The Eastern Galindians (
East Galindian: *
Galindai, , from
Old East Slavic голѧдь
golędĭ), an extinct
East Baltic tribe, lived from the 4th century in the basin of the
Protva River, near the modern
Russian towns of
Mozhaysk,
Vereya, and
Borovsk. It is probable that the Eastern Galindians, as the bearers of the
Moshchiny culture, also occupied all the
Kaluga Oblast before the
Early East Slavs populated the Moshchiny culture's area at the turn of the 7th and 8th centuries. The contemporary sources mention
Golyad only twice, briefly. The Golyad are first mentioned in the
Laurentian Codex, where it is written that they were conquered by
Iziaslav I of Kiev in 1058. This shows that even at the height of the power of the
Kievan Rus', were not its subjects or
tributaries. Second, the
Hypatian Codex mentions that
Sviatoslav Olgovich defeated the Golyad' who lived up the Porotva (now
Protva) river in 1147 ("взя люди Голядь, верхъ Поротве"). In addition the
Novgorod Fourth Chronicle mentioned that
Mikhail Khorobrit "was killed by 'Litva' (Lithuanians) on the Porotva" () in 1248. Historian argues that this 'Litva' people were descendants the Galindians, because he sees no reason why would actual
Lithuanians make military excursions so far from their lands. The
Russians probably did not completely assimilate them until the 15th (or 16th) century. There are several toponyms probably related to
golyad: two villages named Голяди, a village Голяжье, and the Golyada River, a tributary of the
Moskva River. In folk traditions that lived on into the 20th century there are tales about mighty giants with the (personal) name
Golyada. However, this may have been conflated with the Biblical mention about
Goliath. ==Language==