Vineta

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Vineta (sometimes Wineta) is the name of a legendary city at the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. The legend evolved around traditions about the Medieval emporium called Jumne, Jomsborg, Julin or similar names by the chronicles, and with which Vineta is sometimes identified.

Legend

There are several Vineta legends. All of them portray the Vinetans as having an excessive, voluptuous or blasphemous way of life and then being punished in a flood that took the city to the bottom of the Baltic. In some variants of the myth, the city or parts thereof reappear on certain days or can be seen from a boat, making the warning conveyed by the myth more tangible for the audience.

Primary sources

Geographical place

Postulated locations of Vineta

Vineta Reef off Koserow / Damerow

Some variants of the myth have Vineta sunken off

David Chyträus in his 16th century Chronicon Saxoniae had Vineta "beyond the Peene river near the village of Damerow [de]" which was a Vorwerk of Koserow. For Chyträus, Usedom was the land of the Vinetans, while Julin on the neighboring island of Wolin
was inhabited by Pomoranians. Since no traces of Slavic settlement have been found on northwest Usedom, this thesis is no longer accepted.

Ruden

Several maps published between 1633 and 1700 have the sunken "Wineta" east of the island of Ruden northwest of Usedom. About 1700, Bernhard Walther Marperger [de] reported it in the same spot. The origin of this thesis is the All Saints flood of 1306 that reduced Ruden and other small islands from a much larger landmass that prior to the flood had existed between Mönchgut and Usedom.

Wolin

Rudolf Virchow said: "Vineta is Wollin!" Based on the primary sources outlined above, Adolf Hofmeister [de] in 1931/32 formulated the thesis that Vineta, Jumne, Julin, Jomsborg etc. are all different spellings used for the same place on the site of today's town of Wolin.[1] Beginning in the 1930s, and continued after the annexation of Wolin to Poland after World War II, archaeologists unearthed the remains of a large settlement there. Hofmeister's thesis is the only mainstream thesis regarding the location of Vineta in today's historiography.

Barth

A thesis formulated by Goldmann und Wermusch placed Vineta near Barth, pointing to a possibly different course of the Oder in the Middle Ages and a creative reading of the primary sources outlined above.

In popular culture

Poems and music

  • Vineta. poem by Wilhelm Müller (1794-1827), in Muscheln von der Insel Rügen (1825)
    • Intonation by Johannes Brahms for Chor a cappella in six voices, op. 42 Nr. 2 (1860)
    • Intonation by Achim Reichel, for the album Wilder Wassermann (2002)
  • Seegespenst. Poem by Heinrich Heine (1797-1856), in Die Nordsee. 1. Abteilung (1826)
  • Two texts by Ferdinand Freiligrath (1810-1876): Poem Meerfahrt (1838); Wilhelm Müller. Eine Geisterstimme (1872)
  • Vineta-Glocken. Valse boston (1920er Jahre) by John Lindsay-Theimer [de] (Pseudonym of the Carynthian Johann Theimer)
  • Vineta (1994). Concert piece and suite for Zither solo by Peter Kiesewetter
  • Vineta (2001). Sinfonical poem by Urs Joseph Flury [de]
  • Vineta. Song of the band Puhdys (Puhdys 1, 4. Titel)
  • Vineta. Song by Michael Heck
  • Vineta. Song from the De Plattfööt album Ierst mol ganz langsam
  • Vineta. Planned 3. volume of the long poem Nautilus by Uwe Tellkamp
  • Vineta. poetry collection by Uwe Kolbe [de], 1998
  • „Vineta“, Song by Josef Seiler (text) and Ignaz Heim [de] (music)
  • "Vineta", Choral piece by Ēriks Ešenvalds (2009).
  • „Vineta“ (2011). Song of the band Transit (Band) [de] (album „Übers Meer“, title 6)

Plays, festivals and opera

  • Vineta (1863). Opera by Jan Nepomuk Škroup. First 1870 in Prague (Vineta; Czech)
  • Vineta. Schauspiel. In: Zu spät. Vier Einakter (1902) by
    Marie Eugenie delle Grazie
    .
  • Vineta. Die versunkene Stadt (1937). Play by Jura Soyfer
  • Vineta (1960–67). Opera by Rudolf Mors (text und music). First 1968 in Bielefeld
  • Vineta-Festspiele (since 1997). Open air theater festival of the Vorpommersche Landesbühne Anklam [de] in Ostseebühne Zinnowitz
  • Republik Vineta (2000). Play by Moritz Rinke [de]
  • Vineta (Oderwassersucht). Play by Armin Petras [de] (under the pseudonym Fritz Kater). First 2001 in Leipzig

In prosaic literature

Movies

TV-series

  • Küstenwache
    (ZDF), 21. Dezember 2011:
    „Der Fluch von Vineta“.

Board games

Video games

Place names

Ahlbeck (Usedom)
  • In Berlin there is a Vineta Street (Vinetastraße) and a U-Bahn station.
  • In Berlin there is also a Vineta square (Vinetaplatz) in Wedding, next to Swinemünder Straße and Wolliner Straße.
  • The German Empire's navy had the vessels Vineta (Vineta of 1863, Vineta of 1897, Vineta of 1915, and SMS Möwe, briefly renamed Vineta in 1915)
  • In 1903 a square in the center of Gaarden-Ost [de], Kiel was named Vinetaplatz after SMS Vineta I.
  • The (West) German navy from 1961 to 1992 had a mine sweeper „Vineta“ (M2652, Ariadne-class) in 3. Minensuchgeschwader.
  • An artwork installation in Störmthaler See [de] near Leipzig is called „Vineta.“
  • A rare German Empire stamp is called "Vineta provisional".
  • In Swakopmund, Namibia, there is a neighborhood Vineta.
  • In Heidelberg there is a student fraternity "Vineta" since 1879.
  • In Schleswig-Holstein there is a sports club named TSV Vineta Audorf.
  • In Schleswig Holstein (Busdorf) there is a club called Disco-Vineta.
  • In
    Rust (Baden)
    , in the themed land 'Scandinavia' there was an attraction 'Sunken city "Vineta"'. It was destroyed in a fire in 2018 and may never be rebuilt.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Schmidt, Roderich: Das historische Pommern. Personen, Orte, Ereignisse (Veröffentlichungen der Historischen Kommission für Pommern, Reihe V, Forschungen Bd. 41), Köln / Weimar 2007, S. 70-72.
  2. ^ . Retrieved 2013-06-25.

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

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