Linones

{{Short description|Slavic ethnic group}}

The Linones{{harvnb|Rossignol|2019}} anglicizes the name as Linons and {{harvnb|Rossignol|2011}} germanizes it as Linonen. were a small Slavic people first recorded in the early 9th century.{{harvnb|Collins|1998|p=167}}, calls them and the Smeldingi "some lesser Slavic peoples" in comparison with the Obotrites and Wilzi. They lived north and east of the Elbe, across from Höhbeck in the region around Lenzen, south of the Wilzi and Obotrites, north of the Hevelli and northeast of the Saxons.{{harvnb|Fried|2016|p=485}}; {{harvnb|Collins|1998|p=167}}; and see the maps in {{harvnb|Scholz|1970|p=52}}, and {{harvnb|Goldberg|2006|pp=350–351}}. They may have been a sub-group of the Wilzi{{sfn|Nelson|1991|p=47 n13}} and were often under Obotrite control.{{harvnb|Reuter|1992|p=41 n7}}; {{harvnb|Melleno|2017|p=379}}. They may be associated with the medieval Gau Liezizi.{{sfn|Kats|Claszen|2012|loc=vol. II, p. 164 n343}}

The Annals of Lorsch classifies the Linones as Wends.AL, s.a. 808 (in {{harvnb|Minois|2014|pp=537–38}}): "Charles, fils de l'empereur Charles, traversa la rivière Elbe avec une armée franque contre les Wendes. Mais cette attaque ne fut pas un succès, et un grand nombre de Francs furent tués." [Charles, son of the emperor Charles, crossed the river Elbe with a Frankish army against the Wends. But this attack was not a success, and a great number of Franks were killed.] According to the Royal Frankish Annals, in 808 the Linones and Smeldingi "defected" to the Danish king Gudfred and in response the Frankish king Charles the Younger ravaged their lands.RFA, s.a. 808 (in {{harvnb|Scholz|1970|p=88}}): "But Charles, the son of the emperor, built a bridge across the Elbe, and moved the army under his command as fast as he could across the river against the Linones and Smeldingi. These tribes had also defected to Godofrid. Charles laid waste their fields far and wide and after crossing the river again returned to Saxony with his army unimpaired." It is probable that the Linones submitted to Danish authority and cooperated in the Danes' attack on the Obotrites that year, which resulted in the destruction of the emporium of Reric.{{harvnb|Collins|1998|p=167}}; {{harvnb|Minois|2014|p=537}}. The language of the Annals implies that they had previously recognized Frankish suzerainty.{{sfn|Melleno|2017|p=363}} Rather than come to the aid of their Obotrite allies directly, by attacking the Danes, the Franks launched a punitive expedition against the weaker Linones and Smeldingi, who were both more accessible and more immediately threatening as they lived on the border of the Frankish empire.{{harvnb|Collins|1998|p=167}}; {{harvnb|Melleno|2017|p=368}}. The army, led by the Emperor Charlemagne's son in person, was probably drawn mainly from Neustria.{{sfn|Minois|2014|p=537}} While the Royal Frankish Annals depicts a Frankish victory, the Annals of Lorsch suggests a serious check or reverse with heavy losses followed by retreat.{{harvnb|Minois|2014|p=537}}; {{harvnb|Fried|2016|p=485}}, suggests that "losses were heavy on both sides". The Chronicle of Moissac confirms that Charles suffered serious losses.CM, s.a. 808 (in {{harvnb|Kats|Claszen|2012|loc=vol. II, p. 143}}): "Karolus imperator misit filium suum, Karolum regem, super Saxonia ultra Albia ad illos Sclavos, qui vocantur Linai, et vastavit maximam partem regionis ipsius. Sed et aliqui ex nostra partem ibidem ceciderunt." See also {{harvnb|Minois|2014|p=537}}. The response of the Danes, who sued for peace, suggests that the Frankish expedition was nonetheless a successful show of force.{{sfn|Melleno|2017|p=368}}

In 811, following the annual spring assembly, Charlemagne sent another punitive expedition against the Linones.RFA, s.a. 811 (in {{harvnb|Scholz|1970|p=93}}): "After peace had been made with Hemming and the general assembly held at Aachen according to custom, the emperor sent into three parts of his kingdom an equal number of armies. One went beyond the Elbe against the Linones, which ravaged their territory and restored the castle of Hohbuoki on the Elbe destroyed by the Wilzi in the preceding year." The army also rebuilt the fortress of Höhbeck, which the Wilzi had destroyed in 810. The Linones may have been involved in that attack.{{sfn|Minois|2014|pp=553–54}} According to the Chronicle of Moissac, the lands of the Bechelenzi were also devastated in 811.CM, s.a. 811 (in {{harvnb|Kats|Claszen|2012|loc=vol. II, p. 145}}): "Misit Karolus imperator exercitum Francorum et Saxonorum et hostem ultra Albia ad illos Sclavos, qui nominantur Lanai et Bechelenzi et vastaverunt regiones illas et aedificaverunt iterum castello in loco, qui dicitur Abochi." See also {{harvnb|Rossignol|2019|p=50}}.

In later records, the Linones are mentioned sporadically in association with the Obotrites. In 838, Louis the German rebelled against the Emperor Louis the Pious, while King Horik I of Denmark demanded that the emperor transfer authority over the Obotrites to Denmark. A general uprising among the Elbean Slavs followed. The Obotrites, Wilzi, Linones, Sorbs and Colodices are said to have taken part.{{sfn|Goldberg|2006|pp=122–123, 134}} In 839, according to the Annals of Saint-Bertin, Louis the Pious dispatched an army composed of Austrasians and Thuringians against the Obotrites and Linones.AB, s.a. 839 (in {{harvnb|Nelson|1991|p=47}}): "Two expeditions were mounted: a Saxon one against the attacks of the Sorbs and Wilzes who had recently left several villae of the Saxon March in flames; and a combined Austrasian–Thuringian one against the rebellious Obodrites and the people called the Linones." In 858, according to the Annals of Fulda, King Louis the German sent an army under his son Louis the Younger against the Obotrites and Linones.AF, s.a. 858 (in {{harvnb|Reuter|1992|p=41}}): "Louis ... after he had discussed and dealt with many things of importance for the kingdom with his men, decided that three armies should be sent to different frontiers of his kingdom ... [the] second under Louis, his younger son, against the Abodrites and Linones". This was perhaps connected with a Danish attack on Saxony mentioned in the Annals of Saint-Bertin.{{sfn|Goldberg|2006|p=135 n73}}

The Linones are one of the peoples listed in the Catalogue of Fortresses and Regions to the North of the Danube, which was produced at the court of Louis the German between 844 and 862, most likely in 845. The peoples living on the frontier of Louis's kingdom are listed from north to south. The Linones, "who have seven fortresses", come after the Wilzi and before the Bechelenzi, Smeldingi and Morizani (who are grouped together).{{sfn|Goldberg|2006|pp=135–136}}

Notes

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Bibliography

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  • {{cite book |title=The Annals of St-Bertin |translator=Janet L. Nelson |publisher=Manchester University Press |year=1991 |ref={{harvid|Nelson|1991}}}}
  • {{cite book |title=The Annals of Fulda |translator=Timothy Reuter |publisher=Manchester University Press |year=1992 |ref={{harvid|Reuter|1992}}}}
  • {{cite book |title=Carolingian Chronicles: Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard's Histories |translator=Bernhard Walter Scholz |publisher=University of Michigan Press |year=1970 |ref={{harvid|Scholz|1970}} |url=https://archive.org/details/carolingianchron0000scho}}
  • {{cite book |first=Roger |last=Collins |author-link=Roger Collins |title=Charlemagne |publisher=Macmillan |year=1998 |doi=10.1007/978-1-349-26924-2|isbn=978-1-350-36252-9 }}
  • {{cite book |author-link=Johannes Fried |first=Johannes |last=Fried |title=Charlemagne |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2016 |orig-year=2013 |translator=Peter Lewis}}
  • {{cite book |last=Goldberg |first=Eric J. |title=Struggle for Empire: Kingship and Conflict under Louis the German, 817–876 |year=2006 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-0-8014-7529-0}}
  • {{cite thesis |first1=J. M. J. G. |last1=Kats |first2=D. |last2=Claszen |title=Chronicon Moissiacense Maius: A Carolingian World Chronicle From Creation until the First Years of Louis the Pious |type=MA thesis |institution=Leiden University |year=2012 |url=https://studenttheses.universiteitleiden.nl/handle/1887/20005}}
  • {{cite journal |last=Melleno |first=Daniel |title=Between Borders: Franks, Danes, and Abodrites in the Trans-Elben World up to 827 |journal=Early Medieval Europe |volume=25 |issue=3 |year=2017 |pages=359–385|doi=10.1111/emed.12215 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Minois |first=Georges |title=Charlemagne |publisher=Perrin |year=2014 |url=https://www.cairn.info/charlemagne--9782262044237.htm |isbn=9782262044237 |doi=10.3917/perri.minoi.2014.01}}
  • {{cite book |first=Sébastien |last=Rossignol |chapter=Aufstieg und Fall der Linonen. Misslungene Ethnogenese an der unteren Mittelelbe |pages=15–38 |title=Slawen an der Elbe |editor1=Karl-Heinz Willroth |editor2=Jens Schneeweiß |publisher=Wachholtz |year=2011}}
  • {{cite book |first=Sébastien |last=Rossignol |chapter=Die Linonen zwischen Tat und Wort: Die Schriftquellen über die Entwicklung an der unteren Mittelelbe unter Berücksichtigung der interdisziplinären Forschungsergebnisse |pages=135–150 |title=Slawen an der unteren Mittelelbe: Untersuchungen zur ländlichen Besiedlung, zum Burgenbau, zu Besiedlungsstrukturen und zum Landschaftswandel. Beiträge zum Kolloquium vom 7. bis 9. April 2010 in Frankfurt a. M. |editor1=Karl-Heinz Willroth |editor2=Hans-Jürgen Beug |editor3=Friedrich Lüth |editor4=Franz Schopper |editor5=Sebastian Messal |editor6=Jens Schneeweiss |publisher=Reichert |year=2013}}
  • {{cite book |first=Sébastien |last=Rossignol |chapter=The Entry of Early Medieval Slavs into World History: The Chronicle of Moissac |pages=43–57 |publisher=Routledge |year=2019 |editor1=Balázs Nagy |editor2=Felicitas Schmieder |editor3=András Vadas |title=The Medieval Networks in East Central Europe: Commerce, Contacts, Communication}}

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Category:Polabian Slavs