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[[File:Limes.saxoniae.wmt.png|thumb|230px|The ''[[Limes Saxoniae]]'' border between the [[Saxons]] and the Lechites [[Obotrites]], established about 810 in present-day [[Schleswig-Holstein]]]]
[[File:Limes.saxoniae.wmt.png|thumb|230px|The ''[[Limes Saxoniae]]'' border between the [[Saxons]] and the Lechites [[Obotrites]], established about 810 in present-day [[Schleswig-Holstein]]]]


[[File:Blaeu 1645 - Germaniae veteris typus.jpg|right|230px|thumb|''Germaniae veteris typus''. [[Aestui]], [[Vistula Venedi|Venedi]], [[Goths|Gythones]] and [[Ingaevones]] are visible on the right upper corner of the map. Edited by Willem and [[Joan Blaeu]], 1645.]]
[[File:Blaeu 1645 - Germaniae veteris typus.jpg|right|230px|thumb|''Germaniae veteris typus'' (Old Germany). [[Aestui]], [[Vistula Venedi|Venedi]], [[Goths|Gythones]] and [[Ingaevones]] are visible on the right upper corner of the map. Edited by Willem and [[Joan Blaeu]], 1645.]]
'''Wends''' ({{lang-ang|Winedas}} {{IPA-ang|ˈwi.ne.dɑs|}}; {{lang-non|Vindar}}; {{lang-de|Wenden}} {{IPA-de|ˈvɛn.dn̩|}}, {{lang|de|Winden}} {{IPA-de|ˈvɪn.dn̩|}}; {{lang-da|Vendere}}; {{lang-sv|Vender}}; {{lang-pl|Wendowie}}, {{lang-cz|Wendové}}) is a historical name for West [[Slavs]] who inhabited present-day Poland and northeast Germany. They were one of the many Lechitic tribes, ancestors of modern Poles, and Northern Germans. In the modern day, communities identifying as Wendish exist in [[Slovenia]], [[Austria]], [[Lusatia]], the [[United States]] (such as the [[Wends of Texas|Texas Wends]]),<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://texaswendish.org/2010/01/01/who-are-the-wends/|title = Who Are the Wends?|date = January 2010}}</ref> and [[Australia]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wendishheritage.org.au/research/migration-to-australia/history-of-migration/|title = History of Migration}}</ref>
'''Wends''' ({{lang-ang|Winedas}} {{IPA-ang|ˈwi.ne.dɑs|}}; {{lang-non|Vindar}}; {{lang-de|Wenden}} {{IPA|de|ˈvɛn.dn̩|}}, {{lang|de|Winden}} {{IPA|de|ˈvɪn.dn̩|}}; {{lang-da|Vendere}}; {{lang-sv|Vender}}; {{lang-pl|Wendowie}}, {{lang-cz|Wendové}}) is a historical name for [[Slavs]] who inhabited present-day northeast Germany. It refers not to a homogeneous people, but to various people, tribes or groups depending on where and when it was used. In the modern day, communities identifying as Wendish exist in [[Slovenia]], [[Austria]], [[Lusatia]], the [[United States]] (such as the [[Wends of Texas|Texas Wends]]),<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://texaswendish.org/2010/01/01/who-are-the-wends/|title = Who Are the Wends?|date = January 2010}}</ref> and [[Australia]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wendishheritage.org.au/research/migration-to-australia/history-of-migration/|title = History of Migration}}</ref>


For German-speaking people during the [[Middle Ages]], the term "Wends" was as synonymous with Slavs and Poles and used in literature to refer to [[West Slavs]] and [[South Slavs]] living within the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. The name has survived in [[Finnic languages]] ({{Lang-fi|Venäjä}} {{IPA-fi|ˈʋe̞.næ.jæ|}}, {{lang-et|Vene}} {{IPA-et|ˈve.ne|}}, {{lang-krl|Veneä}}), denoting modern [[Russia]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Historical Linguistics |last=Campbell |first=Lyle |year=2004 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=0-262-53267-0 |page=418 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EjXrrOJhex8C&pg=PA418 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Foreword to the Past |last=Bojtár |first=Endre |year=1999 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=9639116424 |page=88 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5aoId7nA4bsC&pg=PA88 }}</ref>
In [[German-speaking Europe]] during the [[Middle Ages]], the term "Wends" was interpreted as synonymous with "Slavs" and sporadically used in literature to refer to [[West Slavs]] and [[South Slavs]] living within the [[Holy Roman Empire]]. The name has possibly survived in [[Finnic languages]] ({{Lang-fi|Venäjä}} {{IPA|fi|ˈʋe̞.næ.jæ|}}, {{lang-et|Vene}} {{IPA|et|ˈve.ne|}}, {{lang-krl|Veneä}}), denoting modern [[Russia]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Historical Linguistics |last=Campbell |first=Lyle |year=2004 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=0-262-53267-0 |page=418 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EjXrrOJhex8C&pg=PA418 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Foreword to the Past |last=Bojtár |first=Endre |year=1999 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=9639116424 |page=88 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5aoId7nA4bsC&pg=PA88 }}</ref>


==Term==
==Term==
{{Main|Lechites|Milceni|Sorbs}}
{{Main|Polabian Slavs|Lechites|Milceni|Sorbs}}
[[File:Germanische und slavische Volksstaemme zwischen Elbe und Weichsel.jpg|thumb|300px|right|''[[Sorbian March|Limes sorabicus]]'': the [[Sorbian settlement area]] bordering [[East Francia]] on a map (''Germanische und slavische Volksstämme zwischen Elbe und Weichsel'', 1869)]]
[[File:Germanische und slavische Volksstaemme zwischen Elbe und Weichsel.jpg|thumb|300px|right|''[[Sorbian March|Limes sorabicus]]'': the [[Sorbian settlement area]] bordering [[East Francia]] on a map of [[medieval Germany]] (''Germanische und slavische Volksstämme zwischen Elbe und Weichsel'', 1869)]]


According to one theory, Germanic-speaking peoples first applied this name to the [[Vistula Veneti|ancient Veneti]].
According to one theory, [[Germanic peoples]] first applied this name to the [[Vistula Veneti|ancient Veneti]].
for tribes in Scandinavia, the term Wends (''Vender'') meant West Slavs living near the southern shore of the [[Baltic Sea]] (''Vendland''), and the term was therefore used to refer to [[Polabian Slavs]] like the [[Obotrites]], [[Rani (Slavic tribe)|Rugian Slavs]], [[Veleti]]/[[Lutici]], and [[Pomeranians (Slavic tribe)|Pomeranian tribes]]. The world Wend is a personal name and is with the Polish Princess and later the Queen Wanda. The archaic words, names Wanda, Wenda, Węda are all variants of the same word, and also common first and last personal names in Poland.
For the [[North Germanic peoples|medieval Scandinavians]], the term Wends (''Vender'') meant Slavs living near the southern shore of the [[Baltic Sea]] (''Vendland''), and the term was therefore used to refer to [[Polabian Slavs]] like the [[Obotrites]], [[Rani (Slavic tribe)|Rugian Slavs]], [[Veleti]]/[[Lutici]], and [[Pomeranians (Slavic tribe)|Pomeranian tribes]].


For people living in the medieval Northern [[Holy Roman Empire]] and its precursors, especially for the Saxons, a Wend (''Wende'') was a Slav living in the area west of the River [[Oder]], inhabited by the Polabian Slav tribes (mentioned above) in the north and by others, such as the [[Sorbs]] and the [[Milceni]], further south (see [[Sorbian March]]).
For people living in the medieval Northern [[Holy Roman Empire]] and its precursors, especially for the [[Saxons]], a Wend (''Wende'') was a Slav living in the area west of the River [[Oder]], an area later entitled ''[[Germania Slavica]]'', settled by the Polabian Slav tribes (mentioned above) in the north and by others, such as the [[Sorbs]] and the [[Milceni]], further south (see [[Sorbian March]]).


The Germans in the south used the term ''Winde'' instead of ''Wende'' and applied it, just as the Germans in the north, to Slavs they had contact with; e.g., the Polabians from Bavaria or the [[Slovenes]] (the names [[Windic March]], [[Slovenska Bistrica|Windisch Feistritz]], [[Windischgraz]], or Windisch Bleiberg near [[Ferlach]] still bear testimony to this historical denomination). The same term was sometimes applied to the neighboring region of [[Slavonia]], which appears as Windischland in some documents prior to the 18th century.
The Germans in the south used the term ''Winde'' instead of ''Wende'' and applied it, just as the Germans in the north, to Slavs they had contact with; e.g., the Polabians from ''[[Bavaria Slavica]]'' or the [[Slovenes]] (the names [[Windic March]], [[Slovenska Bistrica|Windisch Feistritz]], [[Windischgraz]], or Windisch Bleiberg near [[Ferlach]] still bear testimony to this historical denomination). The same term was sometimes applied to the neighboring region of [[Slavonia]], which appears as Windischland in some documents prior to the 18th century.


Following the 8th century, the [[Frankish kingdom|Frankish kings]] and their successors organised nearly all Wendish land into [[marches]]. This process later turned into the series of [[Crusades]].
Following the 8th century, the [[Frankish kingdom|Frankish kings]] and their successors organised nearly all Wendish land into [[marches]]. This process later turned into the series of [[Crusades]]. By the 12th century, all Wendish lands had become part of the Holy Roman Empire. In the course of the [[Ostsiedlung]], which reached its peak in the 12th to 14th centuries, this land was settled by [[Germans]] and reorganised.
Due to the process of [[Germanisation|assimilation following German settlement]], many Slavs west of the Oder adopted the [[German language|language]] and /or were forcefully Germanised through conversion to Christianity. Many of them though, kept their [[West Slavic languages|language]] and Savic culture for centuries, in rural communities and towns which did not have a strong admixture with the invaders. With the gradual decline of the use of these local Slavic tongues, the term ''Wends'' slowly disappeared, too.


Due to the process of [[Germanisation|assimilation following German settlement]], many Slavs west of the Oder adopted the [[German culture]] and [[German language|language]]. Only some rural communities which did not have a strong admixture with Germans and continued to use [[West Slavic languages]] were still termed ''Wends''. With the gradual decline of the use of these local Slavic tongues, the term ''Wends'' slowly disappeared, too.
The Slavic tribes of Wends lived as far North as in Latvia, as some 13th century source claims Wends or [[Vends]] in (east of the Baltic Sea) around the city of [[Cēsis|Wenden]]. [[Henry of Livonia]] (Henricus de Lettis) in his 13th-century Latin chronicle described a tribe called the ''Vindi''. There are many place names named by and after the Savic tribe of Wends/Vinds in many parts of Europe, for example in Poland, Denmark, Sweden, Germany...


Some sources claim that in the 13th century there were actual historic people called Wends or [[Vends]] living as far as northern [[Latvia]] (east of the Baltic Sea) around the city of [[Cēsis|Wenden]]. [[Henry of Livonia]] (Henricus de Lettis) in his 13th-century Latin chronicle described a tribe called the ''Vindi''.
Today, only one group of ''Wends'' still exists: the [[Lusatia]]n [[Sorbs]] in present-day Eastern Germany, with international diaspora.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://texaswendish.org/museum/|title = Museum|date = 29 January 2015}}</ref> Just as there other West Slavic tribes living in parts of what is now Germany, for example Sorbs whose language is basically Polish, a Lechitic West Slavic language.

Today, only one group of ''Wends'' still exists: the [[Lusatia]]n [[Sorbs]] in present-day Eastern Germany, with international diaspora.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://texaswendish.org/museum/|title = Museum|date = 29 January 2015}}</ref>


==Roman-era Veneti==
==Roman-era Veneti==
{{main|Veneti (Slavs)}}
{{main|Veneti (Slavs)}}


The Wends, in the Roman-era were called in {{lang-la|[[Veneti (Slavs)|Venetī]]}}, {{lang|la|Venethī}} {{IPA-la|ˈwe.ne.t̪ʰiː|}} or {{lang|la|Venedī}} {{IPA-la|ˈwe.ne.d̪iː|}}; in {{lang-grc-gre|Οὐενέδαι|Ouenédai}} {{IPA-grc|u.eˈne.ðe|}}. This people is mentioned by [[Pliny the Elder]] and [[Ptolemy]] as inhabiting the Baltic coast.
The term "Wends" derived from the Roman-era people called in {{lang-la|[[Veneti (Slavs)|Venetī]]}}, {{lang|la|Venethī}} {{IPA|la|ˈwe.ne.t̪ʰiː|}} or {{lang|la|Venedī}} {{IPA|la|ˈwe.ne.d̪iː|}}; in {{lang-grc-gre|Οὐενέδαι|Ouenédai}} {{IPA-grc|u.eˈne.ðe|}}. This people is mentioned by [[Pliny the Elder]] and [[Ptolemy]] as inhabiting the Baltic coast.

Various spelling variants of this West Slavic tribe of Wends are, amongst others, Wenden, Wendowie, Wendy, Vendove, Vinden, Wenedi, Weneti, Venedi, Veneti...


==History==
==History==


===Rise (500–1000)===
===Rise (500–1000)===
In the 1st millennium AD, during the split of the Slavs into Southern, Eastern and Western groups, some [[West Slavs]] moved into the areas of Southern europe - moving from east to west and from south to north. There they assimilated the remaining [[Germanic peoples#History|Germanic]] population that had not left the area. The Germanic-speaking tribes used the term they had been using for peoples east of the River Elbe before to the Slavs, calling them ''Wends'' as they called the ''Venedi'' before and probably the ''[[Vandals]]'' as well. In his late sixth century work ''[[History of Armenia (book)|History of Armenia]]'', [[Movses Khorenatsi]] mentions their raids into the lands named Vanand after them.<ref>Istorija Armenii Mojseja Horenskogo, II izd. Per. N. O. Emina, M., 1893, s.55-56.</ref>
In the 1st millennium AD, during the [[Slavs|Slavic]] migrations which split the Slavs into Southern, Eastern and Western groups, some [[West Slavs]] moved into the areas between the Rivers Elbe and Oder - moving from east to west and from south to north. There they assimilated the remaining [[Germanic peoples#History|Germanic]] population that had not left the area in the [[Migration period]].<ref>[[Sebastian Brather|Brather, Sebastian]] (2004). "[https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00112980 The beginnings of Slavic settlement east of the river Elbe]". ''Antiquity'', Volume 78, Issue 300. pp. 314–329</ref> Their German neighbours adapted the term they had been using for peoples east of the River Elbe before to the Slavs, calling them ''Wends'' as they called the ''Venedi'' before and probably the ''[[Vandals]]'' as well. In his late sixth century work ''[[History of Armenia (book)|History of Armenia]]'', [[Movses Khorenatsi]] mentions their raids into the lands named Vanand after them.<ref>Istorija Armenii Mojseja Horenskogo, II izd. Per. N. O. Emina, M., 1893, s.55-56.</ref>


The Wends are mentioned in Fredegar IV.74-75. The lived east of the river Elbe and were neighbours of the Saxons. The Saxons paid tribute to the Merovingian Kingdom since Chlothar I (511-561). They had to pay 500 cows yearly and had the obligation to guard the sector of the Frankish border against the Wends. However, the Saxons broke their oath under Dagobert I which resulted in frequent raids of Wends into Frankish territory and spreading out over Thuringia and other territory. The Saxon duplicity is one of the reasons for future military campaigns against them by the Carolingians, especially Charles Martel and Charlemagne.
Some tribes unified into larger, duchy-like units. For example, the [[Obotrites]] evolved from the unification of the ''[[Holstein]]'' and Western ''[[Mecklenburg]]'' tribes led by mighty dukes known for their raids into [[Old Saxony|Saxony]]. The [[Lutici]] were an alliance of tribes living between Obotrites and Pomeranians. They did not unify under a duke, but remained independent. Their leaders met in the temple of [[Rethra]].


While the Wends were arriving in so-called ''Germania Slavica'' as large homogeneous groups, they soon divided into a variety of small tribes, with large strips of woodland separating one tribal settlement area from another. Their tribal names were derived from local place names, sometimes adopting the Germanic tradition (e.g. [[Heveller]] from ''Havel'', [[Rani (Slavic tribe)|Rujanes]] from [[Rugians]]). Settlements were secured by round ''burghs'' made of wood and clay, where either people could retreat in case of a raid from the neighbouring tribe or used as military strongholds or outposts.
In 983, many Wend tribes participated in a great uprising against the [[Holy Roman Empire]], which had previously established Christian missions, colonies and administrative institutions (''Marken'' such as ''[[Northern March|Nordmark]]'' and ''[[Billungermark]]'') in pagan Wendish territories. The uprising was successful and the Wends delayed Christianisation for about two centuries.


Some tribes unified into larger, duchy-like units. For example, the [[Obotrites]] evolved from the unification of the ''[[Holstein]]'' and Western ''[[Mecklenburg]]'' tribes led by mighty dukes known for their raids into German [[Old Saxony|Saxony]]. The [[Lutici]] were an alliance of tribes living between Obotrites and Pomeranians. They did not unify under a duke, but remained independent. Their leaders met in the temple of [[Rethra]].
Wends and Danes had early and continuous contact including settlement, first and mainly through the closest South Danish islands of [[Møn]], [[Lolland]] and [[Falster]], all having place-names of Wendish origin{{citation needed|date=February 2023}}. There were also trading and settlement outposts by Danish towns as important as Roskilde, when it was the capital: 'Vindeboder' (Wends' booths) is the name of a city neighbourhood there. Danes and Wends also fought wars due to piracy and crusading. They also organised raids against the lands of the Roman empire <ref>{{cite web |title=Venderne og Danmark |url=http://static.sdu.dk/mediafiles//Files/Om_SDU/Institutter/Ihks/Projekter/Middelalderstudier/Venderne_og_Danmark.pdf |archive-date=November 16, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121116144129/http://static.sdu.dk/mediafiles//Files/Om_SDU/Institutter/Ihks/Projekter/Middelalderstudier/Venderne_og_Danmark.pdf }}</ref>

In 983, many Wend tribes participated in a great uprising against the [[Holy Roman Empire]], which had previously established Christian missions, German colonies and German administrative institutions (''Marken'' such as ''[[Northern March|Nordmark]]'' and ''[[Billungermark]]'') in pagan Wendish territories. The uprising was successful and the Wends delayed Germanisation for about two centuries.

Wends and Danes had early and continuous contact including settlement, first and mainly through the closest South Danish islands of [[Møn]], [[Lolland]] and [[Falster]], all having place-names of Wendish origin{{citation needed|date=February 2023}}. There were also trading and settlement outposts by Danish towns as important as Roskilde, when it was the capital: 'Vindeboder' (Wends' booths) is the name of a city neighbourhood there. Danes and Wends also fought wars due to piracy and crusading.<ref>{{cite web |title=Venderne og Danmark |url=http://static.sdu.dk/mediafiles//Files/Om_SDU/Institutter/Ihks/Projekter/Middelalderstudier/Venderne_og_Danmark.pdf |archive-date=November 16, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121116144129/http://static.sdu.dk/mediafiles//Files/Om_SDU/Institutter/Ihks/Projekter/Middelalderstudier/Venderne_og_Danmark.pdf }}</ref>


===Decline (1000–1200)===
===Decline (1000–1200)===
{{Main|Wendish Crusade}}
{{Main|Wendish Crusade}}
After their successes in 983 the Wends came under increasing pressure from [[Denmark|Danes]], [[Polish people|Poles]] and Saxons. The Poles invaded [[Pomerania]] several times. The Danes often raided the Baltic shores (and, in turn, the Wends often raided the raiders).
After their successes in 983 the Wends came under increasing pressure from Germans, [[Denmark|Danes]] and [[Polish people|Poles]]. The Poles invaded [[Pomerania]] several times. The Danes often raided the Baltic shores (and, in turn, the Wends often raided the raiders). The Holy Roman Empire and its [[margrave]]s tried to restore their marches.

In 1068/69 a Christian expedition took and destroyed [[Rethra]], one of the major pagan Wend temples. The Wendish religious centre shifted to [[Cape Arkona|Arkona]] thereafter. In 1124 and 1128, the Pomeranians and some Lutici were baptised. In 1147, the ''[[Wendish Crusade|Wend crusade]]'' took place in what is today parts of north Poland north-eastern Germany.
In 1068/69 a German expedition took and destroyed [[Rethra]], one of the major pagan Wend temples. The Wendish religious centre shifted to [[Cape Arkona|Arkona]] thereafter. In 1124 and 1128, the Pomeranians and some Lutici were baptised. In 1147, the ''[[Wendish Crusade|Wend crusade]]'' took place in what is today north-eastern Germany.


This did not, however, affect the Wendish people in today's [[Saxony]], where a relatively stable co-existence of German and Slavic inhabitants as well as close dynastic and diplomatic cooperation of Wendish and German nobility had been achieved. (See: Wiprecht of Groitzsch).
(See: Wiprecht of Groitzsch).


In 1168, during the [[Northern Crusades]], [[Denmark]] mounted a crusade led by Bishop [[Absalon]] and King [[Valdemar I of Denmark|Valdemar the Great]] against the [[Rani (Slavic tribe)|Wends of Rugia]] in order to convert them to Christianity. The crusaders [[Siege of Arkona|captured and destroyed Arkona]], the Wendish temple-fortress, and tore down the statue of the Wendish god [[Svetovid|Svantevit]]. With the capitulation of the Rugian Wends, the last independent pagan Wends were defeated by the surrounding Christian feudal powers.
In 1168, during the [[Northern Crusades]], [[Denmark]] mounted a crusade led by Bishop [[Absalon]] and King [[Valdemar I of Denmark|Valdemar the Great]] against the [[Rani (Slavic tribe)|Wends of Rugia]] in order to convert them to Christianity. The crusaders [[Siege of Arkona|captured and destroyed Arkona]], the Wendish temple-fortress, and tore down the statue of the Wendish god [[Svetovid|Svantevit]]. With the capitulation of the Rugian Wends, the last independent pagan Wends were defeated by the surrounding Christian feudal powers.


Local dukes and monasteries invited settlers to repopulate farmlands devastated in the wars, as well as to cultivate new farmlands from the expansive woodlands and heavy soils, with the use of iron-based agricultural tools known by ancient Slavs for thousands of years as Slavs are the tribes that taught agriclture many other tribes and communities in Western Europe. Now, newly Christianised lands of Europe, started developing again after the wars, a number of new towns were created under [[Magdeburg town law]] with the introduction of legally enforced markets, contracts and property rights. These developments over two centuries were collectively known as the {{Lang|de|[[Ostsiedlung]]}}. A minority of Germanic-speaking settlers moved beyond into parts of Poland, Hungary and Bohemia.
From the 12th to the 14th centuries, Germanic settlers moved into the Wendish lands in large numbers, transforming the area's culture from a Slavic to a Germanic one. Local dukes and monasteries invited settlers to repopulate farmlands devastated in the wars, as well as to cultivate new farmlands from the expansive woodlands and heavy soils, with the use of iron-based agricultural tools that had developed in Western Europe. Concurrently, a large number of new towns were created under [[German town law]] with the introduction of legally enforced markets, contracts and property rights. These developments over two centuries were collectively known as the {{Lang|de|[[Ostsiedlung]]}} (German eastward expansion). A minority of Germanic settlers moved beyond the Wendish territory into Hungary, Bohemia and Poland, where they were generally welcomed for their skills in farming and craftsmanship.


The [[Polabian language]] was spoken in the central area of [[Lower Saxony]] and in [[Brandenburg]] until around the 17th or 18th century.<ref>[[Harry van der Hulst]]. ''Word Prosodic Systems in the Languages of Europe.'' Walter de Gruyter. 1999. p. 837.</ref><ref>[[Britannica Online Encyclopedia]]. [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/335581/Lekhitic-languages#ref32572 Lekhitic languages]. {{Retrieved| access-date=2013-03-09}}</ref> The Germanic-speaking population forcefully assimilated most of the Wends, meaning that they did not disappeared as an ethnic minority but they were brutally denied all rights by various German governments er the creation of Germany as a state in 1871 which made Wends "disappear" as a distinct Slavic community, exception are the [[Sorbs]] who managed to maintain to this day, despite brutal treatment of the Slavic populations by the German various governments, totalitarian German Nazi regime and so on. Many place names and some family names in eastern Germany still show Wendish origins today. Also, the [[Duke of Mecklenburg|Dukes of Mecklenburg]], of [[Principality of Rügen|Rügen]] and some of [[Dukes of Pomerania|Pomerania]] had Wendish and other Lechitic ancestors.
The [[Polabian language]] was spoken in the central area of [[Lower Saxony]] and in [[Brandenburg]] until around the 17th or 18th century.<ref>[[Harry van der Hulst]]. ''Word Prosodic Systems in the Languages of Europe.'' Walter de Gruyter. 1999. p. 837.</ref><ref>[[Britannica Online Encyclopedia]]. [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/335581/Lekhitic-languages#ref32572 Lekhitic languages]. {{Retrieved| access-date=2013-03-09}}</ref> The German population assimilated most of the Wends, meaning that they disappeared as an ethnic minority - except for the [[Sorbs]]. Yet many place names and some family names in eastern Germany still show Wendish origins today. Also, the [[Duke of Mecklenburg|Dukes of Mecklenburg]], of [[Principality of Rügen|Rügen]] and of [[Dukes of Pomerania|Pomerania]] had Wendish ancestors.


Between 1540 and 1973, the kings of [[Sweden]] were officially called ''kings of the [[Swedish people|Swedes]], the [[King of the Goths|Goths]] and the [[King of the Wends|Wends]]'' (in Latin translation: ''kings of [[Suiones]], Goths and Vandals'') ({{Lang-sv|Svears, Götes och Wendes Konung}}). After the Danish monarch [[Queen Margrethe II]] chose not to use these titles in 1972 the {{as of | 2013 | alt = current}} Swedish monarch, [[Carl XVI Gustaf]] also chose only to use the title King of Sweden" ({{Lang|sv|Sveriges Konung}}), thereby changing an age-old tradition.
Between 1540 and 1973, the kings of [[Sweden]] were officially called ''kings of the [[Swedish people|Swedes]], the [[King of the Goths|Goths]] and the [[King of the Wends|Wends]]'' (in Latin translation: ''kings of [[Suiones]], Goths and Vandals'') ({{Lang-sv|Svears, Götes och Wendes Konung}}). After the Danish monarch [[Queen Margrethe II]] chose not to use these titles in 1972 the {{as of | 2013 | alt = current}} Swedish monarch, [[Carl XVI Gustaf]] also chose only to use the title King of Sweden" ({{Lang|sv|Sveriges Konung}}), thereby changing an age-old tradition.
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==Legacy==
==Legacy==


The Wendish people co-existed with the Germanic-speaking settlers and became gradually assimilated into the German-speaking group of people.
The Wendish people co-existed with the German settlers for centuries and became gradually assimilated into the German-speaking culture.


The [[Golden Bull of 1356]] (one of the constitutional foundations of the German-Roman Empire) explicitly recognised in its Art. 31 that the Holy Roman Empire was a multi-national entity with "diverse nations distinct in customs, manner of life, and in language".<ref>Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/golden.asp translated into English], Yale</ref> For that it stipulated "the sons, or heirs and successors of the illustrious chieftain/prince electors, ... since they are expected in all likelihood to have naturally acquired the German language, ... shall be instructed in the grammar of the Slavic and Italian (i.e. Wendish) tongues, beginning with the seventh Year of their age."<ref>Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/golden.asp translated into English], Yale</ref>
The [[Golden Bull of 1356]] (one of the constitutional foundations of the German-Roman Empire) explicitly recognised in its Art. 31 that the German-Roman Empire was a multi-national entity with "diverse nations distinct in customs, manner of life, and in language".<ref>Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/golden.asp translated into English], Yale</ref> For that it stipulated "the sons, or heirs and successors of the illustrious prince electors, ... since they are expected in all likelihood to have naturally acquired the German language, ... shall be instructed in the grammar of the Italian and Slavic (i.e. Wendish) tongues, beginning with the seventh Year of their age."<ref>Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/golden.asp translated into English], Yale</ref>


Many geographical names in Germany [[Central Germany (cultural area)|Central Germany]] and northern, eastern and south Germany can be traced back to a Slavic origin. Typical Slavic endings include -itz, -witz, -witch,-witch,-itzsch and --ow, -au, -a,-ou, and many others. They can be found in city names for example such as [[Delitzsch]] and [[Rochlitz]]. Even names of major cities like [[Leipzig]] and [[Berlin]] are of Slavic origin. Germany is also full of Germanised Slavic toponyms that can end in any letter.
Many geographical names in [[Central Germany (cultural area)|Central Germany]] and northern Germany can be traced back to a Slavic origin. Typical Slavic endings include -itz, -itzsch and -ow. They can be found in city names such as [[Delitzsch]] and [[Rochlitz]]. Even names of major cities like [[Leipzig]] and [[Berlin]] are most likely of Wendish origin.


Today, the remaining minority of Slavic people in Germany are the [[Sorbs]], maintain their traditional language and culture and enjoy cultural [[self-determination]] exercised through the [[Domowina]]. Their languages is basically just like Polish language and very understandable to many other Slavic people. The third [[minister president]] of Saxony [[Stanislaw Tillich]] (2008–2017) is of Sorbian origin, being the first head of a German federal state with an Sorbian minority background.
Today, the only remaining minority people of Wendish origin, the [[Sorbs]], maintain their traditional language and culture and enjoy cultural [[self-determination]] exercised through the [[Domowina]]. The third [[minister president]] of Saxony [[Stanislaw Tillich]] (2008–2017) is of Sorbian origin, being the first head of a German federal state with an ethnic minority background.


===The Texas Wends===
===The Texas Wends===
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*[[Sukow-Dziedzice group]]
*[[Sukow-Dziedzice group]]
*[[Northern March]]
*[[Northern March]]
*[[Limes Sorabicus]]
*[[Lechitic people]]
*[[Limes Saxoniae]]
*[[Limes Saxoniae]]
*[[Kashubians]]
*[[Drevani]]
*[[Drevani]]
*[[Wendland]]
*[[Wendland]]
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{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Early Slavs]]
[[Category:Ancient Slavic peoples]]
[[Category:Historical ethnic groups of Europe]]
[[Category:Historical ethnic groups of Europe]]
[[Category:Sorbs]]
[[Category:Sorbs]]
[[Category:West Slavs]]
[[Category:Lechites]]
[[Category:Wendland]]
[[Category:Wendland]]
[[Category:West Slavic history]]
[[Category:West Slavic history]]

Revision as of 21:11, 1 September 2024

The Limes Saxoniae border between the Saxons and the Lechites Obotrites, established about 810 in present-day Schleswig-Holstein
Germaniae veteris typus (Old Germany). Aestui, Venedi, Gythones and Ingaevones are visible on the right upper corner of the map. Edited by Willem and Joan Blaeu, 1645.

Wends (Template:Lang-ang [ˈwi.ne.dɑs]; Old Norse: Vindar; German: Wenden [ˈvɛn.dn̩], Winden [ˈvɪn.dn̩]; Template:Lang-da; Swedish: Vender; Template:Lang-pl, Czech: Wendové) is a historical name for Slavs who inhabited present-day northeast Germany. It refers not to a homogeneous people, but to various people, tribes or groups depending on where and when it was used. In the modern day, communities identifying as Wendish exist in Slovenia, Austria, Lusatia, the United States (such as the Texas Wends),[1] and Australia.[2]

In German-speaking Europe during the Middle Ages, the term "Wends" was interpreted as synonymous with "Slavs" and sporadically used in literature to refer to West Slavs and South Slavs living within the Holy Roman Empire. The name has possibly survived in Finnic languages (Finnish: Venäjä [ˈʋe̞.næ.jæ], Estonian: Vene [ˈve.ne], Template:Lang-krl), denoting modern Russia.[3][4]

Term

Limes sorabicus: the Sorbian settlement area bordering East Francia on a map of medieval Germany (Germanische und slavische Volksstämme zwischen Elbe und Weichsel, 1869)

According to one theory, Germanic peoples first applied this name to the ancient Veneti. For the medieval Scandinavians, the term Wends (Vender) meant Slavs living near the southern shore of the Baltic Sea (Vendland), and the term was therefore used to refer to Polabian Slavs like the Obotrites, Rugian Slavs, Veleti/Lutici, and Pomeranian tribes.

For people living in the medieval Northern Holy Roman Empire and its precursors, especially for the Saxons, a Wend (Wende) was a Slav living in the area west of the River Oder, an area later entitled Germania Slavica, settled by the Polabian Slav tribes (mentioned above) in the north and by others, such as the Sorbs and the Milceni, further south (see Sorbian March).

The Germans in the south used the term Winde instead of Wende and applied it, just as the Germans in the north, to Slavs they had contact with; e.g., the Polabians from Bavaria Slavica or the Slovenes (the names Windic March, Windisch Feistritz, Windischgraz, or Windisch Bleiberg near Ferlach still bear testimony to this historical denomination). The same term was sometimes applied to the neighboring region of Slavonia, which appears as Windischland in some documents prior to the 18th century.

Following the 8th century, the Frankish kings and their successors organised nearly all Wendish land into marches. This process later turned into the series of Crusades. By the 12th century, all Wendish lands had become part of the Holy Roman Empire. In the course of the Ostsiedlung, which reached its peak in the 12th to 14th centuries, this land was settled by Germans and reorganised.

Due to the process of assimilation following German settlement, many Slavs west of the Oder adopted the German culture and language. Only some rural communities which did not have a strong admixture with Germans and continued to use West Slavic languages were still termed Wends. With the gradual decline of the use of these local Slavic tongues, the term Wends slowly disappeared, too.

Some sources claim that in the 13th century there were actual historic people called Wends or Vends living as far as northern Latvia (east of the Baltic Sea) around the city of Wenden. Henry of Livonia (Henricus de Lettis) in his 13th-century Latin chronicle described a tribe called the Vindi.

Today, only one group of Wends still exists: the Lusatian Sorbs in present-day Eastern Germany, with international diaspora.[5]

Roman-era Veneti

The term "Wends" derived from the Roman-era people called in Template:Lang-la, Venethī [ˈwe.ne.t̪ʰiː] or Venedī [ˈwe.ne.d̪iː]; in Greek: Οὐενέδαι, translit. Ouenédai [u.eˈne.ðe]. This people is mentioned by Pliny the Elder and Ptolemy as inhabiting the Baltic coast.

History

Rise (500–1000)

In the 1st millennium AD, during the Slavic migrations which split the Slavs into Southern, Eastern and Western groups, some West Slavs moved into the areas between the Rivers Elbe and Oder - moving from east to west and from south to north. There they assimilated the remaining Germanic population that had not left the area in the Migration period.[6] Their German neighbours adapted the term they had been using for peoples east of the River Elbe before to the Slavs, calling them Wends as they called the Venedi before and probably the Vandals as well. In his late sixth century work History of Armenia, Movses Khorenatsi mentions their raids into the lands named Vanand after them.[7]

The Wends are mentioned in Fredegar IV.74-75. The lived east of the river Elbe and were neighbours of the Saxons. The Saxons paid tribute to the Merovingian Kingdom since Chlothar I (511-561). They had to pay 500 cows yearly and had the obligation to guard the sector of the Frankish border against the Wends. However, the Saxons broke their oath under Dagobert I which resulted in frequent raids of Wends into Frankish territory and spreading out over Thuringia and other territory. The Saxon duplicity is one of the reasons for future military campaigns against them by the Carolingians, especially Charles Martel and Charlemagne.

While the Wends were arriving in so-called Germania Slavica as large homogeneous groups, they soon divided into a variety of small tribes, with large strips of woodland separating one tribal settlement area from another. Their tribal names were derived from local place names, sometimes adopting the Germanic tradition (e.g. Heveller from Havel, Rujanes from Rugians). Settlements were secured by round burghs made of wood and clay, where either people could retreat in case of a raid from the neighbouring tribe or used as military strongholds or outposts.

Some tribes unified into larger, duchy-like units. For example, the Obotrites evolved from the unification of the Holstein and Western Mecklenburg tribes led by mighty dukes known for their raids into German Saxony. The Lutici were an alliance of tribes living between Obotrites and Pomeranians. They did not unify under a duke, but remained independent. Their leaders met in the temple of Rethra.

In 983, many Wend tribes participated in a great uprising against the Holy Roman Empire, which had previously established Christian missions, German colonies and German administrative institutions (Marken such as Nordmark and Billungermark) in pagan Wendish territories. The uprising was successful and the Wends delayed Germanisation for about two centuries.

Wends and Danes had early and continuous contact including settlement, first and mainly through the closest South Danish islands of Møn, Lolland and Falster, all having place-names of Wendish origin[citation needed]. There were also trading and settlement outposts by Danish towns as important as Roskilde, when it was the capital: 'Vindeboder' (Wends' booths) is the name of a city neighbourhood there. Danes and Wends also fought wars due to piracy and crusading.[8]

Decline (1000–1200)

After their successes in 983 the Wends came under increasing pressure from Germans, Danes and Poles. The Poles invaded Pomerania several times. The Danes often raided the Baltic shores (and, in turn, the Wends often raided the raiders). The Holy Roman Empire and its margraves tried to restore their marches.

In 1068/69 a German expedition took and destroyed Rethra, one of the major pagan Wend temples. The Wendish religious centre shifted to Arkona thereafter. In 1124 and 1128, the Pomeranians and some Lutici were baptised. In 1147, the Wend crusade took place in what is today north-eastern Germany.

This did not, however, affect the Wendish people in today's Saxony, where a relatively stable co-existence of German and Slavic inhabitants as well as close dynastic and diplomatic cooperation of Wendish and German nobility had been achieved. (See: Wiprecht of Groitzsch).

In 1168, during the Northern Crusades, Denmark mounted a crusade led by Bishop Absalon and King Valdemar the Great against the Wends of Rugia in order to convert them to Christianity. The crusaders captured and destroyed Arkona, the Wendish temple-fortress, and tore down the statue of the Wendish god Svantevit. With the capitulation of the Rugian Wends, the last independent pagan Wends were defeated by the surrounding Christian feudal powers.

From the 12th to the 14th centuries, Germanic settlers moved into the Wendish lands in large numbers, transforming the area's culture from a Slavic to a Germanic one. Local dukes and monasteries invited settlers to repopulate farmlands devastated in the wars, as well as to cultivate new farmlands from the expansive woodlands and heavy soils, with the use of iron-based agricultural tools that had developed in Western Europe. Concurrently, a large number of new towns were created under German town law with the introduction of legally enforced markets, contracts and property rights. These developments over two centuries were collectively known as the Ostsiedlung (German eastward expansion). A minority of Germanic settlers moved beyond the Wendish territory into Hungary, Bohemia and Poland, where they were generally welcomed for their skills in farming and craftsmanship.

The Polabian language was spoken in the central area of Lower Saxony and in Brandenburg until around the 17th or 18th century.[9][10] The German population assimilated most of the Wends, meaning that they disappeared as an ethnic minority - except for the Sorbs. Yet many place names and some family names in eastern Germany still show Wendish origins today. Also, the Dukes of Mecklenburg, of Rügen and of Pomerania had Wendish ancestors.

Between 1540 and 1973, the kings of Sweden were officially called kings of the Swedes, the Goths and the Wends (in Latin translation: kings of Suiones, Goths and Vandals) (Swedish: Svears, Götes och Wendes Konung). After the Danish monarch Queen Margrethe II chose not to use these titles in 1972 the current Swedish monarch, Carl XVI Gustaf also chose only to use the title King of Sweden" (Sveriges Konung), thereby changing an age-old tradition.

From the Middle Ages the kings of Denmark and of Denmark–Norway used the titles King of the Wends (from 1362) and Goths (from the 12th century). The use of both titles was discontinued in 1973.[11]

Legacy

The Wendish people co-existed with the German settlers for centuries and became gradually assimilated into the German-speaking culture.

The Golden Bull of 1356 (one of the constitutional foundations of the German-Roman Empire) explicitly recognised in its Art. 31 that the German-Roman Empire was a multi-national entity with "diverse nations distinct in customs, manner of life, and in language".[12] For that it stipulated "the sons, or heirs and successors of the illustrious prince electors, ... since they are expected in all likelihood to have naturally acquired the German language, ... shall be instructed in the grammar of the Italian and Slavic (i.e. Wendish) tongues, beginning with the seventh Year of their age."[13]

Many geographical names in Central Germany and northern Germany can be traced back to a Slavic origin. Typical Slavic endings include -itz, -itzsch and -ow. They can be found in city names such as Delitzsch and Rochlitz. Even names of major cities like Leipzig and Berlin are most likely of Wendish origin.

Today, the only remaining minority people of Wendish origin, the Sorbs, maintain their traditional language and culture and enjoy cultural self-determination exercised through the Domowina. The third minister president of Saxony Stanislaw Tillich (2008–2017) is of Sorbian origin, being the first head of a German federal state with an ethnic minority background.

The Texas Wends

In 1854, the Wends of Texas departed Lusatia on the Ben Nevis[14] seeking greater liberty, in order to settle an area of central Texas, primarily Serbin. The Wends succeeded, expanding into Warda, Giddings, Austin, Houston, Fedor, Swiss Alp, Port Arthur, Mannheim, Copperas Cove, Vernon, Walburg, The Grove, Bishop, and the Rio Grande Valley.

A strong emphasis on tradition, principles, and education is evident today in families descendant from the Wendish pioneers. Today, thousands of Texans and other Americans (many unaware of their background), can lay claim to the heritage of the Wends.[15]

The interior of the original Lutheran Church the Wends established in Serbin, Texas, St. Paul.

Other uses

This 1940 ethnic map by an Austrian scholar uses the term Windische for the population of Styria, in parallel to Slowenen elsewhere in Slovenia

Historically, the term "Wends" has also occurred in the following contexts:

  • Until the mid-19th-century German-speakers most commonly used the name Wenden to refer to Slovenes. This usage is mirrored in the name of the Windic March, a Medieval territory in present-day Lower Carniola, which merged with the Duchy of Carniola by the mid 15th century. With the diffusion of the term slowenisch for the Slovene language and Slowenen for Slovenes, the words windisch and Winde or Wende became derogatory in connotation. The same development could be seen in the case of the Hungarian Slovenes, who used to be known under the name "Vends".
  • It was also used to denote the Slovaks in German-language texts before c. 1400.
  • The German term "Windischland" was used in the Middle Ages for the historical Kingdom of Slavonia (in Croatia).[16] The terms Veneta, Wenden, Winden etc. were used in reference to the westernmost Slavs in the 1st and 2nd century CE, as a reference to the name of the earlier tribes of Veneti.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Who Are the Wends?". January 2010.
  2. ^ "History of Migration".
  3. ^ Campbell, Lyle (2004). Historical Linguistics. MIT Press. p. 418. ISBN 0-262-53267-0.
  4. ^ Bojtár, Endre (1999). Foreword to the Past. Central European University Press. p. 88. ISBN 9639116424.
  5. ^ "Museum". 29 January 2015.
  6. ^ Brather, Sebastian (2004). "The beginnings of Slavic settlement east of the river Elbe". Antiquity, Volume 78, Issue 300. pp. 314–329
  7. ^ Istorija Armenii Mojseja Horenskogo, II izd. Per. N. O. Emina, M., 1893, s.55-56.
  8. ^ "Venderne og Danmark" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 16, 2012.
  9. ^ Harry van der Hulst. Word Prosodic Systems in the Languages of Europe. Walter de Gruyter. 1999. p. 837.
  10. ^ Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Lekhitic languages. Retrieved 2013-03-09.
  11. ^ "Kungl. Maj:ts kungörelse med anledning av konung Gustaf VI Adolfs frånfälle". Lagen.nu. Archived from the original on 12 July 2014.
  12. ^ Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) translated into English, Yale
  13. ^ Charles IV, Golden Bull of 1356 (full text English translation) translated into English, Yale
  14. ^ "Ben Nevis, Wends and German Texans".
  15. ^ "Who Are the Wends?". January 2010.
  16. ^ Slavonia (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute. 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
  17. ^ Gluhak, Alemko (2003). "The name "Slavonia"". Migration and Ethnic Themes (in Croatian). 19 (1). Zagreb, Croatia: Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies. ISSN 1848-9184.

Further reading