'The Ilmen Slavs' (; also known as Slovene (словѣне)), the northernmost
tribe of the
Early East Slavs, which inhabited the shores of the
Lake Ilmen and the
basin of the rivers of
Volkhov,
Lovat,
Msta, and the upper stream of the
Mologa River in the 8th to 10th centuries.
The Ilmen Slavs seem to have been different from other Slavic tribes colonizing what is now
Russia in that they were closely related to the
Polabian Slavs in language and traditions (see
old Novgorod dialect and
Gostomysl for examples). They settled Northern Russia, moving along the major waterways, until they met the southward expansion of the
Krivichs in the modern-day
Yaroslavl Oblast.
They left a few archaeological monuments of the 6th–8th centuries, such as
agricultural settlements and tall conelike
kurgans with
incinerated bodies in the
Ladoga region. The most
ancient settlement is dated back to the
7th or
8th century. Numerous archaeological finds, such as a metal tip for a wooden
plough, indicate that the Ilmen Slavs had a well-developed agriculture. They were not a particularly warlike state, but evidence of their unique weaponry, dated back to mid-8th Century, has been found around the city of Novgorod. The weaponry consisted of spears, maces, swords, bows, javelins and even some war hammers. It would seem that they fought rather aggressive warfare designed to push their enemies out of their lands, rather than destroy them utterly.
The principal cities of the Ilmen Slavs were
Staraya Russa and
Novgorod, which had appeared in the 9th–10th centuries. The land of the Ilmen Slavs would later become the center of the
Novgorod Republic.