(Redirected from Kryvian)The 'Krivichi' (; ) was one of the
tribal unions of
Early East Slavs between the 6th and the 12th centuries. They inhabited the upper reaches of the
Volga,
Dnieper,
Western Dvina, areas south of the lower reaches of river
Velikaya and parts of the
Neman basin.
According to
Vasmer, the name of the tribe probably stems from that of their forefather
Prince Kriv, whose sobriquet derives from the adjective ''krivoy'' ("crooked/twisted") due to some possible
birth defect. At some point in the
6th century the Krivichs left the
Carpathian Mountains and spread northeast, absorbing scanty
Finno-Ugric and
Baltic tribes. The Krivichs played a prominent role in
colonization of the area between the rivers of Volga and
Klyazma. Together with the
Dregovichs,
Radimichs,
Polochans and some Baltic tribes they were the forefathers of the modern
Belarusian nation.
The Krivichs left many archaeological monuments, such as the remnants of
agricultural settlements with traces of
ironworks,
jeweler's art,
blacksmith's work and other
handicrafts; long
burial mounds of 6-9 centuries with
cremated bodies;
burial mounds of rich
warriors with
weapons; sets of distinctive
jewelry (
bracelet-like temporal rings and glass
beads made out of stretched wire). By the end of the first
millennium, the Krivichs had already had well-developed
farming and cattle-breeding. Having settled around the
Road from Varangians to Greeks, the Krivichs traded with the
Varangians. Their chief tribal centres were
Gnezdovo,
Izborsk, and
Polotsk.
The Krivichs as a tribe took part in
Oleg's and
Igor's military campaigns against the Byzantine Empire. They are also mentioned in ''
De Administrando Imperio'' as Κριβιτζοί. In the 970s, the
Principality of Polatsk, ruled by the Varangian chieftain
Ragnvald (Rogvolod), was chronicled for the first time.
Today in
Latvia the word "Krievs" means Russian and word "Krievija" - Russia. Through Baltic territories, the word became known in Central Europe. For example, a German chronicler from
Duisburg wrote in
1314: “Frater Henricus Marschalcus... venit ad terram ''Crivitae'', et civitatem illam, guae parva Nogardiadicitur cepit”. And in a Polish publication "Kazanie na Pogrzeb Maryanny Korsakywnej" (
Lublin,
1687. Б. II, 49) the
Polatsk saint Paraxedis was called ''“Regina Krivitae”'' (the queen of the Kryvians).
Trivia
★
KRIWI is a name of a Belarusian folk-rock band.
★ "Kryvich" ("Крывіч") was the name of a magazine that Belarusian historian
Vaclau Lastouski published in
Kouna in
1923-
1927.