from Schwanbeck, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany The term 'Elbe Germanic' (German:
Elbgermanen) was first used in 1868 by Paul Gustav Wislicenus (1847–1917), but it was especially popularized by the German prehistorian
:de:Walther Matthes in 1931. The term was based initially on partially speculative derivations from ancient Roman sources. For example, numerous Roman authors mentioned the tribes such as the
Suebi and the
Irminones, and some other Germanic tribes of the late antiquity on the Danube limes of the Roman Empire. In the second half of the 20th century, more archeological evidence has emerged. In 1963, the Czech archaeologist Bedřich Svoboda took up the term and postulated an Elbe Germanic connection with the finds in Bohemia and Bavaria, which was later confirmed. Archaeological finds make it possible to differentiate between the different settlement areas of the Elbe Germanic tribes. There is a northern group around the mouth of the Elbe and in
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, a middle group in central Germany that reaches as far as the Oder, and a southern group in Bohemia, an area that was entirely Elbe-Germanic during the time of the Roman Empire. Based on the linguistic and archaeological evidence, it is believed that the major Germanic tribes of the
Alemanni,
Thuringii, and the
Bavarii mainly developed from the smaller Suebic groups that were part of the Elbe Germanic peoples. == Elbe Germanic protolanguage ==