'Truso', situated on
Lake Druzno, was an
Old Prussian (
Pomesanian) town near the
Baltic Sea just east of the
Vistula River. It was one of the trading posts on the
Amber Road, and is thought to be the antecedent of the city of
ElblÄ…g. In the words of
Marija Gimbutas, "the name of the town is the earliest known historically in the Baltic Sea area".
[1] The main goods of Truso were
amber, furs, and slaves.
History
Truso was situated in a central location upon the Eastern European trade routes, which led from
Birka in the north to the island of
Gotland and to
Visby in the
Baltic Sea and later included the
Hanseatic city of Elbing (ElblÄ…g). From there, traders continued further south to
Carnuntum in the
Alps. This was called the
Amber Road. The ancient amber roads led further south-west and south-east to the
Black Sea and eventually to Asia. ""For
East Prussia, Truso played the same role as
Hedeby for north-western Germany or Slavic
Vineta for
Pomerania", Gimbutas has observed.
[2]
East-west trade route went from Truso and
Wiskiauten (a rival centre which sprang up at the south-western corner of the
Courish Lagoon), along the Baltic Sea to
Jutland, and from there inland by river to Hedeby, a large trading center in Jutland. Hedeby, which lay near the modern city of Schleswig in
Schleswig-Holstein, was pretty centrally located and could be reached from all four directions over land as well as from the
North Sea, the
Atlantic Ocean, and the Baltic Sea.
Around the year 890,
Wulfstan of Hedeby (by his own account) undertook a seven-days boat journey from Hedeby to Truso at the behest of king
Alfred the Great. One possible reason for this expedition was because Alfred needed aid in his defense against the Danes or
Vikings, who had taken over most of England. The reasons for this journey are fundamentally unclear, since Truso was at the time little more than a trading center, and Alfred the Great, the West Saxon ruler, already kept in close contact with the continental Saxons and the Franks.
Archaeology
Archaeological finds in 1897 and excavations started in the 1920s had placed the location of Truso around Gut Hansdorf (
Janów Pomorski) in the south-eastern suburb of Elbing (
ElblÄ…g). These artifacts, dating from the 7th to the 12th century, are now on exhibit at the ElblÄ…g Museum. In the 1980s, the Polish archaeologist
Marek F. Jagodziński resumed excavations and cleared an approximately 20 hectar site, which was burnt down around the year 1000, whereupon the inhabitants found it prudent to disperse.
Whether the site excavated near ElblÄ…g should be identified with Truso is open to questions. "To the present no true town has been found and excavated. Instead there have been finds of Norse weapons, and there is a large Viking Age cemetery near the modern town's railway station containing many Scandinavian graves, these, too, showing a Sweden-Gotlandic pattern".
[3]
References
1. Gimbutas M. ''The Balts.'' London: Thames and Hudson, 1963.
2. Ibidem.
3. Gwyn Jones. ''A History of the Vikings''. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-19-280134-1. Page 244. This statement is contrary to the Museum at Elbląg broschure ''Truso-Discovered Legend'', by Marek F Jagodziński, which talks about a large number of building sites found during the recentmost excavations, with remains of burned posts from buildings about 5 x 10 m and long houses about 6 x 21 m.