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Alemanni

The Alemanni or Alamanni,[1][2] were a confederation of Germanic tribes[3] on the Upper Rhine River. First mentioned by Cassius Dio in the context of the campaign of Caracalla of 213, the Alemanni captured the Agri Decumates in 260, and later expanded into present-day Alsace, and northern Switzerland, leading to the establishment of the Old High German language in those regions, by the eighth century named Alamannia.[4]

Area settled by the Alemanni, and sites of Roman-Alemannic battles, third to sixth centuries

In 496, the Alemanni were conquered by Frankish leader Clovis and incorporated into his dominions. Mentioned as still pagan allies of the Christian Franks, the Alemanni were gradually Christianized during the seventh century. The Lex Alamannorum is a record of their customary law during this period. Until the eighth century, Frankish suzerainty over Alemannia was mostly nominal. After an uprising by Theudebald, Duke of Alamannia, though, Carloman executed the Alamannic nobility and installed Frankish dukes. During the later and weaker years of the Carolingian Empire, the Alemannic counts became almost independent, and a struggle for supremacy took place between them and the Bishopric of Constance. The chief family in Alamannia was that of the counts of Raetia Curiensis, who were sometimes called margraves, and one of whom, Burchard II, established the Duchy of Swabia, which was recognized by Henry the Fowler in 919 and became a stem duchy of the Holy Roman Empire.

The area settled by the Alemanni corresponds roughly to the area where Alemannic German dialects remain spoken, including German Swabia and Baden, French Alsace, German-speaking Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Austrian Vorarlberg.

The French language name of Germany, Allemagne, is derived from their name, from Old French aleman(t),[5] from French loaned into a number of other languages, including Middle English which commonly used the term Almains for Germans.[6][7] Likewise, the Arabic name for Germany is ألمانيا (Almania), the Turkish is Almanya, the Spanish is Alemania, the Portuguese is Alemanha, Welsh is Yr Almaen and Persian is آلمان (Alman).

Name

According to Gaius Asinius Quadratus (quoted in the mid-sixth century by Byzantine historian Agathias), the name Alamanni (Ἀλαμανοι) means "all men". It indicates that they were a conglomeration drawn from various Germanic tribes.[8] The Romans and the Greeks called them as such (Alamanni, all men, in the sense of a group composed of men of all groups in the region). This derivation was accepted by Edward Gibbon, in his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire[9] and by the anonymous contributor of notes assembled from the papers of Nicolas Fréret, published in 1753.[10] This etymology has remained the standard derivation of the name.[11] An alternative suggestion proposes derivation from *alah "sanctuary".[12]

Walafrid Strabo in the ninth century remarked, in discussing the people of Switzerland and the surrounding regions, that only foreigners called them the Alemanni, but that they gave themselves the name of Suebi.[13] The Suebi are given the alternative name of Ziuwari (as Cyuuari) in an Old High German gloss, interpreted by Jacob Grimm as Martem colentes ("worshippers of Mars").[14] Annio da Viterbo a scholar and historian of the 15th century claimed the Alemanni had their name from the hebrew language, as in hebrew the river Rhine was translated into Mannum and the people who live at its shores were called Alemannus.[15] This was refuted by Beatus Rhenanus, a humanist of the 16th century.[15] Rhenanus argued the term Alemanni was meant for the whole Germanic people only in late antiquity and before it was only meant to designate the population of an island in the North Sea.[15]

History

First appearance in historical record

 
Alamannia is shown beyond Silva Marciana (the Black Forest) in the Tabula Peutingeriana. Suevia is indicated separately, further downstream of the Rhine, beyond Silva Vosagus.
 
Alemannic belt mountings, from a seventh-century grave in the grave field at Weingarten

The Alemanni were first mentioned by Cassius Dio describing the campaign of Caracalla in 213. At that time, they apparently dwelt in the basin of the Main, to the south of the Chatti.[8]

Cassius Dio portrays the Alemanni as victims of this treacherous emperor.[16] They had asked for his help, according to Dio, but instead he colonized their country, changed their place names, and executed their warriors under a pretext of coming to their aid. When he became ill, the Alemanni claimed to have put a hex on him. Caracalla, it was claimed, tried to counter this influence by invoking his ancestral spirits.

In retribution, Caracalla then led the Legio II Traiana Fortis against the Alemanni, who lost and were pacified for a time. The legion was as a result honored with the name Germanica. The fourth-century fictional Historia Augusta, Life of Antoninus Caracalla, relates (10.5) that Caracalla then assumed the name Alemannicus, at which Helvius Pertinax jested that he should really be called Geticus Maximus, because in the year before he had murdered his brother, Geta.[17]

Through much of his short reign, Caracalla was known for unpredictable and arbitrary operations launched by surprise after a pretext of peace negotiations. If he had any reasons of state for such actions, they remained unknown to his contemporaries. Whether or not the Alemanni had been previously neutral, they were certainly further influenced by Caracalla to become thereafter notoriously implacable enemies of Rome.

This mutually antagonistic relationship is perhaps the reason why the Roman writers persisted in calling the Alemanni ”barbari," meaning "savages." The archaeology, however, shows that they were largely Romanized, lived in Roman-style houses and used Roman artifacts, the Alemannic women having adopted the Roman fashion of the tunica even earlier than the men.

Most of the Alemanni were probably at the time, in fact, resident in or close to the borders of Germania Superior. Although Dio is the earliest writer to mention them, Ammianus Marcellinus used the name to refer to Germans on the Limes Germanicus in the time of Trajan's governorship of the province shortly after it was formed, around 98-99 AD. At that time, the entire frontier was being fortified for the first time. Trees from the earliest fortifications found in Germania Inferior are dated by dendrochronology to 99-100 AD.

Ammianus relates () that much later the Emperor Julian undertook a punitive expedition against the Alemanni, who by then were in Alsace, and crossed the Main (Latin Menus), entering the forest, where the trails were blocked by felled trees. As winter was upon them, they reoccupied a "fortification which was founded on the soil of the Alemanni that Trajan wished to be called with his own name".[18]

In this context, the use of Alemanni is possibly an anachronism, but it reveals that Ammianus believed they were the same people, which is consistent with the location of the Alemanni of Caracalla's campaigns.

Alemanni and Hermunduri

Germania by Tacitus (AD 90) states[19] that the Hermunduri were a tribe certainly located in the region that later became Thuringia. Tacitus states that they traded with Rhaetia, which in Ptolemy is located across the Danube from Germania Superior, suggesting that the Alemanni originally in part derived from the Hermunduri.

However, no Hermunduri appear in Ptolemy, though after the time of Ptolemy, the Hermunduri joined with the Marcomanni in the wars of 166–180 against the empire. Tacitus says that the source of the Elbe is among the Hermunduri, somewhat to the east of the upper Main. He places them also between the Naristi (Varisti), whose location was at the very edge of the Black Forest, and the Marcomanni and Quadi. Moreover, the Hermunduri were broken in the Marcomannic Wars and made a separate peace with Rome. The Alemanni thus were probably not primarily the Hermunduri, although some elements of them may have been present.

Ptolemy's Geography

Before the mention of Alemanni in the time of Caracalla, one would search in vain for Alemanni in the moderately detailed geography of southern Germany in Claudius Ptolemy, written in Greek in the mid-second century; at that time, the people who later used that name likely were known by other designations.[20]

Nevertheless, some conclusions can be drawn from Ptolemy. Germania Superior is easily identified. Following up the Rhine one comes to a town, Mattiacum, which must be at the border of the Roman Germany (vicinity of Wiesbaden). Upstream from it and between the Rhine and Abnoba (in the Black Forest) are the Ingriones, Intuergi, Vangiones, Caritni and Vispi, some of whom were there since the days of the early empire or before. On the other side of the northern Black Forest were the Chatti about where Hesse is today, on the lower Main.

Historic Swabia was eventually replaced by today's Baden-Württemberg, but it had been the most significant territory of mediaeval Alamannia, comprising all Germania Superior and territory east to Bavaria. It did not include the upper Main, but that is where Caracalla campaigned. Moreover, the territory of Germania Superior was not originally included among the Alemanni's possessions.

However, if one looks for the peoples in the region from the upper Main in the north, south to the Danube and east to the Czech Republic where the Quadi and Marcomanni were located, Ptolemy does not give any tribes. The Tubanti are just south of the Chatti and at the other end of what was then the Black Forest, the Varisti, whose location is known. One possible reason for this distribution is that the population preferred not to live in the forest except in troubled times. The region between the forest and the Danube, though, included about a dozen settlements, or "cantons".

Ptolemy's view of Germans in the region indicates that the tribal structure had lost its grip in the Black Forest region and was replaced by a canton structure. The tribes stayed in the Roman province, perhaps because the Romans offered stability. Also, Caracalla perhaps[citation needed] felt more comfortable about campaigning in the upper Main because he was not declaring war on any specific historic tribe, such as the Chatti or Cherusci, against whom Rome had suffered grievous losses. By Caracalla's time, the name Alemanni was being used by cantons themselves banding together for purposes of supporting a citizen army (the "war bands").

Concentration of Germanic peoples under Ariovistus

The term Suebi has a double meaning in the sources. On the one hand Tacitus' Germania tells us (Chapters 38, 39) that they occupy more than half of Germany, use a distinctive hairstyle, and are spiritually centered on the Semnones. On the other hand, the Suebi of the upper Danube are described as though they were a tribe.

The solution to the puzzle as well as explaining the historical circumstances leading to the choice of the Agri Decumates as a defensive point and the concentration of Germans there are probably to be found in the German attack on the Gallic fortified town of Vesontio in 58 BC. The upper Rhine and Danube appear to form a funnel pointing straight at Vesontio.

Julius Caesar in Gallic Wars tells us (1.51) that Ariovistus had gathered an army from a wide region of Germany, but especially the Harudes, Marcomanni, Triboci, Vangiones, Nemetes and Sedusii. The Suebi were being invited to join. They lived in 100 cantons (4.1) from which 1000 young men per year were chosen for military service, a citizen-army by our standards and by comparison with the Roman professional army.

Ariovistus had become involved in an invasion of Gaul, which the German wished to settle. Intending to take the strategic town of Vesontio, he concentrated his forces on the Rhine near Lake Constance, and when the Suebi arrived, he crossed. The Gauls had called to Rome for military aid. Caesar occupied the town first and defeated the Germans before its walls, slaughtering most of the German army as it tried to flee across the river (1.36ff). He did not pursue the retreating remnants, leaving what was left of the German army and their dependents intact on the other side of the Rhine.

The Gauls were ambivalent in their policies toward the Romans. In 53 BC the Treveri broke their alliance and attempted to break free of Rome. Caesar foresaw that they would now attempt to ally themselves with the Germans. He crossed the Rhine to forestall that event, a successful strategy. Remembering their expensive defeat at the Battle of Vesontio, the Germans withdrew to the Black Forest, concentrating there a mixed population dominated by Suebi. As they had left their tribal homes behind, they probably took over all the former Celtic cantons along the Danube.

Conflicts with the Roman Empire

 
The Limes Germanicus 83 to 260 CE.

The Alemanni were continually engaged in conflicts with the Roman Empire in the third and fourth centuries. They launched a major invasion of Gaul and northern Italy in 268, when the Romans were forced to denude much of their German frontier of troops in response to a massive invasion of the Goths from the east. Their raids throughout the three parts of Gaul were traumatic: Gregory of Tours (died ca 594) mentions their destructive force at the time of Valerian and Gallienus (253–260), when the Alemanni assembled under their "king", whom he calls Chrocus, who acted "by the advice, it is said, of his wicked mother, and overran the whole of the Gauls, and destroyed from their foundations all the temples which had been built in ancient times. And coming to Clermont he set on fire, overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue," martyring many Christians (Historia Francorum Book I.32–34). Thus sixth-century Gallo-Romans of Gregory's class, surrounded by the ruins of Roman temples and public buildings, attributed the destruction they saw to the plundering raids of the Alemanni.

In the early summer of 268, the Emperor Gallienus halted their advance into Italy, but then had to deal with the Goths. When the Gothic campaign ended in Roman victory at the Battle of Naissus in September, Gallienus' successor Claudius Gothicus turned north to deal with the Alemanni, who were swarming over all Italy north of the Po River.

After efforts to secure a peaceful withdrawal failed, Claudius forced the Alemanni to battle at the Battle of Lake Benacus in November. The Alemanni were routed, forced back into Germany, and did not threaten Roman territory for many years afterwards.

Their most famous battle against Rome took place in Argentoratum (Strasbourg), in 357, where they were defeated by Julian, later Emperor of Rome, and their king Chnodomarius was taken prisoner to Rome.[8]

On January 2, 366, the Alemanni yet again crossed the frozen Rhine in large numbers, to invade the Gallic provinces, this time being defeated by Valentinian (see Battle of Solicinium). In the great mixed invasion of 406, the Alemanni appear to have crossed the Rhine river a final time, conquering and then settling what is today Alsace and a large part of the Swiss Plateau.[8] The crossing is described in Wallace Breem's historical novel Eagle in the Snow. The Chronicle of Fredegar gives the account. At Alba Augusta (Alba-la-Romaine) the devastation was so complete, that the Christian bishop retired to Viviers, but in Gregory's account at Mende in Lozère, also deep in the heart of Gaul, bishop Privatus was forced to sacrifice to idols in the very cave where he was later venerated.[citation needed] It is thought[citation needed] this detail may be a generic literary ploy to epitomize the horrors of barbarian violence.

List of battles between Romans and Alemanni

 
Europe at the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD.

Subjugation by the Franks

 
Alemannia (yellow) and Upper Burgundy (green) around 1000.

The kingdom of Alamannia between Strasbourg and Augsburg lasted until 496, when the Alemanni were conquered by Clovis I at the Battle of Tolbiac. The war of Clovis with the Alemanni forms the setting for the conversion of Clovis, briefly treated by Gregory of Tours. (Book II.31) After their defeat in 496, the Alemanni bucked the Frankish yoke and put themselves under the protection of Theodoric the Great of the Ostrogoths[21] but after his death they were again subjugated by the Franks under Theudebert I in 536.[22] Subsequently, the Alemanni formed part of the Frankish dominions and were governed by a Frankish duke.

In 746, Carloman ended an uprising by summarily executing all Alemannic nobility at the blood court at Cannstatt, and for the following century, Alemannia was ruled by Frankish dukes. Following the treaty of Verdun of 843, Alemannia became a province of the eastern kingdom of Louis the German, the precursor of the Holy Roman Empire. The duchy persisted until 1268.

Culture

Language

 
The traditional distribution area of Western Upper German (Alemannic) dialect features in the 19th and 20th centuries

The German spoken today over the range of the former Alemanni is termed Alemannic German, and is recognised among the subgroups of the High German languages. Alemannic runic inscriptions such as those on the Pforzen buckle are among the earliest testimonies of Old High German. The High German consonant shift is thought to have originated around the fifth century either in Alemannia or among the Lombards; before that the dialect spoken by Alemannic tribes was little different from that of other West Germanic peoples.[23]

Alemannia lost its distinct jurisdictional identity when Charles Martel absorbed it into the Frankish empire, early in the eighth century. Today, Alemannic is a linguistic term, referring to Alemannic German, encompassing the dialects of the southern two thirds of Baden-Württemberg (German State), in western Bavaria (German State), in Vorarlberg (Austrian State), Swiss German in Switzerland and the Alsatian language of the Alsace (France).

Political organization

The Alemanni established a series of territorially defined pagi (cantons) on the east bank of the Rhine. The exact number and extent of these pagi is unclear and probably changed over time.

Pagi, usually pairs of pagi combined, formed kingdoms (regna) which, it is generally believed, were permanent and hereditary. Ammianus describes Alemanni rulers with various terms: reges excelsiores ante alios ("paramount kings"), reges proximi ("neighbouring kings"), reguli ("petty kings") and regales ("princes"). This may be a formal hierarchy, or they may be vague, overlapping terms, or a combination of both.[24] In 357, there appear to have been two paramount kings (Chnodomar and Westralp) who probably acted as presidents of the confederation and seven other kings (reges). Their territories were small and mostly strung along the Rhine (although a few were in the hinterland).[25] It is possible that the reguli were the rulers of the two pagi in each kingdom. Underneath the royal class were the nobles (called optimates by the Romans) and warriors (called armati by the Romans). The warriors consisted of professional warbands and levies of free men.[26] Each nobleman could raise an average of c. 50 warriors.[27]

Religion

 
The gold bracteate of Pliezhausen (sixth or seventh century) shows typical iconography of the pagan period. The bracteate depicts the "horse-stabber underhoof" scene, a supine warrior stabbing a horse while it runs over him. The scene is adapted from Roman era gravestones of the region.[28]
 
The seventh-century Gutenstein scabbard, found near Sigmaringen, Baden-Württemberg, is a late testimony of pagan ritual in Alemannia, showing a warrior in ritual wolf costume, holding a ring-spatha.

The Christianization of the Alemanni took place during Merovingian times (sixth to eighth centuries). We know that in the sixth century, the Alemanni were predominantly pagan, and in the eighth century, they were predominantly Christian. The intervening seventh century was a period of genuine syncretism during which Christian symbolism and doctrine gradually grew in influence.

Some scholars have speculated that members of the Alemannic elite such as king Gibuld due to Visigothic influence may have been converted to Arianism even in the later fifth century.[29]

In the mid-6th century, the Byzantine historian Agathias records, in the context of the wars of the Goths and Franks against Byzantium, that the Alemanni fighting among the troops of Frankish king Theudebald were like the Franks in all respects except religion, since

they worship certain trees, the waters of rivers, hills and mountain valleys, in whose honour they sacrifice horses, cattle and countless other animals by beheading them, and imagine that they are performing an act of piety thereby.[30]

He also spoke of the particular ruthlessness of the Alemanni in destroying Christian sanctuaries and plundering churches while the genuine Franks were respectful towards those sanctuaries. Agathias expresses his hope that the Alemanni would assume better manners through prolonged contact with the Franks, which is by all appearances, in a manner of speaking, what eventually happened.[31]

Apostles of the Alemanni were Columbanus and his disciple Saint Gall. Jonas of Bobbio records that Columbanus was active in Bregenz, where he disrupted a beer sacrifice to Wodan. Despite these activities, for some time, the Alemanni seem to have continued their pagan cult activities, with only superficial or syncretistic Christian elements. In particular, there is no change in burial practice, and tumulus warrior graves continued to be erected throughout Merovingian times. Syncretism of traditional Germanic animal-style with Christian symbolism is also present in artwork, but Christian symbolism becomes more and more prevalent during the seventh century. Unlike the later Christianization of the Saxons and of the Slavs, the Alemanni seem to have adopted Christianity gradually, and voluntarily, spread in emulation of the Merovingian elite.

From c. the 520s to the 620s, there was a surge of Alemannic Elder Futhark inscriptions. About 70 specimens have survived, roughly half of them on fibulae, others on belt buckles (see Pforzen buckle, Bülach fibula) and other jewelry and weapon parts. Use of runes subsides with the advance of Christianity. The Nordendorf fibula (early seventh century) clearly records pagan theonyms, logaþorewodanwigiþonar read as "Wodan and Donar are magicians/sorcerers", but this may be interpreted as either a pagan invocation of the powers of these deities, or a Christian protective charm against them.[32] A runic inscription on a fibula found at Bad Ems reflects Christian pious sentiment (and is also explicitly marked with a Christian cross), reading god fura dih deofile ᛭ ("God for/before you, Theophilus!", or alternatively "God before you, Devil!"). Dated to between AD 660 and 690, it marks the end of the native Alemannic tradition of runic literacy. Bad Ems is in Rhineland-Palatinate, on the northwestern boundary of Alemannic settlement, where Frankish influence would have been strongest.[33]

The establishment of the bishopric of Konstanz cannot be dated exactly and was possibly undertaken by Columbanus himself (before 612). In any case, it existed by 635, when Gunzo appointed John of Grab bishop. Constance was a missionary bishopric in newly converted lands, and did not look back on late Roman church history unlike the Raetian bishopric of Chur (established 451) and Basel (an episcopal seat from 740, and which continued the line of Bishops of Augusta Raurica, see Bishop of Basel). The establishment of the church as an institution recognized by worldly rulers is also visible in legal history. In the early seventh century Pactus Alamannorum hardly ever mentions the special privileges of the church, while Lantfrid's Lex Alamannorum of 720 has an entire chapter reserved for ecclesial matters alone.

Genetics

A genetic study published in Science Advances in September 2018 examined the remains of eight individuals buried at a seventh-century Alemannic graveyard in Niederstotzingen, Germany. This is the richest and most complete Alemannic graveyard ever found. The highest ranking individual at the graveyard was a male with Frankish grave goods. Four males were found to be closely related to him. They were all carriers of types of the paternal haplogroup R1b1a2a1a1c2b2b. A sixth male was a carrier of the paternal haplogroup R1b1a2a1a1c2b2b1a1 and the maternal haplogroup U5a1a1. Along with the five closely related individuals, he displayed close genetic links to northern and eastern Europe, particularly Lithuania and Iceland. Two individuals buried at the cemetery were found to be genetically different from both the others and each other, displaying genetic links to Southern Europe, particularly northern Italy and Spain. Along with the sixth male, they might have been adoptees or slaves.[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ The spelling with "e" is used in Encyc. Brit. 9th. ed., (c. 1880), Everyman's Encyc. 1967, Everyman's Smaller Classical Dictionary, 1910. The current edition of Britannica spells with "e", as does Columbia and Edward Gibbon, Vol. 3, Chapter XXXVIII. The Latinized spelling with a is current in older literature (so in the 1911 Britannica), but remains in use e.g. in Wood (2003), Drinkwater (2007).
  2. ^ The Alemanni were alternatively known as Suebi from about the fifth century, and that name became prevalent in the high medieval period, eponymous of the Duchy of Swabia. The name is taken from that of the Suebi mentioned by Julius Caesar, and although these older Suebi did likely contribute to the ethnogenesis of the Alemanni, there is no direct connection to the contemporary Kingdom of the Suebi in Galicia.
  3. ^
    • Drinkwater, John Frederick (2012). "Alamanni". In Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony; Eidinow, Esther (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4 ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0191735257. Retrieved January 26, 2020. Alamanni (Alemanni), a loose concentration of Germanic communities...
    • Hitchner, R. Bruce (2005). "Goths". In Kazhdan, Alexander P. (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195187922. Retrieved January 26, 2020. Alemanni... the Latin term for an amalgamation of a number of smaller Germanic tribes, including a segment of the Suevi.
    • Darvill, Timothy, ed. (2009). "Alamanni". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology (3 ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0191727139. Retrieved January 25, 2020. Alamanni. A confederation of several Germanic tribes who amalgamated in the third century AD
  4. ^ in pago Almanniae 762, in pago Alemannorum 797, urbs Constantia in ducatu Alemanniae 797; in ducatu Alemannico, in pago Linzgowe 873. From the ninth century, Alamannia is increasingly used of the Alsace specifically, while the Alamannic territory in generally is increasingly called Suebia; by the 12th century, the name Suebia had mostly replaced Alamannia. S. Hirzel, Forschungen zur Deutschen Landeskunde 6 (1888), p. 299.
  5. ^ recorded as aleman in c. 1100, and with final dental, alemant or alemand, from c. 1160. Trésor de la Langue Française informatisé s.v. allemand.
  6. ^ F.C. and J. Rivington, T. Payne, Wilkie and Robinson: The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng, 1812, p. 99.
  7. ^ H. Kurath: Middle English Dictionary, part 14, University of Michigan Press, 1952, 1345.
  8. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alamanni". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 468.
  9. ^ Edward Gibbon. "Chapter 10". Ccel.org. Retrieved 2012-01-02.
  10. ^ Histoire de l'Académie Royale des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, avec les Mémoires de Littérature tirés des Registres de cette Académie, depuis l'année MDCCXLIV jusques et compris l'année MDCCXLVI, vol. XVIII, (Paris 1753) pp. 49–71. Excerpts are on-line at ELIOHS.
  11. ^ It is cited in most etymological dictionaries, such as the American Heritage Dictionary (large edition) under the root, *man- 2006-05-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ "the name is possibly Alahmannen, 'men of the sanctuary'" Inglis Palgrave (ed.), The Collected Historical Works of Sir Francis Palgrave, K.H. (1919), p. 443 (citing: "Bury's ed. of Gibbon (Methuen), vol. I [1902], p. 278 note; H. M. Chadwick, Origin of the English Nation [1907]").
  13. ^ Igitur quia mixti Alamannis Suevi, partem Germaniae ultra Danubium, partem Raetiae inter Alpes et Histrum, partemque Galliae circa Ararim obsederunt; antiquorum vocabulorum veritate servata, ab incolis nomen patriae derivemus, et Alamanniam vel Sueviam nominemus. Nam cum duo sint vocabula unam gentem significantia, priori nomine nos appellant circumpositae gentes, quae Latinum habent sermonem; sequenti, usus nos nuncupat barbarorum. Walafrid Strabo, Proleg. ad Vit. S. Galli (833/4) ed. Migne (1852); Thomas Greenwood, The First Book of the History of the Germans: Barbaric Period (1836), p. 498.
  14. ^ Rudolf Much, Der germanische Himmelsgott (1898), p. 192.
  15. ^ a b c Popper, Nicholas S. (2023), Roos, Anna Marie; Manning, Gideon (eds.), "Planks from a Shipwreck: Belief and Evidence in Sixteenth-Century Histories", Collected Wisdom of the Early Modern Scholar: Essays in Honor of Mordechai Feingold, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 141–142, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-09722-5_7, ISBN 978-3-031-09722-5, retrieved 2023-01-04
  16. ^ "Cassius Dio: Roman History". University of Chicago.
  17. ^ "Historia Augusta: The Life of Antoninus Caracalla". University of Chicago.
  18. ^ munimentum quod in Alamannorum solo conditum Traianus suo nomine voluit appellari.
  19. ^ Tacitus. "Tacitus: Germany Book 1". Chapter 42. Retrieved 25 October 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  20. ^ Ptolemy's description has some limitations. Upper Germany and Lower Germany are mentioned by name, but only as specific districts of Gallia Belgica (2.8), the border between them was an unidentified river, the Obruncus. The region is repeated again under Germany, but this time he does not list Roman boundaries. Germania Superior, the Agri Decumates and the limes are not to be found there, though they certainly existed at the time. "Germania Magna" is found within the Rhine, Danube, Vistula and shores of the "Oceanus Germanicus". Most of the tribes are missing or listed without name. The Main is not there, nor is Lake Constance. The Danube runs from the Alps. The Rhine does not bend to the south next to Swabia. Ptolemy's Germania is like a surreal image of itself, accurate only if certain known lines are followed, but the overall shape is greatly distorted.
  21. ^ Jonathan J. Arnold (2016). A Companion to Ostrogothic Italy. Brill. p. 93. ISBN 978-9004313767.
  22. ^ Ian Wood (1998). Franks and Alamanni in the Merovingian Period: An Ethnographic Perspective. The Boydell Press. p. 33. ISBN 0851157238.
  23. ^ "Alamanni/Alemanni (= Suebi/Suevi, Semnones) | Freyia Völundarhúsins" (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  24. ^ Drinkwater (2007) 118, 120
  25. ^ Drinkwater (2007) 223 (map)
  26. ^ Speidel (2004)
  27. ^ Drinkwater (2007) 120
  28. ^ Michael Speidel, Ancient Germanic warriors: warrior styles from Trajan's column to Icelandic sagas, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 978-0415311991, p. 162. Harald Kleinschmidt, People on the move: attitudes toward and perceptions of migration in medieval and modern Europe, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, ISBN 978-0275974176, p. 66.
  29. ^ Schubert, Hans (1909). Das älteste germanische Christentum oder der Sogenannte "Arianismus" der Germanen. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr. p. 32. Cf. also Bossert, G. "Alemanni" in: Jackson, S.M. (Ed.). New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Vol. 1, p. 114: "[the Alamannic] prince, Gibuld, was an Arian, probably converted by Goths".
  30. ^ Murinaeus, Agathias; Scholasticus, Agathias; Agathias (1975). trans. Joseph D. Frendo (1975). ISBN 978-3110033571. Retrieved 2012-01-02.
  31. ^ R. Keydell, Agathiae Myrinaei historiarum libri quinque Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae. Series Berolinensis 2. Berlin: De Gruyter, 1967, p. 18f. 7. Νόμιμα δὲ αὐτοῖς [τῶν Ἀλαμανῶν ἔθνος] εἰσι μέν που καὶ πάτρια, τὸ δέ γε ἐν κοινῷ ἐπικρατοῦν τε καὶ ἄρχον τῇ Φραγγικῇ ἕπονται πολιτείᾳ, μόνα δέ γε τὰ ἐς (5) θεὸν αὐτοῖς οὐ ταὐτὰ ξυνδοκεῖ. δένδρα τε γάρ τινα ἱλάσκονται καὶ ῥεῖθρα ποταμῶν καὶ λόφους καὶ φάραγγας, καὶ τούτοις, ὥσπερ ὅσια δρῶντες, ἵππους τε καὶ βόας καὶ ἄλλα ἄττα μυρία καρατομοῦντες ἐπιθειάζουσιν. 2 ἀλλὰ γὰρ ἡ τῶν Φράγγων αὐτοὺς ἐπιμιξία, εnὖ ποιοῦσα, καὶ ἐς τόδε μετακοσμεῖ καὶ ἤδη ἐφέλκεται τοὺς εὐφρονεστέρους, οὐ πολλοῦ δὲ οἶμαι (10) χρόνου καὶ ἅπασιν ἐκνικήσει. 3 τὸ γὰρ τῆς δόξης παράλογόν τε καὶ ἔμπληκτον καὶ αὐτοῖς οἶμαι τοῖς χρωμένοις, εἰ μὴ πάμπαν εἶεν ἠλίθιοι, γνώριμόν τέ ἐστι καὶ εὐφώρατον καὶ οἶον ἀποσβῆναι ῥᾳδίως. ἐλεεῖσθαι μὲν οὖν μᾶλλον ἢ χαλεπαίνεσθαι δίκαιοι ἂν εἶεν καὶ πλείστης μεταλαγχάνειν συγγνώμης ἅπαντες, ὅσοι δὴ τοῦ ἀληθοῦς ἁμαρτάνουσιν. οὐ γὰρ (15) δήπου ἑκόντες εἶναι ἀλῶνται καὶ ὀλισθαίνουσιν, ἀλλὰ τοῦ ἀγαθοῦ ἐφιέμενοι, ἔπειτα σφαλέντες τῇ κρίσει τὸ λοιπὸν ἔχονται τῶν δοκηθέντων ἀπρίξ, ὁποῖα ἄττα καὶ τύχοιεν ὄντα. 4 τήν γε μὴν τῶν θυσιῶν ὠμότητα καὶ κακοδαιμονίαν οὐκ οἶδα εἰ οἷόν τε λόγῳ ἀκέσασθαι, εἴτε ἄλσεσιν ἐπιτελοῖντο ὥσπερ ἀμέλει παρὰ βαρβάροις, εἴτε τοῖς πάλαι νενομισμέ-(20)νοις θεοῖς, ὁποῖα αἱ τῶν Ἑλλήνων ἐθέλουσιν ἁγιστεῖαι.
  32. ^ Düwel, Klaus (1982). "Runen und Interpretatio Christiana: Zur Religioneschichtlichen Stellung der Bügelfidel von Nordendorf I". In Kamp, Norbert; Wollasch, Joachim (eds.). Tradition als Historische Kraft. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 78–86. ISBN 3110082373.
  33. ^ Wolfgang Jungandreas, 'God fura dih, deofile †' in: Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur, 101, 1972, pp. 84–85.
  34. ^ O’Sullivan et al. 2018: "Genome-wide analyses were performed on eight individuals to estimate genetic affiliation to modern west Eurasians and genetic kinship at the burial. Five individuals were direct relatives. Three other individuals were not detectably related; two of these showed genomic affinity to southern Europeans... These five related individuals had culturally diverse grave goods despite the evidence that all of them showed local isotope signals with northern European genetic affiliations... Niederstotzingen North individuals are closely related to northern and eastern European populations, particularly from Lithuania and Iceland."

Sources

  • Ammianus Marcellinus, passim
  • O. Bremer in H. Paul, Grundriss der germanischen Philologie (2nd ed., Strassburg, 1900), vol. iii. pp. 930 ff.
  • Dio Cassius lxvii. ff.
  • Drinkwater, John F. (2007). The Alamanni and Rome 213–496. Caracalla to Clovis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-929568-5.
  • Ian Wood (ed.), Franks and Alamanni in the Merovingian Period: An Ethnographic Perspective (Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology), Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2003, ISBN 1-84383-035-3.
  • Melchior Goldast, Rerum Alamannicarum scriptores (1606, 2nd ed. Senckenburg 1730)
  • Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum, book ii.
  • O’Sullivan, Niall; et al. (September 5, 2018). "Ancient genome-wide analyses infer kinship structure in an Early Medieval Alemannic graveyard". Science Advances. American Association for the Advancement of Science. 4 (9): eaao1262. Bibcode:2018SciA....4.1262O. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aao1262. PMC 6124919. PMID 30191172.
  • C. Zeuss, Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstämme (Munich, 1837), pp. 303 ff.

External links

  Media related to Alamanni at Wikimedia Commons

  • The Agri Decumates
  • Brauchtum und Masken Alemannic Fastnacht 2017-06-06 at the Wayback Machine

alemanni, people, with, name, alamanni, surname, alamanni, were, confederation, germanic, tribes, upper, rhine, river, first, mentioned, cassius, context, campaign, caracalla, captured, agri, decumates, later, expanded, into, present, alsace, northern, switzer. For people with the name see Alamanni surname The Alemanni or Alamanni 1 2 were a confederation of Germanic tribes 3 on the Upper Rhine River First mentioned by Cassius Dio in the context of the campaign of Caracalla of 213 the Alemanni captured the Agri Decumates in 260 and later expanded into present day Alsace and northern Switzerland leading to the establishment of the Old High German language in those regions by the eighth century named Alamannia 4 Area settled by the Alemanni and sites of Roman Alemannic battles third to sixth centuries In 496 the Alemanni were conquered by Frankish leader Clovis and incorporated into his dominions Mentioned as still pagan allies of the Christian Franks the Alemanni were gradually Christianized during the seventh century The Lex Alamannorum is a record of their customary law during this period Until the eighth century Frankish suzerainty over Alemannia was mostly nominal After an uprising by Theudebald Duke of Alamannia though Carloman executed the Alamannic nobility and installed Frankish dukes During the later and weaker years of the Carolingian Empire the Alemannic counts became almost independent and a struggle for supremacy took place between them and the Bishopric of Constance The chief family in Alamannia was that of the counts of Raetia Curiensis who were sometimes called margraves and one of whom Burchard II established the Duchy of Swabia which was recognized by Henry the Fowler in 919 and became a stem duchy of the Holy Roman Empire The area settled by the Alemanni corresponds roughly to the area where Alemannic German dialects remain spoken including German Swabia and Baden French Alsace German speaking Switzerland Liechtenstein and Austrian Vorarlberg The French language name of Germany Allemagne is derived from their name from Old French aleman t 5 from French loaned into a number of other languages including Middle English which commonly used the term Almains for Germans 6 7 Likewise the Arabic name for Germany is ألمانيا Almania the Turkish is Almanya the Spanish is Alemania the Portuguese is Alemanha Welsh is Yr Almaen and Persian is آلمان Alman Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 First appearance in historical record 2 2 Alemanni and Hermunduri 2 3 Ptolemy s Geography 2 4 Concentration of Germanic peoples under Ariovistus 2 5 Conflicts with the Roman Empire 2 5 1 List of battles between Romans and Alemanni 2 6 Subjugation by the Franks 3 Culture 3 1 Language 3 2 Political organization 3 3 Religion 4 Genetics 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksName EditFurther information Suebi Etymology According to Gaius Asinius Quadratus quoted in the mid sixth century by Byzantine historian Agathias the name Alamanni Ἀlamanoi means all men It indicates that they were a conglomeration drawn from various Germanic tribes 8 The Romans and the Greeks called them as such Alamanni all men in the sense of a group composed of men of all groups in the region This derivation was accepted by Edward Gibbon in his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 9 and by the anonymous contributor of notes assembled from the papers of Nicolas Freret published in 1753 10 This etymology has remained the standard derivation of the name 11 An alternative suggestion proposes derivation from alah sanctuary 12 Walafrid Strabo in the ninth century remarked in discussing the people of Switzerland and the surrounding regions that only foreigners called them the Alemanni but that they gave themselves the name of Suebi 13 The Suebi are given the alternative name of Ziuwari as Cyuuari in an Old High German gloss interpreted by Jacob Grimm as Martem colentes worshippers of Mars 14 Annio da Viterbo a scholar and historian of the 15th century claimed the Alemanni had their name from the hebrew language as in hebrew the river Rhine was translated into Mannum and the people who live at its shores were called Alemannus 15 This was refuted by Beatus Rhenanus a humanist of the 16th century 15 Rhenanus argued the term Alemanni was meant for the whole Germanic people only in late antiquity and before it was only meant to designate the population of an island in the North Sea 15 History EditFirst appearance in historical record Edit Alamannia is shown beyond Silva Marciana the Black Forest in the Tabula Peutingeriana Suevia is indicated separately further downstream of the Rhine beyond Silva Vosagus Alemannic belt mountings from a seventh century grave in the grave field at Weingarten The Alemanni were first mentioned by Cassius Dio describing the campaign of Caracalla in 213 At that time they apparently dwelt in the basin of the Main to the south of the Chatti 8 Cassius Dio portrays the Alemanni as victims of this treacherous emperor 16 They had asked for his help according to Dio but instead he colonized their country changed their place names and executed their warriors under a pretext of coming to their aid When he became ill the Alemanni claimed to have put a hex on him Caracalla it was claimed tried to counter this influence by invoking his ancestral spirits In retribution Caracalla then led the Legio II Traiana Fortis against the Alemanni who lost and were pacified for a time The legion was as a result honored with the name Germanica The fourth century fictional Historia Augusta Life of Antoninus Caracalla relates 10 5 that Caracalla then assumed the name Alemannicus at which Helvius Pertinax jested that he should really be called Geticus Maximus because in the year before he had murdered his brother Geta 17 Through much of his short reign Caracalla was known for unpredictable and arbitrary operations launched by surprise after a pretext of peace negotiations If he had any reasons of state for such actions they remained unknown to his contemporaries Whether or not the Alemanni had been previously neutral they were certainly further influenced by Caracalla to become thereafter notoriously implacable enemies of Rome This mutually antagonistic relationship is perhaps the reason why the Roman writers persisted in calling the Alemanni barbari meaning savages The archaeology however shows that they were largely Romanized lived in Roman style houses and used Roman artifacts the Alemannic women having adopted the Roman fashion of the tunica even earlier than the men Most of the Alemanni were probably at the time in fact resident in or close to the borders of Germania Superior Although Dio is the earliest writer to mention them Ammianus Marcellinus used the name to refer to Germans on the Limes Germanicus in the time of Trajan s governorship of the province shortly after it was formed around 98 99 AD At that time the entire frontier was being fortified for the first time Trees from the earliest fortifications found in Germania Inferior are dated by dendrochronology to 99 100 AD Ammianus relates xvii 1 11 that much later the Emperor Julian undertook a punitive expedition against the Alemanni who by then were in Alsace and crossed the Main Latin Menus entering the forest where the trails were blocked by felled trees As winter was upon them they reoccupied a fortification which was founded on the soil of the Alemanni that Trajan wished to be called with his own name 18 In this context the use of Alemanni is possibly an anachronism but it reveals that Ammianus believed they were the same people which is consistent with the location of the Alemanni of Caracalla s campaigns Alemanni and Hermunduri Edit Germania by Tacitus AD 90 states 19 that the Hermunduri were a tribe certainly located in the region that later became Thuringia Tacitus states that they traded with Rhaetia which in Ptolemy is located across the Danube from Germania Superior suggesting that the Alemanni originally in part derived from the Hermunduri However no Hermunduri appear in Ptolemy though after the time of Ptolemy the Hermunduri joined with the Marcomanni in the wars of 166 180 against the empire Tacitus says that the source of the Elbe is among the Hermunduri somewhat to the east of the upper Main He places them also between the Naristi Varisti whose location was at the very edge of the Black Forest and the Marcomanni and Quadi Moreover the Hermunduri were broken in the Marcomannic Wars and made a separate peace with Rome The Alemanni thus were probably not primarily the Hermunduri although some elements of them may have been present Ptolemy s Geography Edit Before the mention of Alemanni in the time of Caracalla one would search in vain for Alemanni in the moderately detailed geography of southern Germany in Claudius Ptolemy written in Greek in the mid second century at that time the people who later used that name likely were known by other designations 20 Nevertheless some conclusions can be drawn from Ptolemy Germania Superior is easily identified Following up the Rhine one comes to a town Mattiacum which must be at the border of the Roman Germany vicinity of Wiesbaden Upstream from it and between the Rhine and Abnoba in the Black Forest are the Ingriones Intuergi Vangiones Caritni and Vispi some of whom were there since the days of the early empire or before On the other side of the northern Black Forest were the Chatti about where Hesse is today on the lower Main Historic Swabia was eventually replaced by today s Baden Wurttemberg but it had been the most significant territory of mediaeval Alamannia comprising all Germania Superior and territory east to Bavaria It did not include the upper Main but that is where Caracalla campaigned Moreover the territory of Germania Superior was not originally included among the Alemanni s possessions However if one looks for the peoples in the region from the upper Main in the north south to the Danube and east to the Czech Republic where the Quadi and Marcomanni were located Ptolemy does not give any tribes The Tubanti are just south of the Chatti and at the other end of what was then the Black Forest the Varisti whose location is known One possible reason for this distribution is that the population preferred not to live in the forest except in troubled times The region between the forest and the Danube though included about a dozen settlements or cantons Ptolemy s view of Germans in the region indicates that the tribal structure had lost its grip in the Black Forest region and was replaced by a canton structure The tribes stayed in the Roman province perhaps because the Romans offered stability Also Caracalla perhaps citation needed felt more comfortable about campaigning in the upper Main because he was not declaring war on any specific historic tribe such as the Chatti or Cherusci against whom Rome had suffered grievous losses By Caracalla s time the name Alemanni was being used by cantons themselves banding together for purposes of supporting a citizen army the war bands Concentration of Germanic peoples under Ariovistus Edit The term Suebi has a double meaning in the sources On the one hand Tacitus Germania tells us Chapters 38 39 that they occupy more than half of Germany use a distinctive hairstyle and are spiritually centered on the Semnones On the other hand the Suebi of the upper Danube are described as though they were a tribe The solution to the puzzle as well as explaining the historical circumstances leading to the choice of the Agri Decumates as a defensive point and the concentration of Germans there are probably to be found in the German attack on the Gallic fortified town of Vesontio in 58 BC The upper Rhine and Danube appear to form a funnel pointing straight at Vesontio Julius Caesar in Gallic Wars tells us 1 51 that Ariovistus had gathered an army from a wide region of Germany but especially the Harudes Marcomanni Triboci Vangiones Nemetes and Sedusii The Suebi were being invited to join They lived in 100 cantons 4 1 from which 1000 young men per year were chosen for military service a citizen army by our standards and by comparison with the Roman professional army Ariovistus had become involved in an invasion of Gaul which the German wished to settle Intending to take the strategic town of Vesontio he concentrated his forces on the Rhine near Lake Constance and when the Suebi arrived he crossed The Gauls had called to Rome for military aid Caesar occupied the town first and defeated the Germans before its walls slaughtering most of the German army as it tried to flee across the river 1 36ff He did not pursue the retreating remnants leaving what was left of the German army and their dependents intact on the other side of the Rhine The Gauls were ambivalent in their policies toward the Romans In 53 BC the Treveri broke their alliance and attempted to break free of Rome Caesar foresaw that they would now attempt to ally themselves with the Germans He crossed the Rhine to forestall that event a successful strategy Remembering their expensive defeat at the Battle of Vesontio the Germans withdrew to the Black Forest concentrating there a mixed population dominated by Suebi As they had left their tribal homes behind they probably took over all the former Celtic cantons along the Danube Conflicts with the Roman Empire Edit The Limes Germanicus 83 to 260 CE The Alemanni were continually engaged in conflicts with the Roman Empire in the third and fourth centuries They launched a major invasion of Gaul and northern Italy in 268 when the Romans were forced to denude much of their German frontier of troops in response to a massive invasion of the Goths from the east Their raids throughout the three parts of Gaul were traumatic Gregory of Tours died ca 594 mentions their destructive force at the time of Valerian and Gallienus 253 260 when the Alemanni assembled under their king whom he calls Chrocus who acted by the advice it is said of his wicked mother and overran the whole of the Gauls and destroyed from their foundations all the temples which had been built in ancient times And coming to Clermont he set on fire overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue martyring many Christians Historia Francorum Book I 32 34 Thus sixth century Gallo Romans of Gregory s class surrounded by the ruins of Roman temples and public buildings attributed the destruction they saw to the plundering raids of the Alemanni In the early summer of 268 the Emperor Gallienus halted their advance into Italy but then had to deal with the Goths When the Gothic campaign ended in Roman victory at the Battle of Naissus in September Gallienus successor Claudius Gothicus turned north to deal with the Alemanni who were swarming over all Italy north of the Po River After efforts to secure a peaceful withdrawal failed Claudius forced the Alemanni to battle at the Battle of Lake Benacus in November The Alemanni were routed forced back into Germany and did not threaten Roman territory for many years afterwards Their most famous battle against Rome took place in Argentoratum Strasbourg in 357 where they were defeated by Julian later Emperor of Rome and their king Chnodomarius was taken prisoner to Rome 8 On January 2 366 the Alemanni yet again crossed the frozen Rhine in large numbers to invade the Gallic provinces this time being defeated by Valentinian see Battle of Solicinium In the great mixed invasion of 406 the Alemanni appear to have crossed the Rhine river a final time conquering and then settling what is today Alsace and a large part of the Swiss Plateau 8 The crossing is described in Wallace Breem s historical novel Eagle in the Snow The Chronicle of Fredegar gives the account At Alba Augusta Alba la Romaine the devastation was so complete that the Christian bishop retired to Viviers but in Gregory s account at Mende in Lozere also deep in the heart of Gaul bishop Privatus was forced to sacrifice to idols in the very cave where he was later venerated citation needed It is thought citation needed this detail may be a generic literary ploy to epitomize the horrors of barbarian violence List of battles between Romans and Alemanni Edit Europe at the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD 259 Battle of Mediolanum Emperor Gallienus defeats the Alemanni to rescue Rome 268 Battle of Lake Benacus Romans under Emperor Claudius II defeat the Alemanni 271 Battle of Placentia Emperor Aurelian is defeated by the Alemanni forces invading Italy Battle of Fano Aurelian defeats the Alemanni who begin to retreat from Italy Battle of Pavia Aurelian destroys the retreating Alemanni army 298 Battle of Lingones Caesar Constantius Chlorus defeats the Alemanni Battle of Vindonissa Constantius defeats the Alemanni 356 Battle of Reims Caesar Julian is defeated by the Alemanni 357 Battle of Strasbourg Julian expels the Alemanni from the Rhineland 368 Battle of Solicinium Romans under Emperor Valentinian I defeat an Alemanni incursion 378 Battle of Argentovaria Western Emperor Gratianus is victorious over the Alemanni 451 Battle of the Catalaunian Fields Roman General Aetius and his army of Romans and barbarian allies defeat Attila s army of Huns and other Germanic allies including the Alemanni 457 Battle of Campi Cannini Alemanni invade Italy and are defeated near Lake Maggiore by Majorian 554 Battle of the Volturnus Byzantine General Narses defeats a combined force of Franks and Alemanni in southern Italy Subjugation by the Franks Edit Main article Alamannia Alemannia yellow and Upper Burgundy green around 1000 The kingdom of Alamannia between Strasbourg and Augsburg lasted until 496 when the Alemanni were conquered by Clovis I at the Battle of Tolbiac The war of Clovis with the Alemanni forms the setting for the conversion of Clovis briefly treated by Gregory of Tours Book II 31 After their defeat in 496 the Alemanni bucked the Frankish yoke and put themselves under the protection of Theodoric the Great of the Ostrogoths 21 but after his death they were again subjugated by the Franks under Theudebert I in 536 22 Subsequently the Alemanni formed part of the Frankish dominions and were governed by a Frankish duke In 746 Carloman ended an uprising by summarily executing all Alemannic nobility at the blood court at Cannstatt and for the following century Alemannia was ruled by Frankish dukes Following the treaty of Verdun of 843 Alemannia became a province of the eastern kingdom of Louis the German the precursor of the Holy Roman Empire The duchy persisted until 1268 Culture EditLanguage Edit The traditional distribution area of Western Upper German Alemannic dialect features in the 19th and 20th centuries The German spoken today over the range of the former Alemanni is termed Alemannic German and is recognised among the subgroups of the High German languages Alemannic runic inscriptions such as those on the Pforzen buckle are among the earliest testimonies of Old High German The High German consonant shift is thought to have originated around the fifth century either in Alemannia or among the Lombards before that the dialect spoken by Alemannic tribes was little different from that of other West Germanic peoples 23 Alemannia lost its distinct jurisdictional identity when Charles Martel absorbed it into the Frankish empire early in the eighth century Today Alemannic is a linguistic term referring to Alemannic German encompassing the dialects of the southern two thirds of Baden Wurttemberg German State in western Bavaria German State in Vorarlberg Austrian State Swiss German in Switzerland and the Alsatian language of the Alsace France Political organization Edit The Alemanni established a series of territorially defined pagi cantons on the east bank of the Rhine The exact number and extent of these pagi is unclear and probably changed over time Pagi usually pairs of pagi combined formed kingdoms regna which it is generally believed were permanent and hereditary Ammianus describes Alemanni rulers with various terms reges excelsiores ante alios paramount kings reges proximi neighbouring kings reguli petty kings and regales princes This may be a formal hierarchy or they may be vague overlapping terms or a combination of both 24 In 357 there appear to have been two paramount kings Chnodomar and Westralp who probably acted as presidents of the confederation and seven other kings reges Their territories were small and mostly strung along the Rhine although a few were in the hinterland 25 It is possible that the reguli were the rulers of the two pagi in each kingdom Underneath the royal class were the nobles called optimates by the Romans and warriors called armati by the Romans The warriors consisted of professional warbands and levies of free men 26 Each nobleman could raise an average of c 50 warriors 27 Religion Edit Further information Germanic Christianity Religion in Switzerland History Pre Christian Alpine traditions and Continental Germanic mythology The gold bracteate of Pliezhausen sixth or seventh century shows typical iconography of the pagan period The bracteate depicts the horse stabber underhoof scene a supine warrior stabbing a horse while it runs over him The scene is adapted from Roman era gravestones of the region 28 The seventh century Gutenstein scabbard found near Sigmaringen Baden Wurttemberg is a late testimony of pagan ritual in Alemannia showing a warrior in ritual wolf costume holding a ring spatha The Christianization of the Alemanni took place during Merovingian times sixth to eighth centuries We know that in the sixth century the Alemanni were predominantly pagan and in the eighth century they were predominantly Christian The intervening seventh century was a period of genuine syncretism during which Christian symbolism and doctrine gradually grew in influence Some scholars have speculated that members of the Alemannic elite such as king Gibuld due to Visigothic influence may have been converted to Arianism even in the later fifth century 29 In the mid 6th century the Byzantine historian Agathias records in the context of the wars of the Goths and Franks against Byzantium that the Alemanni fighting among the troops of Frankish king Theudebald were like the Franks in all respects except religion since they worship certain trees the waters of rivers hills and mountain valleys in whose honour they sacrifice horses cattle and countless other animals by beheading them and imagine that they are performing an act of piety thereby 30 He also spoke of the particular ruthlessness of the Alemanni in destroying Christian sanctuaries and plundering churches while the genuine Franks were respectful towards those sanctuaries Agathias expresses his hope that the Alemanni would assume better manners through prolonged contact with the Franks which is by all appearances in a manner of speaking what eventually happened 31 Apostles of the Alemanni were Columbanus and his disciple Saint Gall Jonas of Bobbio records that Columbanus was active in Bregenz where he disrupted a beer sacrifice to Wodan Despite these activities for some time the Alemanni seem to have continued their pagan cult activities with only superficial or syncretistic Christian elements In particular there is no change in burial practice and tumulus warrior graves continued to be erected throughout Merovingian times Syncretism of traditional Germanic animal style with Christian symbolism is also present in artwork but Christian symbolism becomes more and more prevalent during the seventh century Unlike the later Christianization of the Saxons and of the Slavs the Alemanni seem to have adopted Christianity gradually and voluntarily spread in emulation of the Merovingian elite From c the 520s to the 620s there was a surge of Alemannic Elder Futhark inscriptions About 70 specimens have survived roughly half of them on fibulae others on belt buckles see Pforzen buckle Bulach fibula and other jewelry and weapon parts Use of runes subsides with the advance of Christianity The Nordendorf fibula early seventh century clearly records pagan theonyms logathorewodanwigithonar read as Wodan and Donar are magicians sorcerers but this may be interpreted as either a pagan invocation of the powers of these deities or a Christian protective charm against them 32 A runic inscription on a fibula found at Bad Ems reflects Christian pious sentiment and is also explicitly marked with a Christian cross reading god fura dih deofile God for before you Theophilus or alternatively God before you Devil Dated to between AD 660 and 690 it marks the end of the native Alemannic tradition of runic literacy Bad Ems is in Rhineland Palatinate on the northwestern boundary of Alemannic settlement where Frankish influence would have been strongest 33 The establishment of the bishopric of Konstanz cannot be dated exactly and was possibly undertaken by Columbanus himself before 612 In any case it existed by 635 when Gunzo appointed John of Grab bishop Constance was a missionary bishopric in newly converted lands and did not look back on late Roman church history unlike the Raetian bishopric of Chur established 451 and Basel an episcopal seat from 740 and which continued the line of Bishops of Augusta Raurica see Bishop of Basel The establishment of the church as an institution recognized by worldly rulers is also visible in legal history In the early seventh century Pactus Alamannorum hardly ever mentions the special privileges of the church while Lantfrid s Lex Alamannorum of 720 has an entire chapter reserved for ecclesial matters alone Genetics EditSee also Goths Genetics Baiuvarii Genetics Lombards Genetics and Visigoths Genetics A genetic study published in Science Advances in September 2018 examined the remains of eight individuals buried at a seventh century Alemannic graveyard in Niederstotzingen Germany This is the richest and most complete Alemannic graveyard ever found The highest ranking individual at the graveyard was a male with Frankish grave goods Four males were found to be closely related to him They were all carriers of types of the paternal haplogroup R1b1a2a1a1c2b2b A sixth male was a carrier of the paternal haplogroup R1b1a2a1a1c2b2b1a1 and the maternal haplogroup U5a1a1 Along with the five closely related individuals he displayed close genetic links to northern and eastern Europe particularly Lithuania and Iceland Two individuals buried at the cemetery were found to be genetically different from both the others and each other displaying genetic links to Southern Europe particularly northern Italy and Spain Along with the sixth male they might have been adoptees or slaves 34 See also EditAnnales Alamannici List of rulers of Alamannia List of confederations of Germanic tribes Armalausi Varisci Helvetii ChariettoReferences Edit The spelling with e is used in Encyc Brit 9th ed c 1880 Everyman s Encyc 1967 Everyman s Smaller Classical Dictionary 1910 The current edition of Britannica spells with e as does Columbia and Edward Gibbon Vol 3 Chapter XXXVIII The Latinized spelling with a is current in older literature so in the 1911 Britannica but remains in use e g in Wood 2003 Drinkwater 2007 The Alemanni were alternatively known as Suebi from about the fifth century and that name became prevalent in the high medieval period eponymous of the Duchy of Swabia The name is taken from that of the Suebi mentioned by Julius Caesar and although these older Suebi did likely contribute to the ethnogenesis of the Alemanni there is no direct connection to the contemporary Kingdom of the Suebi in Galicia Drinkwater John Frederick 2012 Alamanni In Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony Eidinow Esther eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary 4 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0191735257 Retrieved January 26 2020 Alamanni Alemanni a loose concentration of Germanic communities Hitchner R Bruce 2005 Goths In Kazhdan Alexander P ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195187922 Retrieved January 26 2020 Alemanni the Latin term for an amalgamation of a number of smaller Germanic tribes including a segment of the Suevi Darvill Timothy ed 2009 Alamanni The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology 3 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0191727139 Retrieved January 25 2020 Alamanni A confederation of several Germanic tribes who amalgamated in the third century AD in pago Almanniae 762 in pago Alemannorum 797 urbs Constantia in ducatu Alemanniae 797 in ducatu Alemannico in pago Linzgowe 873 From the ninth century Alamannia is increasingly used of the Alsace specifically while the Alamannic territory in generally is increasingly called Suebia by the 12th century the name Suebia had mostly replaced Alamannia S Hirzel Forschungen zur Deutschen Landeskunde 6 1888 p 299 recorded as aleman in c 1100 and with final dental alemant or alemand from c 1160 Tresor de la Langue Francaise informatise s v allemand F C and J Rivington T Payne Wilkie and Robinson The Chronicle of Iohn Hardyng 1812 p 99 H Kurath Middle English Dictionary part 14 University of Michigan Press 1952 1345 a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alamanni Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 468 Edward Gibbon Chapter 10 Ccel org Retrieved 2012 01 02 Histoire de l Academie Royale des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres avec les Memoires de Litterature tires des Registres de cette Academie depuis l annee MDCCXLIV jusques et compris l annee MDCCXLVI vol XVIII Paris 1753 pp 49 71 Excerpts are on line at ELIOHS It is cited in most etymological dictionaries such as the American Heritage Dictionary large edition under the root man Archived 2006 05 19 at the Wayback Machine the name is possibly Alahmannen men of the sanctuary Inglis Palgrave ed The Collected Historical Works of Sir Francis Palgrave K H 1919 p 443 citing Bury s ed of Gibbon Methuen vol I 1902 p 278 note H M Chadwick Origin of the English Nation 1907 Igitur quia mixti Alamannis Suevi partem Germaniae ultra Danubium partem Raetiae inter Alpes et Histrum partemque Galliae circa Ararim obsederunt antiquorum vocabulorum veritate servata ab incolis nomen patriae derivemus et Alamanniam vel Sueviam nominemus Nam cum duo sint vocabula unam gentem significantia priori nomine nos appellant circumpositae gentes quae Latinum habent sermonem sequenti usus nos nuncupat barbarorum Walafrid Strabo Proleg ad Vit S Galli 833 4 ed Migne 1852 Thomas Greenwood The First Book of the History of the Germans Barbaric Period 1836 p 498 Rudolf Much Der germanische Himmelsgott 1898 p 192 a b c Popper Nicholas S 2023 Roos Anna Marie Manning Gideon eds Planks from a Shipwreck Belief and Evidence in Sixteenth Century Histories Collected Wisdom of the Early Modern Scholar Essays in Honor of Mordechai Feingold Cham Springer International Publishing pp 141 142 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 09722 5 7 ISBN 978 3 031 09722 5 retrieved 2023 01 04 Cassius Dio Roman History University of Chicago Historia Augusta The Life of Antoninus Caracalla University of Chicago munimentum quod in Alamannorum solo conditum Traianus suo nomine voluit appellari Tacitus Tacitus Germany Book 1 Chapter 42 Retrieved 25 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Ptolemy s description has some limitations Upper Germany and Lower Germany are mentioned by name but only as specific districts of Gallia Belgica 2 8 the border between them was an unidentified river the Obruncus The region is repeated again under Germany but this time he does not list Roman boundaries Germania Superior the Agri Decumates and the limes are not to be found there though they certainly existed at the time Germania Magna is found within the Rhine Danube Vistula and shores of the Oceanus Germanicus Most of the tribes are missing or listed without name The Main is not there nor is Lake Constance The Danube runs from the Alps The Rhine does not bend to the south next to Swabia Ptolemy s Germania is like a surreal image of itself accurate only if certain known lines are followed but the overall shape is greatly distorted Jonathan J Arnold 2016 A Companion to Ostrogothic Italy Brill p 93 ISBN 978 9004313767 Ian Wood 1998 Franks and Alamanni in the Merovingian Period An Ethnographic Perspective The Boydell Press p 33 ISBN 0851157238 Alamanni Alemanni Suebi Suevi Semnones Freyia Volundarhusins in Norwegian Bokmal Retrieved 2019 04 29 Drinkwater 2007 118 120 Drinkwater 2007 223 map Speidel 2004 Drinkwater 2007 120 Michael Speidel Ancient Germanic warriors warrior styles from Trajan s column to Icelandic sagas Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0415311991 p 162 Harald Kleinschmidt People on the move attitudes toward and perceptions of migration in medieval and modern Europe Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 ISBN 978 0275974176 p 66 Schubert Hans 1909 Das alteste germanische Christentum oder der Sogenannte Arianismus der Germanen Tubingen J C B Mohr p 32 Cf also Bossert G Alemanni in Jackson S M Ed New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol 1 p 114 the Alamannic prince Gibuld was an Arian probably converted by Goths Murinaeus Agathias Scholasticus Agathias Agathias 1975 trans Joseph D Frendo 1975 ISBN 978 3110033571 Retrieved 2012 01 02 R Keydell Agathiae Myrinaei historiarum libri quinque Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae Series Berolinensis 2 Berlin De Gruyter 1967 p 18f 7 Nomima dὲ aὐtoῖs tῶn Ἀlamanῶn ἔ8nos eἰsi men poy kaὶ patria tὸ de ge ἐn koinῷ ἐpikratoῦn te kaὶ ἄrxon tῇ Fraggikῇ ἕpontai politeiᾳ mona de ge tὰ ἐs 5 8eὸn aὐtoῖs oὐ taὐtὰ 3yndokeῖ dendra te gar tina ἱlaskontai kaὶ ῥeῖ8ra potamῶn kaὶ lofoys kaὶ faraggas kaὶ toytois ὥsper ὅsia drῶntes ἵppoys te kaὶ boas kaὶ ἄlla ἄtta myria karatomoῦntes ἐpi8eiazoysin 2 ἀllὰ gὰr ἡ tῶn Fraggwn aὐtoὺs ἐpimi3ia enὖ poioῦsa kaὶ ἐs tode metakosmeῖ kaὶ ἤdh ἐfelketai toὺs eὐfronesteroys oὐ polloῦ dὲ oἶmai 10 xronoy kaὶ ἅpasin ἐknikhsei 3 tὸ gὰr tῆs do3hs paralogon te kaὶ ἔmplhkton kaὶ aὐtoῖs oἶmai toῖs xrwmenois eἰ mὴ pampan eἶen ἠli8ioi gnwrimon te ἐsti kaὶ eὐfwraton kaὶ oἶon ἀposbῆnai ῥᾳdiws ἐleeῖs8ai mὲn oὖn mᾶllon ἢ xalepaines8ai dikaioi ἂn eἶen kaὶ pleisths metalagxanein syggnwmhs ἅpantes ὅsoi dὴ toῦ ἀlh8oῦs ἁmartanoysin oὐ gὰr 15 dhpoy ἑkontes eἶnai ἀlῶntai kaὶ ὀlis8ainoysin ἀllὰ toῦ ἀga8oῦ ἐfiemenoi ἔpeita sfalentes tῇ krisei tὸ loipὸn ἔxontai tῶn dokh8entwn ἀpri3 ὁpoῖa ἄtta kaὶ tyxoien ὄnta 4 thn ge mὴn tῶn 8ysiῶn ὠmothta kaὶ kakodaimonian oὐk oἶda eἰ oἷon te logῳ ἀkesas8ai eἴte ἄlsesin ἐpiteloῖnto ὥsper ἀmelei parὰ barbarois eἴte toῖs palai nenomisme 20 nois 8eoῖs ὁpoῖa aἱ tῶn Ἑllhnwn ἐ8eloysin ἁgisteῖai Duwel Klaus 1982 Runen und Interpretatio Christiana Zur Religioneschichtlichen Stellung der Bugelfidel von Nordendorf I In Kamp Norbert Wollasch Joachim eds Tradition als Historische Kraft Walter de Gruyter pp 78 86 ISBN 3110082373 Wolfgang Jungandreas God fura dih deofile in Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur 101 1972 pp 84 85 O Sullivan et al 2018 Genome wide analyses were performed on eight individuals to estimate genetic affiliation to modern west Eurasians and genetic kinship at the burial Five individuals were direct relatives Three other individuals were not detectably related two of these showed genomic affinity to southern Europeans These five related individuals had culturally diverse grave goods despite the evidence that all of them showed local isotope signals with northern European genetic affiliations Niederstotzingen North individuals are closely related to northern and eastern European populations particularly from Lithuania and Iceland Sources EditAmmianus Marcellinus passim O Bremer in H Paul Grundriss der germanischen Philologie 2nd ed Strassburg 1900 vol iii pp 930 ff Dio Cassius lxvii ff Drinkwater John F 2007 The Alamanni and Rome 213 496 Caracalla to Clovis Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 929568 5 Ian Wood ed Franks and Alamanni in the Merovingian Period An Ethnographic Perspective Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology Boydell amp Brewer Ltd 2003 ISBN 1 84383 035 3 Melchior Goldast Rerum Alamannicarum scriptores 1606 2nd ed Senckenburg 1730 Gregory of Tours Historia Francorum book ii O Sullivan Niall et al September 5 2018 Ancient genome wide analyses infer kinship structure in an Early Medieval Alemannic graveyard Science Advances American Association for the Advancement of Science 4 9 eaao1262 Bibcode 2018SciA 4 1262O doi 10 1126 sciadv aao1262 PMC 6124919 PMID 30191172 C Zeuss Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstamme Munich 1837 pp 303 ff External links Edit Media related to Alamanni at Wikimedia Commons The Agri Decumates The Alemanni The Military Orientation of the Roman Emperors Septimius Severus to Gallienus 146 268 C E Brauchtum und Masken Alemannic Fastnacht Archived 2017 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alemanni amp oldid 1131612898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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