Tomenable
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Johannes said:I told you already that the Slavs were attacked and conquered during the 9th and up to 12th centuries. The were almost ethnically cleansed.
That was far more complex. In some areas there was ethnic cleansing (for example in Wagrien), but in most areas - not.
And even in Wagrien - which was, according to written sources, utterly devastated - after the conquest some Slavs remained, because Germans brought in priests to convert Wagrian Slavs to Christianity. One of those missionaries was Helmold of Bosau:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helmold
Moreover, until the 12th century Germans conquered only areas to the west of the Oder-Neisse Line (current German eastern border). German expansion into areas located to the east of the current German-Polish border started only in the 13th century.
And in some places there was no military expansion, but only immigration of German settlers to Slavic-inhabited areas.
Lower Silesia for example was never conquered, but Polish rulers of that region let in German immigrants to settle there.
Polish rulers also let in German immigrants to other parts of Poland - but those became assimilated (Polonized) over time.
In Lower Silesia, however, local Polish dukes "betrayed", adopting German culture and language. When Poland was fragmented into semi-independent duchies (all ruled by the same - Piast - dynasty, but civil wars were frequent in that period), some dukes tended to lean politically towards foreign realms (Bohemia and the HRE), and some of them slowly alienated themselves from the Polish world.
See for example this line of descent from the first king of Poland - Boleslav I - to Elisabeth II, queen of the UK.
Boleslav I was one of 29xgreat-grandparents of Elisabeth II - here you have the detailed genealogy:
I underlined (bold text) male members of the Polish Piast dynasty, as well as (bolded Italic) the Hohenzollerns:
29x Boleslav I Piast, king of Poland (born 967 - died 1025)
28x Mieszko II Piast king of Poland (990 - 1034)
27x Casimir I Piast duke of Poland (1016 - 1058)
26x Vladislav I Piast duke of Poland (1043 - 1102)
25x Boleslav III Piast duke of Poland (1086 - 1138)
24x Casimir II Piast supreme duke of Poland (1138 - 1194)
23x Conrad I Piast supreme duke of Poland (1187 - 1247)
22x Siemowit I Piast duke of Mazovia & Sieradz (1215 - 1262)
21x Siemowit I Piast duke of Mazovia & Sieradz (1215 - 1262)
20x Boleslav II Piast duke of Mazovia & Sandomir (1251 - 1313)
19x Troyden I Piast duke in Mazovia (1284 - 1341)
18x Euphemia princess of Cieszyn & in Mazovia (1310 - 1374) x Casimir I Piast duke of Cieszyn & in Upper Silesia (1280 - 1358)
17x Premislav I Piast duke of Cieszyn & in Upper Silesia (1332 - 1410)
16x Anne princess of Cieszyn & in Lower Silesia (1374 - 1420) x Henry IX Piast duke in Lower Silesia (1369 - 1420)
15x Louis III Piast duke in Lower Silesia (1405 - 1441)
14x John I Piast duke in Lower Silesia (1425 - 1453)
13x Frederick I Piast duke in Lower Silesia (1448 - 1488)
12x Frederick II Piast duke in Lower Silesia (1480 - 1547)
11x Sophia princess of Legnica (1525 - 1546) x John George Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg (1525 - 1598)
10x Joachim III Frederick Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg (1546 - 1608)
9x John Sigismund Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg, prince of Prussia (1572 - 1619)
8x George William Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg, prince of Prussia (1593 - 1640)
7x Frederick William I Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg, prince of Prussia (1620 - 1688)
6x Frederick I Hohenzollern king of Prussia (1657 - 1713)
5x Frederick William I Hohenzollern king of Prussia (1688 - 1740)
4x Sophia Dorothy of Brandenburg-Schwedt (1719 - 1765) x Frederick William Hohenzollern of Brandenburg-Schwedt (1700 - 1771)
3x Sophia Dorothy princess of Württemberg (1736 - 1798) x Frederick II Eugene duke of Württemberg (1732 - 1797)
2x Louis Frederick duke of Württemberg (1756 - 1817)
Alexander duke of Württemberg (1804 - 1885)
Francis Württemberg duke of Teck (1837 - 1900)
Mary of Teck queen of the UK (1867 - 1953) x George V Koburg Windsor king of the UK (1865 - 1936)
George VI Windsor king of the United Kingdom (1895 - 1952)
Elisabeth II Windsor queen of the United Kingdom (born 1926 - )
As you can see this lineage goes from Polish rulers, via German rulers, ending on English rulers. So they changed their ethnic identity a few times. And as you can see, all of them between 29 x great-grandfather and 12 x great-grandfather were Piast dynasty members. Sophia princess of Legnica was also from the Piast dynasty, but she married into the Hohenzollerns of Brandenburg.
The moment when they abandoned the tradition of using Slavic given names shows probably when they changed their identity.
The same method - tracing the use of Slavic given names by the population - can be used to check where did Slavs live in Germany. This method shows that in many parts of Germany - also west of the Oder River - some people had Slavic names even in the 1700s.
You might also check Draväno-Polabisch - a Slavic dialect of Obotrite, spoken in one part of Lower Saxony until ca. 1800.