Forest Germans: a forgotten ethnic group in the contemporary landscape of the Polish Carpathians
Publié en ligne: 17 mai 2025
Pages: 140 - 149
Reçu: 28 oct. 2024
Accepté: 23 janv. 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/mgrsd-2025-0010
Mots clés
© 2025 Piotr Kołpak et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The former Polish–Ruthenian borderland is situated in the Wisłoka and Wisłok river basins in the south-east of contemporary Poland. Before the middle of the 14th century, this area was sparsely populated, except for a narrow strip along the Wisłoka River, which had been colonized by monasteries and bishoprics since the 11th century for the purposes of Christianization and economic development. The scattered knightly villages, by contrast, were defensive on account of their proximity to borders (Dobrowolska 1985; Klemenski 2025). The limited deforestation and settlement were due to the region being a wide borderland separating Lesser Poland from Red Ruthenia. After the death of the last princes of Ruthenia in the early 14th century, the region attracted interest from several neighbouring powers. Polish King Casimir the Great eventually annexed key Ruthenian territories in the 1340s, transforming them into internal Polish lands and promoting settlement efforts (Bieniak 2000; Paszkiewicz 2002; Klemenski 2025).
These territories – which include an area of previously untrammelled frontier forest – could not be colonized by the Polish population as the Polish lands themselves were not densely populated. There was, however, a substantial surplus population in German-speaking areas. These people were therefore invited to colonize these wilderness regions. Both the Polish initiators of the colonization and the German immigrants were primarily concerned with economic benefits. Every major migration was carried out under special legal norms that took into account the expectations of the immigrants and the interests of the Polish State. The colonists were granted preferential settlement conditions, which further accelerated the wave of German colonization in the East. This is known as part of the
Polish researchers have distinguished several German-language islands clustered around such centres as Biecz in Lesser Poland, Krosno and Łańcut in Ruthenia, Wielopole Skrzyńskie, and Pilzno in the Sandomierz Palatinate in the 14th century (Blajer 2007; Chromik 2017; Klemenski 2025). The intensive settlement of the western part of the region, centred in the town of Biecz, is closely associated with the colonization efforts of King Casimir the Great in the 1340s and 1350s. This town was predominantly settled by Germans. Additionally, many surrounding villages have names of German origin (Binarowa, Ołpiny, Rozembark – now Rożnowice, Szymbark, and Szynwałd) or feature a high percentage of German surnames among the peasantry. Another significant urban settlement with a predominantly German character was Krosno, located in the eastern part of the region. Several villages were established around this city by settlers from the West in the 1350s. In 1594, Emperor Rudolf II’s envoy to the Zaporozhian Cossacks, Erich Lassota von Streblau, crossed the Beskids. He passed through Jaśliska and soon arrived in Rymanów, where “almost every common man speaks German more often than Polish” (Lassota von Streblau 1866). A third area of notable German settlement was around the city of Łańcut, whose name is derived from the German “Landeshut”. There remains strong evidence of the German origins of the surrounding villages. It is likely that this wave of German settlement was associated with the arrival of colonists from Saxony and Thuringia (Klemenski 2025; Doubek 1932).
The influx of Germans into Polish–Ruthenian territory represents the final phase of the medieval German “conquest” of the East. This extensive migration movement might have continued had the Black Death not decimated Western Europe in the 1350s. The subsequent centuries were marked by alternating periods of tranquillity and disruption, particularly in the 17th century, which saw brutal Tartar and Turkish incursions. The most brutal and destructive Tartar invasion of the former Polish–Ruthenian borderland, in 1624, decimated the villages in the vicinity of Łańcut and tore apart the existing social structures. Despite these challenges, the surrounding towns and villages prospered, benefiting from profitable trade routes to Hungary and Black Sea ports. Polish and German chroniclers of the 15th and 17th centuries described the Carpathian Foothills as a region that stood out on the map of Poland, with a significant German-speaking population that cultivated German traditions and taught their Polish neighbours profitable agricultural practices. In this context, Marcin Kromer from Biecz deserves our attention. Kromer came from a patrician family with deep roots in the area. As such, he had a good grasp of the history and characteristics of the Carpathian Foothills. In his work
The mid-16th century records are the most informative in terms of German rural settlement in the Carpathian Foothills. They reveal that villages were established and inhabited by settlers from German-speaking regions, that a variant of German continued to be spoken there, and that the settlers set a good example of economic and infrastructural order. Drawing on personal experience, Maciej Stryjkowski addressed these facts in his 1582 compendium of knowledge about the history of this part of Europe titled to defend the borders from Hungary and Ruthenia, but because they were a sturdy, non-warlike folk, they were turned to farming and cattle, because they make good cheese, especially in Spisz and in the Foothills; others also spin flax well: therefore, linen from the Foothills is most abundant here with us (Bielski 1597).
Similar to Sarnicki, Bielski linked the economy of the local Germans not only with animal husbandry products (e.g. cheese), but primarily with linen production, for which the region came to be renowned. Another aspect that Bielski touched on was the putative reason for inviting Germans to the Carpathian Foothills – namely, to defend Poland’s borders. This naturally raises the question as to whether this supposition was the result of Bielski’s personal reflections or whether it was a presumed continuation of the ancient tradition of having German colonists settle the borderlands for defensive purposes, as illustrated, for example, by the network of fortified churches erected by Transylvanian Saxons. This analogy, however, might have been somewhat automatic, as evidenced by the narrative of the
The tales of the chroniclers allow for the extraction of several research axes around which any analysis of 15th to late 17th century German villages in the Carpathian Foothills should revolve. The first axis is language. Identifying German-speaking communities, and determining the period during which they were Polonized, enables the extent of the most intensive colonization to be delineated, namely the colonization that led to the formation of villages with a predominantly or entirely German-speaking population. Their dialects, influenced by isolation and interaction with neighbouring communities, bore traces of ancient linguistic roots and regional variations, and served as a distinctive marker of their identity. The German villages around Biecz seem to have become Polonized in the late 15th and early 16th centuries, while German was still being spoken in the Krosno area at the end of the 16th century and, in the Łańcut area, as late as the second half of the 17th century (Kołpak 2025). The second trait characterizing these communities, according to the chroniclers, was their high level of economic advancement, primarily manifested in their weaving technology – from flax cultivation, through processing, and culminating in the linen trade. The Forest Germans ingeniously adapted agricultural practices to suit the rugged terrain and fertile soils of the forested regions, cultivating crops and raising livestock in harmony with nature’s rhythms. The third research axis, which is not so well documented in the source materials, is the defensive role of German colonization. Hypothetically, these villages could have served as outposts, protecting the Carpathian Foothills against pagan Tartars, and aligning with the ideological defence system known as the “Bulwark of Christianity”. This concept is comparable to the defensive nature of German settlements in Transylvania.
In light of the complex historical, cultural, and geographical context of Central Europe, including Poland’s proximity to Germany, delimiting the settlement area of Forest Germans requires careful analysis of sources and literature. No one has ever undertaken a systematic description of the borders of Forest Germany, and the only map (from 1923) is very inaccurate and schematic (Niemcówna 1923, p. 61, map annex). We only have a few descriptions – of varying accuracy – of the boundaries of the Forest German settlement area, dating from the 17th century to the mid-20th century (Biblioteka Warszawska… 1882, p. 304; Borcz 2005, pp. 72–189; Bystroń 1935, p. 102; Chmielowski 1756, p. 341; Mycielski 1882, p. 1; “Przegląd polityczny” 1884, pp. 1–2; Fischer 1926, p. 16; “Emigracja chłopska” 1884, p. 2; Gloger 1869, p. 111; Karłowicz 1906, p. 185; Karpiński 1887, p. 160; Liber… 1617–1713; Mss. 1038; Maciejowski 1859, pp. 356–357; Majerski 1921, p. 60; Majerski 1903, p. 271; Majerski 1912, p. 95; Dębicki 1903, p. XXX; Michna 1879, p. 20; Niemcówna 1923, p. 61; Niesiecki 1842 (1989), v. 9, p. 11; Pol 1869a, p. 32; Pol 1869b, p. 87; Siarczyński Mss. 1827, pp. 140, 154, 158–161; Siarczyński 1827, pp. 129–147; Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego… 1880–1892, pp. 612 (v. 2), 151 (v. 8), 155 (v. 10); Szujski 1882, pp. 17–18; Szujski 1896, pp. 17–18; Świętochowski 1939, p. 557; Świętochowski 1928, v. 2, p. 498; Tatomir 1876, p. 59; “Dowcipny manewr” 1884, pp. 62–63; “Petersburg, 31 marca” 1884, p. 4; “Przestroga” 1885, p. 569).
Demarcating the Forest German settlement area comprised several stages and culminated in a series of maps. The first step involved finding as many mentions of Forest Germans in a geographical context as possible. Only texts directly containing the relevant ethnonym or choronym associated with a specific territory were selected for further analysis. The second step consisted in geographically analysing and interpreting the descriptions or images extracted from the sources, and using the results to draw up appropriate maps. The third step involved superimposing the maps obtained in the second step, and colouring the analysed area with a single hue, whose intensity corresponded positively with the number of instances in the sources (Fig. 1).

Borders and area of Forest Germany – areas included in the territory of Forest Germany according to the number of mentions in historical sources (17th–20th centuries)
Source: Own elaboration
During the fourth step, locations indicated merely once or twice were rejected as accidental or as lacking a sufficient basis in the sources (Fig. 2).

Borders and area of Forest Germany – areas included in the territory of Forest Germany according to the number of mentions in historical sources (17th–20th centuries), and with at least three mentions in historical sources
Source: Own elaboration
The fifth and final step consisted in drawing up a map showing the border of the settlement region of Forest Germans (Fig. 3).

Approximate borders and area of Forest Germany
Source: Own elaboration
Each step was accompanied by a lot of randomness or subjectivity. Given the vast quantity of sources and literature that had to be analysed, it is likely that some geographic descriptions of the Forest German country were not successfully captured. The geographical and cartographic interpretation of the relatively few sources found posed another challenge (with their interdependence posing an additional one). The picture obtained as a result of the source analysis presented here is merely preliminary and approximate. It requires further definition based on other indicators.
The two most enduring relics of Forest German (German) settlement in the Middle Ages and the early modern era are toponyms and surnames. However, it should be noted that the Forest Germans have a mixed ethnogenesis. They are not a German minority in Poland, but a Polish cultural group with German–West Slavic roots. The Forest Germans are the descendants of German, Polish, and other West Slavic settlers from so-called Germania Slavica (Slavic Germany), in what is now, inter alia, Saxony, Thuringia, Czechia, or Moravia, who had been Germanized to a greater or lesser degree (Strzelczyk 1976). Toponyms and surnames of Germanic origin are a necessary element in the cultural landscape of Forest Germany but they are not sufficient to tell the whole story. In the nearly 700 years since its inception, Forest Germany has become a veritable melting pot in which Germanic and West Slavic elements have merged to form a cultural and territorial community. Hence, Polish toponyms dominate in the cultural landscape of Forest Germany, and German ones have become heavily distorted. Traces of the medieval settlement of Germans have basically only been preserved in the landscape in the names of towns and villages (FIG. 4). These date back to the 14th and 15th centuries. In the case of anthroponyms, the Forest Germans may have surnames of German origin, but these are sometimes very distorted or transformed (e.g. as calques), but most of them probably now have Polish surnames.

Distribution of selected Forest German toponyms of German or Polish origin that have been distorted under German influence or which once contained an element alluding to German settlers
Source: Own elaboration
Forest German surnames raise a number of research challenges. The most fundamental problem has to do with source materials. Record books were made compulsory in Poland at the turn of the 17th century. However, the oldest of these have been very poorly preserved. This is largely because archival resources sustained significant damage over the course of Poland’s turbulent history – especially between 1648 and 1945. For the period prior to the turn of the 17th century, there are almost no sources at all. It is nigh impossible to find larger groups of surnames from the 14th–15th centuries for the vast majority of places inhabited by Forest Germans. Apart from the gaps in the records, it should be borne in mind that surnames in rural communities in Poland were very unstable. They were also often notated in various ways, depending on the skills, education, or physical limitations (e.g. hearing) of the notary, and were subject to mutations as a result of being inflected for age and gender. It should be noted that Polish is a highly inflected language.
Ołpiny, in the western part of the region, is one of the villages in Forest Germany where surnames have been thoroughly researched. Although the analyses are based on data that are incomplete or lacking, they suffice to warrant the conclusion that the ancestry of the population of a typical village in Forest Germany, such as Ołpiny, which, in 1510, was categorically defined as a German village, is mixed. At the same time, they allow us to confirm the reduction of the German substratum over time in the total population of Ołpiny (Kołpak, Raczyńska-Kruk & Solarz 2024) (Fig. 5).

Surnames of the oldest families from Ołpiny (present in the village before 1950) in 2023, according to their appearance over the centuries and their ethnic origin
Source: Own elaboration
The etymology of the terms denoting the descendants of medieval German settlers in the Carpathian Foothills provides many contexts for its interpretation (Solarz & Raczyńska-Kruk 2023). This paper has adopted the English term “Forest Germans”, which best captures the ambiguity of the Polish name
The first, socio-linguistic, understanding of the term
Both explanations were noted in an expanded version of the
In German literature, there are two names –
From the end of the Enlightenment (when the Forest Germans were beginning to vanish as a living phenomenon) until the 1930s, scholarly interest in the Forest Germans reflected the ongoing socio-political changes in Polish culture (Raczyńska-Kruk 2023).
The turn of the 19th century was a time of collecting and describing “national antiquities” in the partitions of the First Polish Republic. The activities that led to the emergence of modern ethnography as an academic discipline with a range of research methods and tools are therefore rooted in the ideas of the Enlightenment and early Romanticism. It was a time when “folk” became an issue in (the nation’s) life, and folk studies and descriptions of regional cultures were assigned the task of somehow resolving it (Burszta 1973, pp. 6–7). Dating from this period are the works of historian and regionalist Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829), who collected very diverse and multicontextual material relevant to understanding who the Forest Germans were, how and where they were born as a cultural phenomenon, and why their distinctiveness disappeared (Siarczyński Mss. 1827).
During the Romantic era, the Forest Germans became a topic in the scholarly and public debates on the formation of the national consciousness and the identity of the Polish peasantry. Probably the most important accounts, providing reference points for other descriptions of the Forest Germans in this period, were those made by the geographer and ethnographer Wincenty Pol. In his 1869 work
The image of the Forest Germans in Polish humanities and public debate has been expanded by further themes as a result of studies conducted by historian and conservative publicist Józef Szujski. His
Szujski died on 7 February 1883. Around the first anniversary of his death, the migration theory was recalled by the conservative Kraków daily
Authors at the turn of the 20th century, although fascinated by the everyday life of the countryside and folk culture in general, did not devote as much attention to the Forest Germans (Raczyńska-Kruk 2023, pp. 451–454). The growing national movements in Europe determinedly began to dictate the ways of thinking about culture and history. In the 1930s, ethnographer Jan Stanislaw Bystroń and regionalist Adam Wójcik “invented” the Polish ethnographic groups
Nowadays, the Forest Germans exist, as it were, anew in the history of their land and the historical memory of their inhabitants. Local identities in the Carpathian Foothills are, on the one hand, an expression of rootedness, reaffirming traditions and local peasant genealogies and, on the other, they are constantly reinvented, transformed, and supplemented with new segments (Karpecki & Raczyńska-Kruk 2025). The German origins of the village are increasingly mentioned by authors of local publications. No less important is the role of the Internet. The appearance of the entry
Exoethnonym – a name given by representatives of a foreign group (ed. Staszczak 1987).
A single communication barrier is expressed in the word “German” meaning “mute” (Solarz & Raczyńska-Kruk 2023).