Christian Churches of God

No. 46G

 

 

 

Sons of Japheth: Part VII

Meshech

 

(Edition 1.0 20071117-20150919)

 

Meshech, sixth son of Japheth, is the father of the Slavic peoples. Initially an insignificant, repeatedly subjugated Indo-European group living north of the Carpathian Mountains and the middle Dnieper river area, the Slavic farmers through their persistence managed to survive and ultimately succeeded in occupying a vast territory in Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkan Peninsula. We trace their movements here.

 

 

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(Copyright ©  2008, 2015 Wade Cox)

 

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Meshech


 

Meshech was the 6th son of Japheth (Gen. 10:2; 1Chr. 1:5), living in what is now the area of Moscow, and the forefather of the Moscovites of later Russia.

 

Meshech: (from Easton’s Bible Dictionary)

Drawing out, the sixth son of Japheth (Genesis 10:2), the founder of a tribe (1 Chronicles 1:5; Ezek. 27:13; 38:2, 3). They were in all probability the Moschi, a people inhabiting the Moschian Mountains, between the Black and the Caspian Seas. In Psalm 120:5 the name occurs as simply a synonym for foreigners or barbarians. "During the ascendency of the Babylonians and Persians in Western Asia, the Moschi were subdued; but it seems probable that a large number of them crossed the Caucasus range and spread over the northern steppes, mingling with the Scythians. There they became known as Muscovs, and gave that name to the Russian nation and its ancient capital by which they are still generally known throughout the East"

 

Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew Lexicon says: “the descendants of Mesech often are mentioned in connection with Tubal, Magog, and other northern nations including the Moschi, a people on the borders of Colchis and Armeni.

 

Meshech/Mosoch: Moscow

Wikipedia articles state the following:

Some Bible scholars consider Meshech the ancestor of the Russian people with the view that such geographic names in Russia as Moscow, the Meschera tribe and the Meshchera Lowlands could be related to Meschech. Also, the people of Georgia have traditions of descent from Meshech, among others.

 

Josephus has this to say about Meshech and Moscow:

Mesech: Mosocheni were founded by Mosovh; now they are Cappadocians. There is also a mark of their ancient denomination still to be shown; for there is even now among them a city called Mazaca, which may inform those that are able to understand, that so was the entire nation once called (Josephus: A of J, k 1. Ch 6.1).

 

The oldest settlements, dated as 3,000 BCE, in the territory were discovered within the area of the present-day city of Moscow. Slavic tribes ("vjatichi") occupied areas near Moscow in the second half of the first millennia of our era and these were regarded as a core of the future population of Moscow.

 

From the Wikepedia article “Merya”:

The first reference to Moscow dates from 1147 when it was an obscure town in a small province inhabited mostly by Merya, speakers of a now extinct Finnic language.

 

The Meri people (also Meryas or Merä) were an ancient Finno Ugrian tribe who lived in the region of modern Russian cities of Moscow, Rostov, Kostroma, Jaroslavl and Vladimir. Their language was related to the languages spoken by their neighbours, such as the Mari, the Mordvins, the Meshchera and the Veps. Numerous archaeological finds in those areas show they were an old and important culture.

 

Their role has been neglected in Russian history, but after 1998, when a closed archive was located and opened to [the] public, a lot of new (old) Russian information has come to light and provides fascinating facts, even written [in the] Meri language including transliteration of Biblial Old Testament to Meri language in [ca] 1000 [Tenth]-century.

 

They were assimilated by the Slavs. However, the Merya culture was also assimilated in those regions that were initially inhabited by the Merya. Sacred woods and stones, worshipped by the Merya, were part of local traditional feasts for much longer than the similar Slavic sacred places in the west regions of modern Russia.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merya

 

Mushki

Wikipedia article ‘Mushki’ says:

The Mushki (Muški) were an Iron Age people of Anatolia, known from Assyrian sources. They do not appear in Hittite records. Several authors have connected them with the Moschoi (Μόσχοι) of Greek sources and the Georgian tribe of the Meskhi.

 

Two different groups are called Muški in the Assyrian sources (Diakonoff 1984:115), one from the 12th to 9th centuries, located near the confluence of the Arsanias and the Euphrates ("Eastern Mushki"), and the other in the 8th to 7th centuries, located in Cilicia ("Western Mushki"). Assyrian sources identify the Western Mushki with the Phrygians, while Greek sources clearly distinguish between Phrygians and Moschoi.

 

Identification of the Eastern with the Western Mushki is uncertain, but it is of course possible to assume a migration of at least part of the Eastern Mushki to Cilicia in the course of the 10th to 8th centuries, and this possibility has been repeatedly suggested, variously identifying the Mushki as speakers of a Georgian, Armenian or Anatolian idiom. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushki

 

 

Moschoi

The Wikipedia article has this to say about Moschoi:

Hecataeus of Miletus (c. 550 - 476 BCE) speaks of the Moschi as "Colchians" (perhaps, Georgian speaking), situated next to the Matieni (Hurrians).

 

According to Herodotus [Histories: 7.78], the equipment of the Moschoi was similar to that of the Tibareni, Macrones, Mossynoeci and Mardae, with wooden caps upon their heads, and shields and small spears, on which long points were set. All these tribes formed the 19th satrapy of the Achaemenid empire, extending along the southeast of the Euxine, or the Black Sea, and bounded on the south by the lofty chain of the Armenian mountains.

 

Strabo [xi.2. 14,16] locates the Moschoi in two places. The first location is somewhere in modern Abkhazia (Georgia) on the eastern shore of the Black Sea, in agreement with Stephan of Byzantium quoting Hellanicus. The second location Moschice (Moschikê) was divided between the Colchians, Armenians, and Iberians (cf. Mela, III. 5.4; Pliny VI.4.). These latter Moschoi were obviously the Georgian Meskhi or Mesx’i (where Greek χ, chi, is Georgian ხ, x). Procopius calls them Meschoi and says that they were subject to the Iberians (i.e., Georgians), and had embraced Christianity, the religion of their masters. According to Professor James R. Russell of Harvard University, the Georgian designation for Armenians Somekhi, preserves the old name of the Mushki.

 

Pliny [6.10] in the 1st century AD mentions the Moscheni in southern Armenia. In Byzantine historiography, Moschoi was a name equivalent to or considered as the ancestors of "Cappadocians" (Eusebius) with their capital at Mazaca (later Caesarea Mazaca, modern Kayseri). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushki#Moschoi

 

Slavic peoples

Marija Gimbutas has this to say about the Slavs in her book:
The story of the Slavs as deciphered from archaeological, historical, linguistic and folkloric sources reveals the vital ingredient of tenacity as the attribute that kindled the Slavic phenomenon. Initially an insignificant, repeatedly subjugated Indo-European group living north of the Carpathian mountains and the middle Dnieper river area, the Slavic farmers through their persistence managed to survive and ultimately succeeded in occupying a vast territory in Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkan Peninsula. Their expansion was not episodic like that of the Huns and Avars, it was a colonization. Scholars have brilliantly deduced the existence of a Proto-Slavic parent language from the linguistic evidence.

 

…Their thirteen separate languages, grouped into western, southern and eastern blocs, emerged from what appears to have been a single language until the ninth century AD. The languages within the respective blocs show close affinities and transitional dialects connecting them can be observed; but there are also countless differences, just as there are between those of one bloc and another… The Slavs are not a blood group; there is no Slavic race, as there is no Germanic or Romance race.

 

…the diversities of the modern Slavic nations are directly attributable to the varied cultural encounters the Slavs met with during their expansion period. Each Slavic group underwent social and economic changes as a result of exposure to differing ethnetic environments. By the tenth century, the western and southern Slavic dialects had separated into entities which resemble contemporary linguistic divisions.

 

…The Slavic story begins earlier than the tenth-century formation of the Slavic states, earlier than the historic records of the Slavic introduction to Christianity and, in fact, earlier than the accounts of the ‘Sclavini’ written by the sixth-century historians, Procopius and Jordanes. The Slavs, constituting a branch of the Indo-European peoples, can be assumed to have needed as long a period of time for development of their language and culture as did the Greeks, Balts, Germanic peoples, Illyrians, Tracians and other Indo-European groups.

 

Origins

…Most widely accepted as the geographical location of the Slavic homeland is either 1) Central Europe which includes the Oder-Vistula area of Germany and Poland, or 2) the western Ukraine or the whole Ukraine area north of the Black Sea.

 

Recent research has made it clear that ‘proto’-Indo-Europeans embarked on an enormous expansion into Europe and the Near East from the steppes of Eurasia…The first movement from South Russia to the Ukraine and the Lower Danube basin occurred some time before 4000 BC and the repeated migrations and devastation of the Aegean, Mediterranean and Anatolian lands took place in the period 2300 BC.

 

The ‘Proto’-Indo-Europeans were semi-nomadic pastoralists having a patrilinear and patriarchal social system. They were horse breeders and possibly used horses as mounts and possessed vehicles as early as the third millennium BC. This explains their mobility. It took them less than a millennium to conquer and/or assimilate a number of Balkan and Central European food-producing cultures as well as convert some North European hunters and fishers to their way of life. …

(Marija Gimbutas, The Slavs, Thames and Hudson Ltd., London, 1971, pp. 14-18.)

 

Origin of the term Slav

The origin of the word Slav is uncertain, and the earliest references of this name are from the 6th century. The oldest documents written in Old Church Slavonic dating from the 9th century describe the Slavs around Thessalonica as slověne..

 

Some scholars link the name either with the word sláva "glory", "fame" or slovo "word, talk" (both related to the word slusati "to hear" from the IE root *kleu-). Thus slověne would mean "people who speak (the same language)", i.e. people who understand each other.

 

Earliest accounts

Pliny the Elder and Ptolemy mention a tribe of the Venedes around the river Vistula. The Slavs under name of Venets, the Antes and the Sklavens make their first appearance in Byzantine records in the early 6th century. Byzantine historiographers under Justinian I (527-565), describe tribes emerging from the area of the Carpathian Mountains, the lower Danube and the Black Sea, invading the Danubian provinces of the Eastern Empire.

 

Jordanes mentions that the Venets sub-divided into three groups: the Venets, the Ants and the Sklavens (Sclovenes, Sklavinoi), collectively called Spores.

 

The westward movement of Germans and Celts in the 5th and 6th centuries AD started the great migration of the Slavs, who settled the lands abandoned by Germanic tribes fleeing the Huns and their allies: westward into the country between the Oder and the Elbe-Saale line; southward into Bohemia, Moravia, much of present day Austria, the Pannonian plain and the Balkans; and northward along the upper Dnieper river. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavic_tribes

 

Genetic origins

Slavs stem from a wide variety of genetic backgrounds and each group has its own unique history, religion and culture. Today the Slavs are divided into three major subgroups:  West Slavic: Czechs, Poles and Slovaks; East Slavic: Belarusians, Russians, and Ukrainians; and South Slavic Bosniaks, Bulgarians, Croats, Macedonians, Montenegrins, Serbs and Slovenians.

 
Belarusians

From the Wikipedia article ‘History of Belarus’:

Between the 6th and 8th centuries, Slavs settled on the territory within present-day Belarus, Russia and Ukraine, assimilating local Baltic, Ugro-Finnic and steppe nomads already living there. These early ethnic integrations contributed to the gradual differentiation of the three East Slavic nations.

 

The modern Belarusian identity was probably formed on the basis of the three Slavic tribes – Kryvians, Drehovians, Radzimians – as well as several Baltic tribes.

 

After an initial period of independent feudal consolidation, Belarusian lands were included into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Rus and Samogitia within the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Russian Empire and eventually the Soviet Union. Belarus became their own country in 1991 after declaring itself free from the Soviet Union.

 

Etymology

Belarus was named Belorussia in the days of Imperial Russia, and the Russian tsar was usually styled Czar of All the Russias—Great, Little, and White.

 

The name Belarus derives from the term White Russia, which first appeared in German and Latin medieval literature. During the 17th century, Russian tsars used White Rus', asserting that they were trying to recapture their heritage from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

 

Belarus is not to be confused with the political group of White Russians that opposed the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War. The term "White Russians" is misleading as it incorrectly suggests being a subgroup of Russians, whereas Belarusians trace their name back to the people of Rus and not to Russians, who are also descendants of the people of Rus. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Belarus

 

The most popular origin for the name “White Russians” is the fair complexion of the people. However, during the 14th century the name “White Russia” was given to the Western lands of Russia as an expression of their freedom from foreign domination. In those days the word “white” implied “free” and “unconquered”. Sadly, the history of these people since that time tells a different story. They are a people who have suffered greatly at the hands of foreign occupants. … The Belorussians who share a common heritage with the Russians and Ukrainians began to emerge as a separate nationality with a distinct language in the 14th century. …http://www.janzteam.com/OSTEUROPE/en/wfl2.htm : Article ‘White Russians’.

 

Language

Belarusians speak an Eastern Slavic language, but some people also speak Polish, Russian and Ukrainian. The written language uses the Cyrillic alphabet.

 

Because the people of Belarus were greatly influenced by the Soviet rule, over 90% of the population speak only Russian, while the native Belarusian language remains confined to the rural areas alone. The language is closely related to Russian and Ukrainian.

 

Religion

Belorussians are either Eastern Orthodox, Uniate or Catholic in faith.

 

Russians

Very little is known about the Russians and East Slavs in general prior to approximately 859 AD, the date from which the account in the Primary Chronicle (a history of the Ancient Rus from around 850 to 1110 originally compiled in Kiev about 1113) starts.

 

Russian ethnicity

Ethnic Russians are said to have originated from the earlier Rus people and gradually evolved into a different ethnicity from the western Rus peoples, who became the modern-day Belarusians and Ukrainians. Most prominent Slavic tribes in the area of what is now European Russia included Vyatichs, Krivichs, Radimichs, Severians and Ilmen Slavs. By the 11th century, East Slavs assimilated the Finno-Ugric tribes Merya and Muroma and the Baltic tribe Eastern Galindae.

 

Ethnic Russians known as Great Russians began to be recognized as a distinct ethnic group in the 15th century. At that time, during the consolidation of the Muscovy Tsardom as a regional power, they were referred to as Muscovite Russians. Between the 12th and 16th centuries, Russians known as Pomors migrated to Northern Russia and settled the White Sea coasts. As a result of these migrations and Russian conquests, following the liberation from the Mongol Golden Horde domination during the 15th and 16th centuries, Russians settled the Volga, Urals and Northern Caucasus regions. Between the 17th and 19th centuries, Russian migrants settled eastwards in the vast, sparsely inhabited areas of Siberia and the Russian Far East. Russian Cossacks played a major role in these territorial expansions and migrations.

 

Language

Modern Russian gradually evolved from the Old East Slavic and Church Slavonic between the 15th and 18th century.

 

Religion

According to estimates, less than half of the Russian population are practicing worshipers of any religion. Orthodox Christianity is a dominant faith among the Russian believers, most of whom belong to the Russian Orthodox Church, which played a vital role in the development of the Russian national identity.

 

Most prominent of other world religions are Baptists, Pentecostals, Evangelicals and Seventh-Day Adventists. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russians

 

Ukrainians

Most of the following information was retrieved from the Wikipedia article ‘Ukrainians’:

Numerous nomadic tribes inhabited territories now known as Ukraine in antiquity. These  included: Iranic-speaking Scythians and Sarmatians; Greeks from the Black Sea colonies; Germanic-speaking Goths and Varangians; as well as Turkic-speaking Khazars, Pechenegs and Cumans. However, Ukrainian origins are predominantly Slavic.  Some claim a Khazar origin and they controlled a large area of the steppes.

 

Gothic historian Jordanes and 6th century Byzantine authors named two groups that lived on the south of Europe: sclavins (western Slavs) and Anti. The Anti are normally identified with proto-Ukrainians. The name anti is of Iranic origin and means people living on the borderland. The state of Anti existed from the end of 4th to early 7th centuries. In the 4th century the Anti fought against the Goths. In 375, the Gothic king Vinitar, facing the Antis, at first experienced defeat but later captured the king of Anti, Bozh, whom he executed together with his sons and 70 aristocrats. The Goths did not manage to subdue the Anti, since in the same year the Gothic union fell from the attack of the Huns. From the 6th century the Anti fought Byzantium and in the 6-7th centuries colonised the Balkan Peninsula. From the end of 6th century they fought against the Avars.

 

Among the native Ukrainian population of the Carpathians, there are several distinct groups, namely the Hutsuls, Lemkos and Boyko, each with a peculiar area of settlement, dialect, dress, anthropological type and folk traditions. There are a number of theories as to the origins of each of these groups, some even connecting Boyky with the Celtic tribe of Boii and Hutsuls with Uz people of Turkic stock.

 

History

Up to the fifteenth century, Ukrainians were part of the Old East Slavic stock which also gave rise to the Belarusians and Russians. However, long history of separation and foreign influences have reshaped their ethnolinguistic identity splitting them from the rest of the East Slavs.

 

Slavic tribes had inhabited modern-day lands of Ukraine since the ancient times and by the 5th century CE became dominant there and founded the city of Kiev—later capital of a powerful state known as Kievan Rus'.

 

During the 800s CE, a Slavic civilisation called Rus appeared in Kiev and elsewhere – from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea.

 

The 13th century Mongol (later Tartar) invasion devastated the Kievan Rus'. Ukraine/Ruthenia became the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and later of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and still later of the Russian, Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires, Poland and the Soviet Union, finally gaining its independence on August 24, 1991.

 

The history of independent statehood in Ukraine started with the Cossacks who occupied the territory between the Poles and the Tartars. During the 1400s many peasants joined bands with the Cossacks and the region became known as the Ukraine, which means borderland.

 

Most of the Ukraine remained under Polish rule until the 1600s. The Cossacks opposed Polish efforts to make them leave the Eastern Orthodox Church and join the Roman Catholic Church, and in time this led the Cossacks to form an alliance with the Russian czar.

 

Russia then gained control over nearly all of the Ukraine, and understandably many Ukrainians objected to the harsh Russian rule. In time, the Bolshevik Revolution resulted in Russia becoming Communist and hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians were sent to Siberia for resisting the government takeovers.

 

In the 1930s, crop failures and government seizures of grain resulted in millions of deaths from starvation.

 

Millions of Ukrainians starved to death in a famine, known as the Holodomor. Some historians claim Soviet authorities were responsible for nearly 10 million deaths of innocent men, women, and children killed by the deliberate famine in 1932-1933. Ukraine, along with 25 other countries, has declared the Holodomor to be an act of genocide.

 

Language

The Ukrainian language is an East Slavic language and Ukrainian people belong to the same subdivision of Slavs as Rusyn (all Ukrainians were referred as Rusyns or Ruthenians before, from the Kievan Rus' state of proto-Ukraine).

 

Written Ukrainian uses a Cyrillic alphabet. The language shares some vocabulary with the languages of Belarusian, Polish, Russian and Slovak.

 

Religion

Ukrainians are predominantly of the Orthodox Christian faith. Some Ukrainians belong to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. There are various Protestant churches and also ethnic minorities practise Judaism and Islam. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainians

 

Czechs

Czechs are descended from the ancient Western Slavic tribes and are related to both the Celts and the Goths. Since the 6th century the Slavic tribes inhabited the regions of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia, the three political subdivisions of the Czech Republic. Each of the divisions has a slightly varying culture, and although each part speaks the Czech language there are certain local dialects.

 

The most successful and influential of all Czech kings was Charles IV (Karel IV.), who also became the Holy Roman Emperor.

 

History

The first genuine state structure on the territory of the Czech Republic was the Great Moravian Empire. This was located on the territory of Bohemia, Silesia, Moravia, Slovakia and the Danube Basin. In the west, it bordered on the powerful East Frankish Kingdom, from where Christianity spread to pagan Moravia. 

 

After the glorious period of the Great Moravian Empire, the center of the state moved westward to Bohemia, where power was concentrated in the hands of the Přemyslids, who held onto it for more than 400 years until it passed to the hands of the Luxemburgs in 1306 .

 

After the death of the last king of the Přemyslid Dynasty, several kings supplanted each other as the head of state, but none could consolidate their position. Some of the nobility and the abbots, who were dissatisfied with the reign of the king concocted a coup. They deposed the king with the agreement of Emperor Henry VII of Luxemburg.

 

The Czech lands were affected by an economic depression under the reign of Wenceslas IV, the son of Charles IV. Highwaymen and plague epidemics racked the country, while private wars raged. The Church, which was supposed to supervise the observance of God’s commandments, focused on attaining positions of power and accumulating property. Clergymen had long been performing jobs in the royal administration and instead of money they received a church office as settlement. Criticism of the Church grew stronger due to its deviation from its original principles, not just in Bohemia, but all over Europe. http://www.czech.cz/en/czech-republic/history/all-about-czech-history/

 

Mythology

According to a popular myth, the Czechs come from a certain forefather Čech, who brought the tribe into its land.

 

From the Wikipedia article ‘Lech, Czech and Rus’:

 

According to an old legend, Lech, Čech and Rus were brothers who founded the three Slavic nations:

Poland (poetically also known as Lechia),

Bohemia (Čechy – now the major part of the Czech Republic), and

Ruthenia (Rus', whose successor states are now Russia, Belarus and Ukraine).

 

In one variation of the legend, the three brothers went hunting together but each of them followed a different prey and eventually they all traveled in different directions. Rus went to the east, Čech headed to the west to settle on the Říp Mountain rising up from the Bohemian hilly countryside, while Lech traveled to the north until he came across a magnificent white eagle guarding her nest. Startled but impressed by this spectacle, he decided to settle there. He named his settlement (gród) Gniezno (Polish adjective from gniazdo, or "nest") and adopted the White Eagle as his coat-of-arms which remains a symbol of Poland to this day. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forefather_%C4%8Cech

 

Language

The Czech language developed from the Proto-Slavic language in the 10th century and is closely related to the Slovak language and, to a lesser degree, to Polish or to Sorbian in East Germany. Czech and Slovak speakers usually understand each other’s language in its written and spoken form.

 

Religion

The Czech Republic has one of the most non-theistic populations in all of Europe. According to the 2001 census, 59% of the country is agnostic, atheist, non-believer or non-organised believer, 26.8% Roman Catholic and 2.5% Protestant.

 

According to a 2005 poll, 19% of Czech citizens responded that "they believe there is a God", whereas 50% answered that "they believe there is some sort of spirit or life force" and 30% that "they do not believe there is any sort of spirit, God, or life force". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czech_Republic

 

Slovaks

The people of Slovakia are descended from the Slavic who settled around the Danube river basin around 500 CE. The first known Slavic state on the territory of present-day Slovakia was the Empire of Samo. The first known state of the Proto-Slovaks was the Principality of Nitra founded sometime in the 8th century.

 

The original territory inhabited by the proto-Slovaks included present-day Slovakia, parts of present-day south-eastern Moravia and approximately the entire northern half of present-day Hungary.

 

Great Moravia

Great Moravia (833 - ?907) was the ancestral state of the present-day Moravians and Slovaks in the 9th and early 10th centuries CE. Among the important developments that  took place at this time included the mission of Cyril and Methodius and the development of the Glagolitic alphabet – an early form of the Cyrillic alphabet – and the use of Old Church Slavonic as the official and literary language.

 

Kingdom of Hungary

Slovakia came under Hungarian rule gradually from 907 to the early 14th century and remained a part of the Kingdom of Hungary until the formation of Czechoslovakia in 1918. Politically, Slovakia formed (again) the separate entity called Nitra Frontier Duchy, this time within the Kingdom of Hungary, but this was abolished in 1107 and the territory inhabited by the Slovaks was gradually reduced.

 

When Hungary was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in 1541, Slovakia became the core of the "reduced" kingdom, officially called Royal Hungary. Many Magyars (Hungarians) fleeing from Hungary settled in large parts of present-day southern Slovakia, thereby creating the considerable Magyar minority in southern Slovakia today. Some Croats settled for similar reasons, and Germans, Jews and Gypsies also formed significant populations within the territory.

 

After the Ottoman Empire was forced to retreat from present-day Hungary around 1700, hundreds of thousands of Slovaks were gradually settled in depopulated parts of the restored Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Hungary, Romania, Serbia, and Croatia), and that is how present-day Slovak enclaves in these countries arose.

 

Slovakia was the most advanced part of the Kingdom of Hungary for centuries, but in the 19th century, when Buda/Pest became the new capital of the kingdom, many Slovaks were relegated to the peasant class. As a result, hundreds of thousands of Slovaks emigrated to North America.

 

Czechoslovakia

People of Slovakia spent most part of the 20th century within the framework of Czechoslovakia, a new state formed after World War I. Significant reforms and post-World War II industrialization took place during this time. The Slovak language was strongly influenced by the Czech language during this period.

 

Name and ethnogenesis

The Slovaks and Slovenes are the only current Slavic nations that have preserved the old name of the Slavs (singular: slověn) in their name.

 

According to Nestor and modern Slavic linguists, the above mentioned word slověn probably was the original name of all Slavs, but most Slavs took other names in the Early Middle Ages. Although the Slovaks themselves seem to have had a slightly different word for "Slavs" (Slovan), they were called by Latin texts "Slavs" approximately up to the High Middle Ages. Thus, it is sometimes difficult to distinguish when Slavs in general and when Slovaks are meant.

 

Quotes from important chronicles

This is how Nestor in his Primary Chronicle (historically/correctly) describes the Slovaks: Slavs that were settled along the Danube, which have been occupied by the Hungarians, the Czechs, the Lachs, and Poles that are now known as the Rus. Nestor calls these Slavs "Slavs of Hungary" in another place of the text, and mentions them in the first place in a list of Slavic nations (besides Moravians, Bohemians, Poles, Russians, etc.), because he considers the Carpathian Basin (including what is today Slovakia) the original Slavic territory.

 

Language

The Slovak language, sometimes referred to as "Slovakian", is an Indo-European language belonging to the West Slavic languages (together with Czech, Polish, Kashubian and Sorbian). Slovak is mutually intelligible with Czech. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovaks

 

Religion

The majority of Slovak citizens (69%) practice Roman Catholicism; the second-largest group is Protestants (9%). About 3,000 Jews remain of the estimated pre-WWII population of 120,000. The official state language is Slovak, and Hungarian is widely spoken in the southern region. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3430.htm

 

Poles

Slav tribes probably lived in what is now Poland as early as 2000 BCE. During the 800s CE several of the tribes united under the Polane, one of the largest groups in the area.

 

The exact ethnicity and linguistic affiliation of the groups that populated the area of what is now Poland in late Antiquity has been hotly debated. However, the most famous archaeological find from Poland's prehistory is dated from the Lusatian culture of the early Iron Age, around 700 BCE.

 

The origin of the name of the nation Poland comes from a western Slavic ethnic group of Polans. Poles belong to the Lechitic subgroup of these ethnic people. The Polans, as one of the most influential tribes of Greater Poland managed to unite many other West Slavic tribes in the area under the rule of what became the Piast dynasty.

 

Polans

The Polans inhabited the Warta river basin in the 8th century. In the late 9th century they managed to subdue most of the Slavic tribes between the Odra (Oder) and Western Bug rivers and between the Carpathians and the Baltic Sea. By the 10th century they also managed to integrate the lands of Masovia, Kuyavia and Great Poland.

 

Piast dynasty

Members of the Piast family became the first rulers of Poland around the middle of the Tenth century. Poland's first historically documented ruler, Mieszko I, was ruler over most of the land along the Vistula and Oder rivers. He converted from Paganism and adopted Catholic Christianity as the nation's new official religion, to which the bulk of the population converted in the course of the next centuries.

 

Mieszko’s son, Boleslaw I, was crowned the first king of Poland. He built on his father's achievement and uniting all the provinces that subsequently came to comprise the traditional territory of Poland. After his death Poland entered a period of instability and was eventually broken up under the rule of different nobles.

 

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

The marriage between the Queen of Poland and the Grand Duke of Lithuania brought Poland under the Jagiellon dynasty but each country remained self-governing. Polish culture and economy flourished under the Jagiellons and a golden age ensued during the sixteenth century after the birth of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. At this time Poland expanded its borders and became the largest country in Europe.

 

Despite the advances of this period, after the 1500s the monarchy began to lose power to the nobles who dominated the Parliament. After the death of the last Jagiellonian monarch in 1572, Polish kings were elected by the nobles, but some were foreigners and proved to be ineffective rulers. Resultant rivalries among the nobles weakened the Parliament and costly wars ruined the economy.

 

In the mid-seventeenth century, a Swedish invasion and Cossack's uprising which ravaged the country marked the end of the golden age. Numerous wars against Russia coupled with government inefficiency caused by the Liberum Veto, marked the steady deterioration of the Commonwealth from a European power into near-anarchy which saw it controlled by its neighbours. The reforms, particularly those of the Great Sejm, were thwarted with the three partitions of Poland (1772, 1793, and 1795) which ended with Poland's being erased from the map and its territories being divided between Russia, Prussia, and Austria.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Poland

 

Language

Polish is the official language of the Republic of Poland. It is the most spoken West Slavic language and is written in the Roman alphabet.

 

Religion

Though predominantly Roman Catholic, Poland is home to other religious groups, such as Eastern Orthodox, Greek Catholic, Protestant, Jewish and Muslim.

 

Bosnians/Bosniaks

Bosniaks belong to the Slavic ethnic group, but nevertheless their 'genetic roots' are a mixture of Slav settlers and descendants of pre-Slavic indigenous Balkan peoples, mainly of Illyrian tribes. For example, anthropologist John J. Wilkes regards Bosniaks (and Bosnians in general) as a possible descendant of the Illyrians and places Bosnia as once the centre of the Illyrian kingdom.

 

Once spread throughout the regions they inhabited, various instances of ethnic cleansing and genocide have had a tremendous effect on the territorial distribution of the Bosniak population.

 

The earliest Bosnian "name" was the historical term "Bošnjanin" (Latin: Bosniensis), which signified any inhabitant of the medieval Bosnian kingdom. By the early days of Ottoman rule, the word had been replaced by "Bosniak" (Bošnjak). The Bosniaks derive their ethnic name from Bosona (Bosnia), which has been proposed to have an Illyrian origin.

 

For the duration of Ottoman rule, the word Bosniak came to refer to all inhabitants of Bosnia.

 

History

The earliest (genetic) roots of the Bosniak people can be traced back to the ancient populations that expanded into the Balkans following the Last Glacial Maximum. Indeed, recent studies have indicated that the dominant Y-chromosome haplogroup found in Bosnian Bosniaks is I - and specifically its sub-haplogroup I-P37 - which are associated with these Palaeolithic settlers. These are Semitic and descended from the original IJ Haplogroup from which all Semites including Israelites, Jews and Arabs are descended.  So also Croatia is comprised of some 40% of these Hg I Semites.

 

In the 13th century BCE, the old European cultures that developed from them were overrun and assimilated by the Illyrians, the earliest inhabitants of the region of whom we have any historical detail. They would remain the dominant group in the west Balkans until the Roman conquest of the area in 9 CE, which led to Romanization of the native population.

 

The earliest cultural and linguistic roots of Bosniak history, however, can be traced back to the Migration Period of the Early Middle Ages. It was then that the Slavs, a people from northeastern Europe, invaded the Eastern Roman Empire with their Avar overlords and settled in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina and the surrounding lands. The Serbs and Croats came in a second wave, invited by Emperor Heraclius to drive the Avars from Dalmatia.

 

Slavs settled in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the surrounding lands, which were then part of the Eastern Roman Empire, in the seventh century. The Slavic Bosnians established the first form of a state between Croatia and Serbia in the ninth century under the rule of local bans with the strong Bosnian Church, an indigenous Christian sect considered heretical by both the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. The political circumstances of the High Middle Ages led to the area being contested between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Byzantine Empire. After some centuries of rule by the Byzantine Empire, an independent Bosnian kingdom flourished in central Bosnia between the twelfth and the fifteenth centuries.

 

The subject of ethnicity in medieval Bosnia is a complex and sensitive subject which has been obscured by nationalism and propaganda through the ages. However, there is no sign that the population of pre-Ottoman Bosnia had developed Croatian or Serbian ethnic consciousness, even in a medieval sense of the word. To quote Noel Malcolm from the book "Bosnia A Short History":

As for the question of whether the inhabitants of Bosnia were really Croat or really Serb in 1180, it cannot be answered, for two reasons: first, because we lack evidence, and secondly, because the question lacks meaning. We can say that the majority of the Bosnian territory (in 1180) was probably occupied by Croats - or at least, by Slavs under Croat rule - in the seventh century; but that is a tribal label which has little or no meaning five centuries later. The Bosnians were generally closer to the Croats in their religious and political history; but to apply the modern notion of Croat identity (something constructed in recent centuries out of religion, history, and language) to anyone in this period would be an anachronism. All that one can sensibly say about the ethnic identity of the Bosnians is this: they were the Slavs who lived in Bosnia.

 

Religion proved to be the determining factor in the later development of national consciousness, and was more pertinent than any original 'tribal heritage' from centuries earlier. Whilst it's Bishoprics were under Rome's jurisdiction, there was a large following of its local/native Bosnian Church – a form of Christianity with a connection to Bogomilism. The Bosnian Church declared to be faithful to Rome but practiced in Slavic liturgy with eastern type Monasticism. Orthodoxy, Catholicism, and local Bosnian Church following each predominated in certain areas, but neither was overriding. Sabbatarianism was prevalent among the Bogomils.

 

Upon the Ottoman's invasion of Europe, large numbers of Bosnians converted to Islam. A number of Catholic and Orthodox adherents also converted to Islam. There was a three-way split of the population in religious terms, and this was cemented by the Ottoman system that separated people along religious, not ethnic lines. With the slow decay of the Ottoman Empire, the Bosnians who were Catholic eventually identified with the Croatian nation, whilst those that were Orthodox identified with the Serbian nation, giving rise to what we now call “Bosnian Croats" and "Bosnian Serbs". The Islamic Bosnians continued to put their religion at the forefront of their identity, and thus did not align with the early-modern Serbian or Croatian nationality. They were referred to by neighbouring Serbs and Croats simply as Bosnian Muslims – or even "Turks." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosniaks

 

Religion

Most Bosniaks are Muslim, but some are Atheist, Agnostic and Deist. Bosniaks belong to the Sunni branch of Islam, although historically Sufism has also played a significant role in the country.

 

Language

The Bosnian language is one of the standard versions of Central-South Slavic which covers the region that was once known as Serbo-Croat. However, the Serbian, Croatian, and Bosniak languages are all mutually understandable.

 

The Bosnian language is based on the Latin alphabet. While the Cyrillic alphabet is accepted, it is seldom used today. The name Bosnian language is the commonly accepted name among Bosniak linguists.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosnian_language

 

Bulgarians

The Bulgarian DNA data suggest that a human demographic expansion occurred sequentially in the Middle East, through Anatolia, to the rest of Europe (Bulgaria included). From a historical angle, Bulgarians have descended from three main ethnic groups which mixed on the Balkans during the 6th - 10th century: local tribes, including the Thracians; Slavic invaders, who gave their language to the modern Bulgarians; and the Turkic-speaking Bulgars.

 

Genetically, modern Bulgarians are more closely related to Macedonians, Greeks and Romanians than to the rest of the Europeans. On the other hand they are closely related to Armenians, Italians, Turks, Cretans and Sardinians, Scandinavians, Bosnians and Croatians.

 

Some recent genetic studies reveal that early Thracian and Daco-Getic populations made a significant contribution to the genes of the modern Bulgarian population, which is however comparable, or even less than, to the contribution to other Balkan and Italian groups. The ancient languages of the local people had already gone extinct before the arrival of the Slavs, and their cultural influence was highly reduced due to the repeated barbaric invasions on the Balkans during the early Middle Ages by Goths, Celts, Huns, and Sarmatians, accompanied by persistent hellenization, romanisation and later slavicisation.

 

The easternmost South Slavs became part of the ancestors of the modern Bulgarians, which however, are genetically clearly separated from the tight DNA cluster of most Slavic peoples. This phenomenon is explained by “the genetic contribution of the people who lived in the region before the Slavic expansion”. The frequency of the proposed Slavic Haplogroup R1a1 ranges to only 14.7% in Bulgaria.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarians

 

Their DNA distribution is:

The approximate distribution of Y-DNA haplogroups among the Bulgarian people runs as follows:
16% E1b1b
1% G2a
3% I1
20% I2a (very common among South Slavic peoples)
1% I2b
20% J2
1% Q
18% R1a
18% R1b
1% T

Note that the E1 Hg. is also common among Jews and came from North Africa.  25% of all European Jews are E1  and E3. 44% of all Bulgars are of Semitic Hg. IJ origin, 24% at I and 20% at J2. I2a is very common also among South Slavic people.

It is quite possible that these people came from the ten tribes when they were moved north in 722 BCE over the Araxes and intermingled with the R1B Scythian Hittites and the R1a groups there also.

Here are mtDNA haplogroups found among Bulgarians:
38% H (of which 10% are in the subclades H1 and H3 combined)
10% J
6.5% T
20% U (of which 10% are in U3, 6.5% in U4, and 3.5% in U5)
13% K
6% X2
6.5% other haplogroups

Cf.http://www.khazaria.com/genetics/bulgarians.html

The reference site uses evolutionary timeframes and extends the analysis but is useful.

 

Prehistory

The ancient Bulgars belong to the big Iranian ethno-tribal group with origins that can be traced back to the Balhara region in the foothills of Mount Imeon, a territory roughly corresponding to present northern Afghanistan and most of Tajikistan.

 

The migration of the Bulgars to the European continent started as early as the 2nd century when branches of Bulgars settled on the plains between the Caspian and the Black Sea. Between 351 and 389, some of these are reported to have crossed the Caucasus and settled in Armenia. They were eventually assimilated by the Armenians.

 

Swept by the Hun wave at the beginning of the 4th century, other numerous Bulgarian tribes broke loose from their settlements in central Asia to migrate to the fertile lands along the lower valleys of the Donets and the Don rivers and the Azov seashore. Some of these remained for centuries in their new settlements, whereas others moved on with the Huns towards Central Europe, settling in Pannonia.

 

The Bulgars were relatively tall for the time having an average height of 175-180 cm. They were good herdsmen, farmers and builders. The Bulgars had well armed and trained cavalry and army explaining why they were able to defeat the large Byzantine army in the battle of Ongal in 680 and then permanently settle on the Balkan Peninsula.

 

Language

The Bulgarian language is somewhat similar to Serbo-Croatian, and to some degree it is mutually intelligible with Russian. Although related, Bulgarian and the Western and Eastern Slavic languages are not mutually intelligible.

 

The Bulgarian language is written in the Cyrillic alphabet.

 

Religion

Most Bulgarians belong to the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, which is considered an inseparable element of Bulgarian national consciousness. However, some Bulgarians have converted to other faiths or denominations through the course of time. In the 16th and the 17th century Roman Catholic missionaries converted the Bulgarian Paulicians to Roman Catholicism. These conversions may have been directly attributed to persecution of the Sabbatarians.

 

Protestantism was introduced in Bulgaria by missionaries from the United States in 1857. Also, during the Ottoman rule, a large number of Orthodox Bulgarians converted to Islam. Their descendants now form the second largest religious congregation in Bulgaria. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Bulgaria

 

Croats

Wikipedia article ‘Croats’:

The origin of the Croatian tribe before the great migration of the Slavs is uncertain. According to the most widely accepted Slavic theory of the 7th century, the Croatian tribe moved from the area north of the Carpathians and east of the river Vistula (referred to as White Croatia) and migrated into the western Dinaric Alps. White Croats formed the Principality of Dalmatia in the upper Adriatic which was the home of the Heruli who had come in from the East with the Lombards and Anglo-Saxons. Another wave of Slavic migrants from White Croatia subsequently founded the Principality of Pannonia.

 

The Iranian origin of the Croats suggests that they are descendants of ancient Iranians (cf. Alans). These origins are also based on perceived appearances of the name for Croatia or Croatians. The earliest claimed mention of the Croatian name, Horouathos, can be traced on two stone inscriptions in the Greek language and script, dating from around the year 200 AD, found in the seaport Tanais on the Azov sea, located on the Crimean peninsula (near the Black Sea). Both tablets are kept in an archaeological museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Whether the term Hourathos is related to the Croat ethnonym is open to conjecture, as the two words may have separate origins. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croats

 

The earlier Neolithic culture like Danilo is dated ca 4700-3900 BCE, and Eneolithic culture like Vučedol is dated 3000 and 2200 BC.[4] (2) The protohistoric component which includes ancient people like Illyrians, the Dalmatae and Liburnians in coastal Croatia, and the Celts people, the Iapydes, Taurisci, Scordisci and Pannonii in continental Croatia.[4] In the 4th century BCE also existed several Greek colonies on the Adriatic islands and coast.[4] (3) The classical antiquity component caused by the Roman conquest, which included a mixture of ancient people and Rome's colonists and legionaries,[5] as well presence of Iranian-speaking Iazyges.[6] (4) The Late Antiquity-Early Middle Ages component from Migration Period, started by the Huns, and which in the Croatia included in the first phase Visigoths and Suebi, who didn't stay for long period of time, and Ostrogoths, Gepids and Langobards, who formed Ostrogothic Kingdom (493-553 AD).[7] In the second phase occurred the great Slavs migration, often associated with the Avars activity.[7] (5) And the final Middle Ages-Modern Age component which included Franks, Magyars, Italians, Germans/Saxons,[7] and after the 14th century, because of black death, and late 15th century, because of Ottoman invasion, Croatian ethnonym expanded from the historic Croatian lands to the Western Slavonia, which caused Zagreb to become capital city of the Croatian Kingdom, and was incorporated the population ethnogenesis of that territory.[7] The Ottoman invasion caused many migrations of the people in the Balkan, in Croatia like those of Vlachs,[8] but the upcoming world wars and social events also influenced the Croatian ethnogenesis.[8]

 

Old historical sources

The mention of the Croatian ethnonym Hrvat for a specific tribe before the 9th century is not yet completely confirmed. According to Constantine VII's work De Administrando Imperio (10th century), a group of Croats separated from the White Croats who lived in White Croatia and arrived by their own will, or were called by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius (610-641), to Dalmatia where they fought and defeated the Avars, and eventually organized their principality.[9] According to the legend preserved in the work, they were led by five brothers Κλουκας (Kloukas), Λόβελος (Lobelos), Κοσέντζης (Kosentzis), Μουχλώ (Mouchlo), Χρωβάτος (Chrobatos), and two sisters Τουγά (Touga) and Βουγά (Bouga),[9][10] and their archon at the time was father of Porga, and they were baptized during the rule of Porga in the 7th century.[11]

 

The old historical sources do not give exact answer on the ethnogenesis of those early Croats. Constantine VII does not identify Croats with Slavs, neither points to the differences between them.[12] John Skylitzes in his work Madrid Skylitzes identified Croats and Serbs as Scythians. Nestor the Chronicler in his work Primary Chronicle identified White Croats with West Slavs along Vistula river, while another places Croats among an East Slavic tribal union. In the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja Croats are identified with Goths who remained after that king Totila occupied province of Dalmatia.[13] Similarly, Thomas the Archdeacon in his work Historia Salonitana mentioned that seven or eight tribes of nobles, which he called "Lingones", arrived from what is today Poland and settled in Croatia under Totila's leadership.[13]

 

The Historians History of the world deals with the occupation of Dalmatia by the Heruli as the most unstable of the tribes of the invasion by the horde of the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Lombards as a sub-tribe of the Saxons that occupied the Po Valley.  The Goths also came in with that horde and the Visigoths occupied Spain and the Ostrogoths invaded Italy and seem to have been associated also with the lands of Dalmatia. The Suevi also moved into Spaim and Portgal settling there with the Vandals moving on from Spain to Africa.

 

The fact that 40% of the Croat peoples and also a high percentage of Bosnians are Semitic of Hg I indicates and origin that may be associated with the Thracians of Laconia and these have been identified as Sons of Keturah as we see from the identifications in Josephus although he neglects to identify which tribe they were from. The place of Hg. I in Iran also opens the possibility of descent from the original early Hebrews and the descendents of the other sons of Arphaxad.   However, The Jews were specific in their identification of the Spartans as sons of Keturah.  They may also have been of an Israelitic origin as the Ten tribes were relocated north of the Araxes among the tribes in occupation there which became part of the Parthian horde until the Second Century BCE (when they moved into Europe). (cf. Theories on the origin of Croats)

 

More work has been done on the Iranian origin of the Croats and it should also be noted that the general distribution of Hg I in Iran is in the east where these areas are located.  The Scythians are of basic Hg RxR1 basic and many are Hg. R1b. Among the Croats Hg R1b are approx 60% of the Croats.

 

The connection between the Croats as Slavs and sons of Meshech is somewhat tenuous.  Their connection as Jats is listed also in the text below. See also http://www.iranchamber.com/history/articles/common_origin_croats_serbs_jats.php

 

The Croats are seen as being settled in the Dalmatian coast in the early 7th century. This follows the movement of the Heruli down from the main body of the horde that entered NW Europe after the fall of Parthia.

 

Long in conflict with Rome, the region of Dalmatia was subdued by Augustus (35-33 BCE) and incorporated with part of Illyria as a Roman province.

 

In recorded history, the area was inhabited by the Illyrians, and since the 4th century BC also colonized in the north by the Celts and along the coast by the Greeks. The Southern Illyrian kingdom, Illyris, was a sovereign state in modern day Montenegro and Albania until the Romans conquered it in 168 BC. The Western Empire organized the provinces of Pannonia and Dalmatia, which after its downfall passed to the Heruli, Huns, the Ostrogoths and then to the Byzantine Empire.

 

Following the disappearance of the major native dynasty by the end of the 11th century, the Croats eventually recognized the Hungarian ruler Coloman as the common king for Croatia and Hungary in a treaty of 1102.

 

With the Turkish incursion into Europe, the Croats fought an increasing number of battles and gradually lost territory to the Ottoman Empire with Bosnia losing much more to Islam.

 

The death of King Louis II meant the end of Hungarian authority over Croatia, and the Habsburg Monarchy replaced it. The Ottoman Empire further expanded in the 16th century to include most of Slavonia, western Bosnia and Lika.

 

Later in the same century, large areas of Croatia and Slavonia adjacent to the Ottoman Empire were carved out into the Military Frontier and ruled directly from Vienna. The area was subsequently settled by Serbs, Vlachs, Croats and Germans and others. As a result of their compulsory military service to the Habsburg Empire during conflict with the Ottoman Empire, the population in the Military Frontier was free of serfdom and enjoyed much political autonomy unlike the population living in the parts ruled by Hungary.

 

After 1592, only small parts of Croatia remained unconquered which were referred to as the remnants of the remnants of the once great Croatian kingdom. The Ottoman army was successfully repelled for the first time on the territory of Croatia following the battle of Sisak in 1593. The lost territory was mostly restored, except for large parts of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina.

 

By the 1700s, the Ottoman Empire was driven out of Hungary and Croatia, and Austria brought the empire under central control.

 

With the fall of the Venetian Republic in 1797, its possessions in the eastern Adriatic became subject to a dispute between France and Austria. The Habsburgs eventually secured them and Dalmatia and Istria became part of the empire.

 

Religion

Croatians are mainly Roman Catholic, with small percentages of Eastern Orthodox Christians, recognizing the pope, Protestants, and Muslims. Some pre-Christian elements have been integrated into Christian beliefs and practices. Other influences on Croatian religious beliefs and practices have come from European and Near Eastern cultures, from rural and urban traditions alike.

 

Language
Croatian is the official language.
Today the Croats are using exclusively the Latin Script.

 

Information retrieved from Wikipedia article ‘History of Croatia’ at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Croatia

 

Montenegrins

The name "Crna Gora" (Montenegro) is mentioned for the first time in the Charter of King Milutin, in 1276. It is believed that it got its name from the dense dark forests that covered Mount Lovcen and the surrounding area and which gave the impression of a "black" mountain.

 

History of Montenegro

The area now known as Montenegro was inhabited principally by the Illyrians before the arrival of the Slavs. The movement of peoples that was typical of the ancient Mediterranean world ensured the settlement of a mixture of colonists, traders, and those in search of territorial conquest, along the Adriatic coast. Greek colonies were established on the coast during the sixth and seventh centuries BCE and Celts are known to have settled there in the fourth century BCE. The Romans mounted several punitive expeditions against local pirates and finally conquered this Illyrian kingdom in CE (AD) 9, annexing it to the province of Illyricum.

 

As Roman power declined, this part of the Dalmatian coast suffered from intermittent ravages by various semi-nomadic invaders, especially the Goths in the late fifth century and the Avars during the sixth century. By the middle of the seventh century the Slavs supplanted these and became widely established in Dalmatia seemingly absorbing the Heruli with the Lombards retaining control of the Po valley and the Milan regions.

 

Because the area of Montenegro was extremely rugged and lacked mineral resources, it became a haven for residual groups of earlier settlers, including some tribes who had escaped Romanization.

 

The historical roots of Montenegro lie in the arrival of the Slavs at the Balkan Peninsula in the 7th century CE.  This is probably a case of the last victors writing the history. In the period of the Roman Empire the area of present Montenegro greatly overlapped with the territory of Prevalitana (later called Duklia). From the 11th century on, it was called "Zeta", which was first ruled by the Balsics dynasty and later by the Crnoievics. In the 15th century it remained the only unconquered and free oasis, surrounded by the powerful Ottoman Empire and the Venetians.

 

Duklja

When the Slavs migrated to the River of Bojana – an area of land given to them by the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius – they formed the Principality of Doclea. The population was a mixture of the dominant Slavic pagans and Latinized Romans along the Byzantine enclaves of the coastline, including some Illyrian descendants. Around 753, the population was first described as Red Croats. Although the people would enjoy factual independence, they would attract Serbian influence in the ninth century. Under the following missions of Cyril and Methodus, the population was Christianized.

 

The mixed tribes organized into a semi-independent dukedom of Duklja (Doclea) by the Tenth century. After facing subsequent Bulgarian domination, the people were split as the Doclean brother-archonts split the lands among each other after 900. After the fall of the Serbian Realm in 960, the Docleans faced a renewed Byzantine occupation through to the eleventh century. The local ruler, Jovan Vladimir, whose cult still remains in the Orthodox Christian tradition in Montenegro, was at the time struggling to ensure independence.

 

Stefan Vojislav started an uprising against the Byzantine domination and gained a huge victory against the army of several Byzantine strategs in Tudjemili (Bar) in 1042, which put to an end the Byzantine influence over the Doclea.

 

Language

Most citizens of Montenegro speak the Serbian language of the Iyekavian dialect. However, as of 2004 the moves for an independent Montenegrin language were promoted and with the new 2007 Constitution it became Montenegro's prime official language. Next to it, Serbian, Albanian, Bosnian and Croatian are recognized in usage. The language uses the Cyrillic alphabet.

 

Religion

Montenegrins are predominately Orthodox Christians, and there is a handful of Sunni Muslims and also a small Roman Catholic population. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Montenegro

 

Serbs

In his book on the ‘History of Serbia’, John Cox has this to say:

“Prehistory

The territory that is today known as Serbia was first densely settled by humans during the Neolithic period…During the Iron Age, the inhabitants were identifiable as Illyrians, Thracians, and Celts. In the middle of the first Millennium BC, Greeks settled in colonies along the Adriatic coast and moved into northern Macedonia as traders. By 10 AD, the Romans had conquered all of today’s [what was] Yugoslavia. Their long period of rule left mines, cities and a good network that was later to be used by incoming Slavic “barbarians” from the north.

 

… In the sixth and seventh centuries, the ancestors of today’s South Slavs arrived in the Balkans. They settled across the region, fought with the Byzantine Empire… and with Turkic peoples such as the Avars and Bulgars, and gradually coalesced into tribes or principalities bearing mostly geographical names.

 

Across Eastern Europe, both the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church, based in Constantinople, were competing to convert the pagan Slavs. In the Ninth century, the Glagolitic alphabet was created by two famous Byzantine missionaries, Cyril and Methodius. This alphabet was used mostly to the north and west of Serbia, but it was later replaced by another alphabet designed to fit Slavic sounds: the Cyrillic alphabet. Named in honour of the earlier missionary and based more closely on Greek characters, this alphabet provided the means for literacy and high culture to come to the Serbs.

 

Serbia came under Bulgarian and then Byzantine rule after 900. But Serbia’s political history really begins with the reign of an independent prince named Stefan Nemaja, who ruled the territories of Raska and Zeta (modern day southern Serbia and Montenegro) from 1169 to 1196. He was militarily strong... He conquered neighbouring territories in Kosovo, along with the coast (Duklija), and in Hercegovina (Hum). He also gave his name to the dynasty that followed his reign, usually called the Nemanjic dynasty. …

 

… Over the next 140 years, Serbia gradually expanded. Their cultural models remained Byzantine, but their political were also directed at Byzantium; they were staunchly Orthodox but also not adverse to making tactical alliances with their Catholic neighbours to the north and west… “

(Cox, John K., The History of Serbia, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002, pp. 19-21.)

 

From the Wikipedia article ‘Serbs’:

 

The tribal designation Serboi first appears in the 1st century in the works of Tacitus (c. AD 50) and Pliny (AD 69-75), and also in the 2nd century in the Geography of Ptolemy (book 5, 9.21) to designate a tribe dwelling in Sarmatia, probably on the Lower Volga River.

 

Serbia reached its golden age under the House of Nemanjić, climaxing its power in the reign of Tsar Stefan Uroš Dušan. However, Serbia's power subsequently dwindled because of conflict among the nobility, which rendered the country unable to resist the steady incursion of the Ottoman Empire into south-eastern Europe. The Battle of Kosovo in 1389 is commonly regarded in Serbian national mythology as the key event in the country's defeat by the Turks, although Ottoman rule was not fully imposed until some time later.

 

Throughout the 19th century its struggle against Ottoman rule intensified, and in 1878 Serbia gained independence after Russia defeated the Ottoman Turks in the Russo-Turkish war of 1877–1878. In the Balkan wars (1912–1913), Serbia and other Balkan states seized hold of more former Ottoman lands on the peninsula. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbs

 

Religions:

Serbian Orthodox, Muslim, Roman Catholic, Protestant

 

Orthodox Christianity has played a significant role in the formation of Serbian identity. However, the first Serbian kings were crowned by the Vatican, not Constantinople, and prior to the Ottoman invasion Serbs had a strong Catholic element within them. The Serbian Orthodox Church uses the Julian calendar.

 

Language

Serbian is the official language.

 

Slovenes

In the Iron Age the Adriatic Veneti dwelt in northeastern Italy and parts of Slovenia – not to be confused with the Vistula Veneti. A well-developed Illyrian population existed as far north as the upper Sava valley in what is now Slovenia. Illyrian friezes discovered near the present-day Slovene city of Ljubljana depict ritual sacrifices, feasts, battles, sporting events, and other activities. In ancient times Celts and Illyrians inhabited the territory of present-day Slovenia. The Roman Empire established its rule in the region in the 1st century, after 200 years of fighting with the local tribes. The modern country's territory was split among the Roman provinces of Dalmatia, Italia, Noricum, and Pannonia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Slovenia

 

From Prehistoric Times to the Celts

In the late Stone and Bronze Ages, the inhabitants of the area were engaged in livestock rearing and farming. Subsequently, during the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, the Urnfield culture existed in this region. Fortified hilltop settlements and beautifully-crafted iron objects and weapons were typical of the Hallstatt period.

 

In the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE, present-day Slovenia was occupied by Celtic tribes. They formed the first state, called Noricum. The names of many present places (Bohinj, Tuhinj) date from this time, as well as the names of rivers (the Sava, the Savinja, the Drava). Noricum was annexed by the Roman Empire around 10 BCE.

 

Roman rule and Slav settlement  

The Romans established posts at Emona (Ljubljana), Poetovia (Ptuj) and Celeia (Celje) and constructed trade and military roads that ran across Slovene territory from Italy to Pannonia. In the 5th and 6th centuries, the area was exposed to invasions by the Huns and Germanic tribes during their incursions into Italy. After the departure of the last Germanic tribe - the Langobards - to Italy in 568 CE, the Slavs from the East began to dominate the area. After the successful resistance against the nomadic Asian Avars (from 623 to 626 CE), the Slavic people united with King Samo’s tribal confederation, whose centre was in what is now the Czech Republic. The confederation fell apart in 658 and the Slav people, located in present-day Carinthia, formed the independent duchy of Carantania, based at the Krn Castle, north of today's Klagenfurt (Austria). Until 1414 a special ceremony of princes of Carantania took place, conducted in Slovene language.

 

 

The Carantania duchy

In the mid 8th century Carantania became a vassal duchy under the rule of the Bavarians, who began spreading Christianity. Three decades later Carantanians together with the Bavarians came under Frankish rule. At the beginning of the 9th century the Franks removed the fractious Carantanian princes, replacing them with their own border dukes. Consequently, the Frankish feudal system reached the Slovene territory.

 

The Magyar invasion of the Pannonian Plain in the late 9th century effectively isolated the Slovene territory from the other western Slavs. Thus, the Slavs of Carantania and of Carniola to the south began developing into an independent nation of Slovenes. After the victory of Emperor Otto I over the Magyars in 955 CE, Slovene territory was divided into a number of border regions of the Holy Roman Empire. Carantania, being the most important, was elevated into the Duchy of Great Carantania in 976 CE (the 'Freising Manuscripts', a few prayers written in Slovene, date from this period). In the late Middle Ages the historic states of Štajerska (Styria), Koroška (Carinthia), Kranjska (Carniola), Gorizia, Trieste and Istria were formed from the border regions and incorporated into the medieval German state.

 

Habsburg rule, the counts of Celje, Turkish incursions and peasant revolts

In the 14th century most of the territory of Slovenia was taken over by the Habsburgs. The counts of Celje, a feudal family from this area who in 1436 acquired the title of state counts, were their powerful competitors for some time. This large dynasty, important at a European political level, had its seat in Slovene territory but died out in 1456. Its numerous large estates subsequently became the property of the Habsburgs, who retained control of the area right up until the beginning of the 20th century. Thereafter intensive German colonisation diminished Slovene lands, and by the 15th century they were of a similar size to the present-day Slovene ethnic territory.

 

At the end of the Middle Ages life was fraught with Turkish raids and the introduction of new taxes. In 1515 a peasant revolt spread across nearly the whole Slovene territory and in 1572-3 the united Slovene-Croatian peasant revolts wrought havoc throughout the wider region. Uprisings, which often met with bloody defeats, continued throughout the 17th century.

 

Religion

According to the 2002 census the largest section of the population (58 per cent) are Catholics. The Evangelical Church, which has its roots in the Reformation, is most widely spread in the eastern part of Slovenia. Around 38 other religious communities, spiritual groups, societies and associations are also registered in Slovenia.

 

Language

The official language of Slovenia is Slovene. In nationally-mixed regions Italian and Hungarian are also spoken and the Croat and Serb languages are easily understood.

 

The Slovene language has played an important role throughout Slovene history. In spite of various influences, in particular Germanic, it has preserved its unique features. Due to the varied relief of the territory and the various influences coming from neighbouring non-Slavic countries, many dialects developed alongside the standard language.

http://www.culturalprofiles.org.uk/slovenia/Directories/Slovenia_Cultural_Profile/-6799.html

 

Macedonians

The region of Macedonia today has been inhabited since Paleolithic times and was settled by the Paionians and Dardani, peoples of mixed Thraco-Illyrian origin.

 

Under Philip II of Macedon (359–336 BCE), Macedon expanded into the territories of the neighbouring Paionians, Thracians, and Illyrians. Philip's son Alexander the Great (356–323 BCE) managed to briefly extend Macedonian power not only over the Balkans, but also to the Persian empire, including Ancient Egypt and lands as far east as the fringes of India, heralding the Hellenistic period. After Alexander’s death in 323 his generals divided his empire.

 

Macedonia became a Roman province in 146 BCE and incorporated parts of Illyria and Thrace. In the 3rd or 4th century CE, the province of Macedonia was divided into Macedonia Prima (in the south) and Macedonia Salutaris (in the north). When the Roman Empire was divided in AD 395 Macedonia was part of the Byzantine Empire.

 

Arrival of the Slavs

By 581, many Slavic tribes had settled the land around Thessaloniki, though they did not capture the city itself. As John of Ephesus tells us in 581: “the accursed .. Slavs wandered across the whole of Greece, the lands of the Thessalonians and the whole of Thrace, taking many towns and forts, .. and making themselves rulers of the whole country”, creating a Macedonian Sclavinia.

 

Initially, the Slavic tribes were independent and had their own political structure. They were referred to as Sclavenes. Byzantine emperors tried to incorporate them into the socio-economic system of the Byzantine state, with varied success. The Thracian theme was returned to imperial rule in 680-681. However, the Slavs of Greece and Macedonia proved more stubborn and resisted Hellenization. Emperors Constans (656) and Justinian II (686) resorted to re-settling large numbers of Slavs to Anatolia, forcing them to pay tribute and supply military aid to the empire. The remaining Sclavenes were incorporated into the First Bulgarian Empire, as was the entire Region of Macedonia, thus cementing the Slavic character of the area.

 

Despite the raiding and looting, many local populations willingly assimilated with the Slavs. Thus, the settlement by the Slavs was not just a destructive wave of invasion.

 

Arrival of the Bulgars

According to Historical records a group of "Bulgars" led by Kuber settled in the region of the Keramisian plain ca. 680. Kuber was vassaled to the Avar Khagan, and he was made chief of a settlement comprising the descendants of various peoples (possibly Bulgars, Illyrians, Roman soldiers and mercenaries, Slavs and Germanic peoples) who had been subjugated by the Avars and re-settled in Sirmium (in modern Hungary). They referred to themselves as Sermesianoi, and in 680 CE they rebelled against the Avars and left Sirmium. In the following decades, these people launched campaigns against the Byzantine city of Thessaloniki and established contacts with Danubian Bulgaria. By the early 9th century the lands that Kuber settled had been incorporated into the First Bulgarian Empire.

 

The archaeologist from the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Professor Ivan Mikulchik, revealed the presence not only of the Kuber group, but the whole later Bulgar archaeological culture throughout Macedonia. However, it is likely that artefacts found there actually represent evidence of Avar presence in the region. There were vast similarities between early Avar and Bulgar material culture found in Old Bulgaria.

 

In the 1300s Macedonia was incorporated into the Serbian Kingdom. Since Macedonia lay along important trade routes it thus became the centre of Tsar Stefan Dušan's empire. However, with his death the region fell under leadership of local nobles, who divided his territories between them. Having become disunited, the Balkan provinces eventually fell under the emerging Ottoman Empire.

 

From 1389 to 1912, the Turks had possession of Macedonia. Greek, Bulgarian, and Serb inhabitants of Macedonia struggled against the empire and finally defeated the Turks in 1912 in the First Balkan War. Macedonia was subsequently divided among Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia.

 

Christianization

When the Roman Empire was declared (Athanisan) or Trinitarian Christian in 389, laws were passed against pagan practices over the course of the following years. The Slavic tribes in Macedonia accepted this Christianity as their own religion around the 9th century.  Until 389 the Roman Empire was Unitarian Christian from 311 to 389 except for the Rule of Julian the Apostate. After this period we became faced with the Unitarian/Trinitarians Wars (No. 268).

 

Identity

Anthropological evidence demonstrates the contribution that the previous populations had on the formation of what became modern Macedonians. Remains dating back to the 6th century represent a specific mixture of Slavic, Illyrian, Thracian and Byzantine elements.

 

Religion and language

The Macedonian are unique in that they derive from different cultures. The large majority identify themselves as Orthodox Christians, who speak a Slavic language, and share similarities in culture with their Balkan neighbours. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Macedonian_people

 

Anthropology

The official position of the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts is that as a whole the modern Macedonian genotype developed as a result of the absorption by the advancing Slavs of the local peoples living in the area prior to their coming (Illyrians, Thracians, Greeks, Romans, etc.). This position is backed by the findings of most ethnographers such as Vasil Kanchov, Gustav Weigand, and the anthropologist Carleton S. Coon, which state that the Slavs in the Sixth century actively assimilated other tribal peoples by absorbing part of the indigenous populations of the area, including Greeks, Thracians and Illyrians. … Slavs also absorbed their culture, and in that amalgamation a people was gradually formed with perhaps predominantly Slavic ethnic elements, speaking a Slavonic language and with a Slavic-Byzantine culture.

 

Genes

The Macedonian population is also of special interest for HLA anthropological study in the light of unanswered questions regarding its origin and relationship with other populations, especially the neighbouring Balkan peoples. According to some researches, they are most related to the Greeks, Bulgarians, and Romanians, but according to others, Macedonians are closest to Croats and Czechs. Macedonians are genetically clearly separated from the tight DNA cluster of most Slavic peoples (the frequency of the proposed Slavic Haplogroup R1a1 ranges to 15.2% in Macedonians). This phenomenon is explained by “the genetic contribution of the people who lived in the region before the Slavic expansion”. It is also corroborated that there is some non-European, inflow in the modern Macedonians. Furthermore, these genetic studies support the theories that Macedonian genetic heritage is derived from a mixture of ancient Balkan peoples, as well as the relatively newly arrived Slavs with deep European roots. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonians_%28ethnic_group%29

 

Meshech in Prophecy

Josephus Flavius identified the Moschoi with the biblical Japhetic tribe descended from Meshech in his writings on the Genealogy of the Nations in Genesis 10. Meshech is named with Tubal as a principality of the prince of Gog and Magog – possibly the region of the Caucasus mountains – in Ezekiel 38:2 and 39:1.

Ezekiel 38:2 "Son of man, set your face toward Gog, of the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal, and prophesy against him

 

Ezekiel 39:1 "And you, son of man, prophesy against Gog, and say, Thus says the Lord GOD: Behold, I am against you, O Gog, chief prince of Meshech and Tubal; (RSV)

 

Ezekiel 27:13  Javan, Tubal, and Meshech traded with you; they exchanged the persons of men and vessels of bronze for your merchandise.

 

Ezekiel 32:26 "Meshech and Tubal are there, and all their multitude, their graves round about them, all of them uncircumcised, slain by the sword; for they spread terror in the land of the living.

 

Ezekiel 39: 1 can actually be rendered prince of Ros, Meshech and Tubal and may refer to the Rus elements of the tribes identified herein.  There is no doubt that the Russians and many of these tribes of Eastern Europe are descendent of Meshech with other elements among them such as the sons of Ashkenaz and also the R1a Khazars that formed the Ashkenazi Jews.

 

The Ashkenazi language was Yiddish which is a Sorbian language with German reflexology as we identified in the texts regarding these people.  It is quite possible that the sons of Ashkenaz are mingled among the sons of Meshech and the Sons of Gomer and also in Norway as well as Central Europe.  Some of these Norwegians have come into Scotland as R1a Scots among clans such as the Gunns. Other Scots are Georgian/Ossetian groups also and could be Hittite (Gomerite) or Magogite Celts.

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