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    13 Kommentare

    1. Is it a theory? I mean if Slavic homeland is there this is the map right?

    2. tipoftheiceberg1234 on

      Couple of inconsistencies I noticed – I could be wrong:

      – Samos empire curved down the other way. It almost certainly had Vojvodina and Slovenia in it, as well as clipped Croatia in some places.

      Slovenia was almost fully slavicized by 730.

      Once again, early Common Slavic spread to Vojvodina and southern Serbia, even going as far as northern north Macedonia.

    3. Cefalopodul on

      Pannonia and Western Transylvania had heavy slavic presence since the 6th century. Central Transylvania had slavic presence only along the river valleys.

    4. Didudidudadu737 on

      Sorry, all this is a guess assumption, there’s no actual evidence of Slavic migration in this way and many conflicting written evidence of Slavs in these areas in 1st century or Ptolemy’s geography. This is highly debated and contradicted area of Slavic migration study

    5. Veselyi_Kazhan on

      bUt ruSSia iS oLdEr thAn UkRaINe! tHE fAmOus HiStOriAn pUtiN tOlD sO!

    6. lendlevtaldrik on

      Why is Slavic shown in Southeastern Estonia? What is the evidence for it? Because it sounds like utter bs.

    7. szczur_nadodrza on

      This omits the Carinthian Slavs present in present-day Slovenia and parts of Austria.

    8. KingKohishi on

      Not a single mention of Turkic Bulgars who broke the Byzantine military and allowed Slavs to pass the Danube!

    9. Hrdina_Imperia on

      While there are some weird choices (Western Pannonia had quite big Slavic population at the time, for example), it is still a neat map.
      That being said, this is first time I see Samo’s empire pushed so far up north. Hell, first time I see someone drawing it as bordering a sea.

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