Slavs

Introduction
Slavs are a major portion of European inhabitants; one of every three Europeans is of Slavic origin. Slavic languages belong to the Indo-European group of languages; their motherland is the area of today's Iran and northern India. European nations that belong to this Indo-European group are: Ilyrians, Greeks, Italians, Celts, Germans, Balts, and Slavs; and also Asian nations such as Armenians, Chechens, and Indo-Iranians.

History
The earliest mention of the old Slavs comes from the 5th century B.C. in the historic writings of the Greek historian Herodutus. According to his writings, Slavic tribes belonged to the nations of Styte and Sarmatia, located north of the Black Sea by the Don, Dniester, Prut, and Danube Rivers (present-day Russia, Ukraine, Romania, and Bulgaria). The Venedy or Wends were also a part of the old Slavic nations. The Wends lived along the Vistula River (now Poland) between the Baltic Sea and the Carpathian Mountains in the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D.

As an ethnic group, the Slavs entered the history of Europe in the 5th and 6th centuries, when they began to settle intensively in the area of middle and eastern Europe. Some Slavs settled in what are now western Russia and eastern and central Europe. Other Slavs migrated to the region of southeastern Europe known as the Balkans. They assimilated with the native inhabitants and clashed with the Frankish Empire.

During the 800s, the Slavs established the Great Moravian Empire, which united the peoples of central Europe for the first time; Kyjev, Russia, and the Bulgarian Empire. In 906, the Great Moravian Empire was conquered by the Magyars, the ancestors of the Hungarians. Since then, the Slavs have been ruled by many foreign powers, including the Byzantine Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, Austria-Hungary, and Germany. In 1918, after World War I ended, the Slavs established such independent states as Czechoslovakia, Poland, and the former Yugoslavia. Germany conquered these Slavic states during World War II (1939-1945).

Since the eleventh century, Slavonic states are a firm part of Christian Europe and also of the culture of the East and the West.

Historians classify the Slavs into three main groups – (1) eastern, (2) western, and (3) southern – based on the regions in which these people live.

Eastern Slavs Eastern Slavs consist of the Byelorussions, or White Russians; the Russians, or Great Russians; and the Ukrainians, or Little Russians. The eastern Slavs were strongly influenced by the culture of the Byzantine Empire. About A.D. 988, the ruler of the Russian Slavs, Grand Prince Vladimir I, married a Byzantine princess and became a Christian. As a result, most of the people under his rule also turned to Christianity. Today, many eastern Slavs belong to Eastern Orthodox churches.

Western Slavs Western Slavs form a group that includes the Czechs; the Slovaks; the Bohemians; the Poles; and the Wends, who also are known as Sorbs or Lusatians. The Wends live in East Germany. During the 800s, two Greek monks (named Cyril and Methodius) converted many western Slavs to Christianity. At that time, church services were held in Greek or Latin, which few people could understand. But Cyril and Methodius held services in the language of the Slavs, called Old Church Slavonic.

As the western Slavs became involved in the affairs of western Europe, they also became influenced by the Roman Catholic Church. Through the centuries, the Catholic Church has strongly influenced western European culture. Today, most western Slavs are Roman Catholics.

Southern Slavs Southern Slavs are a group composed of the Bulgarians, the Croatians, the Macedonians, the Serbs, and the Slovenes. During the 800s, a large number of southern Slavs converted to Christianity by followers of Cyril and Methodius. However, these Slavs were also strongly influenced by the Byzantine culture. Today, the majority of southern Slavs belong to Eastern Orthodox churches. Most members of the group live in the Balkans.