[Home]History of Vistula River

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Revision 3 . . December 17, 2001 11:17 pm by (logged).20.226.xxx
Revision 2 . . (edit) December 6, 2001 2:49 am by H. Jonat
Revision 1 . . October 18, 2001 9:30 pm by Rmhermen [redirect]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (no other diffs)

Changed: 3c3
The name Vistula is Gothic and was recorded by Tacitus in 98 AD in his "Agricola and Germania". During that time the Vistula River ran into the Mare Suebicum, which was later called Baltic Sea. According to him, near the delta lived the East Germanic tribes of the Burgundians, on both banks the Goths and east of them the Aestii-Prussi, Galindi, Sudauer, Borusci, Veneti, Fenni-Finns, and more. However, Tacitus' record is recently considered doubtful by some modern scholars.
The name Vistula is Gothic and was recorded by Tacitus in 98 AD in his "Agricola and Germania". During that time the Vistula River ran into the Mare Suebicum, which was later called Baltic Sea. According to him, near the delta lived the East Germanic tribes of the Burgundians, on both banks the Goths and east of them the Aestii-Prussi, Galindi, Sudauer, Borusci, Veneti, Fenni-Finns, and more. However, Tacitus' knowledge of the different Germanic peoples was second-hand at best; as such, it should be taken with the proverbial grain of salt.

Changed: 5c5
The Vistula river is only a short portage from the [Dnieper River]?, and thence Black Sea. Boats could be rolled from one river to the next there. What later became the city of Kiev? in the Ukraine was earlier known by its Gothic name of Danapirstadir (Dnepr-Stadt or "Dnieper City"). The Baltic Sea-Vistula-Dneipir-Black Sea water route was one of the most ancient trade-routes, the Amber road, on which amber and other items were traded from Northern Europe to Greece, Asia, Egypt, and elsewhere.
The Vistula river is only a short portage from the [Dnieper River]?, and thence to the Black Sea. Boats could be rolled from one river to the next there. What later became the city of Kiev? in the Ukraine was earlier known by its Gothic name of Danapirstadir "City on the Dnieper". The Baltic Sea-Vistula-Dneipir-Black Sea water route was one of the most ancient trade-routes, the Amber road, on which amber and other items were traded from Northern Europe to Greece, Asia, Egypt, and elsewhere.

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