of the distribution of the Slavs. Archaeologists came to the rescue. But when studying possible archaeological cultures, it was impossible to single out exactly the Slavic one. Cultures overlapped each other, which indicated their parallel existence, constant movement, wars and cooperation, mixing.

The Indo-European linguistic community developed among a population whose individual groups were in direct communication with each other. Such communication was possible only in a relatively limited and compact area. There were quite large zones within which related languages ​​developed. In many areas there lived multilingual tribes, and this situation could also persist for centuries. Their languages ​​were getting closer, but the formation of a relatively common language could only take place under state conditions. Tribal migrations seemed to be a natural cause of the disintegration of the community. So the once closest “relatives” - the Germans - became Germans for the Slavs, literally “mute”, “speaking an incomprehensible language”. The migration wave threw out this or that people, crowding out, destroying, assimilating other peoples. As for the ancestors of modern Slavs and the ancestors of modern Baltic peoples (Lithuanians and Latvians), they formed a single nation for one and a half thousand years. During this period, the northeastern (mainly Baltic) components increased in the Slavic composition, which introduced changes in the anthropological appearance and in certain elements of culture.

Byzantine writer of the 6th century. Procopius of Caesarea described the Slavs as people of very tall stature and enormous strength, with white skin and hair. Entering the battle, they went to the enemies with shields and darts in their hands, but they never put on shells. The Slavs used wooden bows and small arrows dipped in a special poison. Having no leader over them and being at enmity with each other, they did not recognize the military system, were unable to fight in a proper battle and never showed themselves in open and level places. If it happened that they dared to go into battle, then they all slowly moved forward together, shouting, and if the enemy could not withstand their shout and onslaught, then they actively advanced; otherwise, they fled, not in a hurry to measure their strength with the enemy in hand-to-hand combat. Using the forests as cover, they rushed towards them, because only among the gorges they knew how to fight well. Often the Slavs abandoned the captured booty, allegedly under the influence of confusion, and fled into the forests, and then, when the enemies tried to take possession of it, they unexpectedly struck. Some of them wore neither shirts nor cloaks, but only pants, pulled up by a wide belt on the hips, and in this form they went to fight the enemy. They preferred to fight the enemy in places covered with dense forest, in gorges, on cliffs; They suddenly attacked day and night, taking advantage of ambushes and tricks, inventing many ingenious ways to surprise the enemy. They easily crossed rivers, bravely enduring their stay in the water.

The Slavs did not keep captives in slavery for an unlimited time, like other tribes, but after a certain time they offered them a choice: to return home for a ransom or to remain where they were, in the position of free people and friends.

The Indo-European language family is one of the largest. The language of the Slavs retained the archaic forms of the once common Indo-European language and began to take shape in the middle of the 1st millennium. By this time, a group of tribes had already formed. Slavic dialectal features proper, which sufficiently distinguished them from the Balts, formed the linguistic formation that is commonly called Proto-Slavic. The settlement of the Slavs in the vast expanses of Europe, their interaction and miscegenation (mixed ancestry) with other ethnic groups disrupted pan-Slavic processes and laid the foundations for the formation of individual Slavic languages ​​and ethnic groups. Slavic languages ​​fall into a number of dialects.

The word “Slavs” did not exist in those ancient times. There were people, but they had different names. One of the names, the Wends, comes from the Celtic vindos, which means “white.” This word is still preserved in the Estonian language. Ptolemy and Jordan believe that the Wends are the oldest collective name of all the Slavs who lived at that time between the Elbe and the Don. The earliest news of the Slavs under the name of the Wends dates back to the 1st - 3rd centuries AD and belongs to Roman and Greek writers - Pliny the Elder, Publius Cornelius Tacitus and Ptolemy Claudius. According to these authors, the Wends lived along the Baltic coast between the Gulf of Stetin. Odra, and the Gulf of Danzing, into which the Vistula flows; along the Vistula from its headwaters in the Carpathian Mountains to the coast of the Baltic Sea. Their neighbors were the Ingevon Germans, who may have given them such a name. They are also identified as a special ethnic community with the name “Vends.” Half a century later, Tacitus, noting the ethnic differences between the Germanic, Slavic and Sarmatian worlds, assigned the Wends a vast territory between the Baltic coast and the Carpathian region.

The Wends inhabited Europe already in the 3rd millennium BC.

Veneda withVcenturies occupied part of the territory of modern Germany between the Elbe and Oder. INVIIcentury, the Wends invaded Thuringia and Bavaria, where they defeated the Franks. The raids on Germany continued untilXcentury, when Emperor Henry I began an offensive against the Wends, setting their acceptance of Christianity as one of the conditions for concluding peace. The conquered Vendas often rebelled, but each time they were defeated, after which more and more of their lands passed to the winners. The campaign against the Wends in 1147 was accompanied by the mass destruction of the Slavic population, and henceforth the Wends did not offer any stubborn resistance to the German conquerors. German settlers came to the once Slavic lands, and new cities were founded and began to play important role in the economic development of northern Germany. From about 1500, the area of ​​distribution of the Slavic language was reduced almost exclusively to the Lusatian margraviates - Upper and Lower, which later became part of Saxony and Prussia, respectively, and adjacent territories. Here, in the area of ​​the cities of Cottbus and Bautzen, live the modern descendants of the Wends, of whom there are approx. 60,000 (mostly Catholic). In Russian literature, they are usually called Lusatians (the name of one of the tribes that were part of the Vendian group) or Lusatian Serbs, although they themselves call themselves Serbja or Serbski Lud, and their modern German name is Sorben (formerly also Wenden). Since 1991, the Foundation for Lusatian Affairs has been in charge of preserving the language and culture of this people in Germany.

In the 4th century, the ancient Slavs finally became isolated and appeared on the historical arena as a separate ethnic group. And under two names. This is “Slovene” and the second name is “Anty”. In the VI century. The historian Jordan, who wrote in Latin in his work “On the Origin and Deeds of the Getae,” provides reliable information about the Slavs: “Starting from the birthplace of the Vistula River, a large tribe of Veneti settled across vast spaces. Although their names now change according to different clans and localities, nevertheless, they are mainly called Sclavenians and Antes. The Sklavens live from the city of Novietuna and the lake called Mursian to Danaster, and to the north - to Viskla; instead of cities, they have swamps and forests - the strongest of both (tribes) - spread from. Danaster to Danapra, where the Pontic Sea forms a bend.” These groups spoke the same language. At the beginning of the 7th century, the name “Antes” ceased to be used, apparently because during the migration movements a certain tribal union, which was called, fell apart. with this name. In ancient (Roman and Byzantine) literary monuments the name of the Slavs looks like “Sklavins”, in Arabic sources as “Sakaliba”, sometimes the self-name of one of the Scythian groups “Skoloty” is similar to the Slavs.

The Slavs finally emerged as an independent people no earlier than the 4th century AD. when the “Great Migration of Peoples” “teared apart” the Balto-Slavic community. Under their name “Slavs” appeared in chronicles in the 6th century. From the 6th century information about the Slavs appears in many sources, which undoubtedly testifies to their significant strength by this time, to the entry of the Slavs into the historical arena in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe, to their clashes and alliances with the Byzantines, Germans and other peoples inhabiting at that time Eastern and Central Europe. By this time they occupied vast territories, their language retained archaic forms of the once common Indo-European language. Linguistic science has determined the boundaries of the origin of the Slavs from the 18th century BC. until the 6th century AD The first news about the Slavic tribal world appears on the eve of the Great Migration of Peoples.

The attribution of certain groups of languages ​​to this community is controversial. The German scientist G. Krahe came to the conclusion that while the Anatolian, Indo-Iranian, Armenian and Greek languages ​​had already separated and developed as independent ones, the Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Illyrian, Slavic and Baltic languages ​​existed only as dialects of a single Indo-European language. The ancient Europeans, who lived in central Europe north of the Alps, developed a common terminology in the field of agriculture, social relations and religion. The famous Russian linguist, academician O. N. Trubachev, based on an analysis of the Slavic vocabulary of pottery, blacksmithing and other crafts, came to the conclusion that the speakers of early Slavic dialects (or their ancestors) at the time when the corresponding terminology was being formed were in close contact with the future Germans and Italics, that is, Indo-Europeans of Central Europe. Approximately, the separation of the Germanic languages ​​from the Baltic and Proto-Slavic occurred no later than the 7th century. BC e. (according to the estimates of a number of linguists - much earlier), but in linguistics itself there are practically no precise methods of chronological reference to historical processes.

Early Slavic vocabulary and habitats of the Proto-Slavs

Attempts were made to establish the Slavic ancestral home by analyzing early Slavic vocabulary. According to F.P. Filin, the Slavs as a people developed in a forest belt with an abundance of lakes and swamps, far from the sea, mountains and steppes:

“The abundance in the lexicon of the common Slavic language of names for varieties of lakes, swamps, and forests speaks for itself. The presence in the Common Slavic language of various names for animals and birds living in forests and swamps, trees and plants of the temperate forest-steppe zone, fish typical of the reservoirs of this zone, and at the same time the absence of Common Slavic names for the specific features of the mountains, steppes and sea - all this gives unambiguous materials for a definite conclusion about the ancestral home of the Slavs... The ancestral home of the Slavs, at least in the last centuries of their history as a single historical unit, was located away from the seas, mountains and steppes, in a forest belt of the temperate zone, rich in lakes and swamps...”

The Polish botanist Yu. Rostafinsky tried to localize the ancestral home of the Slavs more accurately in 1908: “ The Slavs transferred the common Indo-European name yew to willow and willow and did not know larch, fir and beech.» Beech- borrowing from the Germanic language. In the modern era, the eastern border of the distribution of beech falls approximately on the Kaliningrad-Odessa line, however, the study of pollen in archaeological finds indicates a wider range of beech in ancient times. In the Bronze Age (corresponding to the middle Holocene in botany), beech grew throughout almost the entire territory of Eastern Europe (except for the north), in the Iron Age (late Holocene), when, according to most historians, the Slavic ethnic group was formed, remains of beech were found in most of Russia, the Black Sea region, Caucasus, Crimea, Carpathians. Thus, the probable place of ethnogenesis of the Slavs may be Belarus and the northern and central parts of Ukraine. In the north-west of Russia ( Novgorod lands) beech was found back in the Middle Ages. Beech forests are currently widespread in Western and Northern Europe, the Balkans, the Carpathians, and Poland. In Russia, beech is found in the Kaliningrad region and the northern Caucasus. Fir does not grow in its natural habitat in the territory from the Carpathians and the eastern border of Poland to the Volga, which also makes it possible to localize the homeland of the Slavs somewhere in Ukraine and Belarus, if the assumptions of linguists about the botanical vocabulary of the ancient Slavs are correct.

All Slavic languages ​​(and Baltic) have the word Linden to designate the same tree, which suggests that the distribution area of ​​the linden tree overlaps with the homeland of the Slavic tribes, but due to the extensive range of this plant, the localization is blurred over most of Europe.

Baltic and Old Slavic languages

Map of Baltic and Slavic archaeological cultures of the 3rd-4th centuries.

It should be noted that the regions of Belarus and northern Ukraine belong to the zone of widespread Baltic toponymy. A special study by Russian philologists, academicians V.N. Toporov and O.N. Trubachev showed that in the Upper Dnieper region Baltic hydronyms are often formalized with Slavic suffixes. This means that the Slavs appeared there later than the Balts. This contradiction is removed if we accept the point of view of some linguists regarding the separation of the Slavic language from the common Baltic language.

From the point of view of linguists, in terms of grammatical structure and other indicators, the Old Slavic language was closest to the Baltic languages. In particular, many words not found in other Indo-European languages ​​are common, including: roka(hand), golva(head), lipa(Linden), gvězda(star), balt(swamp), etc. (close ones are up to 1,600 words). The name itself Baltic are derived from the Indo-European root *balt- (standing waters), which has a correspondence in Russian swamp. The wider spread of the later language (Slavic in relation to Baltic) is considered by linguists to be a natural process. V.N. Toporov believed that the Baltic languages ​​are closest to the original Indo-European language, while all other Indo-European languages ​​moved away from their original state in the process of development. In his opinion, the Proto-Slavic language was a Proto-Baltic southern peripheral dialect, which turned into Proto-Slavic around the 5th century. BC e. and then developed independently into the Old Slavic language.

Archaeological data

The study of the ethnogenesis of the Slavs with the help of archeology comes across next problem: modern science is unable to trace back to the beginning of our era the change and continuity of archaeological cultures, the bearers of which could confidently be attributed to the Slavs or their ancestors. Some archaeologists accept some archaeological cultures at the turn of our era as Slavic, a priori recognizing the autochthony of the Slavs in a given territory, even if it was inhabited in the corresponding era by other peoples according to synchronous historical evidence.

Slavic archaeological cultures of the V-VI centuries.

Map of Baltic and Slavic archaeological cultures of the 5th-6th centuries.

The appearance of archaeological cultures, recognized by most archaeologists as Slavic, dates back only to the 6th century, corresponding to the following similar cultures, separated geographically:

  • Prague-Korczak archaeological culture: the range stretches in a strip from the upper Elbe to the middle Dnieper, touching the Danube in the south and capturing the upper reaches of the Vistula. The area of ​​the early culture of the 5th century is limited to the southern basin of the Pripyat and the upper reaches of the Dniester, Southern Bug and Prut (Western Ukraine).

Corresponds to the habitats of the Sklavins of Byzantine authors. Characteristic signs: 1) dishes - hand-made pots without decorations, sometimes clay pans; 2) dwellings - square half-dugouts with an area of ​​up to 20 m² with stoves or hearths in the corner, or log houses with a stove in the center 3) burials - corpse burning, burial of cremation remains in pits or urns, the transition in the 6th century from ground burial grounds to the mound burial rite; 4) lack of grave goods, only random things are found; brooches and weapons are missing.

  • Penkovsky archaeological culture: range from the middle Dniester to the Seversky Donets (western tributary of the Don), capturing the right bank and left bank of the middle part of the Dnieper (territory of Ukraine).

Corresponds to the probable habitats of the antes of Byzantine authors. It is distinguished by the so-called Ant treasures, in which bronze cast figurines of people and animals are found, colored with enamels in special recesses. The figurines are Alan in style, although the technique of champlevé enamel probably came from the Baltic states (earliest finds) through the provincial Roman art of the European West. According to another version, this technique developed locally within the framework of the previous Kievan culture. The Penkovskaya culture differs from the Prague-Korchak culture, in addition to the characteristic shape of the pots, in the relative wealth of material culture and the noticeable influence of the nomads of the Black Sea region. Archaeologists M.I. Artamonov and I.P. Rusanova recognized the Bulgar farmers as the main carriers of culture, at least at its initial stage.

  • Kolochin archaeological culture: habitat in the Desna basin and the upper reaches of the Dnieper (Gomel region of Belarus and Bryansk region of Russia). It adjoins the Prague and Penkovo ​​cultures in the south. Mixing zone of Baltic and Slavic tribes. Despite its proximity to the Penkovo ​​culture, V.V. Sedov classified it as Baltic based on the saturation of the area with Baltic hydronyms, but other archaeologists do not recognize this sign ethno-determining for archaeological culture.

In the II-III centuries. Slavic tribes of the Przeworsk culture from the Vistula-Oder region migrate to the forest-steppe areas between the Dniester and Dnieper rivers, inhabited by Sarmatian and Late Scythian tribes belonging to the Iranian language group. At the same time, the Germanic tribes of the Gepids and Goths moved to the southeast, as a result of which a multi-ethnic Chernyakhov culture with a predominance of Slavs emerged from the lower Danube to the Dnieper forest-steppe left bank. In the process of Slavicization of the local Scythian-Sarmatians in the Dnieper region, a new ethnic group was formed, known in Byzantine sources as the Antes.

Within the Slavic anthropological type, subtypes are classified that are associated with the participation of tribes of various origins in the ethnogenesis of the Slavs. The most general classification indicates the participation in the formation of the Slavic ethnos of two branches of the Caucasian race: southern (relatively broad-faced mesocranial type, descendants: Czechs, Slovaks, Ukrainians) and northern (relatively broad-faced dolichocrane type, descendants: Belarusians and Russians). In the north, participation in the ethnogenesis of Finnish tribes was recorded (mainly through the assimilation of Finno-Ugrians during the expansion of the Slavs to the east), which gave some Mongoloid admixture to East Slavic individuals; in the south there was a Scythian substrate, noted in the craniometric data of the Polyan tribe. However, it was not the Polyans, but the Drevlyans who determined the anthropological type of future Ukrainians.

Genetic history

The genetic history of an individual and entire ethnic groups is reflected in the diversity of the male sex Y chromosome, namely its non-recombining part. Y-chromosome groups (outdated designation: HG - from the English haplogroup) carry information about a common ancestor, but as a result of mutations they are modified, due to which the stages of development can be traced by haplogroups, or, in other words, by the accumulation of a particular mutation in a chromosome humanity. A person’s genotype, like his anthropological structure, does not coincide with his ethnic identification, but rather reflects the migration processes of large groups of the population during the Late Paleolithic era, which makes it possible to make probable assumptions about the ethnogenesis of peoples in their own right. early stage education.

Written evidence

Slavic tribes first appear in Byzantine written sources of the 6th century under the name Sklavini and Antes. Retrospectively, in these sources the Antes are mentioned when describing the events of the 4th century. Presumably the Slavs (or ancestors of the Slavs) include the Wends, who, without defining their ethnic characteristics, were reported by the authors of the late Roman period (-II centuries). Earlier tribes noted by contemporaries in the supposed area of ​​formation of the Slavic ethnos (middle and upper Dnieper region, southern Belarus) could have contributed to the ethnogenesis of the Slavs, but the extent of this contribution remains unknown due to the lack of information on both the ethnicity of the tribes mentioned in the sources, and along the exact boundaries of the habitat of these tribes and the Proto-Slavs themselves.

Archaeologists find a geographical and temporal correspondence to the neurons in the Milograd archaeological culture of the 7th-3rd centuries. BC e., whose range extends to Volyn and the Pripyat River basin (northwestern Ukraine and southern Belarus). On the issue of the ethnicity of the Milogradians (Herodotus's Neuros), the opinions of scientists were divided: V.V. Sedov classified them as Balts, B.A. Rybakov saw them as Proto-Slavs. There are also versions about the participation of Scythian farmers in the ethnogenesis of the Slavs, based on the assumption that their name is not ethnic (belonging to Iranian-speaking tribes), but generalizing (belonging to barbarians).

While the expeditions of the Roman legions revealed Germany from the Rhine to the Elbe and the barbarian lands from the middle Danube to the Carpathians to the civilized world, Strabo, in describing Eastern Europe north of the Black Sea region, uses legends collected by Herodotus. Strabo, who critically interpreted the available information, directly stated that there was a white spot on the map of Europe east of the Elbe, between the Baltic and the Western Carpathians mountain range. However, he reported important ethnographic information related to the appearance of bastarns in the western regions of Ukraine.

Whoever ethnically the bearers of the Zarubintsy culture were, their influence can be traced in the early monuments of the Kyiv culture (at first classified as late Zarubintsy), early Slavic according to most archaeologists. According to the assumption of archaeologist M. B. Shchukin, it was the Bastarns, assimilating with the local population, who could play a noticeable role in the ethnogenesis of the Slavs, allowing the latter to stand out from the so-called Balto-Slavic community:

“Part of [the Bastarns] probably remained in place and, along with representatives of other “post-Zarubinets” groups, could then take part in the complex process of Slavic ethnogenesis, introducing into the formation of the “common Slavic” language certain “centum” elements, which separate the Slavs from their Baltic or Balto-Slavic ancestors."

“Whether the Pevkins, Wends and Fennes should be classified as Germans or Sarmatians, I really don’t know […] The Wends adopted many of their customs, for for the sake of robbery they scour the forests and mountains that exist between the Pevkins [Bastarns] and the Fennes. However, they can rather be classified as Germans, because they build houses for themselves, carry shields and move on foot, and with great speed; all this separates them from the Sarmatians, who spend their entire lives in a cart and on horseback.”

Some historians make hypothetical assumptions that perhaps Ptolemy mentioned among the tribes of Sarmatia and the Slavs under distorted stavan(south of the ships) and sulons(on the right bank of the middle Vistula). The assumption is justified by the consonance of words and intersecting habitats.

Slavs and Huns. 5th century

L. A. Gindin and F. V. Shelov-Kovedyaev consider the Slavic etymology of the word to be the most justified strava, pointing to its meaning in Czech "pagan funeral feast" and Polish "funeral feast, funeral", while allowing the possibility of Gothic and Hunnic etymology. German historians are trying to derive the word strava from Gothic sûtrava, meaning a pile of wood and possibly a funeral pyre.

Making boats using the hollowing method is not a method unique to the Slavs. Term monoxyl found in Plato, Aristotle, Xenophon, Strabo. Strabo points to gouging as a method of making boats in ancient times.

Slavic tribes of the 6th century

Noting the close kinship of the Sklavins and Antes, Byzantine authors did not provide any signs of their ethnic division, except for different habitats:

“Both of these barbarian tribes have the same life and laws [...] They both have the same language, which is quite barbaric. And in appearance they do not differ from each other […] And once upon a time even the name of the Sklavens and Ants was the same. In ancient times, both these tribes were called spores [Greek. scattered], I think because they lived, occupying the country “sporadic,” “scattered,” in separate villages.”
“Starting from the birthplace of the Vistula [Vistula] river, a populous Veneti tribe settled across vast spaces. Although their names now change according to different clans and localities, they are still predominantly called Sclaveni and Antes.”

The Strategikon, whose authorship is attributed to Emperor Mauritius (582-602), contains information about the habitats of the Slavs, consistent with the ideas of archaeologists on early Slavic archaeological cultures:

“They settle in forests or near rivers, swamps and lakes - generally in places that are difficult to access […] Their rivers flow into the Danube […] The possessions of the Slavs and Antes are located along the rivers and touch each other, so that there is no sharp border between them. Due to the fact that they are covered with forests, or swamps, or places overgrown with reeds, it often happens that those who undertake expeditions against them are immediately forced to stop at the border of their possessions, because the entire space in front of them is impassable and covered with dense forests.”

The war between the Goths and the Antes took place somewhere in the Northern Black Sea region at the end of the 4th century, if we relate to the death of Germanarich in 376. The question of the Ants in the Black Sea region is complicated by the point of view of some historians, who saw in these Ants the Caucasian Alans or the ancestors of the Circassians. However, Procopius expands the habitat of the antes to places north of Sea of ​​Azov, although without precise geographical reference:

“The peoples who live here [Northern Azov Sea] in ancient times were called Cimmerians, but now they are called Utigurs. Further, to the north of them, countless tribes of Ants occupy the lands.”

Procopius reported the first known Ant raid on Byzantine Thrace in 527 (the first year of the reign of Emperor Justinian I).

In the ancient German epic “Widside” (the content of which dates back to the 5th century), the list of tribes of northern Europe mentions the Winedum, but there are no other names of Slavic peoples. The Germans knew the Slavs under the ethnonym Venda, although it cannot be ruled out that the name of one of the Baltic tribes bordering the Germans was transferred by them to the Slavic ethnic group during the era of the Great Migration (as happened in Byzantium with the Rus and the ethnonym Scythians).

Written sources about the origin of the Slavs

The civilized world learned about the Slavs, who had previously been cut off by the warlike nomads of Eastern Europe when they reached the borders of the Byzantine Empire. The Byzantines, who consistently fought off waves of barbarian invasions, may not have immediately identified the Slavs as a separate ethnic group and did not report legends about its occurrence. The historian of the 1st half of the 7th century Theophylact Simocatta called the Slavs getae (“ that's what these barbarians were called in the old days"), apparently mixing the Thracian tribe of the Getae with the Slavs who occupied their lands on the lower Danube.

The Old Russian chronicle of the early 12th century “The Tale of Bygone Years” finds the homeland of the Slavs on the Danube, where they were first recorded by Byzantine written sources:

“A long time later [after the biblical Pandemonium of Babylon], the Slavs settled along the Danube, where now the land is Hungarian and Bulgarian. From those Slavs the Slavs spread throughout the land and were called by their names from the places where they sat. So some, having come, sat down on the river in the name of Morava and were called Moravians, while others called themselves Czechs. And here are the same Slavs: white Croats, and Serbs, and Horutans. When the Volochs attacked the Danube Slavs, and settled among them, and oppressed them, these Slavs came and sat on the Vistula and were called Poles, and from those Poles came the Poles, other Poles - Luticians, others - Mazovshans, others - Pomeranians. Likewise, these Slavs came and sat along the Dnieper and were called Polyans, and others - Drevlyans, because they sat in the forests, and others sat between Pripyat and Dvina and were called Dregovichs, others sat along the Dvina and were called Polochans, after the river flowing into the Dvina , called Polota, from which the Polotsk people took their name. The same Slavs who settled near Lake Ilmen were called by their own name - Slavs."

Independently, the Polish chronicle “Greater Poland Chronicle” follows this pattern, reporting on Pannonia (the Roman province adjacent to the middle Danube) as the homeland of the Slavs. Before the development of archeology and linguistics, historians agreed with the Danube lands as the place of origin of the Slavic ethnic group, but now they recognize the legendary nature of this version.

Review and synthesis of data

In the past (Soviet era), two main versions of the ethnogenesis of the Slavs were widespread: 1) the so-called Polish, which places the ancestral home of the Slavs in the area between the Vistula and Oder rivers; 2) autochthonous, influenced by the theoretical views of the Soviet academician Marr. Both reconstructions a priori recognized the Slavic nature of the early archaeological cultures in the territories inhabited by the Slavs in the early Middle Ages, and some original antiquity of the Slavic language, which independently developed from Proto-Indo-European. The accumulation of data in archeology and the departure from patriotic motivation in research led to the development of new versions based on the identification of a relatively localized core of the formation of the Slavic ethnic group and its spread through migrations to neighboring lands. Academic science has not developed a single point of view on exactly where and when the ethnogenesis of the Slavs took place.

Genetic research also confirms the ancestral home of the Slavs in Ukraine.

How the expansion of the early Slavs from the region of ethnogenesis occurred, the directions of migration and settlement in central Europe can be traced through the chronological development of archaeological cultures. Usually the beginning of expansion is associated with the advance of the Huns to the west and the resettlement of Germanic peoples towards the south, associated, among other things, with climate change in the 5th century and the conditions of agricultural activity. By the beginning of the 6th century, the Slavs reached the Danube, where their further history is described in written sources of the 6th century.

The contribution of other tribes to the ethnogenesis of the Slavs

The Scythian-Sarmatians had some influence on the formation of the Slavs due to their long geographical proximity, but their influence, according to archaeology, anthropology, genetics and linguistics, was mainly limited to vocabulary borrowings and the use of horses in the household. According to genetic data, common distant ancestors of some nomadic peoples, collectively called Sarmatians, and Slavs within the Indo-European community, but in historical time these peoples evolved independently of each other.

The contribution of the Germans to the ethnogenesis of the Slavs, according to anthropology, archeology and genetics, is insignificant. At the turn of the era, the region of ethnogenesis of the Slavs (Sarmatia) was separated from the places of residence of the Germans by a certain zone of “mutual fear”, according to Tacitus. The existence of an uninhabited area between the Germans and the Proto-Slavs of Eastern Europe is confirmed by the absence of noticeable archaeological sites from the Western Bug to the Neman in the first centuries AD. e. The presence of similar words in both languages ​​is explained by a common origin from the Indo-European community of the Bronze Age and close contacts in the 4th century after the start of the migration of the Goths from the Vistula to the south and east.

Notes

  1. From the report of V.V. Sedov “Ethnogenesis of the early Slavs” (2002)
  2. Trubachev O. N. Craft terminology in Slavic languages. M., 1966.
  3. F. P. Filin (1962). From the report of M. B. Shchukin “The Birth of the Slavs”

Origin of the Slavs

Until the end of the 18th century, science could not give a satisfactory answer to the question of the origin of the Slavs, although it already attracted the attention of scientists. This is evidenced by the first attempts dating back to that time to give an outline of the history of the Slavs, in which this question was raised. All statements connecting the Slavs with such ancient peoples as the Sarmatians, Getae, Alans, Illyrians, Thracians, Vandals, etc., statements appearing in various chronicles from the beginning of the 16th century, are based only on an arbitrary, tendentious interpretation of the Holy Scriptures and church literature or on the simple continuity of peoples who once inhabited the same territory as the modern Slavs, or, finally, on the purely external similarity of some ethnic names.

This was the situation until the beginning of the 19th century. Only a few historians were able to rise above the level of science of that time, in which the solution to the question of the origin of the Slavs could not be scientifically substantiated and had no prospects. The situation changed for the better only in the first half of the 19th century under the influence of two new scientific disciplines: comparative linguistics and anthropology; both of them introduced new positive facts.

History itself is silent. There is not a single historical fact, not a single reliable tradition, not even a mythological genealogy that would help us answer the question of the origin of the Slavs. The Slavs appear unexpectedly on the historical arena as a great and already formed people; we don't even know where he came from or what his relations were with other peoples. Only one piece of evidence brings apparent clarity to the question that interests us: this is a well-known passage from the chronicle attributed to Nestor and preserved to this day in the form in which it was written in Kyiv in the 12th century; this passage can be considered a kind of “birth certificate” of the Slavs.

The first part of the chronicle “The Tale of Bygone Years” began to be created at least a century earlier. At the beginning of the chronicle there is a fairly detailed legendary story about the settlement of peoples who once tried to build tower of babel in the land of Shinar. This information is borrowed from Byzantine chronicles of the 6th–9th centuries (the so-called “Easter” chronicle and the chronicle of Malala and Amartol); however, in the corresponding places of the named chronicles there is not a single mention of the Slavs. This gap obviously offended the Slavic chronicler, the venerable monk of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra. He wanted to make up for it by placing his people among those peoples who, according to tradition, lived in Europe; therefore, by way of clarification, he attached the name “Slavs” to the name of the Illyrians - Illyro-Slavs. With this addition, he included the Slavs in history, without even changing the traditional number of 72 peoples. It was here that the Illyrians were first called a people related to the Slavs, and from this time on this point of view was dominant in the study of the history of the Slavs for a long time. The Slavs came from Shinar to Europe and settled first on the Balkan Peninsula. There we must look for their cradle, their European ancestral home, in the lands of the Illyrians, Thracians, in Pannonia, on the banks of the Danube. From here individual Slavic tribes later emerged, when their original unity disintegrated, to occupy their historical lands between the Danube, the Baltic Sea and the Dnieper.

This theory was first accepted by all Slavic historiography, and in particular by the old Polish school (Kadlubek, Bohuchwal, Mierzwa, Chronica Polonorum, Chronica principum Poloniae, Dlugosh, etc.) and Czech (Dalimil, Jan Marignola, Przybik Pulkawa, Hajek of Libočan , B. Paprocki); Later it acquired new speculations.

Then a new theory appeared. We don't know where exactly it originated. It should be assumed that it arose outside the mentioned schools, because for the first time we encounter this theory in the Bavarian chronicle of the 13th century and later among German and Italian scientists (Flav. Blondus, A. Coccius Sabellicus, F. Irenicus, B. Rhenanus, A. Krantz etc.). From them this theory was adopted by the Slavic historians B. Vapovsky, M. Kromer, S. Dubravius, T. Peshina from Chekhorod, J. Bekovsky, J. Matthias from the Sudetenland and many others. According to the second theory, the Slavs allegedly moved north along the Black Sea coast and initially settled in Southern Russia, where history first knew the ancient Scythians and Sarmatians, and later the Alans, Roxolans, etc. This is where the idea of ​​the kinship of these tribes with the Slavs arose , as well as the idea of ​​the Balkan Sarmatians as the ancestors of all Slavs. Moving further west, the Slavs allegedly split into two main branches: the South Slavs (south of the Carpathians) and the Northern Slavs (north of the Carpathians).

So, together with the theory of the initial division of the Slavs into two branches, the Balkan and Sarmatian theories appeared; both of them had their enthusiastic followers, both of them lasted until the present day. Even now, books often appear in which ancient history Slavs is based on their identification with the Sarmatians or with the Thracians, Dacians and Illyrians. Nevertheless, already at the end of the 18th century, some scientists realized that such theories, based only on the alleged analogy of various peoples with the Slavs, have no value. The Czech Slavist J. Dobrovsky wrote to his friend Kopitar in 1810: “Such research pleases me. Only I come to a completely different conclusion. All this proves to me that the Slavs are not Dacians, Getae, Thracians, Illyrians, Pannonians... The Slavs are Slavs, and the Lithuanians are closest to them. So, they need to be looked for among the latter on the Dnieper or beyond the Dnieper.”

Some historians held the same views even before Dobrovsky. After him, Safarik in his “Slavic Antiquities” refuted the views of all previous researchers. If in his early writings he was greatly influenced by the old theories, then in Antiquities, published in 1837, he rejected, with some exceptions, these hypotheses as erroneous. Safarik based his book on a thorough analysis of historical facts. Therefore, his work will forever remain the main and indispensable guide on this issue, despite the fact that the problem of the origin of the Slavs is not resolved in it - such a task exceeded the capabilities of the most rigorous historical analysis that time.

Other scientists turned to the new science of comparative linguistics in order to find an answer that history could not give them. The mutual kinship of Slavic languages ​​was assumed at the beginning of the 12th century (see the Kievan Chronicle), but for a long time the true degree of kinship of the Slavic languages ​​with other European languages ​​was unknown. The first attempts made in the 17th and 18th centuries to find out (G. W. Leibniz, P. Ch. Levesque, Fr?ret, Court de Gebelin, J. Dankowsky, K. G. Anton, J. Chr. Adelung, Iv. Levanda, B. Siestrzencewicz etc.) had the disadvantage that they were either too indecisive or simply unreasonable. When W. Jones in 1786 established the common origin of Sanskrit, Gaulish, Greek, Latin, German and Old Persian, he had not yet determined the place of the Slavic language in the family of these languages.

Only F. Bopp, in the second volume of his famous “Comparative Grammar” (“Vergleichende Grammatik”, 1833), resolved the question of the relationship of the Slavic language with the rest of the Indo-European languages ​​and thereby gave the first scientifically substantiated answer to the question of the origin of the Slavs, which historians unsuccessfully tried to resolve . The solution to the question of the origin of a language is at the same time an answer to the question of the origin of the people speaking this language.

Since that time, many disputes have arisen about the Indo-Europeans and the essence of their language. Various views have been expressed which are now rightly rejected and have lost all value. It has only been proven that none of the known languages ​​is the ancestor of other languages ​​and that there has never been an Indo-European people of a single unmixed race that would have a single language and a single culture. Along with this, the following provisions have been adopted that form the basis of our current views:

1. Once upon a time there was a common Indo-European language, which, however, was never completely unified.

2. The development of dialects of this language led to the emergence of a number of languages ​​that we call Indo-European or Aryan. These include, not counting the languages ​​that have disappeared without a trace, Greek, Latin, Gaulish, German, Albanian, Armenian, Lithuanian, Persian, Sanskrit and Common Slavic or Proto-Slavic, which over quite a long time developed into modern Slavic languages. The beginning of the existence of the Slavic peoples dates back to the time when this common language emerged.

The process of development of this language is still unclear. Science has not yet advanced enough to adequately address this issue. It has only been established that a number of factors contributed to the formation of new languages ​​and peoples: the spontaneous force of differentiation, local differences that arose as a result of the isolation of individual groups, and, finally, the assimilation of foreign elements. But to what extent did each of these factors contribute to the emergence of a common Slavic language? This question is almost unresolved, and therefore the history of the common Slavic language is still unclear.

The development of the Aryan proto-language could occur in two ways: either through a sudden and complete separation of different dialects and the peoples speaking them from the mother trunk, or through decentralization associated with the formation of new dialect centers, which were isolated gradually, without completely breaking away from the original core, that is, not having lost contact with other dialects and peoples. Both of these hypotheses had their adherents. The pedigree proposed by A. Schleicher, as well as the pedigree compiled by A. Fick, are well known; The theory of “waves” (?bergangs-Wellen-Theorie) of Johann Schmidt is also known. In accordance with various concepts, the view on the origin of the Proto-Slavs also changed, as can be seen from the two diagrams presented below.

Pedigree of A. Schleicher, compiled in 1865

Pedigree of A. Fick

When the differences in the Indo-European language began to increase and when this large linguistic community began to split into two groups - the Satem and Centum languages ​​- the Proto-Slavic language, combined with the Proto-Lithic language, was included in the first group for quite a long time, so that it retained special similarities with the ancient Thracian (Armenian) and Indo-Iranian languages. The connection with the Thracians was closest in the outlying areas where the historical Dacians later lived. The ancestors of the Germans were in the Centum group of peoples among the closest neighbors of the Slavs. We can judge this from some analogies in the Slavic and German languages.

At the beginning of the second millennium BC. e. all Indo-European languages, in all likelihood, have already formed and divided, since during this millennium some Aryan peoples appear as already established ethnic units in Europe and Asia. The future Lithuanians were then still united with the Proto-Slavs. The Slavic-Lithuanian people to this day represent (with the exception of the Indo-Iranian languages) the only example of the primitive community of two Aryan peoples; its neighbors have always been the Germans and Celts on one side, and the Thracians and Iranians on the other.

After the separation of the Lithuanians from the Slavs, which most likely occurred in the second or first millennium BC. e., the Slavs formed a single people with a common language and only faint dialect differences, and remained in this state until the beginning of our era. During the first millennium AD, their unity began to disintegrate, new languages ​​developed (though still very close to each other) and new Slavic peoples arose. This is the information that linguistics gives us, this is its answer to the question of the origin of the Slavs.

Along with comparative linguistics, another science appeared - anthropology, which also brought new additional facts. The Swedish researcher A. Retzius in 1842 began to determine the place of the Slavs among other peoples from a somatological point of view, based on the shape of their heads, and created a system based on the study of the relative length of the skull and the size of the facial angle. He united the ancient Germans, Celts, Romans, Greeks, Hindus, Persians, Arabs and Jews into the group of “dolichocephalic (long-headed) orthognaths”, and the Ugrians, European Turks, Albanians, Basques, ancient Etruscans, Latvians and Slavs into the group of “brachycephalic (short-headed) ) orthognathates". Both groups were of different origins, so the race to which the Slavs belonged was completely alien to the race to which the Germans and Celts belonged. Obviously, one of them had to be “Aryanized” by the other and take on the Indo-European language from it. A. Retzius did not particularly try to define the relationship between language and race. This question arose later in the first French and German anthropological schools. German scientists, relying on new studies of German burials of the Merovingian era (V-VIII centuries) with the so-called “Reihengr?ber”, created, in accordance with the Retzius system, a theory of an ancient pure Germanic race with a relatively long head (dolichocephals or mesocephals) and with some characteristic external features: fairly tall, pink complexion, blond hair, light eyes. This race was contrasted by another, smaller, with a shorter head (brachycephals), darker skin color, brown hair and dark eyes; the main representatives of this race were supposed to be the Slavs and the ancient inhabitants of France - the Celts, or Gauls.

In France, the school of the outstanding anthropologist P. Broca (E. Hamy, Ab. Hovelacque, P. Topinard, R. Collignon, etc.) adopted approximately the same point of view; Thus, in anthropological science, a theory appeared about two original races that once populated Europe and from which a family of peoples speaking the Indo-European language was formed. It remained to be seen - and this caused a lot of controversy - which of the two original races was Aryan and which was “Aryanized” by the other race.

The Germans almost always considered the first race, long-headed and blond, to be a race of ancestral Aryans, and this view was shared by leading English anthropologists (Thurnam, Huxley, Sayce, Rendall). In France, on the contrary, opinions were divided. Some adhered to the German theory (Lapouge), while others (the majority of them) considered a second race, dark and brachycephalic, often called Celtic-Slavic, the original race that transmitted the Indo-European language to the northern European fair-haired foreigners. Since its main features, brachycephaly and dark coloring of hair and eyes, brought this race closer to the Central Asian peoples with similar characteristics, it was even suggested that it was related to the Finns, Mongols and Turanians. The place intended, according to this theory, for the Proto-Slavs is easy to determine: the Proto-Slavs came from Central Asia, they had a relatively short head, dark eyes and hair. Brachycephals with dark eyes and hair inhabited Central Europe, mainly its mountainous regions, and mixed partly with their northern long-headed and blond neighbors, partly with more ancient peoples, namely with the dark dolichocephals of the Mediterranean. According to one version, the Proto-Slavs, having mixed with the first, passed on their speech to them; according to another version, on the contrary, they themselves adopted their speech.

However, supporters of this theory of the Turanian origin of the Slavs based their conclusions on an erroneous or, at least, insufficiently substantiated hypothesis. They relied on the results obtained from the study of two groups of sources, very distant from each other in time: the original Germanic type was determined from early sources - documents and burials of the 5th–8th centuries, while the Proto-Slavic type was established from relatively later sources, since the early the sources were still little known at that time. Thus, incomparable values ​​were compared - the current state of one nation with the former state of another nation. Therefore, as soon as ancient Slavic burials were discovered and new craniological data came to light, supporters of this theory immediately encountered numerous difficulties, while at the same time, an in-depth study of ethnographic material also yielded a number of new facts. It was found that skulls from Slavic burials of the 9th–12th centuries are mostly of the same elongated shape as the skulls of the ancient Germans, and are very close to them; it was also noted that historical documents give descriptions of the ancient Slavs as a blond people with light or blue eyes and a pink complexion. It turned out that among the Northern Slavs (at least among the majority of them) some of these physical traits prevail to this day.

Ancient burials of the South Russian Slavs contained skeletons, of which 80–90% had dolichocephalic and mesocephalic skulls; burials of northerners on Psela - 98%; burials of the Drevlyans - 99%; burials of glades in the Kyiv region - 90%, ancient Poles in Plock - 97.5%, in Slabozhev - 97%; burials of ancient Polabian Slavs in Mecklenburg - 81%; burials of Lusatian Serbs in Leibengen in Saxony - 85%; in Burglengenfeld in Bavaria - 93%. Czech anthropologists, when studying the skeletons of ancient Czechs, found that among the latter, skulls of dolichocephalic forms were more common than among modern Czechs. I. Gellikh established (in 1899) among the ancient Czechs 28% of dolichocephalic and 38.5% of mesocephalic individuals; these numbers have increased since then.

The first text, which mentions the 6th century Slavs who lived on the banks of the Danube, says that the Slavs are neither black nor white, but dark blond:

„?? ?? ?????? ??? ??? ????? ???? ?????? ?? ????, ? ?????? ?????, ???? ?? ?? ?? ????? ?????? ???????? ?????????, ???? ????????? ????? ???????“.

Almost all ancient Arabic evidence from the 7th–10th centuries characterizes the Slavs as fair-haired (ashab); Only Ibrahim Ibn Yaqub, a Jewish traveler of the 10th century, notes: “it is interesting that the inhabitants of the Czech Republic are dark.” The word “interesting” betrays his surprise that the Czechs are dark-skinned, from which one can conclude that the rest of the northern Slavs in general were not dark-skinned. However, even today among the Northern Slavs the predominant type is blond, not brown-haired.

Some researchers, based on these facts, took a new point of view on the origin of the Slavs and attributed their ancestors to the blond and dolichocephalic, so-called Germanic race, which formed in Northern Europe. They argued that over the centuries the original Slavic type had changed under the influence of the environment and crossing with neighboring races. This point of view was defended by the Germans R. Virchow, I. Kolman, T. Poesche, K. Penka, and among the Russians A. P. Bogdanov, D. N. Anuchin, K. Ikov, N. Yu. Zograf; I also subscribed to this point of view in my early writings.

However, the problem turned out to be more complex than previously thought and cannot be resolved so easily and simply. In many places, brachycephalic skulls and remains of dark or black hair were found in Slavic burials; on the other hand, it must be recognized that the modern somatological structure of the Slavs is very complex and indicates only the general predominance of the dark and brachycephalic type, the origin of which is difficult to explain. It cannot be assumed that this predominance was predetermined by the environment, nor can it be satisfactorily explained by later crossing. I tried to use data from all sources, both old and new, and, based on them, I came to the conviction that the question of the origin and development of the Slavs is much more complex than it has hitherto been represented; I believe that the most plausible and probable hypothesis is built on the combination of all these complex factors.

The Proto-Aryan type did not represent a pure type of a pure race. In the era of Indo-European unity, when internal linguistic differences began to increase, this process was influenced by different races, especially the Northern European dolichocephalic light-haired race and the Central European brachycephalic dark race. Therefore, individual peoples formed in this way during the third and second millennium BC. e., were no longer a pure race from a somatological point of view; this also applies to the Proto-Slavs. There is no doubt that they were not distinguished by either purity of race or unity of physical type, for they received their origin from the two mentioned great races, at the junction of whose lands their ancestral home was; The most ancient historical information, as well as ancient burials, equally testify to this lack of racial unity among the Proto-Slavs. This also explains the great changes that have occurred among the Slavs over the last millennium. Undoubtedly, this problem remains to be carefully considered, but the solution to it - I am convinced of this - can be based not so much on the recognition of environmental influences as on the recognition of the crossing and "struggle for life" of the basic elements available , that is, the northern dolichocephalic fair-haired race and the central European brachycephalic dark-haired race.

Thousands of years ago, the type of the first race prevailed among the Slavs, which has now been absorbed by another, more viable race.

Archeology is currently unable to resolve the question of the origin of the Slavs. Indeed, it is impossible to trace Slavic culture from the historical era to those ancient times when the Slavs were formed. In the ideas of archaeologists about Slavic antiquities before the 5th century AD. e. Complete confusion reigns, and all their attempts to prove the Slavic character of the Lusatian and Silesian burial fields in eastern Germany and to draw appropriate conclusions from this have so far been unsuccessful. It was not possible to prove that the named burial fields belonged to the Slavs, since the connection of these monuments with undoubtedly Slavic burials still cannot be established. At best, one can only admit the possibility of such an interpretation.

Some German archaeologists suggest that the Proto-Slavic culture was one of the constituent parts of the great Neolithic culture called “Indo-European” or better “Danubian and Transcarpathian” with a variety of ceramics, some of which were painted. This is also acceptable, but we have no positive evidence for this, since the connection of this culture with the historical era is completely unknown to us.

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The debate about the place and time of origin of the Indo-Europeans, set out in the previous chapter, already suggests that the conditions for the emergence of “historical” peoples also do not have clear solutions. This fully applies to the Slavs. The problem of the origin of the Slavs has been discussed in science for more than two centuries. Archaeologists, linguists, anthropologists, ethnographers offer different concepts and hypotheses and so far each remains largely of their own opinion.

And the range of controversial issues is very wide. One contradiction lies on the surface: the Slavs under this name entered the historical arena only in the 6th century AD, and therefore there is a great temptation to consider them a “young people”. But on the other hand, Slavic languages ​​are carriers of archaic features of the Indo-European community. And this is a sign of their deep origins. Naturally, with such significant discrepancies in chronology, both the territories and archaeological cultures that attract researchers will be different. It is impossible to name a single culture that has maintained continuity from the 3rd millennium BC. until the middle of the 1st millennium AD

Local history hobbies also caused damage to scientific study of the problem of the origin of the Slavs. Thus, German historians, back in the 19th century, declared all any noticeable archaeological cultures in Europe to be German, and there was no place for the Slavs on the map of Europe at all, and they were placed in a narrow area of ​​the Pinsk swamps. But the “local history” approach will prevail in the literature of various Slavic countries and peoples. In Poland they will look for the Slavs as part of the Lusatian culture and the “Vistula-Oder” concept of the origin of the Slavs will decisively prevail. In Belarus, attention will be paid to the same “Pinsk swamps”. In Ukraine, attention will be focused on the Right Bank of the Dnieper (“Dnieper-Bug” version).

1. THE PROBLEM OF SLAVIC-GERMAN-BALTIC RELATIONS

For at least one and a half thousand years, the history of the Slavs took place in conditions of close interaction with the Germans and Balts. In addition to German, the Germanic languages ​​currently include Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, and to a certain extent English and Dutch. There are also monuments of one of the extinct Germanic languages ​​- Gothic. The Baltic languages ​​are represented by Lithuanian and Latvian; the Prussian language disappeared just a few centuries ago. The significant similarity between the Slavic and Baltic languages, as well as their known similarity with the Germanic languages, is indisputable. The only question is whether this similarity is primordial, going back to a single community, or acquired during the long-term interaction of different ethnic groups.

In classical comparative historical linguistics, the opinion about the existence of the Slavic-Germanic-Baltic community stemmed from the general idea of ​​​​the division of the Indo-European language. This point of view was held in the middle of the last century by German linguists (K. Zeiss, J. Grimm, A. Schleicher). At the end of the last century, under the influence of the theory of two dialect groups of Indo-European languages ​​- Western - centum, Eastern - satem (the designation of the number “one hundred” in Eastern and Western languages), the Germanic and Balto-Slavic languages ​​were identified in different groups.

Currently, the number of opinions and ways of explaining the same facts has increased significantly. The disagreements are aggravated by the tradition of specialists from different sciences to solve problems only using their own material: linguists with theirs, archaeologists with theirs, anthropologists with theirs. Such an approach, obviously, should be rejected as methodologically illegitimate, since historical issues cannot be resolved in isolation from history, much less against history. But in conjunction with history and in the aggregate of all types of data, very reliable results can be obtained.

Were the Germans, Balts and Slavs united in ancient times? The Bulgarian linguist V.I. insisted on the existence of a common proto-language of the three Indo-European peoples. Georgiev. He pointed out a number of important correspondences in the Balto-Slavic and Gothic languages. However, these parallels are not enough to conclude about their original unity. Linguists too unsubstantiatedly attribute the features of the Gothic language to Proto-Germanic. The fact is that for a number of centuries the Gothic language existed separately from other Germanic languages, surrounded by foreign ones, including Balto-Slavic. The correspondences identified by the linguist may well be explained by precisely this centuries-old interaction.

Well-known domestic specialist in Germanic languages ​​N.S. Chemodanov, on the contrary, separated the Germanic and Slavic languages. “Judging by the data of the language,” he concluded, “direct contact between the Germans and the Slavs was established very late, perhaps not earlier than our chronology.” This conclusion was fully shared by another prominent Russian linguist F.P. Owl, and no significant arguments have yet been opposed to him. Linguistic material, therefore, does not provide evidence even for the fact that the Balto-Slavs and Germans formed in the neighborhood.

In German historiography, the Proto-Germans were associated with the culture of Corded Ware and Megaliths. Meanwhile, both of them have nothing to do with the Germans. Moreover, it turns out that on the territory of present-day Germany there are no native Germanic toponyms at all, while non-Germanic ones are represented quite abundantly. Consequently, the Germans settled in this territory relatively late - shortly before the beginning of our era. The only question is the alternative: did the Germans come from the north or from the south.

The toponymy of some southern Scandinavian territories is usually cited in favor of the northern origin of the Germans. But even in Scandinavia, the Germans hardly appeared long before the turn of our era, and, for example, the Suevi moved there from the continent only during the era of the Great Migration of Peoples (IV-V centuries AD). The main body of Scandinavian toponymy is closer not to Germanic, but to Celtic (or “Celto-Scythian”), as was shown in the works of the Swedish scientist G. Johanson and the Swedish-American K.H. Seaholma.

In this regard, the genealogical legends of the Normans are curious, reporting their arrival “from Asia,” with which was associated the idea of ​​an ever-flourishing country, incomparably richer than the cold Atlantic coast. In the Younger Edda, the geography of which is represented by three parts of the world - Africa, Europe or Aenea and Asia, the latter is represented by Troy. “From north to east,” the saga writes, “and to the very south stretches the part called Asia. In this part of the world everything is beautiful and lush, there are possessions of the fruits of the earth, gold and precious stones. And because the land itself is more beautiful and better there in everything, the people inhabiting it are also distinguished by all their talents: wisdom and strength, beauty and all kinds of knowledge.”

The saga recognizes the ancestor of the settlers from Troy as Thror or Thor, who at the age of 12 killed his teacher, the Thracian Duke Loricus, and took possession of Thrace. In the twentieth generation of Thor's family, Odin was born, who was predicted to be famous in the north. Having gathered many people, he went north. Saxony, Westphalia, the land of the Franks, Jutland - submit to Odin and his family, then he goes to Sweden. The Swedish king Gylvi, having learned that people called Aesir had come from Asia, offered Odin to rule over his land.

The discussion about the language of the Ases is interesting: “The Ases took wives for themselves in that land, and some married their sons, and their offspring multiplied so much that they settled throughout the Saxon Country, and from there throughout the northern part of the world, so the language of these people from Asia became the language of all those countries, and people believe that from the recorded names of their ancestors it can be judged that these names belonged to the very language that the Ases brought here to the north - to Norway and Sweden, to Denmark and the Land of the Saxons. And in England there are old names of lands and places, which, apparently, do not come from this language, from another.”

The Younger Edda was written in the 20s of the 13th century. But there are two earlier versions associated with the Norman Aces. This is the “Norman Chronicle” of the 12th century, which seems to justify the rights of the Norman Duke Rollo to take possession of the north of France (“Normandy”) at the beginning of the 10th century, since it was there that the Normans from the Don came in the 2nd century. In the north of France, burial grounds left by the Alans are still preserved. They are also scattered in other places in northwestern Europe, a memory of which is also served by the widespread name Alan or Aldan (in Celtic vowels). Another source is the 12th century chronicle of Annalist Saxo. It even names the exact date of the resettlement: 166 AD.

The Ynglinga Saga (written down like the Younger Edda by Snorri Sturluson, apparently from the words of the 9th century skald Thjodolf) speaks of Great Svitjod (usually interpreted as “Great Sweden”), which occupied vast areas near Tanais (that is, the Don). Here was the country of the Aesir - Asaland, whose leader was Odin, and the main city was Asgard. Following the prophecy, Odin, leaving his brothers in Asgard, led most of them north, then west through Gardariki, after which he turned south to Saxony. The saga quite accurately represents the Volga-Baltic route, and Gardariki is the region from the Upper Volga to the Eastern Baltic, where the western direction gives way to the southern. After a series of migrations, Odin settles in Old Sigtuna near Lake Mälarn, and this area will be called Svitjod or Mannheim (the dwelling of men), and Great Svitjod will be called Godheim (the dwelling of the gods). Upon death, Odin returned to Asgard, taking with him the warriors who died in battle. Thus, “Great Sweden,” which is given a very significant place in Swedish literature and in general in the constructions of the Normanists, has nothing to do with Kievan Rus, and the Saltovsk culture near the Don is both archaeologically and anthropologically linked precisely with the Alans, who were called “Rus” in many eastern sources of the 9th - 12th centuries.

It is interesting that the appearance of the Scandinavians is noticeably different from the Germans (due to the mixing of the descendants of the Corded Ware and Megalith cultures, as well as Ural elements). The language of Odin's ancestors and descendants is also far from that of the continental Germans. The plot related to the “Aces” has another meaning in the sagas: “Aces”, “Yas” were called the Alans of the Don region and the North Caucasus (they are also known under this name in Russian chronicles).

It is also interesting that anthropologists note the similarity of the appearance of continental Germans to the Thracians. It was the assimilation of the local Thracian population by the Danube Slavs that created a seemingly paradoxical situation: of all the Slavs, the current Bulgarians, and not Germany’s neighbors, are anthropologically closest to the Germans. The closeness of the appearance of the continental Germans to the Thracians gives direction to the search for their common origins: they were in the region of the band ceramics cultures and, within its framework, moved to the north-west, confronting or involving tribes of a different appearance into their movement.

The Germans are reliably visible on the Lower Elbe within the framework of the Jastorf culture from about the turn of the 7th-6th centuries. BC e. In the southern reaches, the Celtic influence (of the Hallstatt and later La Tène cultures) is noticeable. As elsewhere in the buffer zones, on the border of the Celtic and Germanic tribes there was repeated interpenetration of cultures, with first one advancing, then the other. But on the eve of N. e. as a result of the almost universal retreat of Celtic cultures, the advantage ends up on the side of the Germans.

The decisive linguistic argument against the hypothesis that there was ever a unity of the Germans with the Balto-Slavs is the absence of any intermediate dialects. The three peoples have been neighbors since the first mention of them in written sources, but it is obvious that by the time of their territorial rapprochement they were linguistically, culturally and socially established societies.

Archaeologically, the earliest stage of Germanic and Balto-Slavic interaction may be the advance around the 3rd century BC. e. groups of the Jastorf population beyond the right bank of the Oder into the area of ​​distribution of the Pomeranian culture at that time. There is an assumption that later these newcomers were pushed back by the tribes of the Oksyv culture, but the solution may be different: in the course of long-term interaction, groups of Jastorfians could have been influenced by the local population, although they retained their language. It was here, in all likelihood, that the Goths were formed and perhaps some other tribes close to them, whose culture was noticeably different from the Germans themselves.

In general, the question of the existence of the original German-Balto-Slavic community is quite unanimously resolved in the negative

2. THE PROBLEM OF SLAVIC-BALTIC RELATIONS

The problem of the Balto-Slavic community causes more controversy than the question of German-Balto-Slavic unity. Disagreements appeared already in the 18th century, in the dispute between M.V. Lomonosov with the first Normanists, during which the Russian scientist drew attention to the facts of linguistic and cultural proximity of the Balts and Slavs. The solution to the question of Slavic ancestral home and in general the question of the conditions for the emergence of the Slavs. But at the same time, the following must be taken into account: since the Germans were not an autochthonous population of the Western Baltic territories, the question of the ancestral homeland of the Balts and Slavs should not be made dependent on the presence or absence of similarities with the Germanic in their language.

The closeness of the Slavic and Balto-Lithuanian languages ​​is obvious. The problem is to determine the reasons for this phenomenon: is it the result of long-term residence of two ethnic groups in the neighborhood, or a gradual divergence of an initially single community. Related to this is the problem of establishing the time of convergence or, conversely, divergence of both linguistic groups. In practice, this means clarifying the question of whether the Slavic language is autochthonous (i.e., indigenous) in the territory adjacent to the Balts, or whether it was introduced by some Central or even Southern European ethnic group. It is also necessary to clarify the original territory of the Proto-Balts.

In Russian linguistics at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, the prevailing opinion was about the original Balto-Slavic community. This view was strongly defended, in particular, by A.A. Shakhmatov. Perhaps only I.A. held the opposite opinion quite consistently. Baudouin de Courtenay, and the Latvian linguist J.M. Endzelin. In foreign linguistics, the original similarity of these languages ​​was recognized by A. Meillet. Later, the idea of ​​the existence of a common proto-language was almost unconditionally accepted by Polish linguists and rejected by Lithuanian ones. One of the most compelling arguments in favor of the existence of the original community is the fact of the morphological similarity of languages; V.I. pays special attention to this. Georgiev. Currently, both abroad and in Russia there are supporters of both points of view.

Almost the majority of discrepancies arise from different understandings of the source material. The thesis about the autochthony of the Germans in Northern Europe is taken for granted in many works. The absence of visible traces of the proximity of Germanic languages ​​with Slavic prompts the search for a “separator”. Thus, the famous Polish scientist T. Ler-Splavinsky placed the Illyrians between the Slavs and Germans, and moved the Balts to the northeast, believing that the Slavs were closer to the Germans. F.P. Filin, on the contrary, saw more common features between the Germans and the Balts, and on this basis localized the ancestral home of the Slavs to the southeast of the Balts, in the region of Pripyat and the Middle Dnieper. B.V. Gornung also starts from the assumption of the autochthony of the Germans in the North, and therefore defines the original territory of the Slavs quite far in the southeast from the places of their later habitat. But since the Germans were not an autochthonous population of the Western Baltic territories, the question of the ancestral homeland of the Balts and Slavs should not depend on the presence or absence of similarities with the Germanic in their language.

The question of the origin of the Balts itself seems simple, since the settlement of the Balts entirely coincides with the zone of distribution of the Corded Ware cultures. However, there are problems that must be taken into account.

In Northern Europe and the Baltic states, since the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic eras, two anthropological types coexist, one of which is close to the population of the Dnieper Nadporozhye, and the other to the Laponoids. With the advent of the battle ax culture tribes, the proportion of the Indo-European population here increases. It is very likely that both waves of Indo-Europeans were close in linguistic terms, although differences caused by the time gap were inevitable. It was a proto-Baltic language, recorded in the toponymy of fairly large areas of Eastern Europe. The Laponoid population apparently spoke one of the Uralic languages, which was also reflected in the onomastics of these territories. A significant part of this population was assimilated by the Indo-Europeans, but as Finno-Ugric groups later advanced from the Urals, the boundaries of the Indo-European languages ​​again shifted to the southwest. In the 2nd millennium BC. waves of movements of tribes of the Srubnaya culture from the east reached the Baltic states, but they did not have a significant impact either due to their small numbers or due to linguistic and cultural proximity.

More originality was introduced by the tribes that moved into the Baltic states during the existence of the Unetica and Lusatian cultures (XIII-VI centuries BC). These, in all likelihood, are the same tribes that brought the ethnonym “Vends” to the Baltic states, and turned the Baltic Sea itself into the “Gulf of Veneds”. At one time A.A. Shakhmatov, recognizing the Baltic Veneti as Celts, noted Romance-Italic elements in their language, which also affected the Baltic languages. In the very population of the coastal strip of the Baltic Sea, which was occupied by the Wends, in particular on the territory of Estonia (and not only) there is a pronounced (and still persisting) admixture of the Pontic (or more broadly Mediterranean) anthropological type, which could have been brought here precisely with the Venetian wave.

In the previous chapter, mention was made of the toponymic “triangle” - Asia Minor-Adriatic-South-Eastern Baltic. Actually, it does not seem to concern the main Baltic territory. But a certain similarity between the languages ​​of the Veneti and Balts is still visible. The river Upios is known in Bithynia. A parallel can be the Lithuanian “upe”, and the Prussian “ape”, and the ancient Indian “ap” - “water”. The names of the rivers of the Southern Bug and Kuban (Iranized in form) - Hypanis - can also be put in connection with these parallels. In other words, with the Veneti, a population close to the Black Sea Indo-Aryans in language came to the Baltic states (the Aryans themselves went not only to the east, but also to the northwest).

IN AND. Georgiev sees indirect evidence of the existence of the Balto-Slavic proto-language in the history of the Indo-Iranian community. He recalls that such a commonality can be traced only in the most ancient written monuments, and not in modern languages.

Slavic languages ​​were recorded 2000 years later, and Lithuanian 2500 years later than the Rig Veda and Avesta, but the comparison is still not conclusive. The Rigveda and Avesta appeared during a period when the Iranian and Indian tribes were in contact, whereas later they had virtually no contact. The Slavs and the Balts directly interacted as neighbors at least since the times of the Rig Veda and Avesta, and it is necessary to explain why there are no intermediate dialects between these, although related, but different languages.

But in the arguments of opponents of the concept of the existence of a Balto-Slavic proto-language, in addition to those mentioned, it must be recognized that there are differences in areas that were important precisely in the ancient era. This includes counting to ten, and the designation of body parts, and the names of immediate relatives, as well as tools. It is in these areas that there are practically no coincidences: the coincidences begin only with the metal era. Therefore, it is logical to assume that in the era preceding the Bronze Age, the Proto-Slavs still lived at some distance from the Balts. Consequently, it is hardly possible to speak of the existence of an original Balto-Slavic community.

3. WHERE AND HOW TO LOOK FOR THE HOMELAND OF THE SLAVS?

The inconsistency of the concept of the original German-Balto-Slavic and more local Balto-Slavic community narrows the range of possible “candidates” for the role of Proto-Slavic archaeological cultures. The search for such among “young” cultures (V-VI centuries) practically disappears, since the affinity recognized by everyone goes back to the Bronze Age or the Early Iron Age. Therefore, the above-mentioned opinion of A.L. cannot be accepted. Mongait about the emergence of the Slavic ethnos itself only around the 6th century AD. There is no more basis in the concept of I.P. Rusanova, leading the Slavs out of the Przeworsk culture - the western borders of Poland in the 2nd century. BC e. - IV century n. e., adjacent in their northern borders to areas with a Baltic population. The version of one of the most thorough researchers of early and medieval Slavism, V.V., cannot be accepted either. Sedov, who led the Slavs out of the region of the Western Balts, adjacent to the Lusatian culture of the last centuries of its existence - the subklosh culture of the 5th-2nd centuries. BC e.

F.P. Filin, who did not connect the origin of the Slavs with the Balts, allocated the Slavs the territory from the Dnieper to the Western Bug. The researcher warned that this territory was inhabited by the Slavs in the 1st millennium BC. e. Whether there were Slavs before and where exactly they were - he considered at this stage an insoluble question.

Attention B.A. Rybakova and P.N. Tretyakov was attracted by the Trzyniec culture of the Bronze Age (c. 1450-1100 BC), which occupied the territory from the Oder to the Dnieper. The proximity to Baltic cultures in this era no longer raises questions from the point of view of linguistic patterns, but in the culture itself there is clearly a mixture of two different ethnic formations: different burial rites (cremation and disposition), and burials with corpses are close to the Baltic type.

In other words, this culture may have been the first contact between the Slavs and the Balts. It indeed resolves many issues that arose during the discussion of facts indicating Balto-Slavic closeness. But another problem arises: if these are Slavs exploring initially non-Slavic territory, then where did they come here from? The culture was initially identified by Polish scientists, and at first they did not even suspect that it was spreading to the Dnieper. On the Dnieper, more significant manifestations of this culture were identified, and B.A. Rybakov suggested that the spread did not go from west to east, but from east to west. However, such a conclusion seems premature. In the east at that time, the Timber-frame culture dominated, within which there was no place for the Slavs or Proto-Slavs. Therefore, it is advisable to take a closer look at the southwestern territories adjacent to this culture.

This is exactly the path O.N. took. Trubachev. Following A. Meillet, he logically perceived the fact of the archaic nature of the Slavic language as a sign of its antiquity and came to the conclusion that archaism is a consequence of the coincidence of the ancestral homeland of the Indo-Europeans and the ancestral homeland of the Slavs. It would probably be more careful to talk about the coincidence of the territory occupied by the Proto-Slavs with one of the large groups of Indo-Europeans. The scientist agreed with those German specialists who generally placed the ancestral home of the Indo-Europeans in Central Europe (north of the Alps), but within the framework of this concept, the chronological depth did not go beyond the Eneolithic, which in the light of many other data seems incredible. As for the search for the ancient Slavs in this territory, the range of arguments can be expanded by involving both linguistic and archaeological-anthropological material.

In our anthropological literature there are two different experiences in solving the problem of Slavic ethnogenesis. One of them belongs to T.A. Trofimova, the other - T.I. Alekseeva. These experiments differ significantly both in approaches and in conclusions. One of the significant discrepancies in the conclusions of T.A. Trofimova and T.I. Alekseeva is to assess the place of the band ceramics culture in the Slavic ethnogenesis of the population. At T.A. Trofimova, this population turns out to be one of the main components, and it is precisely, starting from her conclusion, that V.P. Kobychev connects the original Slavic type with this culture. Meanwhile, as shown by T.I. Alekseeva and confirmed by a number of other anthropologists, the population of band ceramic cultures could have been part of the Slavs either as a substrate or as a superstrate, but among the Germans this element was decisive.

Interesting and rich article by T.A. Trofimova departed from the autochthonist theories that dominated in the 40s of the 20th century, and was aimed against Indo-European comparative studies. As a result, noting the presence of different components in the Slavic composition, the author did not consider it possible “to consider any one of these types as the original Proto-Slavic type.” If we take into account that the same types were part of the Germans and some other peoples, then anthropology was practically excluded from the number of sciences capable of taking part in solving the problems of ethnogenesis.

Works by T.I. Alekseeva appeared in the 1960-1970s, when the restrictive framework of autochthonism and stadialism was largely overcome. Taking into account the migrations of tribes and the indisputable provisions of comparative studies sharply raises the importance of anthropology in understanding the history of the emergence of peoples. Anthropology is becoming not only a means of verifying the provisions of linguistics and archeology, but also an important supplier of original information that requires a certain theoretical understanding. As material accumulates, anthropology provides, on an increasing scale, answers to the questions of when and in what relationships ancient ethnic formations converged and diverged.

In quantitative terms, the most representative of the Slavs is the type of population of the Corded Ware cultures. It is the broad-faced, long-headed population typical of Corded Ware cultures that brings the Slavs closer to the Balts, creating sometimes insurmountable difficulties for their anthropological demarcation. The presence of this component in the Slavs indicates, however, a territory much larger than the area of ​​Baltic toponymy, since related populations occupied a significant part of the left bank of Ukraine, as well as the northwestern coast of Europe, in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. This should also include the zone of distribution of the Dinaric anthropological type, which is manifested in the modern population of Albania and Yugoslavia (especially among the Montenegrins, Serbs and Croats) and which is usually identified with the ancient Illyrians.

Tribes with burials in stone boxes and the Bell-Beaker cultures, who also buried their dead in cists (stone boxes), also took a noticeable part in the formation of the Slavs. Since the Slavs, according to T.I. Alekseeva, connect the types of “northern European, dolichocephalic, light-pigmented race and southern European brachycephalic, dark-pigmented race.” The population of the Bell-Beaker culture should attract special attention in solving the problem of the ancestral home of the Slavs.

Unfortunately, this culture is almost completely unstudied. It is generally noted to be spreading from North Africa to Spain. Here it gives way to the Megalithic culture, and then around 1800 BC. moves quite quickly partly along the western coast of the Atlantic, becoming part of the future Celts, partly to Central Europe, where their burial grounds are recorded. The origins of this culture can be seen somewhere in the Eastern Mediterranean, perhaps in Western or even Central Asia. Apparently, the Hittites and Pelasgians were related to this population (in any case, their migration took place within the same Indo-European wave). It is with this Indo-European wave that the Ligurians who occupied Northern Italy are linked, who in some ancient reports are called the western branch of the Pelasgians. And it is quite noteworthy that the main deity of the Ligurians was Kupavon, whose functions coincided with the functions of the Slavic Kupala, and the corresponding cult in Northern Italy survived until the Middle Ages. It follows from this, by the way, that in the Alpine zone, along with the Proto-Slavs, there were also independent tribes close to them in language and, perhaps, beliefs.

The chain of place names running from Spanish Lusitania through Northern Italy to the Baltic states belongs to the Indo-European population, moreover, to that branch in which the roots “meadow” and “vad-vand” designate valley and water. Strabo noted that the word “vada” among the Ligurians means shallow water, and in the Balkans, in the zone of settlement of the Pelasgians, in Roman sources the rivers are called “Vada” with some definition. The ethnonym “Pelazgi” itself finds a satisfactory explanation precisely from the Slavic languages. This is a literal transfer of the “people of the sea” ethnic group known to ancient authors (in the literature there is an option for “Pelazgians” as “flat surface”). Back in the 19th century, the Czech scientist P. Safarik pointed out the widespread use in Slavic languages ​​of the designation of the water surface as “pelso” (one of the ancient names of the Slavic version is Balaton) or “pleso”. Both the Russian city of Pleskov (Pskov) and the Bulgarian “Pliska” come from the name of the lake. This concept is also preserved in the modern designation of a wide water surface - “reach”. The verb “goit” - to live, was also known in not so long ago (“outcast” means “outlived” from the community or some other social structure). A significant list of early Slavic place names in the Danube region was collected by P. Safarik. Recently it was revised and supplemented by V.P. Kobychev.

The Slavs are distinguished from the Balts, first of all, by the presence in their composition of the Central European Alpine racial type and the population of the bell-shaped beaker culture. Ethnic waves from the south also penetrated into the Baltic states, but these were different waves. The southern population came here, apparently, only as an admixture among the Veneti and Illyrians, perhaps different waves of Cimmerians who passed through Asia Minor and the Balkans. Both the origins and languages ​​of these ethnic groups were quite similar. The speech they understood, apparently, was also heard in the zone of the Thraco-Cimmerian culture in the Carpathian region, since it also arises during the resettlement from the Black Sea region and the left bank of the Dnieper. The language of the Alpine population, as well as the language of the Bell-shaped Beaker culture, differed from the Baltic-Dnieper and Black Sea dialects.

The Alpine population was probably not originally Indo-European in its origins. But if in the Celtic languages ​​a non-Indo-European substrate is clearly visible, then in Slavic it is not visible. Therefore, only the Indo-European tribes had a real impact on the language of this population, among which the most significant were the tribes of the Bell-Beaker culture.

At present, it is difficult to decide whether the Slavic language came in a “ready-made” form to Central Europe, or whether it is being formed here as a result of the mixing of the population of the Bell Beaker cultures and different variants of cultures going back to the previous tribes of the Corded Ware culture. The long-term neighborhood undoubtedly contributed to the mutual influence of the Proto-Slavic language with the Illyro-Venet and Celtic languages. As a result, there was a continuous process of mutual assimilation and the emergence of intermediate dialects within different tribal associations.

T.I. Alekseeva, who admits that the Bell-Beaker culture is a possible original Slavic anthropological type, indicates the proximity of the ancient Russian and even modern Dnieper population to the Alpine zone: Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, Northern Italy, Southern Germany, and the northern Balkans. And in this case we are talking specifically about the movement of the Proto-Slavs from West to East, and not vice versa. Historically, the spread of this type can be traced first to Moravia and the Czech Republic, then to the future tribes of the Ulichs, Tiverts, and Drevlyans. Anthropology cannot indicate the time when such a population moved from Central Europe to the east, since, like most tribes of Central Europe, the Slavs practiced corpse burning, and for two and a half millennia anthropologists were deprived of the opportunity to follow the stages of tribal migrations. But significant toponymic and other linguistic material has come down from this era. And here the most significant contribution belongs to O.N. Trubachev.

The scientist came to the conclusion about the coincidence of the region of origin of the Indo-Europeans and the Slavs for several decades. The most important stages were books about craft terminology (among the Slavs it was closer to the ancient Roman one), then about the names of rivers and other toponyms in the region of the Right Bank of the Dnieper, where along with Slavic ones, Illyrian ones are also found. And finally, the search for Slavic place names in the Danube region, from where Russian, Polish, and Czech chroniclers (sometimes in legendary form) deduced the Slavs and Rus.

In the works of O.N. Trubachev, as a rule, offers only relative chronology: what is ancient and where. In this case, archaeologists and historians bring chronology. Ukrainian archaeologists, in particular A.I. Terenozhkin, expressed an opinion about the Slavism of the Chernoles culture adjacent to the Cimmerians of the 10th-7th centuries BC. It is noteworthy that in the border strip between the Cimmerians themselves and the Black Foresters along the Tyasmin River in the 8th century BC. e. fortified settlements appeared, which indicated an intensified demarcation between the Chernolestsy and the Cimmerians. The most remarkable thing is that the identified O.N. Trubachev, Slavic toponymy completely overlapped with the Chernoles archaeological culture, right up to the left bank of the Dnieper at the south-eastern borders of the culture. Such a coincidence is an extremely rare case in ethnogenetic research.

As a result, the Chernoles culture becomes a reliable link both for moving deeper and for finding subsequent successors. It should be borne in mind that new settlers will follow the old tracks from Central Europe, and the border between the steppe and forest-steppe for many centuries will be the scene of most often bloody clashes between steppe nomads and sedentary farmers. It is also necessary to take into account the fact that with the beginning of social stratification, related tribes are involved in the struggle among themselves.

Solving the question of the ethnicity of the Chernoles culture helps to understand the nature of the earlier Trzyniec culture. It precisely marks the path of the ancient Slavs from the Alpine regions to the Dnieper. At the same time, the ritual of corpse burning apparently reveals the Slavs themselves, while in the ritual of corpse deposition the Slavic anthropological type in pure form not represented. This, in all likelihood, was predominantly a Baltic population. In all likelihood, it was here that the first contact of the Slavs with the Balts took place, which fully explains the convergence and divergence of both in language. It was here, within the framework of this culture, that the southern dark-pigmented brachycephalus crossed paths with the light-colored dolichocranes and assimilated them.

4. THE MIDDLE Dnieper REGION IN THE SCYTHO-SARMATIAN TIME

Despite all the importance of the ethnic history of the Middle Dnieper region for understanding many aspects of the later history of the Slavs and the formation of the ancient Russian state, there are still a lot of blank spots here. The Belogrudovskaya (XII-X centuries BC) and Chernoleskaya cultures, in particular, their relationship with the Trzyniec culture, are poorly studied, although an important connection with Central Europe is indicated in this case. The transitions to subsequent cultures have not been traced. There are objective reasons for this: one of the main indicators of culture (material and spiritual) - the funeral rite - among tribes with corpse burnings is very simplified and leaves archaeologists with practically only ceramics. HE. Trubachev, polemicizing with archaeologists who perceive changes in material culture as a change of ethnic groups, notes, not without irony, that a change in ornamentation on vessels may not mean anything at all except fashion, which, of course, captured different tribes and peoples in ancient times.

Changes in the appearance of culture on the Middle Dnieper could also occur due to population changes in the steppe regions, as well as due to constant migrations from the west or northwest to the east and southeast. Just at the beginning of the 7th century BC. The Cimmerians leave the Black Sea region and after about a few decades the Scythians appear in the steppe. Is the former agricultural population still in place? B.A. Rybakov in his book “Herodotus Scythia” proves that it has survived and retained a certain independence. He draws attention, in particular, to the fact that at the junction of the steppe and forest-steppe strips, where there were fortified settlements in Cimmerian times, the border strip was strengthened to an even greater extent. This is convincing evidence of the heterogeneity of the territory designated by Herodotus as “Scythia”. And the very indication of the existence in the north of “Scythia” of “Scythian ploughmen” with their cults and ethnological legends is important. It is curious that these tribes had a legend about their living in the same place for a thousand years. In this case, the legend coincides with reality: a thousand years before Herodotus passed from the beginning of the timber-frame culture in the Black Sea region, and a thousand years separated the “Scythian plowmen” from the emergence of the Trzyniec culture.

According to legend, “golden objects fell from the sky onto the Scythian land: a plow, a yoke, an ax and a bowl.” Archaeologists find cult bowls in Scythian burials, but they are based on forms common in pre-Scythian times in the cultures of the forest-steppe - Belogrudov and Chernolesk (XII-VIII centuries).

Herodotus also encountered different versions regarding the number of Scythians: “According to some reports, the Scythians are very numerous, but according to others, the indigenous Scythians... are very few.” During the heyday of the Scythian unification, a fairly uniform culture spread to many non-Scythian territories. What is happening is approximately the same as in Central Europe in connection with the rise of the Celts: La Tène influence is noticeable in almost all cultures. When in the last centuries BC the Scythians mysteriously disappeared (according to pseudo-Hippocrates they degenerated), old traditions and, apparently, old languages ​​were revived on the territory of Scythia. The Sarmatian invasion from the east contributed to the decline of the Scythians, but the impact of the Sarmatians on the local tribes was less than that of their predecessors.

In the 6th century BC. A new culture called Milograd appears on the territory of Ukrainian and Belarusian Polesie. The southwestern features noted in it suggest a shift of part of the population from the foothills of the Carpathians to the forested areas of the Pripyat basin. According to researchers, we are talking about the Neuroi mentioned by Herodotus, who, shortly before his trip to the Black Sea region, left the original territory due to an invasion of snakes. It is usually noted that the Thracians had a snake totem and Herodotus simply took literally the story of the invasion of a tribe with such a totem. The culture existed until the 1st-2nd centuries AD. e. and was destroyed or covered by tribes of the Zarubintsy culture, which arose in the 2nd century BC. e.

The intersection and interweaving of the Milograd and Zarubintsy cultures gave rise to a discussion: which of them is considered Slavic? At the same time, the debates were mainly about Zarubintsy culture, and many researchers participated in them to one degree or another. Most archaeologists in Ukraine and Belarus recognized the culture as Slavic. This conclusion was consistently substantiated by P.N. using a large amount of material. Tretyakov. Authoritative archaeologists I.I. objected. Lyapushkin and M.I. Artamonov, and V.V. Sedov recognized the Baltic culture.

The Zarubinets culture arose simultaneously with the Przeworsk culture in southern Poland. The latter included part of the territory that was previously part of the Lusatian culture and some archaeologists saw the original Slavs in it. But their Slavic identity is proven both by the traditions of material culture and by the logic of the historical-genetic process. B.A. Rybakov considered it no coincidence that both cultures seemed to repeat the boundaries of the Trzyniec culture, and the Zarubinets also the intermediate Chernoles culture. The Zarubins were associated with the Celts who settled as far as the Carpathians and had to constantly defend themselves from the Sarmatian tribes that appeared at almost the same time at the borders of the forest-steppe.

Until now, along the border of the forest-steppe, rows of ramparts stretch for hundreds of kilometers, which have long been called “Snake” or “Troyanov”. They have been dated variously - from the 7th century BC. until the era of St. Vladimir (10th century). But the ramparts were clearly erected to protect precisely the territory of the Zarubintsy culture, and it is natural that the Kiev enthusiast A.S. Bugai found material evidence that they were poured around the turn of our era.

It is noteworthy that the settlements of the Zarubintsy culture were not fortified. Obviously, the Zarubins lived peacefully with their northern and western neighbors. They fenced themselves off from the steppe, where the Sarmatians were roaming at that time, with ramparts inaccessible to cavalry. The shafts still make an impression. And a logical question arises: how organized must society be in order to build such structures? And this society, judging by the housing, did not yet know inequality: it was the work of free community members of many settlements.

The Zarubinets culture, securely covered from the south, fell in the 2nd century AD. as a result of a new invasion from the northwest. P.N. Tretyakov found evidence that the Zarubins moved to the northeast and east to the left bank of the Dnieper, where they later merged with a new wave of Slavic settlers from Central Europe.

Being a consistent supporter of the concept of Slavic affiliation of Zarubintsy culture, P.N. Tretyakov did not define his attitude towards the Milogradites, repeatedly leaning first one way or the other (namely the Baltic side). Strong arguments against their Baltic-speaking were given by O.N. Melnikovskaya. Chief among these arguments is the fact that the culture was localized much further south than previously thought: namely, at the headwaters of the Desna and Southern Bug. The earliest monuments of the Milogradovites are located here and their movement to the northeast, traced according to archaeological data, chronologically coincides with the resettlement of Herodotus's Neuroi.

HE. Melnikovskaya does not determine the ethnicity of the Milogradovites-Neurs, however, giving preference to the Slavs and finding in the Milogradovites those characteristics that P.N. Tretyakov proved the Slavicity of the Zarubins. Belarusian archaeologist L.D. Pobol was inclined to see the Milogradovites as the predecessors of the Zarubins. V.P. Kobychev, without connecting the Milogradovites with the Neuroi, suggested their Celtic origin. But the connection here is apparently indirect, indirect. Tribes retreating from the Carpathian region to the northeast could have taken part in the formation of the Milogradovites. These are either Illiro-Veneti, or Slavs or related tribes. The Illyrian presence is recorded precisely at the upper reaches of the Desna and Bug, although in general the toponymy of the region occupied by the Milogradovites is Slavic. And the Celts were nearby. Archaeological research in Romania made it possible to discover Celtic burials of the 4th century BC in the vicinity of the Milograd culture. e.

The obviously non-Baltic origin of the Milograd culture resolves the issue in the same direction regarding the Zarubinets culture. This culture could be recognized as Baltic only if the arrival of Zarubins from one of the above-mentioned Baltic regions could be allowed. But in all these areas, even after the emergence of the Zarubintsy culture, measured (and stagnant) life continued.

But, being both Slavic, the cultures clearly did not mix and were different from each other. Even when they found themselves in the same territory, they did not mix. This gives reason to believe that the Zarubins came to this territory from outside. Their appearance on the territory of the Milograd culture deepened the difference with the Baltic tribes. And they could only come from the west, northwest or southwest. L.D. Pobol notes that the culture “has very few elements of Western cultures and incomparably more southwestern, Celtic ones.” The author finds types of vessels that are considered to be Pomeranian in Hallstatt burials near Radomsk, as well as in burials in this territory of the Bronze Age.

Thus, in the Middle Dnieper region the constant presence of the Slavic population can be traced since the 15th century BC. to 2nd century AD But this territory is not the ancestral home. The ancestral home remained in Central Europe.

In the II-IV centuries. AD The Slavs were part of the Chernyakhov culture, the territory of which scientists identify with the Gothic state of Germanarich. In the 5th century Slavs made up the majority of the population of the Hunnic state of Attila. Unlike the warlike Huns and Germans, the Slavs did not take part in battles. Therefore, they are not mentioned in written sources, but Slavic features are clearly visible in the archaeological culture of that time. After the collapse of Attila's state, the Slavs entered the historical arena.

In the VI-VII centuries. The Slavs settled in the Baltic states, the Balkans, the Mediterranean, the Dnieper region, and reached Spain and North Africa. Approximately three-quarters of the Balkan Peninsula was conquered by the Slavs within a century. The entire region of Macedonia adjacent to Thessalonica was called “Sclavenia.” By the turn of the VI-VII centuries. includes information about powerful Slavic flotillas that sailed around Thessaly, Achaea, Epirus and even reached southern Italy and Crete. Almost everywhere the Slavs assimilate the local population. In the Baltics - Wends and northern Illyrians, as a result the Baltic Slavs are formed. In the Balkans - the Thracians, as a result a southern branch of the Slavs arises.

Byzantine and Germanic medieval authors called the Slavs “Sclavinians” (the southern branch of the Slavs) and “Antes” (the eastern Slavic branch). The Slavs who lived along the southern coast of the Baltic Sea were sometimes called “Venedi” or “Veneti”.

Archaeologists have discovered monuments of the material culture of the Sklavins and Antes. The Sklavins correspond to the territory of the archaeological culture of Prague-Korchak, which spread to the southwest of the Dniester. To the east of this river there was another Slavic culture - Penkovskaya. These were antes.

In the VI - early VII centuries. The territory of their current residence was inhabited by East Slavic tribes - from the Carpathian Mountains in the west to the Dnieper and Don in the east and to Lake Ilmen in the north. The tribal unions of the Eastern Slavs - the Northerners, Drevlyans, Krivichi, Vyatichi, Radimichi, Polyan, Dregovichi, Polotsk, etc. - were also in fact states in which there was a princely power that was isolated from society, but controlled by it. In the territory of the future Old Russian state the Slavs assimilated many other peoples - Baltic, Finno-Ugric, Iranian and other tribes. Thus, the Old Russian people were formed.

By the 9th century. Slavic tribes, lands, and principalities occupied vast territories that exceeded the area of ​​many Western European states.

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Apollo Kuzmin