- The
Nadruvians were a now-extinct
Prussian tribe. They
lived in
Nadruvia (alternative
spellings include: Nadruva, Nadrowite, Nadrovia, Nadrauen, Nadravia...
- (Litauen) were used to
refer to the
Lithuanian inhabited administrative units (
Nadruvia and Scalovia) in the
legal do****entation of
Prussian state since 1618....
- (they
lived in
Lubavia - Lūbawa)
Nadruvians (Nadrāuwai) (they
lived in
Nadruvia - Nadrāuwa)
Natangians (Natangai or Notangiai) (they
lived in Natangia...
-
concentrated in the
southern part of the
Teutonic State and did not move into
Nadruvia and
Skalvia due to the
Lithuanian military threat. In 1454,
following a...
- A
religious centre of
intertribal significance was
Romuva (Romow) in
Nadruvia, Prussia, as
described by
Peter of
Dusburg in 1326. For
Curonians sacred...
- can be
traced to the Proto-Indo-European
adjective *médʰyos 'middle'.
Nadruvia may be a
compound of the
words na ("by" or "on") and drawē ("wood"). The...
- Pagundima; Bet
gelbek mus nu Pikto. Lord's
Prayer in
Lithuanian dialect of
Nadruvia,
corrupted (Simon Praetorius): 708
Tiewe musu,
kursa tu essi Debsissa...
- and
later Ducal Prussia Warmia Lower Prussia Scalovia (Klaipėda region)
Nadruvia Sudovia Bartia Sambia Natangia distinct ethnocultural designations Żuławy...
- been
found either by the
Teutonic Knights, who
controlled the
whole of
Nadruvia, or by
modern archaeologists. Some
details in the
descriptions have similarities...
- Klaipėda (Polish: Kłajpeda).
Entirely under Polish sovereignty in the past.
Nadruvia (Polish: Nadrowia)
Warmia in
northern Poland.
Largest city: Olsztyn. Historical...