Melingoi

{{Short description|Slavic tribe in medieval Greece}}

File:Peloponnese Middle Ages map-en.svg

The Melingoi or Milingoi ({{langx|el|Μηλιγγοί}}) were a Slavic tribe that settled in the Peloponnese in southern Greece during the Middle Ages. In the early decades of the 7th century, Slavic tribes (Sclaveni) settled throughout the Balkans following the collapse of the Byzantine Empire's defense of the Danube frontier with some groups reaching as far south as the Peloponnese.{{harvnb|Kazhdan|1991|pp=1620, 1917}}. The Sclaveni often settled in small groups (i.e., families and clans) and their demographic impact in mainland Greece was both weak and diffuse.{{harvnb|Trombley|1993|pp=438–439}}. Of these, two groups are known by name from later sources, the Melingoi and the Ezeritai, of whom the Melingoi settled on the western slopes of Mount Taygetos. The origin and etymology of the name Melingoi is unknown.{{harvnb|Kazhdan|1991|pp=772, 1334}}.

Etymology

Their name probably derives from Slavic adjective "*milъ" (sweet).{{cite journal |last=Komatina |first=Predrag |date=2020 |title=Славянские этнонимы "баварского географа": историко-лингвистический анализ |trans-title=Slavic ethnonyms in the Bavarian Geographer: A historiographic linguistic analysis |url=https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/handle/123456789/10762 |language=ru |journal=Studia Slavica et Balcanica Petropolitana |volume=27 |issue=1 |pages=127–128 |doi=10.21638/spbu19.2020.106|hdl=11701/19440 |hdl-access=free }} Slavic form of their name possibly sounded like "*Milenьki > *Milenьci", and some scholars related it to the early Slavic tribe of Milceni.{{cite book |last=Komatina |first=Predrag |date=2019 |chapter=Рани јужнословенски етноними и питање порекла и постанка јужнословенских племена |trans-chapter=Early South Slavic Ethnonyms and the Issue of Origin and Genesis of the South Slavic Tribes |chapter-url=https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/handle/123456789/10701 |title=Наслеђе и стварање Свети Ћирило: Свети Сава 869-1219-2019 I |location=Belgrade |publisher=Institute of the Serbian Language of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts |language=sr |pages=10 |isbn=978-86-82873-70-9}}

History

Like the Ezeritai, the Melingoi are first mentioned in the De administrando imperio, a manual on statecraft written by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos ({{reign|913|959}}). The emperor records that in his time they paid a tribute of 60 gold {{Transliteration|grc|nomismata}}, but that after they had revolted and been defeated, in the reign of Romanos I Lekapenos ({{reign|920|945}}), by the {{Transliteration|grc|strategos}} Krinites Arotras, they had to pay 600 {{Transliteration|grc|nomismata}}.{{harvnb|Kazhdan|1991|pp=1334–1335}}. Under Byzantine rule, the Melingoi retained an autonomous existence, but adopted Christianity and became Hellenized in language and culture.{{sfn|Kazhdan|1991|pp=1335, 1620}}

During the period of Frankish rule in the 13th–14th centuries, they were employed by both the Frankish lords of the Principality of Achaea and by the Byzantine Greeks of the Despotate of the Morea as soldiers. For instance, according to the Chronicle of the Morea, Prince William II of Villehardouin ({{reign|1246|1278}}) awarded to the "great {{Transliteration|grc|droungos}}{{cref|a}} of the Melingoi" exemption from all duties except military service. The Melingoi are still attested during the 1330s in a number of founder's inscriptions attached to churches in Laconia. One of them, Constantine Spanes, from the notable Spanes family, is called "{{Transliteration|grc|tzaousios}} of the {{Transliteration|grc|droungos}} of the Melingoi", implying its continued existence as a separate community. N. Nicoloudis identifies the late medieval {{Transliteration|grc|thema}} of Kinsterna or Giserna (from {{langx|la|cisterna}}, "cistern") with the area of the Melingoi in the northwestern Mani peninsula.{{sfn|Nicoloudis|2003|pp=85–89}} While the elite of the Melingoi was rich and exposed to Byzantine and Frankish influence, the ordinary pastoralist hillman remained more conservative and secluded. Their Slavic language was still spoken as late as the 15th century, when the traveller Laskaris Kananos claimed that their tongue resembled that of the Wends. Many Slavic placenames have been preserved to this day.G. L. Huxley (1993): Transhumance on Taygetos in the "Chronicle of Morea". Illinois Classical Studies. 332–334

Notes

{{refbegin}}

{{Cnote|a|Droungos was originally a Late Roman/Byzantine term for a battalion-sized military unit, but from the 12th century on had been equated with zygos ("mountain range") and applied to various mountainous areas in continental Greece, as well as the militia forces detailed to guard the passes in them (cf. the older term kleisoura).{{harvnb|Kazhdan|1991|p=664}}.}}

{{refend}}

References

=Citations=

{{reflist|2}}

=Sources=

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite book|editor-last=Kazhdan|editor-first=Alexander|editor-link=Alexander Kazhdan|title=Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium|location=Oxford|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1991|isbn=978-0-19-504652-6}}
  • {{cite book|last=Nicoloudis|first=N.|chapter=The 'Theme of Kinsterna'|title=Porphyrogenita – Essays on the History and the Literature of Byzantium and the Latin East in honour of Julian Chrysostomides|editor1-first=Charalambos|editor1-last=Dendrinos|editor2-first=Jonathan|editor2-last=Harris|editor3-first=Eirene|editor3-last=Harvalia-Crook|editor4-first=Judith|display-editors=3|editor4-last=Herrin|location=Aldershot and Burlington|publisher=Ashgate Publishing Limited|year=2003|isbn=978-0-7546-3696-0|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Xrbg8_8lrzoC|pages=85–89}}
  • {{cite book|last=Trombley|first=Frank R.|chapter=Byzantine "Dark Age" Cities|title=ΤΟ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΟΝ: Studies in Honor of Speros Vryonis, Jr: Vol. 1: Hellenic Antiquity and Byzantium|year=1993|location=New Rochelle, NY|publisher=Artistide D. Caratzas|pages=429–450|editor=John S. Langdon|display-editors=etal}}

{{refend}}

{{Slavic ethnic groups (VII-XII century)}}

Category:Byzantine Greece

Category:Medieval Peloponnese

Category:Medieval Messenia

Category:Sclaveni

Category:South Slavic tribes