However, during the migration period, those peoples had moved west and vacated territories in Central Europe. Lands in the basins of Oder and Vistula were then taken by Polish tribes who repopulated these abandoned areas and created their own tribal organizations. The Silesian tribes, together with the Polans, Masovians, Vistulans and Pomeranians were the most important Polish tribes.Raymond Breton, National Survival in Dependent Societies: Social Change in Canada and Poland, McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP, 1990, p. 106, Google Books; Charles William Previté-Orton, The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1962, V. II, p. 744, Google Books These five tribes "shared fundamentally common culture and language and were considerably more closely related to one another than were the Germanic tribes."John Blacking, Anna Czekanowska, Polish Folk Music: Slavonic Heritage – Polish Tradition – Contemporary Trends, Cambridge University Press, 2006, p. 3,
[https://books.google.com/books?id=czVkawHfw_UC&dq=%22polish+tribes%22&pg=PA3 Google Books] same conclusions in Mark Salter, Jonathan Bousfield, ''Poland'', Rough Guides, 2002, p. 675, [https://books.google.com/books?id=YgQ0B1CNYfQC&dq=%22Polish+tribes%22+five&pg=PP1 Google Books]
Eventually the Silesian tribes, together with other Polish tribes, formed what is now ethnic Poles and Polish culture.Regina E. Holloman, Serghei A. Arutiunov, Perspectives on Ethnicity, Walter de Gruyter 1978, p. 391, , 9783110807707 Google Books This process is called ethnic consolidation in which several ethnic communities of kindred origin and cognate languages, merge into a single one.Regina E. Holloman, Serghei A. Arutiunov, Perspectives on Ethnicity, Walter de Gruyter 1978, p. 391, , 9783110807707 Google Books
The tribal differences started to disappear after the unification of Poland in the 10th and 11th centuries. The main factors of these process were the establishment of a single monarchy that ruled over all Polish tribes as well as creation of a separate ecclesiastical organization within the boundaries of the newly established Polish state.S. Rosik in: W. Wrzesiński (red.) Historia Dolnego Śląska, Wrocław 2006, p. 49, In the course of the 12th century the remaining tribal differences within regions were almost entirely gone. The names of the smaller tribes disappear from the annals of history as well as the names of some prominent tribes (Vistulans, Polans). However, in some places, names of the most important tribes transform into names of the whole regions (Mazovians for Mazovia, Silesians for Silesia). As a result of the fragmentation of Poland some of those regions were again divided into smaller entities (e.g. Silesia into Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia), however the tribal era was already over and these divisions reflected only political subdivisions of the Polish realm.S. Rosik in: W. Wrzesiński (red.) Historia Dolnego Śląska, Wrocław 2006, p. 53-54,
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