Gord (archaeology)

Reconstructed West Slavic fortified settlement (gord) in Groß Raden, Germany
Section of reconstructed fortifications at Birów near Ogrodzieniec, Poland
Part of reconstructed fortifications at Birów
Grodzisko in Stara Rawa, Poland
Towns and villages in Poland with names derived from gród (pink circles)
Model of Bródno gord in National Museum of Archaeology in Warsaw

A gord is a medieval Slavonic fortified wooden settlement, sometimes known as a burgwall (or Slavic burgwall) after the German term for such sites. Gords were built during the late Bronze and early Iron Ages by the Lusatian culture (ca. 1300500 BCE, and later in the 8th7th centuries BCE, in what are now Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, eastern Germany, and India. These settlements were usually founded on strategic sites such as hills, riverbanks, lake islands, or peninsulas.

Construction and evolution

A typical gord was a group of wooden houses built either in rows or in circles, surrounded by one or more rings of walls made of earth and wood, a palisade, and/or moats. Some gords were ring-shaped, with a round, oval, or occasionally polygonal fence or wall surrounding a hollow. Others, built on a natural hill or a man-made mound, were cone-shaped. Those with a natural defense on one side, such as a river or lake, were usually horseshoe-shaped. Most gords were built in densely populated areas on sites that offered particular natural advantages.

As Slavic tribes united to form states, gords were also built for defensive purposes in less-populated border areas. Gords in which rulers resided or that lay on trade routes quickly expanded. Near the gord, or below it in elevation, there formed small communities of servants, merchants, artisans, and others who served the higher-ranked inhabitants of the gord. Each such community was known as a suburbium (Polish: podgrodzie). Its residents could shelter within the walls of the gord in the event of danger. Eventually the suburbium acquired its own fence or wall. In the High Middle Ages, the gord usual evolved into a castle or citadel (kremlin) and the suburbium into a town.

Some gords did not stand the test of time and were abandoned or destroyed, gradually turning into more or less discernible mounds or rings of earth (Russian gorodische, Polish grodzisko, Ukrainian horodyshche, Slovak hradisko, Czech hradiště, and Serbian gradiška/градишка). Notable archeological sites include Biskupin, Poland; and Bilsk, Ukraine (see Gelonus).

Etymology

The term ultimately descends from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European root ǵʰortós, enclosure.[1] From this same root come the Germanic word elements *gard and *gart (as in Stuttgart), and likely also the names of Graz, Austria and Gartz, Germany. Cognate to these are English words such as yard, garth, girdle, and court.[2][3] Also cognate but less closely related are Latin hortus, a garden, and its English descendants horticulture and orchard.

Further afield, in Ancient Iran, a fortified wooden settlement was called a gerd, which became jerd under later Arab influence. Burugerd or Borujerd is a city in the West of Iran. The Indian suffix -garh, meaning a fort in Hindi, Sanskrit, and other Indo-Iranian languages, appears in many Indian place names.[4] Given that both Slavic and Indo-Iranian are sub-branches of Indo-European and that there are numerous similarities in Russian vocabulary and Sanskrit vocabulary, it is plausible that garh and gorod are related.[5]

The Proto-Slavic word gordъ later differentiated into grad (Cyrillic: град) and gorod (Cyrillic: город), etc.[6][7][8] It is the root of various words in modern Slavic languages pertaining to fences and fenced areas (Ukrainian horodyty, Czech ohradit, Russian ogradit, Serbo-Croatian ograditi, and Polish ogradzać, grodzić, to fence off). It also has evolved into words for a garden:

Additionally, it has furnished numerous modern Slavic words for a city or town:

The names of many Central and Eastern European cities harken back to their pasts as gords. Some of them are in countries which once were but no longer are mainly inhabited by Slavic-speaking peoples. Examples include:

The Polish word for suburbium, podgrodzie, literally means a settlement beneath a town: the gród was frequently built at the top of a hill, and the podgrodzie at its foot. (The Slavic prefix pod-, meaning "under/below" and descending from the Proto-Indo-European root pṓds, meaning foot,[9] is equivalent to Latin sub-.) The word survives in the names of several villages (Podgrodzie, Subcarpathian Voivodeship) and town districts (e.g., that of Olsztyn), as well as in the names of the German municipalities Puttgarden, Wagria and Putgarten, Rügen.

Important gords in Europe

Germany

On Rügen

Rest of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

in Berlin-Brandenburg

in Saxony-Anhalt

in Schleswig-Holstein

Bavaria

Bohemia

Poland

See also

References

  1. "Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/ǵʰortós". en.wiktionary.org. Retrieved 2016-10-30.
  2. ON. garðr; goth. gards; den. -gaard; island. -gard; cimb. -garthur; aleman. -gardo; welsh. -gardd; holln. -gaerde; span. -gardin; pomern. -gard; slav. -grod, -hrad
  3. A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language. Oxford. 1911; Jane Chance. Tolkien and the invention of myth. . 70
  4. "Urban vocabulary in Northern India - City Words WP No. 4". www.unesco.org. Retrieved 2016-05-09.
  5. "Sanskrit and Russian: Ancient kinship". in.rbth.com. Retrieved 2016-05-09.
  6. Taylor, Isaac (1898). Names and Their Histories: A Handbook of Historical Geography and Topographical Nomenclature. Original from the University of Michigan: Rivingtons. p. 331.
  7. Taylor, Isaac (1864). Words and Places, Or, Etymological Illustrations of History, Ethnology, and Geography. Original from Oxford University: Macmillan. p. 128.
  8. Anthropologische Gesellschaft in Wien (1880). Mittheilungen der anthropologischen Gesellschaft in Wien. Original from the University of Michigan: F. Berger & Söhne. p. 40.
  9. "Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/pṓds". en.wiktionary.org. Retrieved 2016-10-30.
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