- The
Obotrites (Latin: Obotriti, Abodritorum, Abodritos) or Obodrites, also
spelled Abodrites (German: Abodriten), were a
confederation of
medieval West...
- Tove of the
Obotrites, also
called Tova, Tofa or Thora, (10th century) was a
Slavic princess and a
Danish Viking Age
queen consort, the
spouse of King...
-
three main tribes, the
Obotrites, the Veleti, and the
Lusatian Sorbs. The main
tribes of the
Obotritic confederation were the
Obotrites proper (Wismar Bay...
-
Obotrite prince or king (1093–1127) from the
Nakonid dynasty; he was
regarded by
contemporaries as "King of the Slavs" (rex Slavorum). The
Obotrite realm...
-
Estrid of the
Obotrites (c. 979 – 1035) was
Queen of
Sweden in the
Viking age, a West
Slavic princess married to the King of Sweden, Olof Skötkonung c...
- Nako, Nakon, Nakko, or
Nacco (flourished 954 – c. 966) was an
Obotrite leader who,
along with his
brother Stoigniew, led the
forces of a
Slavic confederacy...
- he also
helped Otto to
crush an
uprising of
Slavic tribes led by the
Obotrite princes Nakon and Stojgněv on the
Lower Elbe
river in the
Battle on the...
-
Ratibor (or Ratse) (died 1043) was a
prince of the
Obotrite confederacy from the
Polabian tribe. His
capital was Ratzeburg,
which was
named in his honor...
-
Godescalc (Latin: Godescalcus; died 7 June 1066), was a
prince of the
Obotrite confederacy from 1043 to 1066. He
established a
Polabian Slavic kingdom...
-
descended linearly from the
princes (or kings) of a
Slavic tribe, the
Obotrites, and had its
original residence in a
castle (Mecklenburg) in Dorf Mecklenburg...