The reconstruction of the ancient geography of Germania and neighboring Sarmatia has always resembled a complex puzzle, in which the written records of classical antiquity are often difficult to reconcile with the physical realities of modern topography. One of the most fascinating questions in this context concerns the identity of the island of Scandia, which Claudius Ptolemy describes in his Geographike Hyphegesis as a significant island east of the Cimbrian Peninsula.¹ Parallel to this exists the deeply rooted legend of Vineta, a magnificent city sunk in the sea along the Baltic coast, whose historical core is most commonly assumed to lie in the region of Wollin or Usedom.² ³ The scholarly challenge is to examine whether Scandia and Vineta refer to the same geographical feature, merely named differently from distinct ethnic perspectives. A central hypothesis here is that the Sarmatian or Scythian peoples of the east called the island Vineta (or a precursor thereof) because of the Veneti who lived there, while the local population of western Germania Magna used the name Scandia.⁴