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White Serbia

Mythical homeland of the White Serbs


Mythical homeland of the White Serbs

White Serbia (Бела Србија; ), also called Boiki (; ), is the name applied to the assumed homeland, around the region of Bohemia and Saxony, of the White Serbs (), a tribal subgroup of Wends, a mixed and the westernmost group of Early Slavs. They are the ancestors of the modern Sorbs in Saxony and possibly Serbs in Serbia.

Location

Sources

The Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII () in De Administrando Imperio of the mid-10th century recounts in Chapter 31: "These same Croats arrived as refugees to the emperor of the Romaioi Emperor [Heraclius, ] before the Serbs came as refugees to the same Emperor Heraclius"; and mainly in Chapter 32: "It should be known that the Serbs are descended from the unbaptized Serbs, also called ‘white’, who live beyond Hungary, in a region called by them Boïki, where their neighbor is Francia, as is also Megali Croatia, the unbaptized, also called ‘white’. In this place, then, these Serbs also dwelt from the beginning... Now, after the two brothers succeeded their father in the rule of Serbia, one of them, taking one half of the folk, came as the refugee to Heraclius, the emperor of the Romaioi gave them a region in the Thessalonica to settle in, namely Serblia, which from that time has acquired this denomination... Then, after some time these same Serbs decided to depart to their own homes, and the emperor sent them off. And so, when they had crossed the Danube River, they changed their minds and sent a request to the Emperor Heraclius... the emperor settled these same Serbs in these countries".

In the 33rd chapter Constantine writes, "(It should be known) that the clan of the anthypatos and patrikios Michael, son of Visevitz, archon of the Zachlumians, came from the unbaptized inhabitants on the Visla River, called Litziki, and they settled on the river called Zachluma".

A Latin document from the early-10th century states that the "Hungarians moved to Pannonia from Serbia (Ungarorum gens a Servia egressa in Pannoniam)". Tibor Živković suggests that this likely refers to Boïki (Bohemia).

Dispute

Theories on the location of the so-called "Boiki" and "White" Serbs have been disputed, but it is generally established to have been around the region of Bohemia and Saxony. Since the 19th century, two most prominent theories were of Bohemia, and the land of the Boykos in Eastern Galicia in the Carpathians. The latter was mostly argued by 19th-century scholars, like Pavel Jozef Šafárik (1795–1865) and Henry Hoyle Howorth (1842–1923), who also included the White Serbs among the Polabian Slavs. Rather than relating Boiki and Bohemia, which in turn derived from ethnonym of the Celtic tribe Boii, they related the toponym to the much younger ethnonym of the Rusyns sub-ethnic group Boykos. Béni Kállay (1839–1903) noted that many historians assumed that Serbian territory was identical to the Czech lands (Bohemia) based on DAI's account and the name Bojka, but he also supported Šafárik's thesis. Other scholars who had a similar opinion were Vladimir Ćorović (1885–1941), and Ljubivoje Cerović (b. 1936). However, most scholars like Borivoje Drobnjaković (1890–1961), Andreas Stratos (1905–1981), Sima Ćirković (1929–2009), and Relja Novaković (1911–2003) located them to the West in the area between the Elbe and Saale rivers, roughly between Bohemia and East Germany (Polabia). According to Mykhailo Hrushevsky (1898), Gerard Labuda (1949), Francis Dvornik (1962), Jaroslav Rudnyckyj (1962–1972) and Henryk Łowmiański (1964) unlike Croats, there is no proof that Serbs ever lived within Bohemia or in Eastern Galicia, only that they lived near Bohemia, and the connection between Boiki and Boykos is considered to be scholarly improbable, outdated and rejected.

According to archaeologist V. V. Sedov (1995), the 32nd chapter of De Administrando Imperio indicates that it was located in the Lower Lusatia territory where the Sorbs were located, but the 33rd chapter about Zachlumia caused confusion which resulted with several hypotheses. The first group of scholars argued the homeland existed between rivers Elbe and Saale, the second in the upper course of rivers Vistula and Oder, and the third from Elbe and Saale to the upper course of Vistula. However, Sedov concluded that the archaeological data does not confirm any of these hypotheses, and most plausible is the consideration by Lubor Niederle that there's no evidence that White Serbia ever existed and Constantine VII most probably made up Northern Great Serbia only according to the analogy with Great Croatia, which by other historians also did not exist. According to Tibor Živković, the structure and content of the subchapter about the family of Michael of Zahumlje indicates that this account was likely told by Michael himself. He is not noted as being of Serbian origin. Živković thought Michael's family may have preserved the memory of their tribal origin.

Toponyms and antroponyms

Tadeusz Lewicki in his toponomastic research of Polish lands found many toponyms documented between 12th and 14th century with a root "Serb-" and "Sarb-" and defined them as both a trace and remnant population of the so-called White Serbs in DAI. Since the 13th and 15th centuries were recorded also personal names and surnames which possibly derive from the ethnonym. However, according to Hanna Popowska-Taborska, the method didn't take into account the unambiguous etymological interpretation of the Serbian ethnonym because of which most probably the majority of the toponyms don't derive from the ethnonym itself. Also, both Łowmiański and Popowska-Taborska found them and their abundance unusual which cannot reflect the early medieval great migration of the Slavs, and it rather describes the Sorbian population living on the Polish territory which was brought there from the Elbe river as captives by the Piast dynasty.

References

Sources

References

  1. Mykhailo Hrushevsky. (1997). "History of Ukraine-Rus'. Volume 1: From Prehistory to the Eleventh Century". Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press.
  2. Andreas Nikolaou Stratos. (1968). "Byzantium in the seventh century". Adolf M. Hakkert.
  3. (1999). "Acta archaeologica Carpathica". Państwowe Wydawn. Naukowe.
  4. (2003). "Slavia antiqua". [[Poznań Society of Friends of Learning]].
  5. Овчинніков, Олександр. (2000). "Археологічні студії". Видавництво "Прут"; [[Chernivtsi University]].
  6. Howorth, H. H.. (1878). "The Spread of the Slaves. Part I. The Croats.". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
  7. Howorth, H. H.. (7 December 1880). "The Spread of the Slaves. Part III. The Northern Serbs or Sorabians and the Obodriti.". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
  8. Béni Kállay. (1882). "Istorija srpskoga naroda". Petar Curčić.
  9. Ljubivoje Cerović. (2002). "Srbi u Ukrajini". Muzej Vojvodine.
  10. Borivoje M. Drobnjaković. (1960). "Etnologija naroda Jugoslavije. 1 (1960)". Naučna knjiga.
  11. Vizantološki institut. (1996). "Recueil de travaux de l'Institut des études byzantines". Vizantološki institut SANU.
  12. Łowmiański, Henryk. (2004). "Hrvatska pradomovina (Chorwacja Nadwiślańska in Początki Polski)". Maveda.
  13. Jaroslav Rudnyckyj. (1962–1972). "An Etymological Dictionary of the Ukrainian Language: Parts 1–11, A–G". [[National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.
  14. Łowmiański, Henryk. (2004). "Hrvatska pradomovina (Chorwacja Nadwiślańska in Początki Polski)". Maveda.
  15. Popowska-Taborska, Hanna. (1993). "Ślady etnonimów słowiańskich z elementem obcym w nazewnictwie polskim". Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Linguistica.
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