east slavs - EAS

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    SECUREen.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Slavs

    The East Slavs are the most populous subgroup of the Slavs. They speak the East Slavic languages, and formed the majority of the population of the medieval state Kievan Rus', which all three independent East Slavic states (Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine) claim as their cultural ancestor. By the

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    Researchers know relatively little about the Eastern Slavs prior to approximately 859 AD when the first events recorded in the Primary Chronicle occurred. The Eastern Slavs of these early times

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    • Three generations of a Russian family, c. 1910
    Belarusians in traditional dress
    Ukrainians in traditional dress
    Russians in traditional dress of Vologda region

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    • Ancient Russia by G. V. Vernadsky (in Russian) in three different versions:

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    Modern East Slavic peoples and ethnic/subethnic groups include:
    Belarusians
    Russians
    Ukrainians

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    According to Y chromosome, mDNA and autosomal marker CCR5de132, gene pool of the East and West Slavs (the Czechs, Slovaks, and Poles) is

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  2. East Slav | people | Britannica

    SECUREwww.britannica.com/topic/East-Slav

    Other articles where East Slav is discussed: Russia: Prehistory and the rise of the Rus: …had little influence upon the East Slavs, who during this time were spreading south and east from an area between the Elbe River and the Pripet …

    Where did the East Slavs migrate to?
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  3. SECUREfamilypedia.fandom.com/wiki/East_Slavs
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    The East Slavs are Slavic peoples speaking the East Slavic languages. Formerly the main population of the loose medieval Kievan Rus federation state, by the seventeenth century they evolved into the Belarusian, Russian, Rusyn and Ukrainian people.
    See more on familypedia.fandom.com · Text under CC-BY-SA license
  4. SECUREwww.encyclopedia.com/.../russia-and-east-slavs
    • In the East Slavic, especially Russian, lands of the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries, urban dwellers constituted only about 4 to 6 percent of the population and, excepting the ruler and his chief officials, were relatively unimportant. Russian towns were characterized primarily by their administrative-military functions, with commercial activity ...
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  5. SECUREstudy.com/academy/lesson/early-east-slavic-tribes-in-russia.html

    By far the largest of these was the Eastern Slavs, ancestors to today's Russians, Belarusians, and Ukrainians. These early Eastern Slavs arrived in modern-day Ukraine, Belarus, and western …

  6. SECUREmeettheslavs.com/slavs

    May 12, 2013 · The Eastern Slavs in Eastern Europe have mixed mainly with Finno-Ugric peoples and Baltic people. Further East, on the territory of Russia, they have also mixed with Scythians, Siberians, Caucasian peoples, and Turkic …

  7. smarthistories.com/early-russia-2

    The East Slavs arrived in two waves: One moved from Kiev to present-day Suzdal, and the other from Polotsk to the Novgorod region. These people inhabited the steppes, and the woodland belt of Central Russia, and, from the 7th to the 9th …

  8. SECUREen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Slavs

    The early Slavs were known to the Roman writers of the 1st and 2d centuries AD under the name of Veneti. Authors such as Pliny the Elder, Tacitus and Ptolemy described the Veneti as inhabiting the lands east of the Vistula river and along …

  9. SECUREmeettheslavs.com/slavic-warriors

    Jul 09, 2014 · The Slavs started descending from the Carpathian Mountains somewhere around the late fifth century. By the sixth century, they managed to inhibit territories between the Black Sea in the east, the Ionian Sea in the south …

  10. SECUREwww.quora.com/Are-East-Germans-Germanized-Slavs

    Answer (1 of 6): in a way yes, but also to a degree no. let me explain, the first inhabitants of modern eastern Germany were Germanic tribes like the semnones, and Burgundians who left the region around 500 AD during the migration …

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