1
Thumbs Up |
Received: 8,216 Given: 5,754 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,139 Given: 2,861 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,139 Given: 2,861 |
There were a lot of Slavic tribes in Germany. Some are going to have to learn to accept that.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 26,742 Given: 16,840 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 26,742 Given: 16,840 |
"Seventh-century Slavic cultures (the Prague-Penkov-Kolochin complex). The Prague and Mogilla cultures reflect the separation of the early Western Slavs (the Sukow-Dziedzice group in the northwest may be the earliest Slavic expansion to the Baltic Sea); the Kolochin culture represents the early East Slavs; the Penkovka culture and its south-westward extension, the Ipoteşti-Cândeşti culture, demonstrate early Slavic expansion into the Balkans (which would later result in the separation of the South Slavs, associated with the Antes people of Byzantine historiography). In the Carpathian basin, the Eurasian Avars began to be Slavicized during the Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps."
clear to see in the 7th century the furthest they expanded were sukow and prague.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,139 Given: 2,861 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 26,742 Given: 16,840 |
Want me to show what small region they held and how little impact if any impact they had on the German population? The region they controlled called Niedersachsen is a region you will find people genetically close to Frisians or Danes.
Ofc here and there Slavs settled in small numbers west of the Elbe river, never to a extend that could have a genetical impact tho.
Thumbs Up |
Received: 2,139 Given: 2,861 |
Thumbs Up |
Received: 26,742 Given: 16,840 |
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks