According to the sagas, St. Adalbert of Prague (died in 997) was martyred by the Prussians under Widewuto and his brother, after which the holy oak of the Prussians was felled by Adalbert, Bishop of Ermeland, with an axe given to him by Christ himself. After seeing the power of their gods destroyed, the Prussians became Christian. According to the same sagas, Waidewut had twelve sons, after whom were named the districts of and adjoining Prussia. Some of these names are coincidentally and anachronistically linked to the names of leaders of other peoples, for example, the merchant leader Samo[?], known to us from the Chronicle of Fredegar[?] in the 7th century. Samo ruled from 622-658 in Moravia. Slavs had come to this area at the Morava river of Bohemia and the land was then called Moravia, and later Greater Moravia under the Frankish emperors.
More recent historiography posits the theory that Adalbert was murdered less for his opposition to "Prussian tradition" and more because he was believed to be a Polish spy. It should be pointed out that the story of the holy oak and its felling mimics closely the story of Saint Boniface felling the holy oak of the Saxons or the earlier Saint Martin of Tours felling a sacred oak in western France. It is possible that either the evangelist or the story-tellers imitated earlier examples.
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