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The '''Lutici''' [[Lutici#Names and spelling variants|(known by various spelling variants)]] were a federation of [[West Slavs|West Slavic]] [[Polabian Slavs|Polabian]] tribes, who between the 10th and 12th centuries lived in what is now northeastern [[Germany]]. Four tribes made up the core of the federation: the [[Redarians]] (Redari, Redarii), [[Circipanians]] (Circipani), [[Kessinians]] (Kessini, Kycini, Chizzini) and [[Tollensians]] (Tholenzi). At least in part, the Lutici were a continuation of the [[Veleti]]. In contrast to the former and the neighboring peoples, the Lutici were not led by a Christian monarch or duke, rather power was asserted through consensus formed in central assemblies of the social elites, and the Lutici worshipped nature and several deities. The political and religious center was '''Rethra''' (Riedegost).
The '''Lutici''' [[Lutici#Names and spelling variants|(known by various spelling variants)]] were a federation of [[West Slavs|West Slavic]] [[Polabian Slavs|Polabian]] tribes, who between the 10th and 12th centuries lived in what is now northeastern [[Germany]]. Four tribes made up the core of the federation: the [[Redarians]] (Redari, Redarii), [[Circipanians]] (Circipani), [[Kessinians]] (Kessini, Kycini, Chizzini) and [[Tollensians]] (Tholenzi). At least in part, the Lutici were a continuation of the [[Veleti]]. In contrast to the former and the neighboring peoples, the Lutici were not led by a Christian monarch or duke, rather power was asserted through consensus formed in central assemblies of the social elites, and the Lutici worshipped nature and several deities. The political and religious center was [[Radagosc]].


The Lutici were first recorded by written sources in the context of the uprising of 983, by which they annilihated the rule of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] in the [[Billung march|Billung]] and [[Northern March]]es. Hostilities continued until 997. Thereafter, tensions with the empire eased, and in 1003 the Lutici entered an alliance with the emperor against duke [[Boleslaw I of Poland]]. Once Boleslaw's successor [[Mieszko II of Poland|Mieszko]] was [[Treaties of Bautzen and Merseburg|defeated in 1033]], the alliance broke apart, and a German-Lutician war broke out that lasted until 1035, when the Lutici became tributaries of the empire again, but otherwise retained their independence. A civil war between the core tribes started the decline of the Lutici in 1056/57. The neighboring [[Obodrites]] intervened and subdued the northwestern faction of the Lutici.
The Lutici were first recorded by written sources in the context of the uprising of 983, by which they annilihated the rule of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] in the [[Billung march|Billung]] and [[Northern March]]es. Hostilities continued until 997. Thereafter, tensions with the empire eased, and in 1003 the Lutici entered an alliance with the emperor against duke [[Boleslaw I of Poland]]. Once Boleslaw's successor [[Mieszko II of Poland|Mieszko]] was [[Treaties of Bautzen and Merseburg|defeated in 1033]], the alliance broke apart, and a German-Lutician war broke out that lasted until 1035, when the Lutici became tributaries of the empire again, but otherwise retained their independence. A civil war between the core tribes started the decline of the Lutici in 1056/57. The neighboring [[Obodrites]] intervened and subdued the northwestern faction of the Lutici.

Revision as of 06:38, 14 May 2011

The Lutici (known by various spelling variants) were a federation of West Slavic Polabian tribes, who between the 10th and 12th centuries lived in what is now northeastern Germany. Four tribes made up the core of the federation: the Redarians (Redari, Redarii), Circipanians (Circipani), Kessinians (Kessini, Kycini, Chizzini) and Tollensians (Tholenzi). At least in part, the Lutici were a continuation of the Veleti. In contrast to the former and the neighboring peoples, the Lutici were not led by a Christian monarch or duke, rather power was asserted through consensus formed in central assemblies of the social elites, and the Lutici worshipped nature and several deities. The political and religious center was Radagosc.

The Lutici were first recorded by written sources in the context of the uprising of 983, by which they annilihated the rule of the Holy Roman Empire in the Billung and Northern Marches. Hostilities continued until 997. Thereafter, tensions with the empire eased, and in 1003 the Lutici entered an alliance with the emperor against duke Boleslaw I of Poland. Once Boleslaw's successor Mieszko was defeated in 1033, the alliance broke apart, and a German-Lutician war broke out that lasted until 1035, when the Lutici became tributaries of the empire again, but otherwise retained their independence. A civil war between the core tribes started the decline of the Lutici in 1056/57. The neighboring Obodrites intervened and subdued the northwestern faction of the Lutici.

In 1066, the Lutici succeeded in stirring up a revolt against the Obodrite elites, in the course of which John, the bishop of Mecklenburg, was captured and sacrificed at Rethra. As a consequence, the bishop of Halberstadt and the emperor sacked and destroyed Rethra in subsequent campaigns, and its role as the leading pagan cult site was taken over by the Swantewit temple at Arkona. Another civil war in the 1070s led to a further decline of the Lutician federation, who then were unable to resist conquests and looting by their neighbors in the following decades.

During the first half of the 12th century, the settlement area of the Lutici was partitioned between Obodrite principalities, the later Duchy of Mecklenburg (west), the re-constituted Northern March, which became the Margraviate of Brandenburg (south), and the Duchy of Pomerania (east). The Lutici were converted to Christianity, and in the 13th century were assimilated by German settlers and became part of the German people during the Ostsiedlung.

Veleti origins

Settlement area and differentiation of the Slavs following the 8th century, Veleti are indicated

At least in part, the Lutici were a continuation of the Veleti (Wilzi, Wilci), who are referred to by sources of the late 8th and first half of the 9th centuries as having inhabited the same region, and according to the Bavarian Geographer were likewise organized in four tribes (regiones).[1] Whether the Lutici were ethnically identical with the Veleti remains unproven.[1] Contemporary chronicles sometimes connect the Lutici to the Veleti,[1] e.g. Adam von Bremen (Gesta II,22) refers to them as "Leuticios, qui alio nomine Wilzi dicuntur", and Helmold von Bosau (Chronica Slavorum I,2) says "Hii quatuor populi a fortidudine Wilzi sive Lutici appellantur." Modern scholarship sometimes refers to both entities by a double name, e.g. "Wilzen-Lutizen" in German or "Wieleci-Lucice" in Polish.[1]

Nestor author of the Russian Chronicle, relating events from 862 to 1110, mentions Wallachians attacking and subduing the Slavs north of Danube and settling among them : "Волохомъ бо нашедшим на Словены на Дунаискыє, и сѣдшимъ в нихъ, и насилѧющимъ имъ. Словѣне же ови пришєдшє и сѣдоша на Вислѣ, и прозвашасѧ Лѧховѣ, а от тѣхъ Лѧховъ прозвашасѧ Полѧне, Лѧховѣ друзии – Лютицѣ, инии Мазовшане, а нии Поморѧне. Тако же и тѣ же Словѣне, пришедше, сѣдоша по Днепру и наркошасѧ Полѧне а друзии Деревлѧне, зане сѣдоша в лѣсѣхъ". tran. [...] When the Vlakhs (Волхмъ) attacked the Danubian Slavs, settled among them, and did them violence, the latter came and made their homes by the Vistula, and were then called Liakhs. Of these same Liakhs, some were called Poles, some Lutichians, some Mazovians, same Pomeranians [...]"

Organization

The Lutici were a federation of several smaller tribes between the Warnow and Mildenitz in the west, the Havel in the south and the Oder in the east,[2] with the core formed by four tribes: Redarians, Tolensians, Kessinians and Circipanians.[1][3] Within the federation, power was asserted by representatives of the clans and settlement communities (the "elders").[1][4] The highest political institution of both Veleti and Lutici was the assembly of the free, yet in contrast to the Veleti who were led by a prince, the Lutici were a "tribe without a ruler", meaning political power was asserted via discourse in an assembly.[1][4] This type of government had its roots in the Veleti period: since the mid-9th century, no Veleti princes or kings are recorded, and archaeology has revealed that in this period, many small strongholds were built in the area, in part on the ruins of the earlier, large strongholds.[3] During the Lutician assemblies, decisions were made based on consensus,[3][5] and once a decision had been made it was enforced by "severe punishment" of any violations.[5] While similar types of government have been postulated for archaic Slavic societies, this was unusual for contemporary ones, who were usually led by a prince, duke or king asserting power via feudal dependencies.[1][6]

Though missing a monarch, the Lutici had a social hierarchy.[3][5] Political power was asserted by nobles, priests and free farmers.[3] A reference to social differentiation is made by Thietmar (Chronicon VI, 25), who reported a progressive fine system imposing higher fines for offenses on persons with a higher social status.[5]

Whether or not the Lutician tribes had a common ethnic identity remains speculative:[7] The cultural differences to the neighboring tribes (Obodrites, Hevelli, Pomeranians) were minor, while differences with the Saxon and Christian culture and military pressure asserted by the Holy Roman Empire have most probably resulted in a common identity, evidently in mutual solidarity[8] expressed by the common councils and combined military campaigns.[9] Thietmar (VIII/5) refers to the resulting way of life as libertas more Liuticio.[9]

The most important stronghold of the Lutici was Rethra or Riedegost in the territory of the Redarii.[10] After a period of dominance by the Hevelli, centered on the other important Wendish stronghold of Brandenburg, the Redarii became a dominant regional power themselves after the 930s.[11] This is documented by the amount of silver tribute the Redarii were to pay to the Holy Roman Empire, and the failiure of the latter to permanently subdue the area despite multiple campaigns.[11]

Names and spelling variants

The name of the Lutici has survived in its many Latinized spelling variants used by contemporary chroniclers, most of which are still used in modern historiography in addition to their English, German and Polish renderings. The etymology of these terms is not sure, it has been proposed that they derive from the ur-Slavic root *ljutъ, meaning "wild", "fierce", or from the Slavic root *lutъ or its Latin equivalent lutum, meaning "swamp".[12] The Polabian original might have been *L'utici.[13]

Table: Spelling variants of "Lutici"

Latinized form*Anglicized formGermanized formPolonized form
LuticiLuticians-Lucice
LeuticiLeuticians--
LiuticiLiuticians--
Lyutici---
LutitiiLutitians--
-Liutitians--
LutiziLutiziansLutizen-
LeutiziLeutiziansLeutizen-
LiutiziLiutiziansLiutizen-

* as adopted from contemporary Latin sources by Anglo-Saxon historiography

The names of the four subtribes relate to their respective settlement areas: the Kessini around their main stronghold Kessin on the lower Warnow,[12] the Circipani were centered on the upper Peene,[12][14] the Tollensians on the Tollense,[12][14] and the Redarians lived south of Lake Tollensesee around Rethra.[12][13] In the latter case though, it is unknown whether the name of the deity is the root of the stronghold's and the tribe's name or if it is the other way around (see section on Rethra below), and alternative theories connect their name to a hypothetical river "Rada" or propose a translation as "red-haired people".[13] Earlier theories translating "Redarii" as "farmers", "plowers" or "warriors" have been refuted.[13]

The names of these tribes likewise survived in various spelling variants, including Tolensane and Tholenzi for the Tollensians;[14] Circipani, Zcirizspani and Zerezpani for the Circipanians;[14] as well as Riaderi, Redarii, and Rederi for the Redarians.[13]

History

Revolt of 983

In 983, the Lutici initiated an open rebellion, and in the ensuing war (983-995) succeeded in revoking imperial control over most of the Northern and Billung marches, where the corresponding bishoprics of Brandenburg and Havelberg were de facto annihilated.[15] The rebellion did not only affect Lutician territories, but also those of the neighboring Obodrites (also Abodriti) and Hevelli (also Stodorani).[15] The strategically important Hevellian Brandenburg was sacked by Lutician forces and successfully defended against the Saxon margraves and Hevellian princes.[15] Incidentally, the pagan Luticians appointed Kizo, a Saxon Christian, commander of the Brandenburg.[16] Contemporary German chronicler Thietmar (VI, 25) blames the uprising on maltreatment of the Lutici by the margraves: "warriors, who used to be our servants, now free as a consequence of our injustices ['iniquitates']."[17]

Lutician federation (983-1056/57)

In the Obodrite principality, the Luticians initiated a revolt aiming at the abolishment of feudal rule and Christianity,[15] drawing on consideral support by the Obodrite populace.[18] In part, the Obrodite revolt was successful: The princely family, though in part remaining Christian, dissolved Christian institutions, and the Oldenburg bishop had to abandon his bishopric.[18] The Obodrite rebels destroyed the see in Oldenburg and also the see of the diocese, Hamburg.[19] The ensuing war with the Saxons however culminated in the sack of the Obodrite stronghold of Mecklenburg by Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor in 995.[18][20]

The uprising had started when the Holy Roman Empire was weakened by the defeat emperor Otto II had suffered against the Saracens in the Battle of Stilo (982).[2] Otto II died in Rome shortly after the rebellion started, and three weeks later, his three-year-old son Otto III was crowned and anointed king of the Germans by the archbishops of Mainz and Ravenna in Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) on Christmas 983.[19] The coronation was not undisputed: an oppositional group had formed in the empire supporting the kingship of Bavarian duke Henry the Quarrelsome, and the Christian West Slavic dukes Boleslaus II of Bohemia and Mieszko I of Poland as well as the Christian Obodrite prince Mstivoj were among the latter's supporters.[21] All of them had accepted Henry's claim to the throne at the Quedlinburg Hoftag of Easter 984,[22] and only at the Quedlinburg Hoftag of Easter 986 Otto III was accepted as king by the opposition, including the Bohemian and Polish dukes.[23] While neither Mstivoj (also Mistui, died between 992 and 995), nor his son and successor Mstislav were present at the 986 meeting, they continued to maintain close ties to the empire,[23] despite their participation in campaigns into Saxon Northalbinga and Altmark in the initial stage of the uprising.[22]

Handling of the Lutician rebellion thus became a central objective for the young king, and several campaigns of the Lutici and Obodriti into the eastern Duchy of Saxony and German campaigns vice versa are recorded for nearly every year of his kingship.[19] Thereby, the Saxons experienced several difficulties resulting from the de-central organization of the Lutici.[24] Apart from the attempted reconquest of the lost sees of the bishoprics,[25] the Saxon armies faced wide heaths, lake- and woodlands that lacked targets suitable to decide the war.[24] According to the annales Quedlinburgensis, the first Saxon campaign of 985 thus followed a tactic of scorched earth: "with fire and slaughter, they devastated the whole region" (totam terram illam incendiis et caedibus devastaverunt), a characterization that applied to the following campaigns as well.[24] Following a hypothesis forwarded in modern historiography, e.g. by Gerd Althoff, these campaigns had not the primary purpose of a reconquest, but rather the purpose of looting and taking revenge.[24]

The first such campaign Otto III participated in was in 986, when Otto was six years old.[19] In 991, at the age of eleven, he participated in the temporary reconquest of Brandenburg, which was soon lost again due to the treason of a Saxon defector, and in 992 he participated again in the subsequent siege of Brandenburg, where the Saxon army suffered heavy casualties before it was victorious in 993.[19] In 994 however, the war's tide turned again.[24]

Thus, Otto III organized a campaign involving an abundance of princes of the empire, which was also the first campaign he led as an independent ruler, since before 994/995 he had been under tutelage[26] of his mother Theophanu, and after her death, under the tutelage of his grand-mother, Adelaide, and Willigis, archbishop of Mainz. Among the participants of the campaign were Bernard I of Saxony, his former rival Henry the Quarrelsome of Bavaria along with his son and later emperor Henry IV (II), also the bishops of Regensburg and Freising, Magdeburg archbishop Giselher with his suffragan Eiko, bishop of Meißen, as well as the margraves Gero and Liuthar, duke Mieszko's son Boleslaw I of Poland, a son of duke Boleslaus II of Bohemia, and the latter's rival Soběslav, brother of Adalbert of Prague.[26] While Henry the Quarrelsome died before the campaign started in 995,[26] and his son Henry IV (II) thereupon returned to Bavaria to secure his succession, the participant's list and the assembled force distinguished this campaign from the mostly Saxon campaigns mounted to crush the rebellion before.[22] The 995 campaign also played a role in Bohemian history: Boleslaus II, against his promises, made use of the absence of his rival Soběslav, marched on the latter's stronghold in Libice (Libitz) and killed the members of his family, the oppositional Slavnikids.[27]

In early 996, Otto III left for Rome to receive the imperial crown from pope Gregory V.[28] At the same time, Adalbert of Prague was also in Rome, and both Otto and Adalbert left - on different routes - in June 996, to meet again in Ingelheim and Mainz during the fall.[28] Adalbert, who in Rome and with the pope's consent had agreed on going on a mission into pagan territory,[28] yet he was still undecided on whether he should try to convert the Lutici or the Old Prussians.[29] Eventually he settled for a mission to the Prussians, who killed him on 23 April 997.[29] Also in 997, Otto III mounted a last campaign into the areas held by the Lutici, targeting the Hevelli.[29] Afterwards, Otto III instead focussed on plans to re-organize the Holy Roman Empire.[29]

German-Lutician alliance against Poland

"Sclavinia", "Germania", "Gallia" and "Roma" with presents for Otto III (~1000)
"Germania", "Gallia" and "Roma" pay hommage to Henry II (between 1007 and 1012)
Contemporary illustrations of the personalized provinces of the Holy Roman Empire paying hommage to the emperors Otto III (above) and Henry II (below). "Sclavinia", symbolizing the Slavic lands, is depicted in the above, but missing in the below illustration.

After the Lutici gained independence, Otto III allied against them with Mieszko I of Poland, whom he wanted to integrate in his renovatio imperii Romani.[30] Mieszko's successor Boleslaw I Chrobry however expanded his realm and denied Otto's successor Henry II homage for Bohemia, conquered in 1003.[30] Furthermore, Boleslaw supported the inner-German opposition to Henry.[30] This led Henry to abandon the reconquest of the Lutician areas, and instead offer them an alliance against Boleslaw, first recorded at a meeting in Quedlinburg on 28 March 1003.[30][31] Since the Lutici remained pagan, this policy was widely criticized in the empire, especially by the clergy.[30] By 1004, Henry had expelled Boleslaw from Bohemia and adjacent territories in Lusatia, and by 1005 mounted a counteroffensive.[32]

The Lutici, who participated in the campaign, caused dismay among the Christian army when carrying idols of their deities with them.[32][33] Thietmar of Merseburg blames delays that prevented the imperial army from decisively defeating Boleslaw on the Lutici, and obviously it was not in the Lutician interest to eliminate the Boleslaw's threat to Henry as this was the basis for the German-Lutician alliance preventing the resumption of German campaigns into Lutician territory.[32] On the other hand, the delays were caused also by corrupt guides and several Saxon nobles, who also opposed campaigns against Christian Boleslaw and rather supported re-establishing control and mission of the pagan Lutici.[34] The campaign was aborted near Poznan when Boleslaw's envoys negotiated a peace.[34]

Afterwards, Boleslaw negotiated an anti-Lutician alliance "in Christo" with unknown nobles at Magdeburg, while "with words and money" trying to instigate Lutician and Bohemian campaigns against Henry at the same time, according to the testimony of Lutician and Bohemian envoys at Regensburg (Easter 1007).[33][35] The Lutician and Bohemian envoys demanded a promt attack on Boleslaw, yet Henry faced considerable opposition of several nobles against a renewed war.[36] The war (1007–1013) was then started by Boleslaw, and sources do not mention Lutician participation.[36] The next record of the Lutici in the sources is of negotiations in Amberg in November 1012, confirming the alliance of 1003.[37] Considerable Lutician forces participated in the two following campaigns of Henry II against Boleslaw in 1015 and 1017.[38][39]

In 1017 however, two incidents led to the temporary departure of the Lutici from the campaign.[40] First, a stone's throw of a compagnon of margrave Hermann Billung damaged a Lutician idol, and Henry II had to re-concile them with twelve pounds of silver.[40][41] Secondly, they lost fifty warriors and an idol of a female deity in a flood while crossing the Mulde river,[40][41] near Wurzen.[40] The Lutici interpreted these incidents as bad omen, and departed determined to break the alliance with the emperor.[40] Yet, an assembly was convoked where it was decided to re-enter the war on the emperor's side, and two Lutician armies again attacked Boleslaw later in 1017.[40] One Lutician army joined the emperor's forces in the siege of Glogau (Thietmar VII, 59), while the other attacked another stronghold of Boleslaw and devastated the surrounding region once they had lost 100 men in an unsuccessful attempt to take it (Thietmar VII, 61).[40] Günther, an eremite from Magdeburg, tried to mission in the Lutician lands during the same year without success.[40][41]

The Peace of Bautzen (1018) ended the war between Henry and Boleslav, and the Lutici attacked their western neighbors, the Obodrite dukes, during the same year.[41] They justified the attack with the fact that the Obodrites had not participated in the war.[41] The Lutici were supported by part of the Obodrites, and the resulting revolt expelled Obodrite duke Mstislav to Saxony and destroyed the see in Oldenburg.[42] This caused the Danish king Canute the Great to intervene in 1019, and the duke of Saxony and the bishop of Bremen, previously in a dispute about influence in the Obodrite areas, combined their forces in 1020 and ended the revolt in 1021.[42]

When Henry II died, Boleslaw I of Poland used the power vacuum in the empire to crown himself king in 1025.[43] While he died in the same year, his son and successor Mieszko II also took on the royal title, denied paying homage to the successor of Henry II, emperor Conrad II, and coveted the Lutici territories.[43] Conrad renewed the German-Lutician alliance.[43] In 1028, Mieszko invaded and devastated the area east of the Saale river in a campaign which also affected the Lutician associate tribe of the Hevelli.[43] Thus, in the same year, Lutician delegates asked Conrad for help against "tyrant Mieszko" at a synode in Pöhlde, Conrad's answer however is not recorded.[43] From 1029 to 1032, the emperor mounted several campaigns against Miesko II, utterly defeating him and forcing him into the disadvantegeous Peace of Merseburg in 1033.[44] Whether Lutician forces participated in the campaigns is not known.[44] With Poland defeated and disintegrating in a civil war, the German-Lutician aliance had lost its basis, and a new war began.[44]

German-Lutician war

Conrad II

In 1033, a Lutician army repeatedly attacked the fortress of Werben on the Elbe.[44] A Saxon relief army was defeated, whereby 42 knights were killed.[44] Emperor Conrad II however focussed on securing succession in Burgundy and thus refrained from immediate retaliation.[44] In 1035, the Lutici sacked Werben after an act of treason and killed most of the defendants.[44] Conrad II, supported by Bretislav of Bohemia, retaliated with a large-scale campaign into the Lutician territories.[44] The result was inconclusive, with both sides suffering heavy casualties.[44]

A subsequent campaign mounted primarily by Saxon nobles resulted in the defeat of the Lutici, who had to agree to a high tribute and provide hostages.[44] Despite the defeat, the Lutici retained their autonomy, and the bishoprics of Brandenburg and Havelberg were not re-instated.[44]

Civil wars and Obodrite rule

In 1056/1057, the Lutician federation disintegrated in a civil war (lutizischer Bruderkrieg, "Lutician brother-war").[45] Kessini and Circipani fought against Tollensians and Redarii.[3] The dispute was decided by an intervention of the Obodrite prince Gottschalk, son-in-law of the Danish jarl Sven Estridson.[46] After Obodrite ruler Ratibor and his sons had been killed in battle in 1043, Gottschalk had established himself as the new ruler of the Obodrite and part of the Lutician realm with the support of Sven Estridson and Bernard II, Duke of Saxony.[46] According to Adam of Bremen (Gesta II, 79), Gottschalk went to the "Slavic lands with a mighty force, attacked everybody and caused great fear among the pagans."[46] In 1057, again with the support of Bernard II and Sven Estridson, Gottschalk subdued the Kessini and Circipani and integrated them into his realm.[46]

Henry IV

In 1066, the Lutici were involved in the Obodrite revolt,[3] in the course of which Gottschalk was slain,[46] his wife and her abigails were chased out of Mecklenburg naked, and a monk, Ansvar, and others were stoned to death in Ratzeburg.[47] Adam of Bremen (III, 51) further recorded the capture of the elderly Mecklenburg bishop "Iohannes" (Johann, John Scotus), who was carried to Rethra, where his severed head was sacrificed to Redigost.[47][48] However, Halberstadt bishop Burchard sacked Rethra in the winter of 1067/1068, and as a symbol of his victory rode home on the temple's sacred horse.[45] In the winter of 1069, king and later emperor Henry IV led a follow-up campaign into the Lutician territories, looting and pillaging the area.[45]

In 1073 however, Henry IV sought to win the Lutici as allies against a Saxon opposition led by Otto of Northeim.[45] According to Bruno of Querfurt, Henry IV offered to the Lutici the chance of conquering as much Saxon land as they desired.[45] The Saxon nobles then tried to also win the Lutici as allies against Henry IV:[45] Among the Lutici, another civil war broke out between the factions supporting either Otto or Henry, resulting in a high death toll.[45] As a consequence, the Lutici were unable to attack either Henry or Otto.[45] However, due to the emerging Investiture Controversy, Henry IV had to shift his focus away from the Lutician areas, so the remaining Lutici retained their independence.[45] In 1090, the Obodrite prince Henry had consolidated the Obodrite realm with Danish and Saxon support, and killed his rival Kruto.[49] After an Obodrite revolt was quelled in 1093, Henry expanded eastward in several campaigns, and subdued all Lutician areas north of the Havel river.[50] In 1100/1101, Henry's combined Obodrite and Saxon forces sieged Havelberg to quell a revolt of the Hevelli and Brisani, while his son Mistue lootet the territory of the nearby Linoni with 300 Slavs and 200 Saxons.[51]

Division and conversion of the Lutician areas

When in 1115 Saxon duke Lothair of Supplinburg defeated Holy Roman Emperor Henry V in the Battle of Welfesholz, the emperor's influence in Saxony and the Wendish territories had virtually disappeared.[52] On the other hand, Lothair then followed an expansionist policy himself.[52] Among the tribes he campaigned against, regardless of whether they were within the Obodrite sphere of interest, were also the Kessini, whose prince Dumar was subdued, along with his sons, in 1114.[52] This campaign was supported by the (nominal) margrave of the Northern March, whose army included 300 Circipanian cavalry.[52] Several subsequent campaigns of Lothair into the Lutician areas followed between 1115 and 1127.[53] In 1121, Lothair mounted another successful campaign against the Kessini, this time sacking their main stronghold Kessin and subduing their prince Sventipolk.[52] In the same year, duke Boleslaw III of Poland mounted a campaign into the Müritz area.[53] In 1127, a campaign of Lothair was targeted the Gützkow area.[53] With his campaigns, Lothair renewed the German claim to the areas lost in 983.[53]

In 1127, Kessin was again sacked, along with Werle, this time by Obodrite prince Sventipolk.[54] A son of Henry (deceased 1125), Sventipolk struggled for his father's heritage against his brother Knud.[54] In his campaign against the Kessini he was supported by Adolf I, Count of Schauenburg.[54] However, Sventipolk, his son Swinike and his brother Knud were all murdered in 1128, and in 1129 Lothair (king of the Germans since 1125) gave the "kingdom of the Obodrites" to Danish Knud Lavard, who was however murdered by a relative in 1131.[55] His successor in the eastern Obodrite realm, up to the Peene river, was Niklot.[55]

Otto of Bamberg, Pomeranian Dukes' Castle, Szczecin (Stettin)

The eastern Lutician areas between the Peene, Tollense, Uecker and Oder rivers had by then been subdued by the Pomeranian duke Wartislaw I,[56] and the Lutician primores of this area converted to Christianity in 1128.[57] Thence the Pomeranian dukes occasionally styled themselves dux Liuticiorum.[58] The conversion of the Lutici was accomplished by Otto of Bamberg, who had also missioned the Pomeranians (Slavic tribe) and the tribes on the lower Oder (Prissani and Velunzani, all under Wartislaw's rule) in 1124/25.[53] Boleslaw III of Poland had subdued Wartislaw after his abovementioned Lutician campaign, and in 1127 was on the verge of attacking Wartislaw again because of the latter's Lutician conquests, which had considerably strengthened Wartislaw's position.[53] When Otto of Bamberg waited for Wartislaw I in Demmin in 1128 to convert the Lutici, the Pomeranian duke appeared with two armies, and according to Otto's biographer Herbod looted and burned the surrounding areas before he held talks with Otto about the conversion.[53] Wartislaw had also convened a meeting of the Lutician nobles at Usedom, where they accepted Christianity upon Otto's and Wartislaw's appearance.[59] Otto then destroyed the pagan temples at Wolgast and Gützkow, before he mediated in the dispute between Wartislaw I and Boleslaw III.[60] Boleslaw aborted his preparations for war, and in turn Wartislaw accepted Boleslaw's superiority for his territories east of the Oder, while for the Lutician areas his superior was Lothair.[60] When the pope crowned Lothair Holy Roman Emperor at Rome on 6 June 1133, he also issued a document addressed at bishop Norbert of Magdeburg listing a "Bishopric of Stettin" for the Lutician areas between Elbe and Oder, and a Pomeranian bishopric for the areas east of the Oder.[60] These bishoprics however never materialized, instead the Bishopric of Wollin was founded in 1140 for the areas then ruled by Wartislaw.[61]

In 1134, Lothair gave the Northern March,[54] i.e. the area south of the Peene river,[52] to Albrecht the Bear of the House of Ascania.[54] The Wendish Crusade of 1147 targeted the Obodrite and Lutician areas.[62] After a period of Danish rule in the northern part, the Holy Roman Empire's duchies of Pomerania and Mecklenburg (successor of the Obodrite state) as well as the Margraviate of Brandenburg (successor of the Northern March) had consolidated in the former Lutician areas.[62] In the course of the Ostsiedlung, the Lutici were assimilated by German settlers,[62] ultimately becoming part of the German people.[48]

Religion

Traditionally, the Lutici worshipped nature in sacred groves or at springs, lakes, and rivers.[16] There, worship and sacrificing were done in the open without the support of priests.[16] In addition, the Lutici maintained several cult sites.[16] The density of Lutician temples was the highest in the whole Slavic settlement area.[16] As of 2002, about twenty such cult sites have been identified,[63] with Rethra (Riedegost) being the most important one before the Svantevit temple at Arkona took over the leading role after Rethra's destruction.[48][63] Cult sites such as Rethra were maintained by priests, and since in Lutician society politics was closely tied to religious beliefs and not ruled by a secular monarch, the Rethra priests were extremely influential.[48] According to Thietmar (VI, 25), every Lutician region had its own temple, each home to a special idol.[5]

The maintenance of temple sites marks the transition from the worship of nature to the worship of idols representing personalized deities, a trend that in historiography is interpreted as resulting from contacts to Christianity.[63] While the erection of cult sites flourished since the 10th century, an idol dating to the 7th to 8th century has been found in Feldberg, and a cult site surrounded by planks was found in the fortress of Groß Raden, dating to the second half of the 9th century.[16]

Rethra

The main deity worshipped in Rethra was reported as Zuarasici by Thietmar (VI, 23), and as Redigost (Redigast, Riedegost) by Adam of Bremen (II, 21; III, 51) and Helmold (I, 2).[63] This is interpreted by historians and linguists in different ways: probably, the different names mark the transition from an appellativum related with the Iranian root xvar, "sun", to a distinct personalized deity with the name Riedegost.[63] This could then have been adopted as the name of the temple (Rethra) and as the name of the tribe settling there (Redarii).[63] Following the alternative hypothesis, it was the other way around: Adam of Bremen and Helmold mistakenly adopted the name of the temple site as the name of the deity, which was correctly identified by Thietmar and corresponds with Svarožič or Svarog.[63] According to a third theory, Riedegost was the second name of Thietmar's Zuarasici.[63]

Thietmar (VI, 25) details Rethra's elevated position as follows: "To [Rethra], they bid farewell when they go to war, [Rethra] is honoured with due gift upon their fortunate return, and it is carefully determined [...] by lot and horse [oracle], what sacrifices the priests have to make to the deities. When in their unspeakable wrath however, they are comforted with the blood of animals and humans."[5]

According to Helmold of Bosau, the revolt of 983 was started after a meeting at the civitas Rethre, and the successful beginning of the revolt of 1066 was according to Adam of Bremen celebrated in Rethra by the ritual decapitation of captured bishop Johann of Mecklenburg and the sacrifice of his head, stuck on a lance, to Riedegost.[48] The last historical record of "Rheda" is an entry in the Annals of Augsburg for the year 1068,[64] describing its capture by bishop Burchard and the abduction of its sacred horse.[48] It is assumed that Rethra was destroyed either in this or one of the following campaigns, probably it was destroyed and rebuilt several times since Ebo's Vita Ottonis episcopi Bambergensis (III, 5) mentions the destruction of "the Lutician civitas and temple" by king Lothair of Supplinburg in 1126/27, without specifying its name.[64]

Thietmar (VI, 23) described Rethra as a castle (urbs) with three horns (tricornis) and three gates (tres in se continens portas), two of which could be reached by land, while the third and smallest one faced a lake (mare) to the east, supposedly a terrifying sight (horribile visu).[64] The castle was surrounded by woodland (silva).[64] Inside the castle, there was a wooden temple grounded on animal horns, and in this temple there were idols of several deities, who each had a name engraved and wore helmet and armor, with Zuarasici being the highest deity.[65] Guidons (vexilla) of these deities were stored inside the temple and were only to leave the room during a war.[65] Thietmar wrote this when the Lutici were allies of the emperor, an alliance he opposed, and included his Rethra report with the purpose of advising the Germans against it.[65] He also explicitly turned to the reader and advised them to not follow the Lutician cult, but instead adhere to the Holy Bible.[17]

Adam of Bremen wrote his Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum when Rethra was already in decline, and gave a somewhat differing account: according to him, Rethra, "seat of the idols" (sedes ydolatriae) was surrounded by a deep lake and had nine gates. He described Redigast as the superior deity in a large, demonic temple (templum ibi magnum constructum est demonibus, princeps est Redigast), that could be reached by a wooden bridge by those who wanted to sacrifice or ask the oracle.[66] 12th-century chronicler Helmold largely followed Adam's version.[66] The difference in the numbers used by Thietmar ("three", tricornis) and Adam ("nine") might be explained with the symbolic use of these numbers, meant not to accurately describe Rethra, but rather connect it to the underworld.[67] The boar, who according to Thietmar came out of the lake prior to a war to take pleasure in the mud, thereby "terribly shaking and appearing to many", might likewise be a symbol Thietmar used for the devil rather than an actual oracle, in contrast to the horse oracle.[68]

12th century burial site at Sanzkow

Archaeological records suggest a life expectancy of 20 to 30 years, primarily due to a high infant and child mortality.[69] Excavations in the Sanzkow burial site near Demmin revealed that 25.8% of the buried children were under the age of 6 years, another 4.4% under the age of 12 years, adding to an estimated infant mortality of 20%.[69] For those who reached adulthood, the average death age was 40.7 years (males) and 34.1 years (females),[69] and only 4.4%, primarily men, reached an age >60 years.[70] The lower life expectancy of women results from puerperal mortality: An average woman gave birth to three to four children in intervals of three to four years.[70] The average heights of adult males was 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) and 1.60 m (5 ft 3 in) for adult women.[71] Medical research of teeth revealed a healthy diet with sufficient protein and low carbohydrate shares and a two-year breastfeeding period.[72] Serious pathological deformations of bones were found in 28% of the adult Sanzkow skeletons, less serious ones in 44%.[73] Most adults suffered from spondylosis deformans, especially men above the age of twenty years, but also women above the age of thirty years.[72] Combined with high rates of arthrosis deformans, likewise primarily affecting males,[74] and other skeleton deformations, this points to high physical strain especially of the male population.[75] An extraordinarily high rate of bone fractures (15% of the adult population, primarily men) indicates massive involvement in battles and accidents.[74] Skull injuries from strokes, swords and arrows were also common.[74] Two bodies at Sanzkow were buried as vampires.[76] For one of those, there is evidence for a head injury that might have resulted in brain dysfunctions, this man was banned with three large rocks placed on his face, breast and legs.[77] One woman had a denture, and there is also evidence for trepanations.[78]

Sources

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Lübke (2001), RGA XIX p. 51
  2. ^ a b Petersohn (2003), p. 101
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Herrmann (1985), p. 261
  4. ^ a b Garipzanov (2008), p. 198
  5. ^ a b c d e f Hengst (2005), p. 500
  6. ^ Garipzanov (2008), p. 200
  7. ^ Lübke (2002), pp. 105f
  8. ^ Lübke (2002), p. 106
  9. ^ a b Lübke (2002), p. 107
  10. ^ Lübke (2002), pp. 98-99
  11. ^ a b Lübke (2002), p. 98
  12. ^ a b c d e Lübke (2001), p. 51
  13. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), p. 14
  14. ^ a b c d Herrmann (1985), p. 13
  15. ^ a b c d Lübke (2002), p. 99
  16. ^ a b c d e f Lübke (2002), p. 103
  17. ^ a b Hengst (2005), p. 501
  18. ^ a b c Lübke (2002), p. 97
  19. ^ a b c d e Petersohn (2003), p. 102
  20. ^ Petersohn (2003), p. 136
  21. ^ Petersohn (2003), pp. 108, 111
  22. ^ a b c Petersohn (2003), p. 108
  23. ^ a b Petersohn (2003), p. 109
  24. ^ a b c d e Petersohn (2003), p. 103
  25. ^ Petersohn (2003), pp. 101ff
  26. ^ a b c Petersohn (2003), p. 107
  27. ^ Petersohn (2003), pp. 121-122
  28. ^ a b c Petersohn (2003), p. 137
  29. ^ a b c d Petersohn (2003), p. 138
  30. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), pp. 356, 358 Cite error: The named reference "Herrmann356" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  31. ^ Hengst (2005), p. 495
  32. ^ a b c Herrmann (1985), p. 357
  33. ^ a b Hengst (2005), p. 496
  34. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 358
  35. ^ Herrmann (1985), pp. 358, 359
  36. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 359
  37. ^ Herrmann (1985), pp. 359, 360
  38. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 360
  39. ^ Hengst (2005), pp. 496, 497
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h Hengst (2005), p. 497
  41. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), p. 361
  42. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 362
  43. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), p. 363
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Herrmann (1985), p. 364
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i Herrmann (1985), p. 366
  46. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), p. 365
  47. ^ a b Müller-Wille (1991), p. 94
  48. ^ a b c d e f Schmidt (2009), p. 75
  49. ^ Herrmann (1985), pp. 366-367
  50. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 367
  51. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 379
  52. ^ a b c d e f Herrmann (1985), p. 380
  53. ^ a b c d e f g Schmidt (2009), p. 105
  54. ^ a b c d e Herrmann (1985), p. 381
  55. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 382
  56. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 384
  57. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 385
  58. ^ Schultze (1964), p. 142
  59. ^ Schmidt (2009), p. 106
  60. ^ a b c Schmidt (2009), p. 107
  61. ^ Schmidt (2009), pp. 267-268
  62. ^ a b c Brather (2001), p. 85
  63. ^ a b c d e f g h Lübke (2002), p. 104
  64. ^ a b c d Schmidt (2009), p. 76
  65. ^ a b c Schmidt (2009), p. 77
  66. ^ a b Schmidt (2009), p. 78
  67. ^ Schmidt (2009), pp. 85-98
  68. ^ Schmidt (2009), p. 98
  69. ^ a b c Herrmann (1985), p. 55
  70. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 56
  71. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 57
  72. ^ a b Herrmann (1985), p. 60
  73. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 64
  74. ^ a b c Herrmann (1985), p. 61
  75. ^ Herrmann (1985), pp. 60, 61
  76. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 62
  77. ^ Stülzebach (1998), p. 108
  78. ^ Herrmann (1985), p. 63

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  • Stülzebach, Annett (1998). "Vampir- und Wiedergängererscheinungen aus volkskundlicher und archäologischer Sicht" (PDF). Concilium medii aevi (in German) (1): 97–121.

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