In this article we will explore the fascinating history of Serboi, a topic that has captured the interest of people of all ages and backgrounds. From its origins to its relevance today, Serboi has played a key role in society and culture. Over the years, it has sparked debates, generated passions and evolved in multiple ways. We will analyze its impact in different areas and its influence on daily life. Additionally, we will examine the various perspectives related to Serboi, from expert opinions to the personal experiences of those who have been touched by this phenomenon. Ultimately, this article aims to offer a comprehensive and enriching vision of Serboi, inviting the reader to reflect, question and appreciate its complexity.
The Serboi or Serbi (Ancient Greek: Σέρβοι, romanized: Sérboi) and Sirbi (Ancient Greek: Σίρβοι)[1] was a tribe mentioned in Greco-Roman geography as living in the North Caucasus, believed by scholars to have been Sarmatian.
Kazimierz Moszyński derived the name from Indo-European *ser-, *serv-, meaning "guard, protect" (cognate of Latin servus), and originally, it may have meant "guardians of animals", that is "shepherds".[2] Similar toponyms were mentioned earlier farther away.
Pliny the Elder mentioned in Book IV of his Natural History (ca. 77–79) the Serbi among tribes inhabiting the coast east of the Sea of Azov.[3][4] Almost a century later, Ptolemy (100–170) in his Geography (ca. 150) mentioned the Serboi as inhabiting, along with other tribes, the land between the northeastern foothills of the Caucasus and the Volga.[5] The tribe was included on maps of the antique Sarmatia Asiatica as Serbi, Sirbi, in the Early modern period.
The Sarmatians were eventually decisively assimilated (e.g. Slavicisation) and absorbed by the Proto-Slavic population of Eastern Europe around the Early Medieval Age.[6] Scholars have connected the ethnonym with those of the Slavic peoples of Serbs and Croats in Europe. There is a theory that "Horoati" and their kin Serboi fled a Hunnic invasion into southern Poland and southeast Germany where they were assimilated by Slavs, and by the time of the 7th-century Slavic migration to the Balkans were completely Slavicized.[2] Others believe that the tribe may in fact have been early Slavic, as noted by Lithuanian-American archaeologist Marija Gimbutas (1921–1994),[7] and others.[8] While some Serbian historians treat them as a Sarmatian tribe that was part of the Proto-Serb ethnogenesis,[9] some more fringe theories treat them as a historical Serb tribe, pushing the Serbs' history further into antiquity.[10] In the 10th century, the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos mentions in his book De Ceremoniis two tribes named Krevatades (Krevatas) and Sarban (Sarbani) located in the Caucasus near Alania. There were most likely the original Sarmatian tribes, but some researchers identify them with the Croats and Serbs respectively.[11][12]
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