(Redirected from Abodrites)The 'Obotrites' (; ), also commonly known as the 'Obodrites', 'Abotrites', or 'Abodrites', were a confederation of medieval
West Slavic tribes within the territory of modern
Mecklenburg and
Holstein in northern
Germany (see
Polabian Slavs). In
804 they had received
Saxon land from the emperor, who dispersed the still heathen Saxons.
Adam of Bremen referred to them as the 'Reregi' because of their lucrative trade emporium
Reric. In common with other Slavic groups, they were often described by Germanic sources as
Wends.
The main tribes
[1] of the Obotritic confederation were the Obotrites proper (
Wismar Bay to the
Schweriner See); the
Wagrians (eastern
Holstein); the
Warnower (the upper
Warnow and
Mildenitz); and the
Polabians proper (between the
Trave and the
Elbe). Other tribes associated with the confederation include the Linonen near
Lenzen, the Travnjane near the
Trave, and the Drevani in the
Hanoverian Wendland and the northern
Altmark.
[2]
As allies of the
Carolingian kings and their
Ottonian successors empire the Obotrites battled the
kings of
Denmark from
808- 1200, who wished to rule in the
Baltic region independend from the empire. Often upon death of an emperor or other difficulties, they sought to seize power and in
983 Hamburg was destroyed by the Obotrites under their king,
Mstivoj. At times they collected tributes from the
Danes and
Saxons. Under the leadership of
Niklot, they resisted a Christian assault during the
Wendish Crusade.
German missionaries, such as Saint
Vicelinus, converted the Obotrites to
Christianity. In 1170 they acknowledged the suzerainty of the
Holy Roman Empire, leading to
Germanization and assimilation over the following centuries. However, up to the late 15th century, most villagers in the Obotritic area were still speaking Slavic dialects (
Polabian language); but some time after that their language changed to
German.
Some of the Obotrites also migrated to the south and settled in the
Pannonian Plain, where the
Bodrogiensis county of the medieval
Kingdom of Hungary was named after them.
The German poet
Johann Heinrich Voss (1751-1826), born in
Mecklenburg-Strelitz, liked to identify himself as an Obotrite to emphasize his Slavic heritage. Obotrites were sufficiently remote and obscure to appeal to the nascent ethnic identifications of
romanticism.
Notes
1. Herrmann, 7
2. Herrmann, 8
References
★
Die Slawen in Deutschland, , Joachim, Herrmann, Akademie-Verlag GmbH, 1970,
External Link
★
Emperor Charles the Great in 804 gave Saxon land to Obodrites, dispersed Saxons