Silesian tribes

The Silesian tribes (Polish: plemiona śląskie) is a term used to refer to tribes, or groups of West Slavs[1] that lived in the territories of Silesia in the Early Middle Ages. The territory they lived on became part of Great Moravia in 875 (now mostly in the Czech Republic) and later, in 990, the first Polish state created by duke Mieszko I and then expanded by king Boleslaw I at the beginning of the 11th century. They are usually treated as part of the Polish tribes[2] and sometimes as part of the Germanic tribes.[3] Two tribes among them are sometimes considered as Czech (Moravian) tribes.[4]

  1. ^ "Borderlands of Language in Europe" – Vaughan Cornish, Sifton, Praed, 1936; "Annales Silesiae" – Wrocławskie Towarzystwo Naukowe; PWN 2003; "The Dynamics of the Policies of Ethnic Cleansing in Silesia in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries" – Tomasz Kamusella 1999 [1][permanent dead link]; "Historia Śląska" – Wydawnictwo Śląskie ABC "Historia Śląska - Wydawnictwo Śląskie ABC". Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2009-02-22.; "Śląsk w czasach słowiańskich" na podstawie prac Marka Szołtyska [2]; "Fale Migracyjne w historii Śląska" – Ruch Autonomii Śląska, 2003
  2. ^ Jerzy Strzelczyk [in:] The New Cambridge Medieval History, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 521-522 ISBN 0-521-36447-7 Google Books; Robert Machray, The Problem of Upper Silesia, G. Allen & Unwin ltd. 1945, p. 13 Google Books; Paul Wagret, Helga S. B. Harrison, Poland, Nagel, 1964, p. 231. Google Books
  3. ^ "Coming Home to Germany?" – David Rock, Stefan Wolff; 2002, ISBN 1-57181-729-8 p. 200 Google Books)
  4. ^ "Czeski Śląsk" – Montes Tarnovicensis, 05/2008