Old Prussians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Prussians" redirects here. "Prussians" may also refer to citizens of the former German state of Prussia.
The Prussian tribes in the context of the other Baltic tribes, ca. 1200 AD.  The Eastern Balts are shown in brown hues while the Western Balts are shown in green.  The boundaries are approximate.
The Prussian tribes in the context of the other Baltic tribes, ca. 1200 AD. The Eastern Balts are shown in brown hues while the Western Balts are shown in green. The boundaries are approximate.

The Old Prussians or Baltic Prussians (German: Pruzzen or Prußen; Latin: Pruteni; Lithuanian: Prūsai; Polish: Prusowie) were an ethnic group, made up of the Baltic tribes that inhabited the lands of the southeastern Baltic Sea in the area around the Vistula and Curonian Lagoons. They spoke a language now known as Old Prussian. During the 13th century, the Old Prussians were conquered by the Teutonic Knights, and gradually Germanized and Polonized over the following centuries. The former state of Prussia took its name from the Baltic Prussians, although it was led by Germans and not by the Old Prussians (who were marginalized and dispersed and whose language was extinct by the 17th century[1]).

The land of the Old Prussians consisted approximately of central and southern East Prussia — the present-day Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship of Poland, the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia, and the Klaipėda Region of Lithuania.

Contents

[edit] Etymology


History of Brandenburg and Prussia
Northern March
pre-12th century
Old Prussians
pre-13th century
Margraviate of Brandenburg
1157-1618 (1806)
Teutonic State
1224-1525
Duchy of Prussia
1525-1618
Royal Prussia
1466-1772
Brandenburg-Prussia
1618-1701
Kingdom of Prussia
1701-1918
Free State of Prussia
1918-1947
Brandenburg
1947-1952 / 1990-

The names of the Prussian tribes all reflected the theme of landscape. Most of the names were based on water, an understandable convention in a land dotted with thousands of lakes, streams, and swamps (see Masurian Lakeland). Indeed, that landscape caused the very partial isolation that preserved the Baltic language group. To the south, the terrain runs into the Pripet Marshes at the headwaters of the Dnieper River; these have been an effective barrier over the millennia.

The original pre-Baltic settlers generally named their settlements after the streams, lakes, seas, or forests by which they settled. The clan or tribal entities into which they were organized then took the name of the settlement. For example, Barta, the home of the Barti, is related to the name of the Bartis River in Lithuania, and such words as the Albanian berrak and Bulgarian bara, both meaning "swamp". A *bor- root can be reconstructed, meaning "swamp", to come from the o-grade of Indo-European *bher-; Indo-European has several *bher- roots, however, so the exact meaning and line of descent is unclear.

This root is perhaps the one used in the very name of Prusa (Prussia), for which an earlier Brus- is found in the map of the Bavarian Geographer. In Tacitus' Germania, the Lugii Buri are mentioned living within the eastern range of the Germans. Lugi may descend from Pokorny's *leug- (2), "black, swamp" (Page 686), while Buri is perhaps the "Prussian" root.

The name of Pameddi (Pomesania) tribe is derived from the words pa ("by" or "near") and meddin ("forest") or meddu ("honey").[2] Nadruvia be a compound of the words na ("by" or "on") and drawē ("wood") or na and the root *dhreu- ("flow" or "river"). The name of the Bartians, a Prussian tribe, and the name of the Bārta river in Latvia are possibly cognates.

In the 2nd century AD, the geographer Claudius Ptolemy listed some Borusci living in European Sarmatia (in his Eighth Map of Europe), which was separated from Germania by the Vistula Flumen. His map is very confused in that region, but the Borusci seem further east than the Prussians, which would have been under the Gythones (Goths) at the mouth of the Vistula. The Aesti (Easterners) recorded by Tacitus were recorded later by Jordanes as part of the Gothic Empire.

[edit] Early history

Main article: Origins of Prussia
Medieval depiction of Prussians killing Saint Adalbert the missionary bishop, part of the Gniezno Doors c. 1175.
Medieval depiction of Prussians killing Saint Adalbert the missionary bishop, part of the Gniezno Doors c. 1175.

At the beginning of Baltic history, the Old Prussians were bordered by the Vistula and the Neman Rivers with a southern depth to about Toruń, which was Prussian, and the line of the River Narew. The Kashubians were on the west, the Poles on the south, the Sudovians (sometimes considered a separate people, other times regarded as a Prussian tribe) on the east, the Curonians on the north, and the Lithuanians on the northeast. The Sudovians began at about Suwałki.

The Prussians, like the other Balts of the times, were organized into a tribal structure. This structure is most fully attested in the Chronicon terrae Prussiae of Peter of Dusburg, a priest of the Teutonic Order. The work is dated to 1326. He lists eleven lands and ten tribes, which were named on a geographical basis. These were :

  1. Pomesania (German Pomesanien, modern Lithuanian Pamedė, with the reconstructed Prussian name Pameddi)
  2. Varmia (German Ermland or Warmien, modern Lithuanian Varmė, with the reconstructed Prussian name Wārmi)
  3. Pogesania (German Pogesanien, modern Lithuanian Pagudė, with the reconstructed Prussian name Paguddi)
  4. Natangia (German Natangen, modern Lithuanian Notanga)
  5. Sambia (German Samland, modern Lithuanian Semba; see also Sambians)
  6. Nadruvia (German Nadrauen, modern Lithuanian Nadruva)
  7. Bartia (German Barten, modern Lithuanian Barta, with the reconstructed Prussian name Barta)
  8. Skalovia (German Schalauen, modern Lithuanian Skalva; see also Skalvians)
  9. Sudovia (German Sudauen, modern Lithuanian Sūduva, with the reconstructed Prussian name Sūdawa; see Sudovians\Yotvingians)
  10. Galindia (German Galindien, modern Lithuanian Galinda, with the reconstructed Prussian name Galinda)

Peter noted that the eleventh land, Kulm, to the southwest of Pomesania, was nearly uninhabited. After the German conquest of Prussia, the country was divided along almost these exact lines, although the Germans added a twelfth land which they called Sassen, centred at Tannenberg. Those names are not, perhaps, exhaustive. Many of the names appear in ancient and medieval sources, but the spelling and to some degree the morphology vary. Peter of Dusburg, for example, preferred Latin names, such as the Pomesani, Pogesani, Varmienses, etc.

[edit] Medieval history

The first definite mention of the Old Prussians in historical sources is in connection with Adalbert of Prague, who was slain in 997 during a missionary effort to Christianize the Prussians.[3] In the 1220s, Duke Konrad I of Masovia sought external help in the conflict between the pagan Old Prussians and Roman Catholic Poland. Although the Old Prussians repelled the Order of Dobrzyń, they succumbed to the Order of the Teutonic Knights after a bloody conflict spanning several decades in the 13th century during the Northern Crusades. Many of the native Prussians who survived were resettled in Sambia. Frequent revolts, including a major rebellion in 1286, were defeated by the Teutonic Knights.

Baptised Prussians were educated at the Archbishopric of Magdeburg, while Germans and Dutch settlers colonized the lands of the native Old Prussians; Poles and Lithuanians also settled in southern and eastern Prussia, respectively. Significant pockets of Old Prussians were left in a matrix of Germans throughout Prussia (in what is now the Kaliningrad Oblast), and remained part of the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights until 1525. They were gradually Germanized or Polonized, depending on which part of Prussia they lived in, beginning especially in the 15th century.

The monks and scholars of the Teutonic Order took an interest in the language spoken by the Prussians, and tried to record it. In addition, missionaries needed to communicate with the Prussians in order to convert them. Records of the Old Prussian language therefore survive; along with the little-known Galindian and the better-known Sudovian, these records are all that remain of the West Baltic language group. As might be expected, it is a very archaic Baltic, showing affinities with Proto-Germanic. The Old Prussian language seems to support the theory that a common Balto-Slavic language once existed.

The Teutonic Order was gradually defeated by the Polish-Lithuanian Union during the 15th century. In 1525 Grand Master Albert of Brandenburg-Ansbach secularized the Order's Prussian territories into the Protestant Duchy of Prussia, a vassal of Poland. The Old Prussians rose again in rebellion, but were defeated by the German authorities. During the Protestant Reformation, Lutheranism spread throughout the territories, officially in the Duchy of Prussia and unofficially in the Polish province of Royal Prussia, while Catholicism survived in Warmia. With Protestantism came the use of the vernacular in church services instead of Latin, so Albert had the Catechisms translated into Old Prussian.

Because of the assimilation of the Old Prussians by Germans, Poles, and Lithuanians, the Old Prussian language became extinct before the end of the 17th century, but translations of the Bible, Old Prussian poems, and some other texts survived and have enabled scholars to reconstruct the language.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica entry 'Old Prussian language'.
  2. ^ Meddu can be traced to the Proto-Indo-European root *medhu-.
  3. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia entry 'St. Adalbert'. (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01127c.htm)

[edit] External links