The Slavic nations according to Polish myth …

Years: 964 - 1107

The Slavic nations according to Polish myth trace their ancestry to three brothers who parted in the forests of Eastern Europe, each moving in a different direction to found a family of distinct but related peoples.

Fanciful elements aside, this tale accurately describes the westward migration and gradual differentiation of the early West Slavic tribes following the collapse of the Roman Empire.

About twenty such tribes had formed small states between 800 and 960.

One of these tribes, the Polanie or Poliane ("people of the plain"), had settled in the flatlands that eventually formed the heart of Poland, lending their name to the country.

Over time the modern Poles have emerged as the largest of the West Slavic groupings, establishing themselves to the east of the Germanic regions of Europe with their ethnographic cousins, the Czechs and Slovaks, to the south.

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