One of the first known Slavic tribes to inhabit what would later become known as Red Ruthenia were the Lendians, a Lechitic tribe that would later form part of the Polish ethnicity and founded many of the fortified Cherven Cities in the region. They lived along the banks of the Bug river in the Pobuże (Cis-Bug) and Zabuże (Trans-Bug) regions on the western and eastern sides of the river respectively.[4] Another Slavic tribe were the White Croats (or Chrobatians), who likely originated in what is now Volhynia but whose ethnogenesis is unclear, though their ethnonym being of Iranian-speaking Sarmatian origin indicates possible subjugations or incursions by eastern nomads.[5] The Vistulans, another Lechitic tribe, would also gradually settle in the western part of the region, eventually joining the other related tribes to form an autochthonous Polish-speaking population.
The region would be part of Great Moravia in the 9th century before being invaded by the Magyars at the end of the century. It became a contentious prize for the Kievan Rus', owing to prior settlement of its eastern portions by East Slavic tribes, most of whom would become known in the coming centuries as the Ruthenians. Consequently, it was captured by Vladimir the Great in the late 10th century. In 1018 parts of Red Ruthenia would become part of the newly established Polish kingdom before again falling to Rus' in 1031. The region would thereafter change hands consistenly between Poland and Rus' and its successor kingdoms and duchies (such as the Principality of Peremyshl and later the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia) across the centuries, endure a Mongol invasion and suzerainty, with only the Galicia–Volhynia Wars ultimately securing it as an integral part of Casimir the Great's Poland.
According to Marcin Bielski, although Bolesław I Chrobry settled Germans in the region to defend the borders against Hungary and Kievan Rus' the settlers became farmers. Maciej Stryjkowski described German peasants near Rzeszów, Przemyśl, Sanok, and Jarosław as good farmers. Casimir the Great settled German citizens on the borders of Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia to join the acquired territory with the rest of his kingdom. Furthermore, Poles from other regions of Poland would begin to settle in the area alongside the already existing autochthonous Polish populations. In determining the population of late medieval Poland, colonisation and Polish migration to Red Ruthenia, Spiš and Podlachia[7] (whom the Ruthenians called Mazury—poor peasant migrants, chiefly from Mazowsze[8]) should be considered.
During the second half of the 14th century, the Vlachs arrived from the southeastern Carpathians and quickly settled across Red Ruthenia, especially in its mountainous southern reaches. Although during the 15th century the Ruthenians gained a foothold, it was not until the 16th century that the Wallachian population in the Bieszczady Mountains and the Lower Beskids was Ruthenized, giving rise to the Rusyn ethnicity.[9] From the 14th to the 16th centuries Red Ruthenia underwent rapid urbanization, resulting in over 200 new towns built on the German model (virtually unknown before 1340, when Red Ruthenia was the independent Kingdom of Halych).[10] At this time, a new wave of German settlers known as Walddeutsche ("Forest Germans"), as well as minorities such as Jews, Armenians, Karaims, Crimean Tatars, Greeks and Vlachs also made up part of the population.[11]
The ducal seal of Vladislaus II of Opole (Władysław Opolczyk): "Ladislaus Dei Gracia Dux Opoliensis Wieloniensis et Terre Russie Domin et Heres" (c. 1387)The 1507 Lesser Poland and Red Ruthenia Map (Polonia Minor; Russia) by Martin Waldseemüller[12]
In October 1372, Władysław Opolczyk was deposed as count palatine. Although he retained most of his castles and goods in Hungary, his political influence waned. As compensation, Opolczyk was made governor of Hungarian Galicia. In this new position, he contributed to the economic development of the territories entrusted to him. Although Opolczyk primarily resided in Lwów, at the end of his rule he spent more time in Halicz. The only serious conflict during his time as governor involved his approach to the Eastern Orthodox Church, which angered the local Catholic boyars.[citation needed]
Region of Red Ruthenia at the beginning of XVIII c. - map by Herman Moll
Sanok County (Powiat Sanocki), Sanok: Intensive settlement occurred from the 13th to 15th centuries in an area flanked by the Wisłok, San and Wisłoka Rivers. The Vlachs primarily engaged in agriculture; moving west, they established a number of villages during the 15th century. In Sanok Land were six Jewish communities, with synagogues and kahal organizations. Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Jewish Communities were also autonomous in criminal law.[citation needed]
Map of Red Russia (La Russie Rouge) and the southern part of the Krakow Palatinate after First Partition of Poland (Map of 1775)
Red Ruthenia (except for Podolia) was conquered by the Austrian Empire in 1772 during the First Partition of Poland, remaining part of the empire until 1918.[17] Between World Wars I and II, it belonged to the Second Polish Republic. The region is currently split, with its western portion in southeastern Poland (around Rzeszów, Przemyśl, Zamość and Chełm) and its eastern portion (around Lviv) in western Ukraine.[citation needed]
Akta grodzkie i ziemskie z archiwum ziemskiego. Lauda sejmikowe. Tom XXIII, XXIV, XXV.
Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego (Digital edition)
Lustracja województwa ruskiego, podolskiego i bełskiego, 1564-1565 Warszawa, (I) edition 2001, pages 289. ISBN83-7181-193-4
Lustracje dóbr królewskich XVI-XVIII wieku. Lustracja województwa ruskiego 1661—1665. Część III ziemie halicka i chełmska. Polska Akademia Nauk - Instytut Historii. 1976
Lustracje województw ruskiego, podolskiego i bełskiego 1564 - 1565, wyd. K. Chłapowski, H. Żytkowicz, cz. 1, Warszawa - Łódź 1992
Lustracja województwa ruskiego 1661-1665, cz. 1: Ziemia przemyska i sanocka, wyd. K. Arłamowski i W. Kaput, Wrocław-Warszawa-Kraków. 1970
Aleksander Jabłonowski. Polska wieku XVI, t. VII, Ruś Czerwona, Warszawa 1901 i 1903.
Notes
↑In some older English-language literature, Red Russia is used as a synonym for Red Ruthenia, although the latter was eventually favoured by authors. For example, in his 1916 book on Poland, George Slocombe narrated how Bolesław II the Bold of Poland briefly took control of the Cherven Cities in the mid-11th century: "On two occasions Boleslaw restored Izaslaw, Grand Duke of Kieff, to the throne from which that ruler had been driven by his insurgent brothers. The Polish King's price for this assistance was the province of Red Russia, or, as it should more strictly be called, Red Ruthenia, which, however, did not long remain a part of Poland."[1] After the 1917 October Revolution, Red Russia became a synonym for Soviet Russia in English.[original research?]
↑'Galicia remains in Poland for over four hundreds years [after 1393], where it becomes known as "Red Ruthenia", named after the "Red Strongholds" (also called "Cherven Cities") in its western region.'[2]
References
↑Slocombe, George (1916). Poland. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack. p.16. Retrieved 3 December 2024.
↑Kwartalnik historii kultury materialnej: t. 47, PAN. 1999. p. 146
↑"were mainly Germans, Poles, Armenians and Jews, but also Karaims, Crimean Tatars, Greeks or Wallachians [in:] "Kwartalnik historii kultury materialnej: t. 47, PAN. 1999. p. 146
↑„Karte von Germania, Kleinpolen, Hungary, Walachai u. Siebenbuergen nebst Theilen der angraenzenden Laender“ von des „Claudii Ptolemaei geographicae enarrationis libri octo“, 1525, Strassburg
↑H. H. Fisher, "America and the New Poland (1928)", Read Books, 2007, p. 15
↑N. Davies, God's playground: a history of Poland in two volumes, Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 71, 135
↑A. Janeczek, Town and country in the Polish Commonwealth, 1350-1650, in: S. R. Epstein, Town and Country in Europe, 1300-1800, Cambridge University Press, 2004, p. 164
↑K. Kocsis, E. K. Hodosi, Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin, Simon Publications, 1988, p. 84