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  2. Polish tribes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_tribes

    The name "Poland" is derived from the most powerful of the tribes — the Polans. Their name, in turn, derives from the word pole — field, and translates as "Men of the fields". [ 3 ] It was also used for the eastern Polans , a perhaps unrelated East Slavic tribe that lived in the region of the Dnieper River in Eastern Europe .

  3. Poland in antiquity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poland_in_antiquity

    Expansion of the Old Prussian tribes, such as the previously mentioned Galindians and Yotvingians, encompassed today's northeast Poland and the adjacent territories further north. Galindia (today's western Masuria), whose new inhabitants included the Olsztyn group, became in the 6th and 7th centuries the most affluent of the lands settled by ...

  4. Prehistory and protohistory of Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistory_and_proto...

    As ancient civilizations began to appear in southern and western Europe, the cultures of the area of present-day Poland were influenced by them to various degrees. Among the peoples that inhabited various parts of Poland up to the Iron Age stage of development were Scythian, Celtic, Germanic, Sarmatian, Roman, Avar, Vlach and Baltic tribes.

  5. Old Prussians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Prussians

    Permanent recorded Baltic history begins in the 10th century with the failed Christianisation by Adalbert of Prague (997 AD), the first conquest attempts at the expense of the Old Prussians by the duchy of the Polans under Mieszko I and the Duchy of Greater Poland under his son Bolesław, as a number of border areas were eventually lost.

  6. History of Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Poland

    The history of Poland spans over a thousand years, from medieval tribes, Christianization and monarchy; through Poland's Golden Age, expansionism and becoming one of the largest European powers; to its collapse and partitions, two world wars, communism, and the restoration of democracy.

  7. Polabian Slavs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polabian_Slavs

    Primary source about history of Polabian Slavs - Chronica Slavorum of Helmold from the 12th century translated to Polish language by Jan Papłoński in 1862. The Polabian Slavs partly replaced the Germanic tribes who had emigrated by the 6th century during the migration period.

  8. Polish people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_people

    Today, the largest urban concentrations of Poles are within the Warsaw metropolitan area and the Katowice urban area. Ethnic Poles are considered to be the descendants of the ancient West Slavic Lechites and other tribes that inhabited the Polish territories during the late antiquity period.

  9. Poland in the Early Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poland_in_the_Early_Middle...

    The origins of the Slavic peoples, who arrived on Polish lands at the outset of the Middle Ages as representatives of the Prague culture, go back to the Kyiv culture, which formed beginning early in the 3rd century AD and is genetically derived from the Post-Zarubintsy cultural horizon (Rakhny–Ljutez–Pochep material culture sphere) [10] and itself was one of the later post-Zarubintsy ...