with what later became
Sweden, here in the 9th century.
Roslagen is located in
Uppland, the southeastern part of the yellow area of
Svealand. The most common theory about the origins of the name
Rus' is the Germanic version. The name
Rus, like the
Proto-Finnic name for
Sweden (
*roocci), supposed to be descended from an
Old Norse term for "the men who row" (
rods-) as rowing was the main method of navigating the rivers of Eastern Europe, and that it could be linked to the Swedish coastal area of
Roslagen or
Roden, as it was known in earlier times. The name Rus' would then have the same origin as the
Finnish,
Estonian,
Võro and
Northern Sami names for Sweden:
Ruotsi,
Rootsi,
Roodsi and
Ruoŧŧa. The local
Finnic and
Permic peoples in northern Russia proper use the same (
Rus-related) name both for
Sweden and
Russia (depending on the language): thus the
Veps name for
Sweden and Swedish is
Ročinma /
Ročin, while in the
Komi language spoken further east the etymologically corresponding term
Roćmu /
Roć means already
Russia and Russian instead. The Finnish scholar
Tor Karsten has pointed out that the territory of present-day
Uppland,
Södermanland and
Östergötland in ancient times was known as
Roðer or
roðin. Thomsen accordingly has suggested that
Roðer probably derived from
roðsmenn or
roðskarlar, meaning seafarers or rowers.
Ivar Aasen, the Norwegian philologist and lexicographer, noted proto-Germanic root variants
Rossfolk,
Rosskar,
Rossmann.
George Vernadsky theorized about the association of Rus and
Alans. He claimed that
Ruxs in
Alanic means "radiant light", thus the ethnonym
Roxolani could be understood as "bright Alans". He theorized that the name
Roxolani a combination of two separate tribal names: the Rus and the Alans. The word
Ruthenia originated as a
Latin designation of the region its people called
Rus'.
Rusia or
Ruthenia appears in the 1520 Latin treatise
Mores, leges et ritus omnium gentium, per Ioannem Boëmum, Aubanum, Teutonicum ex multis clarissimis rerum scriptoribus collecti by
Johann Boemus. In the chapter
De Rusia sive Ruthenia, et recentibus Rusianorum moribus ("About Rus', or Ruthenia, and modern customs of the Rus'"), Boemus tells of a country extending from the
Baltic Sea to the
Caspian Sea and from the
Don River to the northern ocean. It is a source of
beeswax, its
forests harbor many animals with valuable
fur, and the capital city
Moscow (
Moscovia), named after the
Moskva River (
Moscum amnem), is 14 miles in circumference. Danish diplomat
Jacob Ulfeldt, who traveled to Russia in 1578 to meet with
Tsar Ivan IV, titled his posthumously (1608) published memoir
Hodoeporicon Ruthenicum ("Voyage to Ruthenia").
Early evidence In
Old East Slavic literature, the
East Slavs refer to themselves as "
[muzhi] ruskie" ("Rus' men") or, rarely, "
rusichi." The East Slavs are thought to have adopted this name from the
Varangian elite, which was first mentioned in the 830s in the
Annales Bertiniani. The
Annales recount that
Louis the Pious's court at
Ingelheim am Rhein in 839 (the same year as the first appearance of
Varangians in
Constantinople), was visited by a delegation from the
Byzantine emperor. The delegates included two men who called themselves "
Rhos" ("Rhos vocari dicebant"). Louis inquired about their origins and learned that they were Swedes. Fearing that they were spies for their brothers the
Danes, he jailed them. They were also mentioned in the 860s by Byzantine Patriarch
Photius under the name "
Rhos."
Rusiyyah or
Rūs (روس) was used by
Ahmad ibn Fadlan for what was assumed to be Varangians he met by the
Volga River, and by the
Persian traveler
Ahmad ibn Rustah who visited
Veliky Novgorod and described how the Rus' exploited the Slavs. When the Varangians arrived in
Constantinople, the Byzantines considered and described the
Rhos (
Greek Ῥῶς) as a different people from the Slavs. The earliest written mention of the word
Rus appears in the
Primary Chronicle under the year 912. When describing
the peace treaty signed by the Varangian
Oleg of Novgorod during his
campaign on Constantinople, it contains the following passage, "Oleg sent his men to make peace and sign a treaty between the Greeks and the Rus', saying thus: [...] "We are the Rus': Karl, Inegeld, Farlaf, Veremud, Rulav, Gudi, Ruald, Karn, Frelav, Ruar, Aktevu, Truan, Lidul, Vost, Stemid, sent by Oleg, the great prince of Rus', and all those under him[.]" Later the
Primary Chronicle states that they conquered
Kiev and created what is now called
Kievan Rus'. The territory they conquered was named after them as were, eventually, the local people (
cf.
Normans). However, the Synod Scroll of the
Novgorod First Chronicle, which is partly based on the original list of the late 11th Century and partly on the Primary Chronicle, does not name the
Varangians asked by the Chuds, Slavs and Krivichs to reign their obstreperous lands as the "Rus'". One can assume that there was no original mention of the Varangians as the Rus' due to the old list predating the Primary Chronicle and the Synod Scroll only referred to the Primary Chronicle if the pages of the old list were blemished. Other spellings used in Europe during the 9th and 10th centuries were as follows:
Ruzi,
Ruzzi,
Ruzia and
Ruzari. Sources written in Latin routinely confused the Rus' with the
Rugii, an ancient
East Germanic tribe related to the
Goths.
Olga of Kiev, for instance, was called "queen of the Rugii" (
regina Rugorum) in the Lotharingian Chronicle compiled by the anonymous
continuator of
Regino of Prüm.
Alternate anti-Normanist theories A number of alternative etymologies have been suggested. These are derived from the "
anti-Normanist" school of thought in
Russian historiography during the 19th century and in the
Soviet era. These hypotheses are considered unlikely in Western mainstream academia. In
Ukraine, the
Ros and
Rusna, near
Kiev and
Pereiaslav, respectively, whose names are derived from a postulated Slavic term for "water", akin to
rosa (dew),
rusalka (
water nymph),
ruslo (
stream bed). (A relation of
rosa to the
Sanskrit rasā́- "liquid, juice; mythical river" suggests itself; compare
Avestan Raŋhā "mythical stream" and the ancient name of the
Volga River, Ῥᾶ
Rā, from a cognate
Scythian name). •
Rusiy (Русый), light-brown, said of hair color (the translation "reddish-haired", cognate with the Slavic "ryzhiy", "red-haired", is not quite exact). • A postulated proto-Slavic word for "
bear", cognate with
arctos and
ursus. The name
Rus may have originated from the
Iranian name of the
Volga River (by F. Knauer, Moscow 1901). The Russian-American historian,
George Vernadsky, has suggested a derivation from the
Roxolani, stating that the first part of the name Roxolani comes from the Iranian "rukhs", meaning "light" and thus the name Roxolani meant "the light Alans". The Russian linguist
Igor Danilevsky, in his
Ancient Rus as Seen by Contemporaries and Descendants, argued against these theories, stating that the anti-Normanists neglected the realities of the Ancient Slavic languages and that the nation name
Rus could not have arisen from any of the proposed origins. • The populace of the
Ros River would have been known as
Roshane; •
Red-haired or bear-origined people would have ended their self-name with the plural
-ane or
-ichi, and not with the singular
-s' (red hair is one of the natural hair colors of Scandinavians and other
Germanic peoples); • Most theories are based on a
Ros- root, and in Ancient Slavic an
o would never have become the
u in
Rus. Danilevskiy further argued that the term followed the general pattern of Slavic names for neighboring
Finnic peoples—the ''
Chud', Ves', Perm', Sum', etc.—but that the only possible word that it could be based on, Ruotsi'', presented a historical dead-end, since no such tribal or national name was known from non-Slavic sources. "Ruotsi" is, however, the Finnish name for
Sweden. Danilevskiy shows that the oldest historical source, the
Primary Chronicle, is inconsistent in what it refers to as the "Rus'": in adjacent passages, the Rus' are grouped with
Varangians, with the Slavs, and also set apart from the Slavs and Varangians. Danilevskiy suggests that the
Rus' were originally not a nation but a
social class, which can explain the irregularities in the
Primary Chronicle and the lack of early non-Slavic sources. == From Rus' to Russia ==