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Very soon after that in chronicles the name "Vandal" started to mean "Slavs" (eg. in the same ''Annales Alamanici'' about a raid of ''Annales Augustani'' mentioned defeat of Germans with Slavic Lucics (?) as ''exercitus Saxonum a Wandalis trucidatur'' ("an army of Saxons is destroyed by Vandals"). In the chronicle of Adam Of Bremen there is a longer sentence: Sclavania igitur, amplissima Germaniae provintia, a Winulis incolitur, qui olim dicti sum Wandali; decies maior esse fertur nostra Saxonia, presertim si Boemiam et eos, qui trans Oddaram sunt, Polanos, quaia nec habitu nec lingua discrepant, in partem adiecreris Sclavaniae that is: "Slavania (Slavic lands), the biggest from Germanic countries, is inhabited by Winnils, who were formerly called Vandals. It is supposed to be bigger than our Saxony, especially when it would include Bohemians and Polans across the Oder, since they are no different in customs and language". In 983-993 Gerhard of Augsburg in ''Miracula Sancti Oudalrici'' (about saint Udalric) called Mieszko I ''dux Wandalorum, Misico nomine''. Probably the first man who directly mentioned supposedly Vandalic roots of Poland was the Polish chronicler Wincenty Kadlubek in the 12th Century , who wrote that Poles were once called Vandals, because they live next to the river Vandalus ( Vistula ), and that river received its name from the mythical queen Vanda who committed suicide by drowning in it. A similar story was told by the author of ''Wielkopolska chronicle'' from the 14th Century , and then Dzierzwa from Krakow in the 14th Century , who tried to give Slavic etymology to all known Vandalic names, like deriving ''Vanda'' from ''węda'', that is fishing-rod. In 12th Century also Gerwazy from Tilbury, English writer in ''Otia imperialia'' wrote that citizens of Poland are called and are calling themselves Vandals. Similar thoughts gave German historian Albert Krantz ( 1450 - 1517 ) in ''Wandalia sive historia de Wandalorum vera origine, variis gentibus, crebris a aptria migrationibus, regnis item, etc'' where who consequently connected history of ancient Vandals and Slavs. The same was repeated by Falvio Blondi from Italy, and then Maciej Miechowita in ''Tractatus de duabus Sarmatiis...'' from 1517 . Other arguments that Vandals were Polish ancestors were supplied by Marcin Bielski in 15th Century . The first Polish historian to deny any connection to Vandals and to criticise that idea was Marcin Kromer , bishop of Warmia , author of ''De origine et rebus gestis Polonorum'' from 1555 . EXTERNAL LINKS |