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Silesia is the Latin and English name for a province which is situated nowadays in western part of Poland, and is divided into Dolnoslaskie (with capital in Wroclaw), Opolskie (capital: Opole) and Slaskie (capital: Katowice) voivoidship. Polish name of Silesia is "Slask". Before World War II it belonged to Germany. Its German name is "Schlesien".

Silesia derived its name from the Silinger, a Germanic tribe like the Vandals and the (Celtic) Germanic Lugier or Lygier who all lived south of the Baltic Sea in the Elbe?, Oder, and Vistula river area.

Ptolemy in his book Geography recorded in Germany as follows: "Below the Semnones the Silingae have their abodes, and below the Burguntae are the Lugi Omani: below these are the Lugi Diduni extending as far as the Asciburgius mountains,and below the Silingae are the Calucones on both banks of the river Albis; below whom are the Chaerusci and the Camavi extending as far as Melibocus mountain,from whom toward the east along the Albis river are the Banochaemae; above whom are the Batini, and above these, but below the Asciburgius mountains are the Corconti and the Lugi Buri extending as far as the source or the Vistula river; first below these are the Sidones, then the Gotini, then the Visburgi above the Orcynium forest... The source and mouth of the Albis {{Oder River]] and of the Vistula River are in Germania." Source: Claudius Ptolemy The Geography, Translated and edited by Edward Luther Stevenson, Dover Publications, Inc N.Y. ISBN O-486-26896-9.

[Procopius of Caesarea]? , historian of Byzantium reported that those Vandili remaining in the Oder area ,sent messages to the 'Vandili' in Northern Africa.

Vandali , Asdinger , Silinger and Alans were in confederation with the Franks.

First the Huns, then Avars and Slavs , then Hungarians stormed into Germania.

By the 7st century small amounts of Slavs started to take over some areas, vacated by those Vandali who had left for Africa. There they lived amongs the remaining Germanic people. Silinger then concentrated around the mount Zobten.

The Regensburg? (table of peoples) Voelkertafel lists four Silesian Gaue (latin pagi).

990 Polish duke Mieszko Icame and attacked the Oderland , the region around the Oder river. He was aided by German troops of margrave of Meissen and by men of the bishopric of Meissen. Mieszko I first conquered the Boehmenburg (Bohemia burg) on the Oder island . This endet the free Silinger Silesia era, because from then on ( the first Christianization-take-over) Silesia was embroiled in political battles.


It should be noted that there is considerable debate among archaeologists and historians as to whether there is such a thing as a Celtic-Germanic people. Exhibits such as the one in Rosenheim (Bayern) certainly demonstrate that the Celts had an influence on the area; however, the movement of the Celts westward through Europe was such that there is little if any overlap between them and the Germanic tribes.

Moreover, the question of Germanic tribes and their relationship to place names is entirely chicken/egg. Traditional German historiography, most notably the works of Ranke?, tend to argue a thing's inherent "Germanness" on the grounds that clearly work in a 19th century nationalist context, but hardly work for today's historians. To argue that the people living in Silesia when it was taken by the Slavs (AFTER it had been overrun by Vikings and others) were the same ethnic group as those living in Silesia in 1945 is insupportable.


Vikings in Silesia ???

Silesia was in earlier centuries overrun by Slavs.

Since 1945 it belongs to Poland. The Communists ousted most of the German population of Silesia. Some Germans managed to stay in their homeland, when it was taken over by Poland, mainly in Opolskie voivoidship.


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Edited November 23, 2001 4:34 am by H. Jonat (diff)
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