Middle Ages marked in black, all known ethnonyms of Croats are within this area. Presumable migration routes of Croats are indicated by arrows, per V.V. Sedov (1979).
Nestor the Chronicler in his
Primary Chronicle (12th century), which information and convoluted viewpoint were often compiled and influenced by use of various sources of different origin, mentions the White Croats, calling them
Horvate Belii or
Hrovate Belii, the name depending upon which manuscript of his is referred to: Most what is known about the early history of White Croats comes from the work by the Byzantine emperor
Constantine VII,
De Administrando Imperio (10th century). In the 30th chapter, "The Story of the Province of Dalmatia" Constantine wrote: In the previous 13th chapter which described the Hungarian neighbors Franks to the West, Pechenegs to the North, and
Moravians to the South, it is also mentioned that "on the other side of the mountains, the Croats are neighboring the Turks", however as are mentioned Pechenegs to the North while in the 10th century the Croats are mentioned as the Southern neighbors of the Hungarians, the account is of uncertain meaning, but most probably referring to Croats living "on the other side" of
Carpathian Mountains. It is considered that the described 7th century homeland and migration's starting point is anachronistic based on partly available information about contemporary 10th century White Croats, and the 6-7th century existence and location of White Croats and Croatia to the West of the Eastern Carpathians or Carpathian Mountains was never proved. It is considered that Constantine VII was referring to the 10th century
Duchy of Bohemia which controlled parts of Southern Poland and Western Ukraine. From the 30th chapter can be observed that the Croats lived "beyond Bavaria" in the sense East of it, in Bohemia and Lesser Poland, because the original source of information was of Western Roman origin. White Croatia in the 7th century could not border Francia, and Frankish sources do not mention and know anything about the Croats implying they must have lived much further to the East. They could have been the neighbors of the Franks as early as 846 or 869 when the Duchy of Bohemia was under the control of Eastern Francia, and Otto I ruled the Bohemians only from 950, and the White Croats were also part of the Bohemian state, at least from 929.
György Györffy argued that the White Croats were allies of the
Hungarians (Turks), but "neither in 929 nor in 950 could be Bohemia described as being in good relations with Hungary", as part of White Croatia was in the realm of Bohemia, and friendly relations between Bohemia and Magyars were established after 955. White Croats since 906 until 955, or since 955, were in friendly and matrimonial relations with the
Árpád dynasty. A similar story to the 30th chapter is mentioned in the work by
Thomas the Archdeacon,
Historia Salonitana (13th century), where he recounts how seven or eight tribes of nobles, who he called
Lingones, arrived from
Poland and settled in Croatia under
Totila's leadership. According to the Archdeacon, they were called
Goths, but also Slavs, depending on the names brought by those who came from Polish and Bohemian lands. Some scholars consider
Lingones to be a distortion of the name for the Polish tribe of
Lendians. The reliability to the claim adds the recorded oral tradition of
Michael of Zahumlje from
DAI that his family originates from the unbaptized inhabitants of the river Vistula called as
Litziki, identified with
Widukind's
Licicaviki, also referring to the Lendians (
Lyakhs). According to
Tibor Živković, the area of the Vistula where the ancestors of Michael of Zahumlje originate was the place where White Croats would be expected. In the 31st chapter, "Of the Croats and of the Country They Now Dwell in" Constantine wrote: According to the 31st chapter, the Pechenegs were Eastern neighbors of the White Croats, those living around Upper Dniester in Western Ukraine, in the second half of the 9th century and early 10th century. In that time Franks and Hungarians plundered Moravia, and White or Great Croatia was probably part of the
Great Moravia. Some scholars relate
Vita Methodii's account about "the mighty prince on the Vistula" who persecuted Christians in his land, but was attacked and defeated by
Svatopluk I of Moravia (870–894), possibly indicating conquest and integration of White Croatia into Great Moravia. It is notable that in both chapters they are noted to be "unbaptized"
pagans, a description only additionally used for the Moravians and
White Serbs. Such an information probably came from an Eastern source because particular religious affiliation was of interest to the
Khazars as well as to Arabian historians and explorers who carefully recorded them.
Francis Dvornik doubted the claim about paganism of Croats because were part of already Christianized realms. Some scholars believe that the "dark sea" is a reference to the
Baltic Sea, however, more probable is a reference to the Black Sea because in
DAI there's no reference to the Baltic Sea, the chapter has information usually found in 10th century Arabian sources like of
Al-Masudi, the Black Sea was of more interest to the Eastern merchants and Byzantine Empire, and its Persian name "Dark Sea" (
axšaēna-) was already well known. 's work (9th century), showing
Honithi around river
Warta and
Vistula in Poland, per
D. Barrington and
J. R. Forster &
G. Forster (18th century).
Alfred the Great in his
Geography of Europe (888–893) relying on
Orosius, recorded that, "
These Moravians have, to the west of them, the Thuringians, and Bohemians, and part of the Bavarians ... to the east of the country Moravia, is country of the Wisle, and to the east of them are the Dacians, who were formerly Goths. To the north-east of the Moravians are the Dalamensan, and to the east of the Dalamensan are the Horithi, and to the north of the Dalamensan are the Surpe, and to the west of them are the Sysele. To the north of the Horithi is Mægtha-land, and north of the Mægtha-land are the Sermende even to the Rhipæan mountains". According to Richard Ekblom,
Gerard Labuda, and Łowmiański the issue with positioning in the work is present for
Scandinavia while the data is accurate for the continent. Some scholars correct the north-east position of Dalamensan to north-west. Sysele are the Siusler-Susłowie, one of the Sorbian tribes. The location of Croats is usually interpreted to be East of Czechia around river
Eastern Neisse or Upper Vistula in Poland, or possibly around
Elbe in Czechia. Their location does not necessarily mean their whole territory, it could enter it from the direction of the east, as Alfred evidently did not know well Slavic borders to the East. According Łowmiański, with the fact that the Frankish chronicles do not mention Croats, while Silesian Croats are a historiographical construction without evidence in historical sources, it indicates that the Croats lived around river Vistula in southern Poland exactly south of Mazovia. In southern and southeastern Poland are usually placed tribes of
Vistulans and Lendians, which Łowmiański and
Tadeusz Lehr-Spławiński considered as tribes of Croats after happened a division of the Croatian tribal alliance in the 7th century, The Persian geography book ''
Hudud al-'Alam (10th century), which has information from 9th century, in the area of Slavs mentioned their two capital cities, Wabnit
(actually Wāntit
, considered as reference to Vyatichi, or Antes), the first city East of Slavs, and Hurdāb
(Khurdāb
), a big city where ruler S.mūt-swyt
resides, located below the mountains (probably Carpathians) on river Rūtā'' (most probably
Prut), which springs from the mountains and is on the frontier between Pechenegs (ten days), Hungarians (two days), and Kievan Rus'. In the chronicles of the time word
šahr meant "country, state, city" – thus
Hurdāb represented Croatia. It was a common practice to call a whole region and country by the capital or well-known city, as well a city by the tribal name, especially if was on the periphery where the first contacts of merchants and researchers took place. Although it is generally accepted that
Swntblk refers to Svatopluk I (870–894), it was puzzling that the country in which he lived and ruled over was called by the sources as Croatia.
George Vernadsky also considered that the details on the king's custom of life is evidence of Alanic and Eurasian nomadic origin of the ruling caste among those Slavs. Most probable reason for the use of the Croatian name in the East among Arabs is due to trade routes which led to and passed through the lands of
Buzhans, Lendians and Vistulans connecting the city of Kraków with the city of Prague, implying they were partly dependent to the rule of Svatopluk I. These facts exclude the possibility of referring to Croats in Bohemia, placing them in Lesser Poland on the territory of Lendians and Vistulans (Kraków and
Cherven Cities), or more probably the Revno complex on river Prut in Western Ukraine, and generally in Prykarpattia. with location of White Croats in today's
Western Ukraine, per
H. J. B. A. Leroy-Beaulieu & F. S. Weller (1893). Nestor described how many East Slavic tribes of "
...the Polyanians, the Derevlians, the Severians, the Radimichians, and the Croats lived at peace". In 904–907, "
Leaving Igor (914–945) in Kyiv, Oleg (879–912) attacked the Greeks. He took with him a multitude of Varangians, Slavs, Chuds, Krivichians, Merians, Polyanians, Severians, Derevlians, Radimichians, Croats, Dulebians, and Tivercians, who are pagans. All these tribes are known as Great Scythia by the Greeks. With this entire force, Oleg sallied forth by horse and by ship, and the number of his vessels was two thousand". The list indicates that the closest tribal neighbours were Dulebes-
Volhynians, The fact no Lechitic tribe was part of Oleg's conquest it is more probable that those Croats were located on river Dniester rather than Vistula. After
Vladimir the Great (980–1015) conquered several Slavic tribes and cities to the West, in 992 he "
attacked the Croats. When he had returned from the Croatian War, the Pechenegs arrived on the opposite side of the Dnieper". Since then those Croats became part of
Kievan Rus and are not mentioned anymore in that territory. It seems that Croatian tribes who lived in the area of
Bukovina and
Galicia got conquered because had too many large tribal capitals with local lords who probably didn't act in a centralized and nationalized manner (polycentric proto-state), were pressured by Bohemian, Polish and Hungarian principalities, while were attacked by Kievan Rus' because inhibited Rus' free access to the Vistula valley trade route, and did not want to submit to Kievan centralism and accept Christianity. It is considered that in 991 was held a Christian mission and foundation of the bishopric seat of
Volodymyr, but local political and religious separatism caused his punitive war next year (slowing down Christianization of the lands, which became widespread only in the 11th century). After the attack on Croats and Polish marches, Rurikids expanded their realm on the Croatian territory which would be known as
Principality of Peremyshl,
Terebovlia,
Zvenyhorod and eventually
Principality of Halych. It is considered that Croatian nobility probably survived and retained local influence, becoming the core of the
Galician nobility, who continued to control routes, trade with salt and livestock among others, but also with internal nationalization oppose Kyiv. To the upper accounts by the historians were related the Vladimir the Great's conquest of the
Cherven Cities in 981, and
Annales Hildesheimenses note that Vladimir threatened to attack the Duke of Poland,
Bolesław I the Brave (992 to 1025), in 992. Polish chronicler
Wincenty Kadłubek in his
Chronica Polonorum (12–13th century) recounted that Bolesław I the Brave conquered some "
Hunnos seu Hungaros, Cravatios et Mardos, gentem validam, suo mancipavit imperio". The occurrence of the Croatian name together with the Hungarians and Pechenegs and not Moravians and Bohemians, and the fact that during the period of Bolesław I the Brave the Polish realm expanded to the territory later-known as Western and Eastern Galicia, indicates that the mentioned Croats most probably lived on the territory of the Carpathians. In the Hebrew book
Josippon (10th century) are listed four Slavic ethnic names which are usually interpreted to be spreading from
Venice to
Saxony,
Mwr.wh (Moravians),
Krw.tj (Croats),
Swrbjn (
Sorbs),
Lwcnj (Lučané or Lusatians), and also a Slavic east–west trade route
Lwwmn (Lendians/Lechites),
Kr. Kr (Krakow), and
Bzjm/Bwjmjn (Bohemia), while K. T. Witczak considers that the first series of names is related to the Balkan
Moravians, Croats, Serbs and
Zachlumians. and
Slavník dynasty under
Boleslaus I and
Boleslaus II of
Přemyslid dynasty in the 10th century. Duchy's territory included parts of today's Poland and Ukraine. during the 10th century, per abandoned
hypothesis about the Czech tribes. According to 10th century
First Old Slavonic Legend about
Wenceslaus I, Duke of Bohemia, after his murder in 929 or 935 which ordered his brother
Boleslaus I, their mother
Drahomíra fled in exile to
Xorvaty. This is the first local account of the Croatian name in Slavic language. While some considered that those Croats lived near Prague, There were also some attempts to relate with Croats an anonymous neighbor ruler (
vicinus subregulus) who was unsuccessfully helped by
Saxons and
Thuringians at war against Boleslaus I, but the evidence is inconclusive. The Prague Charter from 1086 AD but with data from 973 mentions that on the Northeastern frontier of the Prague diocese lived "
Psouane, Chrouati et altera Chrowati, Zlasane...". It is very rare that on a small territory lived two tribes of the same name, possibly indicating that the
Crouati were probably settled East of
Zlicans and West of
Moravians having a territory around the Elbe river, while the other
Chrowati were present in Silesia or along the Upper Vistula in Poland because the diocese expanded up to Kraków and rivers
Bug and
Styr. The Eastern part of the diocese territory was part of the Moravian expansion in the 9th and Bohemian expansion in the 10th century. Some scholars located these Czech Croats within the territory of present-day
Chrudim,
Hradec Králové,
Libice and
Kłodzko. Vach argued that they had the most developed techniques of building fortifications among the Czech Slavs. Many scholars considered that the
Slavník dynasty (and possibly related Bohemian duke
Witizla from 895), who competed with the
Přemyslid dynasty for control over Bohemia and eventually succumbed to them, was of White Croat origin. After the
massacre of the Slavníks in 995 and unification of Bohemia, the Croats aren't mentioned anymore in that territory. However, Łowmiański considered that the Bohemian location and existence of the Croats is very disputable, and those sources mentioning Croats and Croatia at the Carpathian Mountains never mention them around river Elbe in Bohemia. The location of Croats in northeastern Bohemia and identification with the Slavníks is related to the
hypothesis about the Czech tribes, which by the 21st century has become abandoned in the Czech historiography,
Thietmar of Merseburg recorded in 981 toponym
Chrvuati vicus (also later recorded in 11th–14th century), which is present-day
Großkorbetha, between
Halle and
Merseburg in
Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The
Chruuati (901) and
Chruuati (981) near Halle. In charter by
Henry II is recorded
Chruazzis (1012), by
Henry III as
Churbate (1055), by
Henry IV as
Grawat (also
Curewate, 1086). This settlement today is Korbetha on river
Saale, near
Weißenfels. In the 10th–12th centuries Croatian name can be often found in the territory of
March and
Duchy of Carinthia, as well
March and
Duchy of Styria. In 954, Otto I in his charter mentions
župa Croat – "
hobas duas proorietatis nostrae in loco Zuric as in pago Crouuati et in ministerio Hartuuigi", and again in 961
pago Crauuati. The
pago Chruuat is also mentioned by
Otto II (979), and
pago Croudi by
Otto III.
Legends According to Czech and Polish chronicles, the legendary
Lech and Czech came from (White) Croatia. The
Chronicle of Dalimil (14th century) recounts "
V srbském jazyku jest země, jiežto Charvaty jest imě; v téj zemi bieše Lech, jemužto jmě bieše Čech".
Alois Jirásek recounted as "
Za Tatrami, v rovinách při řece Visle rozkládala se od nepaměti charvátská země, část prvotní veliké vlasti slovanské" (Behind the
Tatra Mountains, in the plains of the river
Vistula, stretched from immemorial time Charvátská country (
White Croatia), the initial part of the great Slavic homeland), and
V té charvátské zemi bytovala četná plemena, příbuzná jazykem, mravy, způsobem života (In Charvátská existed numerous tribes, related by language, manners, and way of life).
Dušan Třeštík noted that the chronicle tells Czech came with six brothers from Croatia which once again indicates seven chiefs/tribes like in the Croatian
origo gentis legend from the 30th chapter of
De Administrando Imperio. It is considered that the chronicle refers to the Carpathian Croatia. One of the legendary figures
Kyi, Shchek and Khoryv who founded
Kyiv, brother Khoryv or Horiv, and its oronym Khorevytsia, is often related to the Croatian ethnonym. This legend, recorded by Nestor, has similar Armenian transcript from the 7th-8th century, in which Horiv is mentioned as
Horean. Paščenko related his name, beside to the Croatian ethnonym, to solar deity
Khors. Near Kyiv there's a stream where previously existed large homonymous village Horvatka or Hrovatka (destroyed in the time of
Joseph Stalin), which flows into
Stuhna River. In the vicinity are parts of the
Serpent's Wall. Some scholars consider that Croats could have been mentioned in the Old English and Nordic epic poems, like the verse in the Old English poem
Widsith (10th century), which is similar to the one in
Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks (13th century), where prior the battle between Goths and Huns,
Heidrek died in
Harvaða fjöllum (Carpathian Mountains) which is sometimes translated as "beneath the mountains of Harvathi", considered somewhere beneath Carpathian Mountains near river Dnieper. Lewicki argued that
Anglo-Saxons, as in the case of Alfred the Great where called Croats
Horithi, often distorted foreign Slavic names. The legendary Czech hermit from the 9th century,
Svatý Ivan, is mentioned as the son of certain king Gestimul or Gostimysl, who according to the Czech chronicles descended from the Croats or
Obotrites.
Modern age Polish writer Kazimierz Władysław Wóycicki released work
Pieśni ludu Białochrobatów, Mazurów i Rusi z nad Bugu in 1836. In 1861, in the statistical data about population in
Volhynia governorship released by Mikhail Lebedkin, were counted Horvati with 17,228 people. According to
United States Congress Joint Immigration Commission which ended in 1911, Polish immigrants to the United States born in around
Kraków reportedly declared themselves as Bielochrovat (i.e. White Croat), which with Krakus and Crakowiak/Cracovinian was "names applying to subdivisions of the Poles". The Northern Croats contributed and assimilated into Ukrainian, Polish and Czech ethnos. They are considered as the predecessors of the
Rusyns, specifically Dolinyans,
Boykos,
Hutsuls, and
Lemkos. == Migration to Croatia ==