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Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples were historical groups of people that once occupied Northwestern and Central Europe and Scandinavia during antiquity and into the early Middle Ages. Since the 19th century, they have traditionally been defined by the use of ancient and early medieval Germanic languages and are thus equated at least approximately with Germanic-speaking peoples, although different academic disciplines have their own definitions of what makes someone or something "Germanic".[1] The Romans named the area belonging to North-Central Europe in which Germanic peoples lived Germania, stretching east to west between the Vistula and Rhine rivers and north to south from southern Scandinavia to the upper Danube.[2] In discussions of the Roman period, the Germanic peoples are sometimes referred to as Germani or ancient Germans, although many scholars consider the second term problematic since it suggests identity with present-day Germans. The very concept of "Germanic peoples" has become the subject of controversy among contemporary scholars.[3] Some scholars call for its total abandonment as a modern construct since lumping "Germanic peoples" together implies a common group identity for which there is little evidence.[3] Other scholars have defended the term's continued use and argue that a common Germanic language allows one to speak of "Germanic peoples", regardless of whether these ancient and medieval peoples saw themselves as having a common identity.[4] While several historians and archaeologists continue to use the term "Germanic peoples" to refer to historical people groups from the 1st to 4th centuries CE, the term is no longer used by most historians and archaeologists for the period around the Fall of the Roman Empire and the Early Middle Ages.[5]

Roman bronze statuette representing a Germanic man with his hair in a Suebian knot. Dating to the late 1st century – early 2nd century A.D.

Scholars generally agree that it is possible to refer to Germanic-speaking peoples after 500 BCE.[6] Archaeologists usually connect the early Germanic peoples with the Jastorf culture of the Pre-Roman Iron Age, which is found in Denmark (southern Scandinavia) and northern Germany from the 6th to 1st centuries BCE, around the same time that the First Germanic Consonant Shift is theorized to have occurred; this sound change led to recognizably Germanic languages.[7][a] From northern Germany and southern Scandinavia, the Germanic peoples expanded south, east, and west, coming into contact with the Celtic, Iranic, Baltic, and Slavic peoples. Roman authors first described Germanic peoples near the Rhine in the 1st century BCE, while the Roman Empire was establishing its dominance in that region. Under Emperor Augustus (27 BCE–14 CE), the Romans attempted to conquer a large area of Germania, but they withdrew after a major Roman defeat at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 CE. The Romans continued to control the Germanic frontier closely by meddling in its politics, and they constructed a long fortified border, the Limes Germanicus. From 166 to 180 CE, Rome was embroiled in a conflict against the Germanic Marcomanni, Quadi, and many other peoples known as the Marcomannic Wars. The wars reordered the Germanic frontier, and afterwards, new Germanic peoples appear for the first time in the historical record, such as the Franks, Goths, Saxons, and Alemanni. During the Migration Period (375–568), various Germanic peoples entered the Roman Empire and eventually took control of parts of it and established their own independent kingdoms after the collapse of Western Roman rule. The most powerful of them were the Franks, who conquered many of the others. Eventually, the Frankish king Charlemagne claimed the title of Holy Roman Emperor for himself in 800.

Archaeological finds suggest that Roman-era sources portrayed the Germanic way of life as more primitive than it actually was. Instead, archaeologists have unveiled evidence of a complex society and economy throughout Germania. Germanic-speaking peoples originally shared similar religious practices. Denoted by the term Germanic paganism, they varied throughout the territory occupied by Germanic-speaking peoples. Over the course of Late Antiquity, most continental Germanic peoples and the Anglo-Saxons of Britain converted to Christianity, but the Saxons and Scandinavians converted only much later. The Germanic peoples shared a native script from around the first century or before, the runes, which was gradually replaced with the Latin script, although runes continued to be used for specialized purposes thereafter.

Traditionally, the Germanic peoples have been seen as possessing a law dominated by the concepts of feuding and blood compensation. The precise details, nature and origin of what is still normally called "Germanic law" are now controversial. Roman sources state that the Germanic peoples made decisions in a popular assembly (the thing) but that they also had kings and war leaders. The ancient Germanic-speaking peoples probably shared a common poetic tradition, alliterative verse, and later Germanic peoples also shared legends originating in the Migration Period.

The publishing of Tacitus's Germania by humanist scholars in the 1400s greatly influenced the emerging idea of "Germanic peoples". Later scholars of the Romantic period, such as Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, developed several theories about the nature of the Germanic peoples that were highly influenced by romantic nationalism. For those scholars, the "Germanic" and modern "German" were identical. Ideas about the early Germans were also highly influential among and were influenced and co-opted by the nationalist and racist völkisch movement and later by the Nazis, which led in the second half of the 20th century to a backlash against many aspects of earlier scholarship.

Terminology edit

Etymology edit

The etymology of the Latin word Germani, from which Latin Germania and English Germanic are derived, is unknown, although several proposals have been put forward. Even the language from which it derives is a subject of dispute, with proposals of Germanic, Celtic, and Latin, and Illyrian origins.[10] Herwig Wolfram, for example, thinks Germani must be Gaulish.[11] The historian Wolfgang Pfeifer more or less concurs with Wolfram and surmises that the name Germani is likely of Celtic etymology and is related to the Old Irish word gair ('neighbours') or could be tied to the Celtic word for their war cries, gairm, which simplifies into 'the neighbours' or 'the screamers'.[12] Regardless of its language of origin, the name was transmitted to the Romans via Celtic speakers.[13]

It is unclear that any people group ever referred to themselves as Germani.[14] By late antiquity, only peoples near the Rhine, especially the Franks and sometimes the Alemanni, were called Germani by Latin or Greek writers.[15] Germani subsequently ceased to be used as a name for any group of people and was revived as such only by the humanists in the 16th century.[14] Previously, scholars during the Carolingian period (8th–11th centuries) had already begun using Germania and Germanicus in a territorial sense to refer to East Francia.[16]

In modern English, the adjective Germanic is distinct from German, which is generally used when referring to modern Germans only. Germanic relates to the ancient Germani or the broader Germanic group.[17] In modern German, the ancient Germani are referred to as Germanen and Germania as Germanien, as distinct from modern Germans (Deutsche) and modern Germany (Deutschland). The direct equivalents in English are, however, Germans for Germani and Germany for Germania[18] although the Latin Germania is also used. To avoid ambiguity, the Germani may instead be called "ancient Germans" or Germani by using the Latin term in English.[19][17]

Modern definitions and controversies edit

The modern definition of Germanic peoples developed in the 19th century, when the term Germanic was linked to the newly identified Germanic language family. Linguistics provided a new way of defining the Germanic peoples, which came to be used in historiography and archaeology.[20][1] While Roman authors did not consistently exclude Celtic-speaking people or have a term corresponding to Germanic-speaking peoples, this new definition—which used the Germanic language as the main criterion—presented the Germani as a people or nation (Volk) with a stable group identity linked to language. As a result, some scholars treat the Germani (Latin) or Germanoi (Greek) of Roman-era sources as non-Germanic if they seemingly spoke non-Germanic languages.[21] For clarity, Germanic peoples, when defined as "speakers of a Germanic language", are sometimes referred to as "Germanic-speaking peoples".[1] Today, the term "Germanic" is widely applied to "phenomena including identities, social, cultural or political groups, to material cultural artefacts, languages and texts, and even specific chemical sequences found in human DNA".[22] Several scholars continue to use the term to refer to a culture existing between the 1st to 4th centuries CE, but most historians and archaeologists researching Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages no longer use it.[23]

Apart from the designation of a language family (i.e., "Germanic languages"), the application of the term "Germanic" has become controversial in scholarship since 1990,[1] especially among archaeologists and historians. Scholars have increasingly questioned the notion of ethnically defined people groups (Völker) as stable basic actors of history.[24] The connection of archaeological assemblages to ethnicity has also been increasingly questioned.[25] This has resulted in different disciplines developing different definitions of "Germanic".[1] Beginning with the work of the "Toronto School" around Walter Goffart, various scholars have denied that anything such as a common Germanic ethnic identity ever existed. Such scholars argue that most ideas about Germanic culture are taken from far later epochs and projected backwards to antiquity.[26] Historians of the Vienna School, such as Walter Pohl, have also called for the term to be avoided or used with careful explanation,[27] and argued that there is little evidence for a common Germanic identity.[28] The Anglo-Saxonist Leonard Neidorf writes that historians of the continental-European Germanic peoples of the 5th and 6th centuries are "in agreement" that there was no pan-Germanic identity or solidarity.[29] Whether a scholar favors the existence of a common Germanic identity or not is often related to their position on the nature of the end of the Roman Empire.[30]

Defenders of continued use of the term Germanic argue that the speakers of Germanic languages can be identified as Germanic people by language regardless of how they saw themselves.[4] Linguists and philologists have generally reacted skeptically to claims that there was no Germanic identity or cultural unity,[31] and they may view Germanic simply as a long-established and convenient term.[32] Some archaeologists have also argued in favor of retaining the term Germanic due to its broad recognizability.[33] Archaeologist Heiko Steuer defines his own work on the Germani in geographical terms (covering Germania), rather than in ethnic terms.[2] He nevertheless argues for some sense of shared identity between the Germani, noting the use of a common language, a common runic script, various common objects of material culture such as bracteates and gullgubber (small gold objects) and the confrontation with Rome as things that could cause a sense of shared "Germanic" culture.[34] Despite being cautious of the use of Germanic to refer to peoples, Sebastian Brather, Wilhelm Heizmann and Steffen Patzold nevertheless refer to further commonalities such as the widely attested worship of deities such as Odin, Thor and Frigg, and a shared legendary tradition.[32]

Classical terminology edit

The first author to describe the Germani as a large category of peoples distinct from the Gauls and Scythians was Julius Caesar, writing around 55 BCE during his governorship of Gaul.[35] In Caesar's account, the clearest defining characteristic of the Germani people was that they lived east of the Rhine,[36] opposite Gaul on the west side. Caesar sought to explain both why his legions stopped at the Rhine and also why the Germani were more dangerous than the Gauls and a constant threat to the empire.[37] He also classified the Cimbri and Teutons, peoples who had previously invaded Italy, as Germani, and examples of this threat to Rome.[38][39] Although Caesar described the Rhine as the border between Germani and Celts, he also describes a group of people he identifies as Germani who live on the west bank of the Rhine in the northeast of Gaul, the Germani cisrhenani.[40] It is unclear if these Germani were actually Germanic speakers.[41] According to the Roman historian Tacitus in his Germania (c. 98 CE), it was among this group, specifically the Tungri, that the name Germani first arose, and was spread to further groups.[42] Tacitus continues to mention Germanic tribes on the west bank of the Rhine in the period of the early Empire.[43] Caesar's division of the Germani from the Celts was not taken up by most writers in Greek.[44]

Caesar and authors following him regarded Germania as stretching east of the Rhine for an indeterminate distance, bounded by the Baltic Sea and the Hercynian Forest.[45] Pliny the Elder and Tacitus placed the eastern border at the Vistula.[46] The Upper Danube served as a southern border. Between there and the Vistula Tacitus sketched an unclear boundary, describing Germania as separated in the south and east from the Dacians and the Sarmatians by mutual fear or mountains.[47] This undefined eastern border is related to a lack of stable frontiers in this area such as were maintained by Roman armies along the Rhine and Danube.[44] The geographer Ptolemy (2nd century CE) applied the name Germania magna ("Greater Germania", Greek: Γερμανία Μεγάλη) to this area, contrasting it with the Roman provinces of Germania Prima and Germania Secunda (on the west bank of the Rhine).[48] In modern scholarship, Germania magna is sometimes also called Germania libera ("free Germania"),[49] a name coined by Jacob Grimm around 1835.[50]

Caesar and, following him, Tacitus, depicted the Germani as sharing elements of a common culture.[51] A small number of passages by Tacitus and other Roman authors (Caesar, Suetonius) mention Germanic tribes or individuals speaking a language distinct from Gaulish. For Tacitus (Germania 43, 45, 46), language was a characteristic, but not defining feature of the Germanic peoples.[52] Many of the ascribed ethnic characteristics of the Germani represented them as typically "barbarian", including the possession of stereotypical vices such as "wildness" and of virtues such as chastity.[53] Tacitus was at times unsure whether a people were Germanic or not, expressing his uncertainty about the Bastarnae, who he says looked like Sarmatians but spoke like the Germani, about the Osi and the Cotini, and about the Aesti, who were like Suebi but spoke a different language.[52] When defining the Germani ancient authors did not differentiate consistently between a territorial definition ("those living in Germania") and an ethnic definition ("having Germanic ethnic characteristics"), although the two definitions did not always align.[54]

The Romans did not regard the eastern Germanic speakers such as Goths, Gepids, and Vandals as Germani, but rather connected them with other non-Germanic-speaking peoples such as the Huns, Sarmatians, and Alans.[44] Romans described these peoples, including those who did not speak a Germanic language, as "Gothic people" (gentes Gothicae) and most often classified them as "Scythians".[55] The writer Procopius, describing the Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Vandals, Alans, and Gepids, derived the Gothic peoples from the ancient Getae and described them as sharing similar customs, beliefs, and a common language.[56]

Subdivisions edit

 
The approximate positions of the three groups and their sub-peoples reported by Tacitus:

Several ancient sources list subdivisions of the Germanic tribes. Writing in the first century CE, Pliny the Elder lists five Germanic subgroups: the Vandili, the Inguaeones, the Istuaeones (living near the Rhine), the Hermiones (in the Germanic interior), and the Peucini Basternae (living on the lower Danube near the Dacians).[57] In chapter 2 of the Germania, written about a half-century later, Tacitus lists only three subgroups: the Ingvaeones (near the sea), the Hermiones (in the interior of Germania), and the Istvaeones (the remainder of the tribes);[58] Tacitus says these groups each claimed descent from the god Mannus, son of Tuisto.[59] Tacitus also mentions a second tradition that there were four sons of either Mannus or Tuisto from whom the groups of the Marsi, Gambrivi, Suebi, and Vandili claim descent.[60][61] The Hermiones are also mentioned by Pomponius Mela, but otherwise, these divisions do not appear in other ancient works on the Germani.[60]

There are a number of inconsistencies in the listing of Germanic subgroups by Tacitus and Pliny. While both Tacitus and Pliny mention some Scandinavian tribes, they are not integrated into the subdivisions.[57] While Pliny lists the Suebi as part of the Hermiones, Tacitus treats them as a separate group.[62] Additionally, Tacitus's description of a group of tribes as united by the cult of Nerthus (Germania 40) as well as the cult of the Alcis controlled by the Nahanarvali (Germania 43) and Tacitus's account of the origin myth of the Semnones (Germania 39) all suggest different subdivisions than the three mentioned in Germania chapter 2.[63]

The subdivisions found in Pliny and Tacitus have been very influential for scholarship on Germanic history and language up until recent times.[57] However, outside of Tacitus and Pliny there are no other textual indications that these groups were important. The subgroups mentioned by Tacitus are not used by him elsewhere in his work, contradict other parts of his work, and cannot be reconciled with Pliny, who is equally inconsistent.[62][61] Additionally, there is no linguistic or archaeological evidence for these subgroups.[62][64] New archaeological finds have tended to show that the boundaries between Germanic peoples were very permeable, and scholars now assume that migration and the collapse and formation of cultural units were constant occurrences within Germania.[65] Nevertheless, various aspects such as the alliteration of many of the tribal names in Tacitus's account and the name of Mannus himself suggest that the descent from Mannus was an authentic Germanic tradition.[66]

Languages edit

Proto-Germanic edit

All Germanic languages derive from the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), which is generally thought to have been spoken between 4500 and 2500 BCE.[67] The ancestor of Germanic languages is referred to as Proto- or Common Germanic,[68] and likely represented a group of mutually intelligible dialects.[69] They share distinctive characteristics which set them apart from other Indo-European sub-families of languages, such as Grimm's and Verner's law, the conservation of the PIE ablaut system in the Germanic verb system (notably in strong verbs), or the merger of the vowels a and o qualities (ə, a, o > a; ā, ō > ō).[70] During the Pre-Germanic linguistic period (2500–500 BCE), the proto-language was almost certainly influenced by an unknown non-Indo-European language, still noticeable in the Germanic phonology and lexicon.[71][b]

Although Proto-Germanic is reconstructed without dialects via the comparative method, it is almost certain that it never was a uniform proto-language.[74] The late Jastorf culture occupied so much territory that it is unlikely that Germanic populations spoke a single dialect, and traces of early linguistic varieties have been highlighted by scholars.[75] Sister dialects of Proto-Germanic itself certainly existed, as evidenced by the absence of the First Germanic Sound Shift (Grimm's law) in some "Para-Germanic" recorded proper names, and the reconstructed Proto-Germanic language was only one among several dialects spoken at that time by peoples identified as "Germanic" by Roman sources or archeological data.[76] Although Roman sources name various Germanic tribes such as Suevi, Alemanni, Bauivari, etc., it is unlikely that the members of these tribes all spoke the same dialect.[77]

Early attestations edit

Definite and comprehensive evidence of Germanic lexical units only occurred after Caesar's conquest of Gaul in the 1st century BCE, after which contacts with Proto-Germanic speakers began to intensify. The Alcis, a pair of brother gods worshipped by the Nahanarvali, are given by Tacitus as a Latinized form of *alhiz (a kind of 'stag'), and the word sapo ('hair dye') is certainly borrowed from Proto-Germanic *saipwōn- (English soap), as evidenced by the parallel Finnish loanword saipio.[78] The name of the framea, described by Tacitus as a short spear carried by Germanic warriors, most likely derives from the compound *fram-ij-an- ('forward-going one'), as suggested by comparable semantical structures found in early runes (e.g., raun-ij-az 'tester', on a lancehead) and linguistic cognates attested in the later Old Norse, Old Saxon and Old High German languages: fremja, fremmian and fremmen all mean 'to carry out'.[79]

 
The inscription on the Negau helmet B, carved in the Etruscan alphabet during the 3rd–2nd c. BCE, is generally regarded as Proto-Germanic.[80]

In the absence of earlier evidence, it must be assumed that Proto-Germanic speakers living in Germania were members of preliterate societies.[81] The only pre-Roman inscriptions that could be interpreted as Proto-Germanic, written in the Etruscan alphabet, have not been found in Germania but rather in the Venetic region. The inscription harikastiteiva\\\ip, engraved on the Negau helmet in the 3rd–2nd centuries BCE, possibly by a Germanic-speaking warrior involved in combat in northern Italy, has been interpreted by some scholars as Harigasti Teiwǣ (*harja-gastiz 'army-guest' + *teiwaz 'god, deity'), which could be an invocation to a war-god or a mark of ownership engraved by its possessor.[80] The inscription Fariarix (*farjōn- 'ferry' + *rīk- 'ruler') carved on tetradrachms found in Bratislava (mid-1st c. BCE) may indicate the Germanic name of a Celtic ruler.[82]

Linguistic disintegration edit

By the time Germanic speakers entered written history, their linguistic territory had stretched farther south, since a Germanic dialect continuum (where neighbouring language varieties diverged only slightly between each other, but remote dialects were not necessarily mutually intelligible due to accumulated differences over the distance) covered a region roughly located between the Rhine, the Vistula, the Danube, and southern Scandinavia during the first two centuries of the Common Era.[83] East Germanic speakers dwelled on the Baltic sea coasts and islands, while speakers of the Northwestern dialects occupied territories in present-day Denmark and bordering parts of Germany at the earliest date when they can be identified.[84]

In the 2nd and 3rd centuries CE, migrations of East Germanic gentes from the Baltic Sea coast southeastwards into the hinterland led to their separation from the dialect continuum.[85] By the late 3rd century CE, linguistic divergences like the West Germanic loss of the final consonant -z had already occurred within the "residual" Northwest dialect continuum.[86] The latter definitely ended after the 5th- and 6th-century migrations of Angles, Jutes and part of the Saxon tribes towards modern-day England.[87]

Classification edit

 
Replica of an altar for the Matrons of Vacallina (Matronae Vacallinehae) from Mechernich-Weyer, Germany

The Germanic languages are traditionally divided between East, North and West Germanic branches.[88] The modern prevailing view is that North and West Germanic were also encompassed in a larger subgroup called Northwest Germanic.[89]

Further internal classifications are still debated among scholars, as it is unclear whether the internal features shared by several branches are due to early common innovations or to the later diffusion of local dialectal innovations.[101][c]

History edit

Prehistory edit

 
Area of the Nordic Bronze Age culture, ca 1200 BC

The Germanic-speaking peoples speak an Indo-European language. The leading theory for the origin of Germanic languages, suggested by archaeological, linguistic and genetic evidence,[102] postulates a diffusion of Indo-European languages from the Pontic–Caspian steppe towards Northern Europe during the third millennium BCE, via linguistic contacts and migrations from the Corded Ware culture towards modern-day Denmark, resulting in cultural mixing with the earlier Funnelbeaker culture.[103][d] The subsequent culture of the Nordic Bronze Age (c. 2000/1750-c. 500 BCE) shows definite cultural and population continuities with later Germanic peoples,[8] and is often supposed to have been the culture in which the Germanic Parent Language, the predecessor of the Proto-Germanic language, developed.[104] However, it is unclear whether these earlier peoples possessed any ethnic continuity with the later Germanic peoples.[9]

Generally, scholars agree that it is possible to speak of Germanic-speaking peoples after 500 BCE, although the first attestation of the name Germani is not until much later.[6] Between around 500 BCE and the beginning of the common era, archeological and linguistic evidence suggest that the Urheimat ('original homeland') of the Proto-Germanic language, the ancestral idiom of all attested Germanic dialects, was primarily situated in the southern Jutland peninsula, from which Proto-Germanic speakers migrated towards bordering parts of Germany and along the sea-shores of the Baltic and the North Sea, an area corresponding to the extent of the late Jastorf culture.[105][e] If the Jastorf Culture is the origin of the Germanic peoples, then the Scandinavian peninsula would have become Germanic either via migration or assimilation over the course of the same period.[106] Alternatively, Hermann Ament [de] has stressed that two other archaeological groups must have belonged to the Germani, one on either side of the Lower Rhine and reaching to the Weser, and another in Jutland and southern Scandinavia. These groups would thus show a "polycentric origin" for the Germanic peoples.[107] The neighboring Przeworsk culture in modern Poland is thought to possibly reflect a Germanic and Slavic component.[108][f] The identification of the Jastorf culture with the Germani has been criticized by Sebastian Brather, who notes that it seems to be missing areas such as southern Scandinavia and the Rhine-Weser area, which linguists argue to have been Germanic, while also not according with the Roman era definition of Germani, which included Celtic-speaking peoples further south and west.[109]

 
Celtic–Germanic contact zone in the Iron Age around 500 BC–1 BCE according to Stefan Schumacher (2007)[110]

A category of evidence used to locate the Proto-Germanic homeland is founded on traces of early linguistic contacts with neighbouring languages. Germanic loanwords in the Finnic and Sámi languages have preserved archaic forms (e.g. Finnic kuningas, from Proto-Germanic *kuningaz 'king'; rengas, from *hringaz 'ring'; etc.),[111] with the older loan layers possibly dating back to an earlier period of intense contacts between pre-Germanic and Finno-Permic (i.e. Finno-Samic) speakers.[112] Shared lexical innovations between Celtic and Germanic languages, concentrated in certain semantic domains such as religion and warfare, indicates intensive contacts between the Germani and Celtic peoples, usually identified with the archaeological La Tène culture, found in southern Germany and the modern Czech Republic.[113] Early contacts probably occurred during the Pre-Germanic and Pre-Celtic periods, dated to the 2nd millennium BCE,[114][g] and the Celts appear to have had a large amount of influence on Germanic culture from up until the first century CE, which led to a high degree of Celtic-Germanic shared material culture and social organization.[115] Some evidence of linguistic convergence between Germanic and Italic languages, whose Urheimat is supposed to have been situated north of the Alps before the 1st millennium BCE, have also been highlighted by scholars.[116] Shared changes in their grammars also suggest early contacts between Germanic and Balto-Slavic languages; however, some of these innovations are shared with Baltic only, which may point to linguistic contacts during a relatively late period, at any rate after the initial breakup of Balto-Slavic into Baltic and Slavic languages, with the similarities to Slavic being seen as remnants of Indo-European archaisms or the result of secondary contacts.[117][118][h]

Earliest recorded history edit

 
Expansion of early Germanic tribes into Central Europe:[119]
   Settlements before 750 BCE
   New settlements by 500 BCE
   New settlements by 250 BCE
   New settlements by 1 CE

According to some authors the Bastarnae or Peucini were the first Germani to be encountered by the Greco-Roman world and thus to be mentioned in historical records.[120] They appear in historical sources going back as far as the 3rd century BCE through the 4th century CE.[121] Another eastern people known from about 200 BCE, and sometimes believed to be Germanic-speaking, are the Sciri (Greek: Skiroi), who are recorded threatening the city of Olbia on the Black Sea.[122] Late in the 2nd century BCE, Roman and Greek sources recount the migrations of the Cimbri, Teutones and Ambrones whom Caesar later classified as Germanic.[123] The movements of these groups through parts of Gaul, Italy and Hispania resulted in the Cimbrian War (113–101 BCE) against the Romans, in which the Teutons and Cimbri were victorious over several Roman armies but were ultimately defeated.[124][125][126]

The first century BCE was a time of the expansion of Germanic-speaking peoples at the expense of Celtic-speaking polities in modern southern Germany and the Czech Republic.[127][128] Before 60 BCE, Ariovistus, described by Caesar as king of the Germani, led a force including Suevi across the Rhine into Gaul near Besançon, successfully aiding the Sequani against their enemies the Aedui at the Battle of Magetobriga.[129][130] Ariovistus was initially considered an ally of Rome.[131] In 58 BCE, with increasing numbers of settlers crossing the Rhine to join Ariovistus, Julius Caesar went to war with them, defeating them at the Battle of Vosges.[130] [132] In the following years Caesar pursued a controversial campaign to conquer all of Gaul on behalf of Rome, establishing the Rhine as a border. In 55 BCE he crossed the Rhine into Germania near Cologne. Near modern Nijmegen he also massacred a large migrating group of Tencteri and Usipetes who had crossed the Rhine from the east.[133]

Roman Imperial Period to 375 edit

 
The Roman province of Germania, in existence from 7 BCE to 9 CE. The dotted line represents the Limes Germanicus, the fortified border constructed following the final withdrawal of Roman forces from Germania.

Early Roman Imperial period (27 BCE–166 CE) edit

Throughout the reign of Augustus—from 27 BCE until 14 CE—the Roman empire expanded into Gaul, with the Rhine as a border. Starting in 13 BCE, there were Roman campaigns across the Rhine for a 28-year period.[134] First came the pacification of the Usipetes, Sicambri, and Frisians near the Rhine, then attacks increased further from the Rhine, on the Chauci, Cherusci, Chatti and Suevi (including the Marcomanni).[135] These campaigns eventually reached and even crossed the Elbe, and in 5 CE Tiberius was able to show strength by having a Roman fleet enter the Elbe and meet the legions in the heart of Germania.[136] Once Tiberius subdued the Germanic people between the Rhine and the Elbe, the region at least up to Weser—and possibly up to the Elbe—was made the Roman province Germania and provided soldiers to the Roman army.[137][138]

However, within this period two Germanic kings formed larger alliances. Both of them had spent some of their youth in Rome; the first of them was Maroboduus of the Marcomanni,[i] who had led his people away from the Roman activities into Bohemia, which was defended by forests and mountains, and had formed alliances with other peoples. In 6 CE, Rome planned an attack against him but the campaign was cut short when forces were needed for the Illyrian revolt in the Balkans.[137][140] Just three years later (9 CE), the second of these Germanic figures, Arminius of the Cherusci—initially an ally of Rome—drew a large Roman force into an ambush in northern Germany, and destroyed the three legions of Publius Quinctilius Varus at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.[141] Marboduus and Arminius went to war with each other in 17 CE; Arminius was victorious and Marboduus was forced to flee to the Romans.[142]

Following the Roman defeat at the Teutoburg Forest, Rome gave up on the possibility of fully integrating this region into the empire.[143] Rome launched successful campaigns across the Rhine between 14 and 16 CE under Tiberius and Germanicus, but the effort of integrating Germania now seemed to outweigh its benefits.[144] In the reign of Augustus's successor, Tiberius, it became state policy to expand the empire no further than the frontier based roughly upon the Rhine and Danube, recommendations that were specified in the will of Augustus and read aloud by Tiberius himself.[145] Roman intervention in Germania led to a shifting and unstable political situation, in which pro- and anti-Roman parties vied for power. Arminius was murdered in 21 CE by his fellow Germanic tribesmen, due in part to these tensions and for his attempt to claim supreme kingly power for himself.[142]

In the wake of Arminius's death, Roman diplomats sought to keep the Germanic peoples divided and fractious.[146] Rome established relationships with individual Germanic kings that are often discussed as being similar to client states; however, the situation on the border was always unstable, with rebellions by the Frisians in 28 CE, and attacks by the Chauci and Chatti in the 60s CE.[147] The most serious threat to the Roman order was the Revolt of the Batavi in 69 CE, during the civil wars following the death of Nero known as the Year of the Four Emperors.[148] The Batavi had long served as auxiliary troops in the Roman army as well as in the imperial bodyguard as the so-called Numerus Batavorum, often called the Germanic bodyguard.[149] The uprising was led by Gaius Julius Civilis, a member of the Batavian royal family and Roman military officer, and attracted a large coalition of people both inside and outside of the Roman territory. The revolt ended following several defeats, with Civilis claiming to have only supported the imperial claims of Vespasian, who was victorious in the civil war.[150]

 
A bog body, the Osterby Man, displaying the Suebian knot, a hairstyle which, according to Tacitus, was common among Germanic warriors[151]

The century after the Batavian Revolt saw mostly peace between the Germanic peoples and Rome. In 83 CE, Emperor Domitian of the Flavian dynasty attacked the Chatti north of Mainz (Mogontiacum).[152] This war would last until 85 CE. Following the end of the war with the Chatti, Domitian reduced the number of Roman soldiers on the upper Rhine and shifted the Roman military to guarding the Danube frontier, beginning the construction of the limes, the longest fortified border in the empire.[153] The period afterwards was peaceful enough that the emperor Trajan reduced the number of soldiers on the frontier.[154] According to Edward James, the Romans appear to have reserved the right to choose rulers among the barbarians on the frontier.[155]

Marcomannic Wars to 375 CE edit

Following sixty years of quiet on the frontier, 166 CE saw a major incursion of peoples from north of the Danube during the reign of Marcus Aurelius, beginning the Marcomannic Wars.[156] By 168 (during the Antonine plague), barbarian hosts consisting of Marcomanni, Quadi, and Sarmatian Iazyges, attacked and pushed their way to Italy.[157] They advanced as far as Upper Italy, destroyed Opitergium/Oderzo and besieged Aquileia.[158] The Romans had finished the war by 180, through a combination of Roman military victories, the resettling of some peoples on Roman territory, and by making alliances with others.[159] Marcus Aurelius's successor Commodus chose not to permanently occupy any territory conquered north of the Danube, and the following decades saw an increase in the defenses at the limes.[158] The Romans renewed their right to choose the kings of the Marcomanni and Quadi, and Commodus forbid them to hold assemblies unless a Roman centurion was present.[160]

 
Depiction of Romans fighting Goths on the Ludovisi Battle sarcophagus (c. 250–260 CE)

The period after the Marconmannic Wars saw the emergence of peoples with new names along the Roman frontiers, which were probably formed by the merger of smaller groups.[159] These new confederacies or peoples tended to border the Roman imperial frontier.[161] Many ethnic names from earlier periods disappear.[162] The Alamanni emerged along the upper Rhine and are mentioned in Roman sources from the third century onward.[163] The Goths begin to be mentioned along the lower Danube, where they attacked the city of Histria in 238.[164] The Franks are first mentioned occupying territory between the Rhine and Weser.[165] The Lombards seem to have moved their center of power to the central Elbe.[61] Groups such as the Alamanni, Goths, and Franks were not unified polities; they formed multiple, loosely associated groups, who often fought each other and some of whom sought Roman friendship.[166] The Romans also begin to mention seaborne attacks by the Saxons, a term used generically in Latin for Germanic-speaking pirates. A system of defenses on both sides of the English Channel, the Saxon Shore, was established to deal with their raids.[167][168]

From 250 onward, the Gothic peoples formed the "single most potent threat to the northern frontier of Rome".[165] In 250 CE a Gothic king Cniva led Goths with Bastarnae, Carpi, Vandals, and Taifali into the empire, laying siege to Philippopolis. He followed his victory there with another on the marshy terrain at Abrittus, a battle which cost the life of Roman emperor Decius.[164] In 253/254, further attacks occurred reaching Thessalonica and possibly Thrace.[169] In 267/268 there were large raids led by the Herules in 267/268, and a mixed group of Goths and Herules in 269/270. Gothic attacks were abruptly ended in the years after 270, after a Roman victory in which the Gothic king Cannabaudes was killed.[170]

The Roman limes largely collapsed in 259/260,[171] during the Crisis of the Third Century (235–284),[61] and Germanic raids penetrated as far as northern Italy.[172] The limes on the Rhine and upper Danube was brought under control again in 270s, and by 300 the Romans had reestablished control over areas they had abandoned during the crisis.[172] From the later third century onward, the Roman army relied increasingly on troops of Barbarian origin, often recruited from Germanic peoples, with some functioning as senior commanders in the Roman army.[173] In the 4th century, warfare along the Rhine frontier between the Romans and Franks and Alemanni seems to have mostly consisted of campaigns of plunder, during which major battles were avoided.[174] The Romans generally followed a policy of trying to prevent strong leaders from emerging among the barbarians, using treachery, kidnapping, and assassination, paying off rival tribes to attack them, or by supporting internal rivals.[175]

Migration Period (ca. 375–568) edit

 
2nd century to 6th century simplified migrations

The Migration Period is traditionally cited by historians as beginning in 375 CE, under the assumption that the appearance of the Huns prompted the Visigoths to seek shelter within the Roman Empire in 376.[176] The end of the migration period is usually set at 568 when the Lombards invaded Italy. During this time period, numerous barbarian groups invaded the Roman Empire and established new kingdoms within its boundaries.[177] These Germanic migrations traditionally mark the transition between antiquity and the beginning of the early Middle Ages.[178] The reasons for the migrations of the period are unclear, but scholars have proposed overpopulation, climate change, bad harvests, famines, and adventurousness as possible reasons.[179] Migrations were probably carried out by relatively small groups rather than entire peoples.[180]

Early Migration Period (before 375–420) edit

The Greuthungi, a Gothic group in modern Ukraine under the rule of Ermanaric, were among the first peoples attacked by the Huns, apparently facing Hunnic pressure for some years.[181] Following Ermanaric's death, the Greuthungi's resistance broke and they moved toward the Dniester river.[182] A second Gothic group, the Tervingi under King Athanaric, constructed a defensive earthwork against the Huns near the Dniester.[183] However, these measures did not stop the Huns and the majority of the Tervingi abandoned Athanaric; they subsequently fled—accompanied by a contingent of Greuthungi—to the Danube in 376, seeking asylum in the Roman Empire.[184] The emperor Valens chose only to admit the Tervingi, who were settled in the Roman provinces of Thrace and Moesia.[183][185]

Due to mistreatment by the Romans, the Tervingi revolted in 377, starting the Gothic War, joined by the Greuthungi.[186][183][j] The Goths and their allies defeated the Romans first at Marcianople, then defeated and killed emperor Valens in the Battle of Adrianople in 378, destroying two-thirds of Valens' army.[188][189] Following further fighting, peace was negotiated in 382, granting the Goths considerable autonomy within the Roman Empire.[190] However, these Goths—who would be known as the Visigoths—revolted several more times,[191] finally coming to be ruled by Alaric.[192] In 397, the disunited eastern Empire submitted to some of his demands, possibly giving him control over Epirus.[193] In the aftermath of the large-scale Gothic entries into the empire, the Franks and Alemanni became more secure in their positions in 395, when Stilicho, the barbarian generalissimo who held power in the western Empire, made agreements with them.[194]

 
A replica of an ivory diptych probably depicting Stilicho (on the right), the son of a Vandal father and a Roman mother, who became the most powerful man in the Western Roman Empire from 395 to 408 CE[195][196]

In 401, Alaric invaded Italy, coming to an understanding with Stilicho in 404/5.[197] This agreement allowed Stilicho to fight against the force of Radagaisus, who had crossed the Middle Danube in 405/6 and invaded Italy, only to be defeated outside Florence.[198] That same year, a large force of Vandals, Suevi, Alans, and Burgundians crossed the Rhine, fighting the Franks but facing no Roman resistance.[199] In 409, the Suevi, Vandals, and Alans crossing the Pyrenees into Spain, where they took possession of the northern part of the peninsula.[200] The Burgundians seized the land around modern Speyer, Worms, and Strasbourg, territory that was recognized by the Roman Emperor Honorius.[201] When Stilicho fell from power in 408, Alaric invaded Italy again and eventually sacked Rome in 410; Alaric died shortly thereafter.[202] The Visigoths withdrew into Gaul where they faced a power struggle until the succession of Wallia in 415 and his son Theodoric I in 417/18.[203] Following successful campaigns against them by the Roman emperor Flavius Constantius, the Visigoths were settled as Roman allies in Gaul between modern Toulouse and Bourdeaux.[204][205]

Other Goths, including those of Athanaric, continued to live outside the empire, with three groups crossing into the Roman territory after the Tervingi.[206] The Huns gradually conquered Gothic groups north of the Danube, of which at least six are known, from 376 to 400. Those in Crimea may never have been conquered.[207] The Gepids also formed an important Germanic people under Hunnic rule; the Huns had largely conquered them by 406.[208] One Gothic group under Hunnic domination was ruled by the Amal dynasty, who would form the core of the Ostrogoths.[209] The situation outside the Roman empire in 410s and 420s is poorly attested, but it is clear that the Huns continued to spread their influence onto the middle Danube.[210]

The Hunnic Empire (c. 420–453) edit

In 428, the Vandal leader Geiseric moved his forces across the strait of Gibraltar into north Africa. Within two years, they had conquered most of north Africa.[211] By 434, following a renewed political crisis in Rome, the Rhine frontier had collapsed, and in order to restore it, the Roman magister militum Flavius Aetius engineered the destruction of the Burgundian kingdom in 435/436, possibly with Hunnic mercenaries, and launched several successful campaigns against the Visigoths.[212] In 439, the Vandals conquered Carthage, which served as an excellent base for further raids throughout the Mediterranean and became the basis for the Vandal Kingdom.[213] The loss of Carthage forced Aetius to make peace with the Visigoths in 442, effectively recognizing their independence within the boundaries of the empire.[214] During the resulting peace, Aetius resettled the Burgundians in Sapaudia in southern Gaul.[215] In the 430s, Aetius negotiated peace with the Suevi in Spain, leading to a practical loss of Roman control in the province.[216] Despite the peace, the Suevi expanded their territory by conquering Mérida in 439 and Seville in 441.[217]

By 440, Attila and the Huns had come to rule a multi-ethnic empire north of the Danube; two of the most important peoples within this empire were the Gepids and the Goths.[218] The Gepid king Ardaric came to power around 440 and participated in various Hunnic campaigns.[208] In 450, the Huns interfered in a Frankish succession dispute, leading in 451 to an invasion of Gaul. Aetius, by uniting a coalition of Visigoths, part of the Franks, and others, was able to defeat the Hunnic army at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains.[219] In 453, Attila died unexpectedly, and an alliance led by Ardaric's Gepids rebelled against the rule of his sons, defeating them in the Battle of Nedao.[208] Either before or after Attila's death, Valamer, a Gothic ruler of the Amal dynasty, seems to have consolidated power over a large part of the Goths in the Hunnic domain.[220] For the next 20 years, the former subject peoples of the Huns would fight among each other for preeminence.[221]

The arrival of the Saxons in Britain is traditionally dated to 449, however, archaeology indicates they had begun arriving in Britain earlier.[222] Latin sources used Saxon generically for seaborne raiders, meaning that not all of the invaders belonged to the continental Saxons.[167] According to the British monk Gildas (c. 500 – c. 570), this group had been recruited to protect the Romano-British from the Picts, but had revolted.[223] They quickly established themselves as rulers on the eastern part of the island.[224]

After the death of Attila (453–568) edit

 
Barbarian kingdoms and peoples after the end of the Western Roman Empire in 476 CE
 
Mausoleum of Theodoric the Great

In 455, in the aftermath of the death of Aetius in 453 and the murder of emperor Valentinian III in 455,[225] the Vandals invaded Italy and sacked Rome in 455.[226] In 456, the Romans persuaded the Visigoths to fight the Suevi, who had broken their treaty with Rome. The Visigoths and a force of Burgundians and Franks defeated the Suevi at the Battle of Campus Paramus, reducing Suevi control to northwestern Spain.[217] The Visigoths went on to conquer all of the Iberian Peninsula by 484 except a small part that remained under Suevian control.[227]

The Ostrogoths, led by Valamer's brother Thiudimer, invaded the Balkans in 473. Thiudimer's son Theodoric succeeded him in 476.[228] In that same year, a barbarian commander in the Roman Italian army, Odoacer, mutinied and removed the final western Roman emperor, Romulus Augustulus.[229] Odoacer ruled Italy for himself, largely continuing the policies of Roman imperial rule.[230] He destroyed the Kingdom of the Rugians, in modern Austria, in 487/488.[231] Theodoric, meanwhile, successfully extorted the Eastern Empire through a series of campaigns in the Balkans. The eastern emperor Zeno agreed to send Theodoric to Italy in 487/8.[232] After a successful invasion, Theodoric killed and replaced Odoacer in 493, founding a new Ostrogothic kingdom.[233] Theodoric died in 526, amid increasing tensions with the eastern empire.[234]

Toward the end of the migration period, in the early 500s, Roman sources portray a completely changed ethnic landscape outside of the empire: the Marcomanni and Quadi disappeared, as had the Vandals. Instead, the Thuringians, Rugians, Sciri, Herules, Goths, and Gepids are mentioned as occupying the Danube frontier.[235] From the mid-5th century onward, the Alamanni had greatly expanded their territory in all directions and launched numerous raids into Gaul.[236] The territory under the Frankish influence had grown to encompass northern Gaul and Germania to the Elbe.[237] The Frankish king Clovis I united the various Frankish groups in 490s,[238] and conquered the Alamanni by 506.[239] From the 490s onward, Clovis waged wars against the Visigoths, defeating them in 507 and taking control of most of Gaul.[238] Clovis's heirs conquered the Thuringians by 530 and the Burgundians by 532.[240] The continental Saxons, composed of many subgroups, were made tributary to the Franks, as were the Frisians, who faced an attack by the Danes under Hygelac in 533.[241]

The Vandal and Ostrogothic kingdoms were destroyed in 534 and 555 respectively by the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) empire under Justinian.[242] Around 500, a new ethnic identity appears in modern southern Germany, the Baiuvarii (Bavarians), under the patronage of Theodoric's Ostrogothic kingdom and then of the Franks.[231] The Lombards, moving out of Bohemia, destroyed the kingdom of the Heruli in Pannonia in 510. In 568, after destroying the Gepid kingdom, the last Germanic kingdom in the Carpathian basin,[231] the Lombards under Alboin invaded northern Italy, eventually conquering most of it.[243] This invasion has traditionally been regarded as the end of the migration period.[177] The eastern part of Germania, formerly inhabited by the Goths, Gepids, Vandals, and Rugians, was gradually Slavicized, a process enabled by the invasion of the nomadic Avars.[244]

Early Middle Ages to c. 800 edit

 
Frankish expansion from the early kingdom of Clovis I (481) to the divisions of Charlemagne's Empire (843–870)
 
The Sutton Hoo helmet from c. 625 in the British Museum

Merovingian Frankia became divided into three subkingdoms: Austrasia in the east around the Rhine and Meuse, Neustria in the west around Paris, and Burgundy in the southeast around Chalon-sur-Saône.[245] The Franks ruled a multilingual and multi-ethnic kingdom, divided between a mostly Romance-speaking West and a mostly Germanic-speaking east, that integrated former Roman elites but remained centered on a Frankish ethnic identity.[246] In 687, the Pippinids came to control the Merovingian rulers as mayors of the palace in Neustria. Under their direction, the subkingdoms of Frankia were reunited.[247] Following the mayoralty of Charles Martel, the Pippinids replaced the Merovingians as kings in 751, when Charles's son Pepin the Short became king and founded the Carolingian dynasty. His son, Charlemagne, would go on to conquer the Lombards, Saxons, and Bavarians.[248] Charlemagne was crowned Roman emperor in 800 and regarded his residence of Aachen as the new Rome.[249]

Following their invasion in 568, the Lombards quickly conquered larger parts of the Italian peninsula.[250] From 574 to 584, a period without a single Lombard ruler, the Lombards nearly collapsed,[251] until a more centralized Lombard polity emerged under King Agilulf in 590.[252] The invading Lombards only ever made up a very small percentage of the Italian population, however Lombard ethnic identity expanded to include people of both Roman and barbarian descent.[253] Lombard power reached its peak during the reign of King Liutprand (712–744).[254] After Liutprand's death, the Frankish King Pippin the Short invaded in 755, greatly weakening the kingdom.[254] The Lombard kingdom was finally annexed by Charlemagne in 773.[255]

After a period of weak central authority, the Visigothic kingdom came under the rule of Liuvigild, who conquered the Kingdom of the Suebi in 585.[256] A Visigothic identity that was distinct from the Romance-speaking population they ruled had disappeared by 700, with the removal of all legal differences between the two groups.[257] In 711, a Muslim army landed at Grenada; the entire Visigothic kingdom would be conquered by the Umayyad Caliphate by 725.[258]

In what would become England, the Anglo-Saxons were divided into several competing kingdoms, the most important of which were Northumbria, Mercia, and Wessex.[259] In the 7th century, Northumbria established overlordship over the other Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms, until Mercia revolted under Wulfhere in 658. Subsequently, Mercia would establish dominance until 825 with the death of King Cenwulf.[259] Few written sources report on Vendel period Scandinavia from 400 to 700, however this period saw profound societal changes and the formation of early states with connections to the Anglo-Saxon and Frankish kingdoms.[260] In 793, the first recorded Viking raid occurred at Lindisfarne, ushering in the Viking Age.[261]

Religion edit

Germanic paganism edit

 
Wooden idols from Oberdorla moor, modern Thuringia. The idols were found in context with animal bones and other evidence of sacrificial rites.[262]

Germanic paganism refers to the traditional, culturally significant religion of the Germanic-speaking peoples.[263] It did not form a uniform religious system across Germanic-speaking Europe, but varied from place to place, people to people, and time to time. In many contact areas (e.g. Rhineland and eastern and northern Scandinavia), it was similar to neighboring religions such as those of the Slavs, Celts, and Finnic peoples.[264] The term is sometimes applied as early as the Stone Age, Bronze Age, or the earlier Iron Age, but it is more generally restricted to the time period after the Germanic languages had become distinct from other Indo-European languages. From the first reports in Roman sources to the final conversion to Christianity, Germanic paganism thus covers a period of around one thousand years.[265] Scholars are divided as to the degree of continuity between the religious practices of the earlier Germanic peoples and those attested in later Norse paganism and elsewhere: while some scholars argue that Tacitus, early medieval sources, and the Norse sources indicate religious continuity, other scholars are highly skeptical of such arguments.[266]

Like their neighbors and other historically related peoples, the ancient Germanic peoples venerated numerous indigenous deities. These deities are attested throughout literature authored by or written about Germanic-speaking peoples, including runic inscriptions, contemporary written accounts, and in folklore after Christianization. As an example, the second of the two Merseburg charms (two Old High German examples of alliterative verse from a manuscript dated to the ninth century) mentions six deities: Woden, Balder, Sinthgunt, Sunna, Frija, and Volla.[267]

With the exception of Sinthgunt, proposed cognates to these deities occur in other Germanic languages, such as Old English and Old Norse. By way of the comparative method, philologists are then able to reconstruct and propose early Germanic forms of these names from early Germanic mythology. Compare the following table:

Old High German Old Norse Old English Proto-Germanic reconstruction Notes
Wuotan[268] Óðinn[268] Wōden[268] *Wōđanaz[268] A deity similarly associated with healing magic in the Old English Nine Herbs Charm and particular forms of magic throughout the Old Norse record. This deity is strongly associated with extensions of *Frijjō (see below).
Balder[269] Baldr[269] Bældæg[269] *Balđraz[269] In Old Norse texts, where the only description of the deity occurs, Baldr is a son of the god Odin and is associated with beauty and light.
Sunne[270] Sól[270] Sigel[270] *Sowelō ~ *Sōel[271][272] A theonym identical to the proper noun 'Sun'. A goddess and the personified Sun.
Volla[273] Fulla[273] Unattested *Fullōn[273] A goddess associated with extensions of the goddess *Frijjō (see below). The Old Norse record refers to Fulla as a servant of the goddess Frigg, while the second Merseburg Charm refers to Volla as Friia's sister.
Friia[274] Frigg[274] Frīg[274] *Frijjō[274] Associated with the goddess Volla/Fulla in both the Old High German and Old Norse records, this goddess is also strongly associated with the god Odin (see above) in both the Old Norse and Langobardic records.

The structure of the magic formula in this charm has a long history prior to this attestation: it is first known to have occurred in Vedic India, where it occurs in the Atharvaveda, dated to around 500 BCE.[275] Numerous other beings common to various groups of ancient Germanic peoples receive mention throughout the ancient Germanic record. One such type of entity, a variety of supernatural women, is also mentioned in the first of the two Merseburg Charms:

Old High German Old Norse Old English Proto-Germanic reconstruction Notes
itis[276] dís[276] ides[276] *đīsō[276] A type of goddess-like supernatural entity. The West Germanic forms present some linguistic difficulties but the North Germanic and West Germanic forms are used explicitly as cognates (compare Old English ides Scildinga and Old Norse dís Skjǫldunga).[277]

Other widely attested entities from the North and West Germanic folklore include elves, dwarfs, and the mare. (For more discussion on these entities, see Proto-Germanic folklore.)

The great majority of material describing Germanic mythology stems from the North Germanic record. The body of myths among the North Germanic-speaking peoples is known today as Norse mythology and is attested in numerous works, the most expansive of which are the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda. While these texts were composed in the 13th century, they frequently quote genres of traditional alliterative verse known today as eddic poetry and skaldic poetry dating to the pre-Christian period.[278]

 
An image of a museum reproduction of one of the two golden horns of Gallehus, found in Denmark and dating to the early fifth century. Composed in Proto-Norse, the Elder Futhark inscription on the horn features the earliest known generally accepted example of Germanic alliterative verse.

West Germanic mythology (that of speakers of, e.g., Old English and Old High German) is comparatively poorly attested. Notable texts include the Old Saxon Baptismal Vow and the Old English Nine Herbs Charm. While most extant references are simply to deity names, some narratives do survive into the present, such as the Lombard origin myth, which details a tradition among the Lombards that features the deities Frea (cognate with Old Norse Frigg) and Godan (cognate with Old Norse Óðinn). Attested in the 7th-century Origo Gentis Langobardorum and the 8th-century Historia Langobardorum from the Italian Peninsula, the narrative strongly corresponds in numerous ways with the prose introduction to the eddic poem Grímnismál, recorded in 13th-century Iceland.[279][280]

Very few texts make up the corpus of Gothic and other East Germanic languages, and East Germanic paganism and its associated mythic body is especially poorly attested. Notable topics that provide insight into the matter of East Germanic paganism include the Ring of Pietroassa, which appears to be a cult object (see also Gothic runic inscriptions), and the mention of the Gothic Anses (cognate with Old Norse Æsir '(pagan) gods') by Jordanes.[281]

Practices associated with the religion of the ancient Germanic peoples see fewer attestations. However, elements of religious practices are discernable throughout the textual record associated with the ancient Germanic peoples, including a focus on sacred groves and trees, the presence of seeresses, and numerous vocabulary items. The archaeological record has yielded a variety of depictions of deities, a number of them associated with depictions of the ancient Germanic peoples (see Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe). Notable from the Roman period are the Matres and Matronae, some having Germanic names, to whom devotional altars were set up in regions of Germania, Eastern Gaul, and Northern Italy (with a small distribution elsewhere) that were occupied by the Roman army from the first to the fifth century.[282]

Germanic mythology and religious practice is of particular interest to Indo-Europeanists, scholars who seek to identify aspects of ancient Germanic culture—both in terms of linguistic correspondence and by way of motifs—stemming from Proto-Indo-European culture, including Proto-Indo-European mythology. The primordial being Ymir, attested solely in Old Norse sources, makes for a commonly cited example. In Old Norse texts, the death of this entity results in creation of the cosmos, a complex of motifs that finds strong correspondence elsewhere in the Indo-European sphere, notably in Vedic mythology.[283]

Conversion to Christianity edit

 
Page from the Codex Argenteus containing the Gothic Bible translated by Wulfila

Germanic peoples began entering the Roman Empire in large numbers at the same time that Christianity was spreading there,[284] and this connection was a major factor encouraging conversion.[285] The East Germanic peoples, the Langobards, and the Suevi in Spain converted to Arian Christianity,[286] a form of Christianity that believed that God the Father was superior to God the Son.[287] The first Germanic people to convert to Arianism were the Visigoths, at the latest in 376 when they entered the Roman Empire. This followed a longer period of missionary work by both Orthodox Christians and Arians, such as the Arian Wulfila, who was made missionary bishop of the Goths in 341 and translated the Bible into Gothic.[288] The Arian Germanic peoples all eventually converted to Nicene Christianity, which had become the dominant form of Christianity within the Roman Empire; the last to convert were the Visigoths in Spain under their king Reccared in 587.[289]

The areas of the Roman Empire conquered by the Franks, Alemanni, and Baiuvarii were mostly Christian already, but it appears that Christianity declined there.[290] In 496, the Frankish king Clovis I converted to Nicene Christianity. This began a period of missionizing within Frankish territory.[291] The Anglo-Saxons gradually converted following a mission sent by Pope Gregory the Great in 595.[292] In the 7th century, Frankish-supported missionary activity spread out of Gaul, led by figures of the Anglo-Saxon mission such as Saint Boniface.[293] The Saxons initially rejected Christianization,[294] but were eventually forcibly converted by Charlemagne as a result of their conquest in the Saxon Wars in 776/777.[295]

While attempts to convert the Scandinavian peoples began in 831, they were mostly unsuccessful until the 10th and 11th centuries.[296] The last Germanic people to convert were the Swedes, although the Geats had converted earlier. The pagan Temple at Uppsala seems to have continued to exist into the early 1100s.[297]

Society and culture edit

Runic writing edit

 
The Vimose Comb, housed at the National Museum of Denmark and dating to around from c. 160 CE, bears the oldest generally accepted runic inscription.[298]

Germanic speakers developed a native script, the runes (or the fuþark), and the earliest known form of which consists of 24 characters. The runes are generally held to have been used exclusively by Germanic-speaking populations.[k] All known early runic inscriptions are found in Germanic contexts with the potential exception of one inscription, which may indicate cultural transfer between the Germanic speakers to Slavic speakers (and may potentially be the earliest known writing among Slavic speakers).[l]

Like other indigenous scripts of Europe, the runes ultimately developed from the Phoenician alphabet, but unlike similar scripts, the runes were not replaced by the Latin alphabet by the first century BCE. Runes remained in use among the Germanic peoples throughout their history despite the significant influence of Rome.[m]

The precise date that Germanic speakers developed the runic alphabet is unknown, with estimates varying from 100 BCE to 100 CE.[303] Generally accepted inscriptions in the oldest attested form of the script, called the Elder Futhark, date from 200 to 700 CE.[304] The word rune is widely attested among Germanic languages, where it developed from Proto-Germanic *rūna and held a primary meaning of 'secret',[305] but also other meanings such as 'whisper', 'mystery', 'closed deliberation', and 'council'.[306] In most cases, runes appear not to have been used for everyday communication and knowledge of them may have generally been limited to a small group,[303] for whom the term erilaR is attested from the sixth century onward.[307]

The letters of the Elder Futhark are arranged in an order called the futhark, so named after its first six characters.[308] The alphabet is supposed to have been extremely phonetic, and each letter could also represent a word or concept, so that, for instance, the f-rune also stood for *fehu ('cattle, property'). Such examples are known as Begriffsrunen ('concept runes').[309] Runic inscriptions are found on organic materials such as wood, bone, horn, ivory, and animal hides, as well as on stone and metal.[310] Inscriptions tend to be short,[303] and are difficult to interpret as profane or magical. They include names, inscriptions by the maker of an object, memorials to the dead, as well as inscriptions that are religious or magical in nature.[311]

Personal names edit

 
The Istaby Stone (DR359) is a runestone that features a Proto-Norse Elder Futhark inscription describing three generations of men. Their names share the common element of 'wolf' (wulfaz) and alliterate.

Germanic personal names are commonly dithematic, consisting of two components that may be combined freely (such as the Old Norse female personal name Sigríðr, consisting of sigr 'victory' + fríðr 'beloved'). As summarized by Per Vikstrand, "The old Germanic personal names are, from a social and ideological point of view, characterized by three main features: religion, heroism, and family bonds. The religious aspect [of Germanic names] seems to be an inherited, Indo-European trace, which the Germanic languages share with Greek and other Indo-European languages."[312]

One point of debate surrounding Germanic name-giving practice is whether name elements were considered semantically meaningful when combined. [312] Whatever the case, an element of a name could be inherited by a male or female's offspring, leading to an alliterative lineage (related, see alliterative verse). The runestone D359 in Istaby, Sweden provides one such example, where three generations of men are connected by way of the element *wulfaz, meaning 'wolf' (the alliterative Haþuwulfaz, *Heruwulfaz, and Hariwulfaz).[312] Sacral components to Germanic personal names are also attested, including elements such as *hailaga- and *wīha- (both usually translated as 'holy, sacred', see for example ), and deity names (theonyms). Deity names as first components of personal names are attested primarily in Old Norse names, where they commonly reference in particular the god Thor (Old Norse Þórr).[313]

Poetry and legend edit

The ancient Germanic-speaking peoples were a largely oral culture. Written literature in Germanic languages is not recorded until the 6th century (Gothic Bible) or the 8th century in modern England and Germany.[314] The philologist Andreas Heusler proposed the existence of various genres of literature in the "Old Germanic" period, which were largely based on genres found in high medieval Old Norse poetry. These include ritual poetry, epigrammatic poetry (Spruchdichtung), memorial verses (Merkdichtung), lyric, narrative poetry, and praise poetry.[315] Heinrich Beck suggests that, on the basis of Latin mentions in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, the following genres can be adduced: origo gentis (the origin of a people or their rulers), the fall of heroes (casus heroici), praise poetry, and laments for the dead.[316]

Some stylistic aspects of later Germanic poetry appear to have origins in the Indo-European period, as shown by comparison with ancient Greek and Sanskrit poetry.[317] Originally, the Germanic-speaking peoples shared a metrical and poetic form, alliterative verse, which is attested in very similar forms in Old Saxon, Old High German and Old English, and in a modified form in Old Norse.[318] Alliterative verse is not attested in the small extant Gothic corpus.[319] The poetic forms diverge among the different languages from the 9th century onward.[320]

Later Germanic peoples shared a common legendary tradition. These heroic legends mostly involve historical personages who lived during the migration period (4th–6th centuries AD), placing them in highly ahistorical and mythologized settings;[321][n] they originate and develop as part of an oral tradition.[323][324] Some early Gothic heroic legends are already found in Jordanes' Getica (c. 551).[325] The close link between Germanic heroic legend and Germanic language and possibly poetic devices is shown by the fact that the Germanic speakers in Francia who adopted a Romance language, do not preserve Germanic legends but rather developed their own heroic folklore—excepting the figure of Walter of Aquitaine.[326]

Germanic law edit

 
Germanic bracteate from Funen, Denmark

Until the middle of the 20th century, the majority of scholars assumed the existence of a distinct Germanic legal culture and law.[327] Early ideas about Germanic law have come under intense scholarly scrutiny since the 1950s, and specific aspects of it such as the legal importance of Sippe, retinues, and loyalty, and the concept of outlawry can no longer be justified.[328][329] Besides the assumption of a common Germanic legal tradition and the use of sources of different types from different places and time periods,[328] there are no native sources for early Germanic law.[330][331] The earliest written legal sources, the Leges Barbarorum, were all written under Roman and Christian influence and often with the help of Roman jurists,[332] and contain large amounts of "Vulgar Latin Law", an unofficial legal system that functioned in the Roman provinces.[333]

As of 2023, scholarly consensus is that Germanic law is best understood in contrast with Roman law, in that whereas Roman law was "learned" and the same across regions, Germanic law was not learned and incorporated regional peculiarities.[334] Common elements include an emphasis on orality, gesture, formulaic language, legal symbolism, and ritual.[335] Some items in the "Leges", such as the use of vernacular words, may reveal aspects of originally Germanic, or at least non-Roman, law. Legal historian Ruth Schmidt-Wiegand writes that this vernacular, often in the form of Latinized words, belongs to "the oldest layers of a Germanic legal language" and shows some similarities to Gothic.[336][337]

Warfare edit

 
Image of Romans fighting the Marcomanni on the Column of Marcus Aurelius (193 CE)

Warfare seems to have been a constant in Germanic society,[338] including conflicts among and within Germanic peoples.[339] There is no common Germanic word for "war", and it was not necessarily differentiated from other forms of violence.[340] Historical information on Germanic warfare almost entirely depends on Greco-Roman sources,[341] however their accuracy has been questioned.[342] The core of the army was formed by the comitatus (retinue), a group of warriors following a chief.[343] As retinues grew larger, their names could become associated with entire peoples. Many retinues functioned as auxilia (mercenary units in the Roman army).[344]

Roman sources stress, perhaps partially as a literary topos, that the Germanic peoples fought without discipline.[345][346] Germanic warriors fought mostly on foot,[347] in tight formations in close combat.[348] Tacitus mentions a single formation as used by the Germani, the wedge (Latin: cuneus).[349] Cavalry was rare: in the Roman period, it mostly consisted of chiefs and their immediate retinues,[347] who may have dismounted to fight.[350] However, East Germanic peoples such as the Goths developed cavalry forces armed with lances due to contact with various nomadic peoples.[351] Archaeological finds, mostly in the form of grave goods, indicate that most warriors were armed with spear, shield, and often with swords.[348] Higher status individuals were often buried with spurs for riding.[350] The only archaeological evidence for helmets and chain mail shows them to be of Roman manufacture.[352]

Economy and material culture edit

Agriculture and population density edit

Unlike agriculture in the Roman provinces, which was organized around the large farms known as villae rusticae, Germanic agriculture was organized around villages. When Germanic peoples expanded into northern Gaul in the 4th and 5th centuries CE, they brought this village-based agriculture with them, which increased the agricultural productivity of the land; Heiko Steuer suggests this means that Germania was more agriculturally productive than is generally assumed.[353] Villages were not distant from each other but often within sight, revealing a fairly high population density, and contrary to the assertions of Roman sources, only about 30% of Germania was covered in forest, about the same percentage as today.[354]

Based on pollen samples and the finds of seeds and plant remains, the chief grains cultivated in Germania were barley, oats, and wheat (both Einkorn and emmer), while the most common vegetables were beans and peas. Flax was also grown.[355] Agriculture in Germania relied heavily on animal husbandry, primarily the raising of cattle, which were smaller than their Roman counterparts[356] Both cultivation and animal husbandry methods improved with time, with examples being the introduction of rye, which grew better in Germania, and the introduction of the three-field system.[357]

Crafts edit

It is unclear if there was a special class of craftsmen in Germania, however archaeological finds of tools are frequent.[358] Many everyday items such as dishes were made out of wood, and archaeology has found the remains of wooden well construction.[359] The 4th-century CE Nydam and Illerup ships show highly developed knowledge of ship construction, while elite graves have revealed wooden furniture with complex joinery.[360] Products made from ceramics included cooking, drinking, and storage, vessels, as well as lamps. While originally formed by hand, the period around 1 CE saw the introduction of the potter's wheel.[361] Some of the ceramics produced on potter's wheels seem to have been done in direct imitation of Roman wares,[362] and may have been produced by Romans in Germania or by Germani who had learned Roman techniques while serving in the Roman army.[363] The shape and decoration of Germanic ceramics vary by region and archaeologists have traditionally used these variations to determine larger cultural areas.[364] Many ceramics were probably produced locally in hearths, but large pottery kilns have also been discovered, and it seems clear that there were areas of specialized production.[362]

Metalworking edit

 
A 5th-century CE gold collar from Ålleberg, Sweden. It displays Germanic filigree work.[365]

Despite the claims of Roman writers such as Tacitus that the Germani had little iron and lacked expertise in working it, deposits of iron were commonly found in Germania and Germanic smiths were skillful metalworkers.[366] Smithies are known from multiple settlements, and smiths were often buried with their tools.[367] An iron mine discovered at Rudki, in the Łysogóry mountains of modern central Poland, operated from the 1st to the 4th centuries CE and included a substantial smelting workshop; similar facilities have been found in Bohemia.[368] The remains of large smelting operations have been discovered by Ribe in Jutland (4th to 6th century CE),[369] as well as at Glienick in northern Germany and at Heeten in the Netherlands (both 4th century CE).[370] Germanic smelting furnaces may have produced metal that was as high-quality as that produced by the Romans.[371] In addition to large-scale production, nearly every individual settlement seems to have produced some iron for local use.[369] Iron was used for agricultural tools, tools for various crafts, and for weapons.[372]

Lead was needed in order to make molds and for the production of jewelry, however it is unclear if the Germani were able to produce lead. While lead mining is known from within the Siegerland across the Rhine from the Roman Empire, it is sometimes theorized that this was the work of Roman miners.[373] Another mine within Germania was near modern Soest, where again it is theorized that lead was exported to Rome.[374] The neighboring Roman provinces of Germania superior and Germania inferior produced a great deal of lead, which has been found stamped as plumbum Germanicum ("Germanic lead") in Roman shipwrecks.[375]

Deposits of gold are not found naturally within Germania and had to either be imported[376] or could be found having naturally washed down rivers.[377] The earliest known gold objects made by Germanic craftsmen are mostly small ornaments dating from the later 1st century CE.[376] Silver working likewise dates from the first century CE, and silver often served as a decorative element with other metals.[378] From the 2nd century onward, increasingly complex gold jewelry was made, often inlaid with precious stones and in a polychrome style.[379] Inspired by Roman metalwork, Germanic craftsmen also began working with gold and silver-gilt foils on belt buckles, jewelry, and weapons.[365] Pure gold objects produced in the late Roman period included torcs with snakeheads, often displaying filigree and cloisonné work, techniques that dominated throughout Germanic Europe.[380]

Clothing and textiles edit

 
A pair of trousers with attached stockings found in the Thorsberg moor (3rd century CE)[381]

Clothing does not generally preserve well archaeologically. Early Germanic clothing is shown on some Roman stone monuments such as Trajan's Column and the Column of Marcus Aurelius, and is occasionally discovered in finds from in moors,[382] mostly from Scandinavia.[383] Frequent finds include long trousers, sometimes including connected stockings, shirt-like gowns (Kittel) with long sleeves, large pieces of cloth, and capes with fur on the inside.[384] All of these are thought to be male clothing, while finds of tubular garments are thought to be female clothing. These would have reached to the ankles and would likely have been held in place by brooches at the height of the shoulders, as shown on Roman monuments.[385] On Roman depictions, the dress was gathered below the breast or at the waist, and there are frequently no sleeves. Sometimes a blouse or skirt is depicted below the dress, along with a neckerchief around the throat.[386] By the middle of the 5th century CE, both men and women among the continental Germanic peoples came to wear a Roman-style tunic as their most important piece of clothing. This was secured at the waist and likely adopted due to intensive contact with the Roman world.[387] The Romans typically depict Germanic men and women as bareheaded, although some head-coverings have been found. Although Tacitus mentions an undergarment made of linen, no examples of these have been found.[386]

Surviving examples indicate that Germanic textiles were of high quality and mostly made of flax and wool.[381] Roman depictions show the Germani wearing materials that were only lightly worked.[388] Surviving examples indicate that a variety of weaving techniques were used.[386] Leather was used for shoes, belts, and other gear.[389] Spindles, sometimes made of glass or amber, and the weights from looms and distaffs are frequently found in Germanic settlements.[381]

Trade edit

 
The Minerva Bowl, part of the Hildesheim Treasure, likely a Roman diplomatic gift.[390] The treasure may date from the reign of Nero (37–68 CE) or the early Flavian dynasty (69–96 CE).[391]

Archaeology shows that from at least the turn of the 3rd century CE larger regional settlements in Germania existed that were not exclusively involved in an agrarian economy, and that the main settlements were connected by paved roads. The entirety of Germania was within a system of long-distance trade.[392] Migration-period seaborne trade is suggested by Gudme on the Danish island of Funen and other harbors on the Baltic.[393]

Roman trade with Germania is poorly documented.[394] Roman merchants crossing the Alps for Germania are recorded already by Caesar in the 1st century BCE.[390] During the imperial period, most trade probably took place in trading posts in Germania or at major Roman bases.[395] The most well-known Germanic export to the Roman Empire was amber, with a trade centered on the Baltic coast.[396] Economically, however, amber is likely to have been fairly unimportant.[397] The use of Germanic loanwords in surviving Latin texts suggests that besides amber (glaesum), the Romans also imported the feathers of Germanic geese (ganta) and hair dye (sapo). Germanic slaves were also a major commodity.[398] Archaeological discoveries indicate that lead was exported from Germania as well, perhaps mined in Roman-Germanic "joint ventures".[399]

Products imported from Rome are found archaeologically throughout the Germanic sphere and include vessels of bronze and silver, glassware, pottery, brooches; other products such as textiles and foodstuffs may have been just as important.[400] Rather than mine and smelt non-ferrous metals themselves, Germanic smiths seem to have often preferred to melt down finished metal objects from Rome, which were imported in large numbers, including coins, metal vessels, and metal statues.[401] Tacitus mentions in Germania chapter 23 that the Germani living along the Rhine bought wine, and Roman wine has been found in Denmark and northern Poland.[390] Finds of Roman silver coinage and weapons might have been war booty or the result of trade, while high quality silver items may have been diplomatic gifts.[402] Roman coinage may have acted as a form of currency as well.[403]

Genetics edit

The use of genetic studies to investigate the Germanic past is controversial, with scholars such as Guy Halsall suggesting it could represent a hearkening back to 19th-century ideas of race.[404] Sebastian Brather, Wilhelm Heizmann, and Steffen Patzold write that genetics studies are of great use for demographic history, but cannot give us any information about cultural history.[405] In a 2013 book which reviewed studies made up until then, scholars noted that most Germanic speakers today have a Y-DNA that is a mixture including haplogroup I1, R1a1a, R1b-P312 and R1b-U106; however, the authors also note that these groups are older than Germanic languages and found among speakers of other languages.[406]

Modern reception edit

The rediscovery of Tacitus's Germania in the 1450s was used by German humanists to claim a glorious classical past for their nation that could compete with that of Greece and Rome,[407] and to equate the "Germanic" with the "German".[408] While the humanists' notion of the "Germanic" was initially vague, later it was narrowed and used to support a notion of German(ic) superiority to other nations.[409] Equally important was Jordanes's Getica, rediscovered by Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini in the mid-15th century and first printed in 1515 by Konrad Peutinger, which depicted Scandinavia as the "womb of nations" (Latin: vagina nationum) from which all the historical northeastern European barbarians migrated in the distant past.[410] While treated with suspicion by German scholars, who preferred the indigenous origin given by Tacitus, this motif became very popular in contemporary Swedish Gothicism, as it supported Sweden's imperial ambitions.[411] Peutinger printed the Getica together with Paul the Deacon's History of the Lombards, so that the Germania, the Getica, and the History of the Lombards formed the basis for the study of the Germanic past.[412] Scholars did not clearly differentiate between the Germanic peoples, Celtic peoples, and the "Scythian peoples" until the late 18th century with the discovery of Indo-European and the establishment of language as the primary criterion for nationality. Before that time, German scholars considered the Celtic peoples to be part of the Germanic group.[413]

The beginning of Germanic philology proper starts around the turn of the 19th century, with Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm being the two most significant founding figures. Their oeuvre included various monumental works on linguistics, culture, and literature.[414] Jacob Grimm offered many arguments identifying the Germans as the "most Germanic" of the Germanic-speaking peoples, many of which were taken up later by others who sought to equate "Germanicness" (German: Germanentum) with "Germanness" (German: Deutschtum).[415] Grimm also argued that the Scandinavian sources were, while much later, more "pure" attestations of "Germanness" than those from the south, an opinion that remains common today.[416] German nationalist thinkers of the völkisch movement placed a great emphasis on the connection of modern Germans to the Germania using Tacitus to prove the purity and virtue of the German people, which had allowed them to conquer the decadent Romans.[417] German historians used the Germanic past to argue for a liberal, democratic form of government and a unified German state.[418] Contemporary Romantic nationalism in Scandinavia placed more weight on the Viking Age, resulting in the movement known as Scandinavism.[419]

In the late 19th century, Gustaf Kossinna developed several widely accepted theories tying archaeological finds of specific assemblages of objects. Kossina used his theories to extend Germanic identity back to the Neolithic period and to state with confidence when and where various Germanic and other peoples had migrated within Europe.[420] In the 1930s and 40s, the Nazi Party made use of notions of Germanic "purity" reaching back into the earliest prehistoric times.[10] Nazi ideologues also used the "Germanic" nature of peoples such as the Franks and Goths to justify territorial annexations in northern France, Ukraine, and the Crimea.[421] Scholars reinterpreted Germanic culture to justify the Nazis' rule as anchored in the Germanic past, emphasizing noble leaders and warlike retinues who dominated surrounding peoples.[422] After 1945, these associations led to a scholarly backlash and re-examining of Germanic origins.[10] Many medieval specialists have even demanded that scholars avoid the term Germanic altogether since it is too emotionally charged, adding that it has been politically abused and creates more confusion than clarity.[423]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The earlier Nordic Bronze Age of southern Scandinavia also shows definite population and material continuities with the Jastorf Culture,[8] but it is unclear whether these indicate ethnic continuity.[9]
  2. ^ The reconstruction of such loanwords remains a difficult task, since no descendant language of substrate dialects is attested, and plausible etymological explanations have been found for many Germanic lexemes previously regarded as of non-Indo-European origin. The English term sword, long regarded as "without etymology", was found to be cognate with the Ancient Greek áor, the sword hung to the shoulder with valuable rings, both descending from the PIE root *swerd-, denoting the 'suspended sword'. Similarly, the word hand could descend from a PGer. form *handu- 'pike' (< *handuga- 'having a pike'), possibly related to Greek kenteîn 'to stab, poke' and kéntron 'stinging agent, pricker'.[72] However, there is still a set of words of Proto-Germanic origin, attested in Old High German since the 8th c., which have found so far no competing Indo-European etymologies, however unlikely: e.g., Adel 'aristocratic lineage'; Asch 'barge'; Beute 'board'; Loch 'lock'; Säule 'pillar'; etc.[73]
  3. ^ Rübekeil 2017, pp. 996–997: West Germanic: "There seems to be a principal distinction between the northern and the southern part of this group; the demarcation between both parts, however, is a matter of controversy. The northern part, North Sea Gmc or Ingvaeonic, is the larger one, but it is a moot point whether Old Saxon and Old Low Franconian really belong to it, and if yes, to what extent they participate in all its characteristic developments. (...) As a whole, there are arguments for a close relationship between Anglo-Frisian on the one hand and Old Saxon and Old Low Franconian on the other; there are, however, counter-arguments as well. The question as to whether the common features are old and inherited or have emerged by connections over the North Sea is still controversial."
  4. ^ Iversen & Kroonen 2017, p. 521: "In the more than 250 years (ca. 2850–2600 B.C.E.) when late Funnel Beaker farmers coexisted with the new Single Grave culture communities within a relatively small area of present-day Denmark, processes of cultural and linguistic exchange were almost inevitable—if not widespread."
  5. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 85: "Early Jastorf, at the end of the 7th century BCE, is almost certainly too early for the last common ancestor of the attested languages; but later Jastorf culture and its successors occupy so much territory that their populations are most unlikely to have spoken a single dialect, even granting that the expansion of the culture was relatively rapid. It follows that our reconstructed PGmc was only one of the dialects spoken by peoples identified archeologically, or by the Romans, as 'Germans'; the remaining Germanic peoples spoke sister dialects of PGmc." Polomé 1992, p. 51: "...if the Jastorf culture and, probably, the neighboring Harpstedt culture to the west constitute the Germanic homeland, a spread of Proto-Germanic northwards and eastwards would have to be assumed, which might explain both the archaisms and the innovative features of North Germanic and East Germanic, and would fit nicely with recent views locating the homeland of the Goths in Poland."
  6. ^ Mallory and Adams observe: "The Przeworsk Culture shows continuity with preceding cultures (Lusatian) and insures that the Slavic homeland was in its territory from whence the Venedi, one of the earliest historically attested Slavic tribes are specifically derived. On the other hand, Germanicists have argued that the Przeworsk culture was occupied by the Elbe-Germanic tribes and there are also those who argue that the Przeworsk reflects both a Germanic and Slavic component."[108]
  7. ^ Koch 2020, pp. 79–80: "New words shared between these languages at this period are not detectable as loanwords. The smaller number that do show Celtic innovations probably post-date the transition from Pre-Celtic to Proto-Celtic ~1200 BC. For example, the Celto-Germanic group name giving Proto-Germanic *Burgunþaz and Pro-Celtic *Brigantes was *Bhr̥ghn̥tes, which then independently underwent the Germanic and Celtic treatments of Proto-Indo-European syllabic * and * . It would be unlikely for the name to have its attested Germanic form if it had been borrowed from Celtic after ~1200 BC and probably impossible after ~900 BC."
  8. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 581–582: "Also: eine Gemeinsamkeit von Germ., Balt. und Slaw., wobei die Neuerungen vor allem in einer Gemeinsamkeit von Germ. und Balt. zum Ausdruck kommen; die Gemeinsamkeit von Germ. und Slaw. beruht mehr auf der Bewahrung urspr. Verhältnisse und weist damit nicht auf engere Gemeinsamkeiten im Verlauf der Entwicklung. (...) Die Kontakte zum Extrem auf der anderen Seite, dem Slaw., sind wohl nur als eine Begleiterscheinung der Kontakte zum Balt. aufzufassen. Diese Kontakte zum Balt. müssen allerdings teilweise recht alt sein."; Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 166–167: "... as for the Balto-Slavic connection, other pieces of evidence show shared innovations with Baltic only, not with Slavic, which indicates a period of contact and joint development between Germanic and Balto-Slavic languages during a relatively late time period and, in any event, after the initial breakup of Balto-Slavic."
  9. ^ Tacitus referred to him as king of the Suevians.[139]
  10. ^ During the initial stage of the conflict between the Romans and the Tervingi, the Greuthungi had crossed the Danube into the Empire.[187]
  11. ^ "The indigenous ancient alphabet of Germania, the fuþark, consisted of twenty-four characters named runes."[299] "The discovery of a rune-inscribed bone from Lány (Břeclav, Moravia/Czech Republic) challenges the prevalent opinion that the older fuþark was used exclusively by Germanic-speaking populations."[300]
  12. ^ "Runes are an alphabetic script, called fuþark, used among Germanic tribes ... The find reported here renders six of the last eight runes of the older fuþark, making it the first find containing the final part of the older fuþark in South-Germanic inscriptions, and the only one found in a non-Germanic context."[301]
  13. ^ "For unknown reasons the Latin, or Roman, alphabet was not adapted in the North, but instead an alphabet was created that reflected Roman influence, but deviated in crucial features. History of writing in the Mediterranean area shows that there were many indigenous scripts, all somehow descending from the Phoenician mother script, but they were all replaced in ultimately the first century BC by the Roman script, the writing system of the leading culture."[302]
  14. ^ Historian Shami Ghosh for instance, argues: "It is certainly the case that the Goths, Lombards, Franks, Angles, Saxons, and Burgundians...were all Germanic peoples, in that their vernacular tongue belonged to the Germanic sub-group of the Indo-European family of languages. It is also the case that the corpus of what literary scholars define as Germanic heroic poetry does contain narratives that have as a historical core events that took place largely in the period c.300–c.600—insofar as any of these narratives can in fact be related to any sort of historical realities at all. But there is little evidence from before the eighth century, at least, for any sense even of an awareness of an inter-relatedness among these peoples, and certainly not of any perception among them of any significance of such inter-relatedness—any sort of knowledge of and meaning granted to a common 'Germanentum', or 'Germanic-ness', that has any relation to the burden of significance such a concept has borne in modern scholarship. Furthermore, the historical links between the extant heroic texts and any verifiable historical fact are both invariably slender and often quite tenuous, and therefore should not be overvalued."[322]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Steuer 2021, p. 30.
  2. ^ a b Steuer 2021, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b Steuer 2021, p. 28.
  4. ^ a b Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 383–385.
  5. ^ Steinacher 2022, p. 292.
  6. ^ a b Steuer 2021, p. 32.
  7. ^ Steuer 2021, p. 89, 1310.
  8. ^ a b Timpe & Scardigli 2010, p. 636.
  9. ^ a b Todd 1999, p. 11.
  10. ^ a b c Todd 1999, p. 9.
  11. ^ Wolfram 1988, p. 5.
  12. ^ Pfeifer 2000, p. 434.
  13. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 58.
  14. ^ a b Pohl 2004a, p. 1.
  15. ^ Steinacher 2020, pp. 48–57.
  16. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 4.
  17. ^ a b Green 1998, p. 8.
  18. ^ Winkler 2016, p. xxii.
  19. ^ Kulikowski 2020, p. 19.
  20. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 380–381.
  21. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 379–380.
  22. ^ Harland & Friedrich 2020, pp. 2–3.
  23. ^ Steinacher 2022, pp. 292–293.
  24. ^ Brather, Heizmann & Patzold 2021, p. 31.
  25. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 381–382.
  26. ^ Harland & Friedrich 2020, p. 6.
  27. ^ Steuer 2021, pp. 29, 35.
  28. ^ Pohl 2004a, pp. 50–51.
  29. ^ Neidorf 2018, p. 865.
  30. ^ Harland 2021, p. 28.
  31. ^ Harland & Friedrich 2020, p. 10.
  32. ^ a b Brather, Heizmann & Patzold 2021, p. 34.
  33. ^ Steuer 2021, p. 29.
  34. ^ Steuer 2021, pp. 1275–1277.
  35. ^ Steinacher 2020, pp. 35–39.
  36. ^ Riggsby 2010, p. 51.
  37. ^ Steinacher 2020, pp. 36–37.
  38. ^ Steinacher 2020, pp. 37–38.
  39. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 11.
  40. ^ Pohl 2004a, pp. 52–53.
  41. ^ Pohl 2004a, pp. 53–54.
  42. ^ Pohl 2004a, pp. 54–55.
  43. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 19.
  44. ^ a b c Pohl 2004a, p. 3.
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  46. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, p. 377.
  47. ^ Krebs 2011, p. 204.
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  51. ^ Liebeschuetz 2015, p. 97.
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  55. ^ Steinacher 2020, p. 47.
  56. ^ Steinacher 2020, pp. 47–48.
  57. ^ a b c Rübekeil 2017, p. 986.
  58. ^ Tacitus 1948, p. 102.
  59. ^ Wolters 2001, p. 567.
  60. ^ a b Wolters 2001, p. 568.
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  62. ^ a b c Wolters 2001, p. 470.
  63. ^ Wolters 2001, pp. 470–471.
  64. ^ Steuer 2021, p. 59.
  65. ^ Steuer 2021, pp. 125–126.
  66. ^ Wolters 2001, p. 471.
  67. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 84; Anthony 2007, pp. 57–58; Iversen & Kroonen 2017, p. 519
  68. ^ Penzl 1972, p. 1232.
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  70. ^ Stiles 2017, p. 889; Rübekeil 2017, p. 989
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  74. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 85; Nedoma 2017, p. 875; Seebold 2017, p. 975; Rübekeil 2017, p. 989
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  76. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 85.
  77. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, p. 595.
  78. ^ Kroonen 2013, p. 422; Rübekeil 2017, p. 990
  79. ^ Rübekeil 2017, p. 990.
  80. ^ a b Todd 1999, p. 13; Green 1998, p. 108; Ringe 2006, p. 152; Sanders 2010, p. 27; Nedoma 2017, p. 875.
  81. ^ Green 1998, p. 13; Nedoma 2017, p. 876
  82. ^ Nedoma 2017, p. 875.
  83. ^ Fortson 2004, pp. 338–339; Nedoma 2017, p. 876
  84. ^ Ringe 2006, p. 85; Nedoma 2017, p. 879
  85. ^ a b Nedoma 2017, pp. 879, 881; Rübekeil 2017, p. 995; ; Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 158–160.
  86. ^ Nedoma 2017, pp. 876–877.
  87. ^ a b Nedoma 2017, p. 881.
  88. ^ Fortson 2004, p. 339; Rübekeil 2017, p. 993
  89. ^ Fortson 2004, p. 339; Seebold 2017, p. 976; Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 158–160.
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  91. ^ Schrijver 2014, p. 185; Rübekeil 2017, p. 992
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  95. ^ Rübekeil 2017, pp. 987, 991, 997; Nedoma 2017, pp. 881–883
  96. ^ Nedoma 2017, pp. 877, 881.
  97. ^ Rübekeil 2017, p. 992.
  98. ^ Nedoma 2017, p. 879.
  99. ^ Rübekeil 2017, pp. 987, 997–998.
  100. ^ Nedoma 2017, p. 880.
  101. ^ Fortson 2004, p. 339.
  102. ^ Anthony 2007, p. 360; Seebold 2017, p. 978; Heyd 2017, pp. 348–349; Kristiansen et al. 2017, p. 340; Reich 2018, pp. 110–111
  103. ^ Anthony 2007, pp. 360, 367–368; Seebold 2017, p. 978; Kristiansen et al. 2017, p. 340; Iversen & Kroonen 2017, pp. 512–513
  104. ^ Koch 2020, p. 38.
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  108. ^ a b Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 470.
  109. ^ Brather 2004, pp. 181–183.
  110. ^ Koch 2020, p. 19.
  111. ^ Fortson 2004, p. 338; Kroonen 2013, pp. 247, 311; Nedoma 2017, p. 876
  112. ^ Schrijver 2014, p. 197; Nedoma 2017, p. 876
  113. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 579–589; Steuer 2021, p. 113; Koch 2020, pp. 79–80; Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 161–163.
  114. ^ Koch 2020, pp. 79–80.
  115. ^ Green 1998, pp. 145–159.
  116. ^ Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 161–163.
  117. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 581–582.
  118. ^ Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen & Kroonen 2022, pp. 166–167.
  119. ^ Kinder 1988, p. 108.
  120. ^ Maciałowicz, Rudnicki & Strobin 2016, pp. 136–138.
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  122. ^ Chaniotis 2013, pp. 209–211.
  123. ^ Kaul & Martens 1995, pp. 133, 153–154.
  124. ^ Harris 1979, pp. 245–247.
  125. ^ Burns 2003, pp. 72.
  126. ^ Woolf 2012, pp. 105–107.
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  128. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 13.
  129. ^ Vanderhoeven & Vanderhoeven 2004, p. 144.
  130. ^ a b Todd 1999, p. 45.
  131. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 204.
  132. ^ Steuer 2006, p. 230.
  133. ^ Goldsworthy 2009, p. 212, note 2.
  134. ^ Wells 2004, p. 155.
  135. ^ Gruen 2006, pp. 180–182.
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  137. ^ a b Haller & Dannenbauer 1970, p. 30.
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  176. ^ Springer 2010, pp. 1020–1021.
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  179. ^ Brather 2010, p. 1035-1036.
  180. ^ Brather 2010, p. 1036.
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  185. ^ Heather 1996, p. 131.
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  206. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 102–103.
  207. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 111–112.
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  218. ^ Heather 1996, p. 109.
  219. ^ Halsall 2007, pp. 251–253.
  220. ^ Heather 1996, p. 116.
  221. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 151–152.
  222. ^ James 2014, p. 65.
  223. ^ James 2014, p. 64.
  224. ^ Wolfram 1997, p. 242.
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  226. ^ Todd 1999, p. 177.
  227. ^ Todd 1999, p. 153.
  228. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 154–155.
  229. ^ Halsall 2007, p. 280.
  230. ^ Halsall 2007, pp. 284–285.
  231. ^ a b c Pohl 2004a, p. 42.
  232. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 216–217.
  233. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 219–220.
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  235. ^ Goffart 2006, p. 111.
  236. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 31.
  237. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 34.
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  239. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 32.
  240. ^ Todd 1999, p. 200, 240.
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  242. ^ Halsall 2007, p. 284.
  243. ^ Todd 1999, p. 226.
  244. ^ Pohl 2004a, p. 41-2.
  245. ^ Beck & Quak 2010, p. 853.
  246. ^ Beck & Quak 2010, pp. 857–858.
  247. ^ Beck & Quak 2010, p. 863-864.
  248. ^ Beck & Quak 2010, p. 864-865.
  249. ^ Todd 1999, p. 193.
  250. ^ Todd 1999, pp. 226–227.
  251. ^ Wolfram 1997, pp. 293–294.
  252. ^ Todd 1999, p. 228.
  253. ^ Nedoma & Scardigli 2010, p. 129.
  254. ^ a b Todd 1999, p. 234.
  255. ^ Wolfram 1997, p. 300.
  256. ^ Todd 1999, pp. 158, 174.
  257. ^ Heather 1996, pp. 297–298.
  258. ^ Wolfram 1997, pp. 277–278.
  259. ^ a b Kuhn & Wilson 2010, p. 614.
  260. ^ Todd 1999, pp. 210, 219.
  261. ^ Capelle & Brather 2010, pp. 157–158.
  262. ^ Steuer 2021, pp. 641–642.
  263. ^ Hultgård 2010, p. 863.
  264. ^ Hultgård 2010, pp. 865–866.
  265. ^ Hultgård 2010, pp. 866–867.
  266. ^ Schjødt 2020, p. 265.
  267. ^ For general discussion regarding the Merseburg Charms, see for example Lindow 2001, pp. 227–28 and Simek 1993, pp. 84, 278–279.
  268. ^ a b c d Orel 2003, p. 469.
  269. ^ a b c d Orel 2003, p. 33.
  270. ^ a b c Orel 2003, pp. 361, 385, 387.
  271. ^ Orel 2003, p. 385.
  272. ^ Magnússon 1989, pp. 463–464.
  273. ^ a b c Orel 2003, p. 118.
  274. ^ a b c d Orel 2003, p. 114.
  275. ^ The Atharveda charm is specifically charm 12 of book four of the Atharveda. See discussion in for example Storms 2013, pp. 107–112.
  276. ^ a b c d Orel 2003, p. 72.
  277. ^ Kroonen 2013, pp. 96, 114–115.
  278. ^ For a concise overview of sources on Germanic mythology, see Simek 1993, pp. 298–300.
  279. ^ Simek 1993, pp. 298–300.
  280. ^ On the correspondences between the prose introduction to Grímnismál and the Langobardic origin myth, see for example Lindow 2001, p. 129.
  281. ^ Regarding the Ring of Pietroassa, see for example discussion in MacLeod & Mees 2006, pp. 173–174. On Gothic Anses, see for example Orel 2003, p. 21.
  282. ^ Simek 1993, pp. 204–205.
  283. ^ See discussion in for example Puhvel 1989, pp. 189–221 and Witzel 2017, pp. 365–369.
  284. ^ Cusack 1998, p. 35.
  285. ^ Düwel 2010a, p. 356.
  286. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, p. 350.
  287. ^ Düwel 2010a, p. 802.
  288. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 350–353.
  289. ^ Cusack 1998, pp. 50–51.
  290. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 360–362.
  291. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 362–364.
  292. ^ Stenton 1971, pp. 104–128.
  293. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 364–371.
  294. ^ Padberg 2010, p. 588.
  295. ^ Padberg 2010, pp. 588–589.
  296. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 389–391.
  297. ^ Schäferdiek & Gschwantler 2010, pp. 401–404.
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  299. ^ Looijenga 2020, p. 820.
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  305. ^ Düwel 2004, p. 121.
  306. ^ Green 1998, p. 255.
  307. ^ Düwel 2004, p. 132.
  308. ^ Düwel 2004, pp. 121–122.
  309. ^ Düwel 2004, p. 123.
  310. ^ Düwel 2010b, pp. 999–1006.
  311. ^ Düwel 2004, pp. 131–132.
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  314. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, p. 609.
  315. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 614–615.
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  317. ^ Timpe & Scardigli 2010, pp. 609–611.
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External links edit

Classical and medieval sources

  • Agathias, Histories
  • Bede, Ecclesiastical history of England, in Latin
  • Caesar, De Bello Gallico
  • Cicero, Against Piso
  • Dio Cassius, Roman History
  • Historia Augusta
  • Jordanes, Getica
  • Titus Livy, History of Rome
  • Paul the Deacon, History of the Langobards, in Latin
  • Pliny the Elder, Natural Histories
  • Pomponius Mela, Description of the World
  • Procopius, Gothic War
  • Ptolemy, Geography
  • Strabo, Geography
  • Suetonius, 12 Caesars
  • Tacitus, Germania
  • Tacitus, The History

germanic, peoples, confused, with, germans, germani, redirects, here, iberian, people, germani, oretania, other, uses, germani, disambiguation, were, historical, groups, people, that, once, occupied, northwestern, central, europe, scandinavia, during, antiquit. Not to be confused with Germans Germani redirects here For the Iberian people see Germani Oretania For other uses see Germani disambiguation The Germanic peoples were historical groups of people that once occupied Northwestern and Central Europe and Scandinavia during antiquity and into the early Middle Ages Since the 19th century they have traditionally been defined by the use of ancient and early medieval Germanic languages and are thus equated at least approximately with Germanic speaking peoples although different academic disciplines have their own definitions of what makes someone or something Germanic 1 The Romans named the area belonging to North Central Europe in which Germanic peoples lived Germania stretching east to west between the Vistula and Rhine rivers and north to south from southern Scandinavia to the upper Danube 2 In discussions of the Roman period the Germanic peoples are sometimes referred to as Germani or ancient Germans although many scholars consider the second term problematic since it suggests identity with present day Germans The very concept of Germanic peoples has become the subject of controversy among contemporary scholars 3 Some scholars call for its total abandonment as a modern construct since lumping Germanic peoples together implies a common group identity for which there is little evidence 3 Other scholars have defended the term s continued use and argue that a common Germanic language allows one to speak of Germanic peoples regardless of whether these ancient and medieval peoples saw themselves as having a common identity 4 While several historians and archaeologists continue to use the term Germanic peoples to refer to historical people groups from the 1st to 4th centuries CE the term is no longer used by most historians and archaeologists for the period around the Fall of the Roman Empire and the Early Middle Ages 5 Roman bronze statuette representing a Germanic man with his hair in a Suebian knot Dating to the late 1st century early 2nd century A D Scholars generally agree that it is possible to refer to Germanic speaking peoples after 500 BCE 6 Archaeologists usually connect the early Germanic peoples with the Jastorf culture of the Pre Roman Iron Age which is found in Denmark southern Scandinavia and northern Germany from the 6th to 1st centuries BCE around the same time that the First Germanic Consonant Shift is theorized to have occurred this sound change led to recognizably Germanic languages 7 a From northern Germany and southern Scandinavia the Germanic peoples expanded south east and west coming into contact with the Celtic Iranic Baltic and Slavic peoples Roman authors first described Germanic peoples near the Rhine in the 1st century BCE while the Roman Empire was establishing its dominance in that region Under Emperor Augustus 27 BCE 14 CE the Romans attempted to conquer a large area of Germania but they withdrew after a major Roman defeat at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 CE The Romans continued to control the Germanic frontier closely by meddling in its politics and they constructed a long fortified border the Limes Germanicus From 166 to 180 CE Rome was embroiled in a conflict against the Germanic Marcomanni Quadi and many other peoples known as the Marcomannic Wars The wars reordered the Germanic frontier and afterwards new Germanic peoples appear for the first time in the historical record such as the Franks Goths Saxons and Alemanni During the Migration Period 375 568 various Germanic peoples entered the Roman Empire and eventually took control of parts of it and established their own independent kingdoms after the collapse of Western Roman rule The most powerful of them were the Franks who conquered many of the others Eventually the Frankish king Charlemagne claimed the title of Holy Roman Emperor for himself in 800 Archaeological finds suggest that Roman era sources portrayed the Germanic way of life as more primitive than it actually was Instead archaeologists have unveiled evidence of a complex society and economy throughout Germania Germanic speaking peoples originally shared similar religious practices Denoted by the term Germanic paganism they varied throughout the territory occupied by Germanic speaking peoples Over the course of Late Antiquity most continental Germanic peoples and the Anglo Saxons of Britain converted to Christianity but the Saxons and Scandinavians converted only much later The Germanic peoples shared a native script from around the first century or before the runes which was gradually replaced with the Latin script although runes continued to be used for specialized purposes thereafter Traditionally the Germanic peoples have been seen as possessing a law dominated by the concepts of feuding and blood compensation The precise details nature and origin of what is still normally called Germanic law are now controversial Roman sources state that the Germanic peoples made decisions in a popular assembly the thing but that they also had kings and war leaders The ancient Germanic speaking peoples probably shared a common poetic tradition alliterative verse and later Germanic peoples also shared legends originating in the Migration Period The publishing of Tacitus s Germania by humanist scholars in the 1400s greatly influenced the emerging idea of Germanic peoples Later scholars of the Romantic period such as Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm developed several theories about the nature of the Germanic peoples that were highly influenced by romantic nationalism For those scholars the Germanic and modern German were identical Ideas about the early Germans were also highly influential among and were influenced and co opted by the nationalist and racist volkisch movement and later by the Nazis which led in the second half of the 20th century to a backlash against many aspects of earlier scholarship Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Modern definitions and controversies 1 3 Classical terminology 1 4 Subdivisions 2 Languages 2 1 Proto Germanic 2 2 Early attestations 2 3 Linguistic disintegration 2 4 Classification 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 3 2 Earliest recorded history 3 3 Roman Imperial Period to 375 3 3 1 Early Roman Imperial period 27 BCE 166 CE 3 3 2 Marcomannic Wars to 375 CE 3 4 Migration Period ca 375 568 3 4 1 Early Migration Period before 375 420 3 4 2 The Hunnic Empire c 420 453 3 4 3 After the death of Attila 453 568 3 5 Early Middle Ages to c 800 4 Religion 4 1 Germanic paganism 4 2 Conversion to Christianity 5 Society and culture 5 1 Runic writing 5 2 Personal names 5 3 Poetry and legend 5 4 Germanic law 5 5 Warfare 6 Economy and material culture 6 1 Agriculture and population density 6 2 Crafts 6 3 Metalworking 6 4 Clothing and textiles 6 5 Trade 7 Genetics 8 Modern reception 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Bibliography 12 External linksTerminology editSee also Germania Etymology edit The etymology of the Latin word Germani from which Latin Germania and English Germanic are derived is unknown although several proposals have been put forward Even the language from which it derives is a subject of dispute with proposals of Germanic Celtic and Latin and Illyrian origins 10 Herwig Wolfram for example thinks Germani must be Gaulish 11 The historian Wolfgang Pfeifer more or less concurs with Wolfram and surmises that the name Germani is likely of Celtic etymology and is related to the Old Irish word gair neighbours or could be tied to the Celtic word for their war cries gairm which simplifies into the neighbours or the screamers 12 Regardless of its language of origin the name was transmitted to the Romans via Celtic speakers 13 It is unclear that any people group ever referred to themselves as Germani 14 By late antiquity only peoples near the Rhine especially the Franks and sometimes the Alemanni were called Germani by Latin or Greek writers 15 Germani subsequently ceased to be used as a name for any group of people and was revived as such only by the humanists in the 16th century 14 Previously scholars during the Carolingian period 8th 11th centuries had already begun using Germania and Germanicus in a territorial sense to refer to East Francia 16 In modern English the adjective Germanic is distinct from German which is generally used when referring to modern Germans only Germanic relates to the ancient Germani or the broader Germanic group 17 In modern German the ancient Germani are referred to as Germanen and Germania as Germanien as distinct from modern Germans Deutsche and modern Germany Deutschland The direct equivalents in English are however Germans for Germani and Germany for Germania 18 although the Latin Germania is also used To avoid ambiguity the Germani may instead be called ancient Germans or Germani by using the Latin term in English 19 17 Modern definitions and controversies edit The modern definition of Germanic peoples developed in the 19th century when the term Germanic was linked to the newly identified Germanic language family Linguistics provided a new way of defining the Germanic peoples which came to be used in historiography and archaeology 20 1 While Roman authors did not consistently exclude Celtic speaking people or have a term corresponding to Germanic speaking peoples this new definition which used the Germanic language as the main criterion presented the Germani as a people or nation Volk with a stable group identity linked to language As a result some scholars treat the Germani Latin or Germanoi Greek of Roman era sources as non Germanic if they seemingly spoke non Germanic languages 21 For clarity Germanic peoples when defined as speakers of a Germanic language are sometimes referred to as Germanic speaking peoples 1 Today the term Germanic is widely applied to phenomena including identities social cultural or political groups to material cultural artefacts languages and texts and even specific chemical sequences found in human DNA 22 Several scholars continue to use the term to refer to a culture existing between the 1st to 4th centuries CE but most historians and archaeologists researching Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages no longer use it 23 Apart from the designation of a language family i e Germanic languages the application of the term Germanic has become controversial in scholarship since 1990 1 especially among archaeologists and historians Scholars have increasingly questioned the notion of ethnically defined people groups Volker as stable basic actors of history 24 The connection of archaeological assemblages to ethnicity has also been increasingly questioned 25 This has resulted in different disciplines developing different definitions of Germanic 1 Beginning with the work of the Toronto School around Walter Goffart various scholars have denied that anything such as a common Germanic ethnic identity ever existed Such scholars argue that most ideas about Germanic culture are taken from far later epochs and projected backwards to antiquity 26 Historians of the Vienna School such as Walter Pohl have also called for the term to be avoided or used with careful explanation 27 and argued that there is little evidence for a common Germanic identity 28 The Anglo Saxonist Leonard Neidorf writes that historians of the continental European Germanic peoples of the 5th and 6th centuries are in agreement that there was no pan Germanic identity or solidarity 29 Whether a scholar favors the existence of a common Germanic identity or not is often related to their position on the nature of the end of the Roman Empire 30 Defenders of continued use of the term Germanic argue that the speakers of Germanic languages can be identified as Germanic people by language regardless of how they saw themselves 4 Linguists and philologists have generally reacted skeptically to claims that there was no Germanic identity or cultural unity 31 and they may view Germanic simply as a long established and convenient term 32 Some archaeologists have also argued in favor of retaining the term Germanic due to its broad recognizability 33 Archaeologist Heiko Steuer defines his own work on the Germani in geographical terms covering Germania rather than in ethnic terms 2 He nevertheless argues for some sense of shared identity between the Germani noting the use of a common language a common runic script various common objects of material culture such as bracteates and gullgubber small gold objects and the confrontation with Rome as things that could cause a sense of shared Germanic culture 34 Despite being cautious of the use of Germanic to refer to peoples Sebastian Brather Wilhelm Heizmann and Steffen Patzold nevertheless refer to further commonalities such as the widely attested worship of deities such as Odin Thor and Frigg and a shared legendary tradition 32 Classical terminology edit The first author to describe the Germani as a large category of peoples distinct from the Gauls and Scythians was Julius Caesar writing around 55 BCE during his governorship of Gaul 35 In Caesar s account the clearest defining characteristic of the Germani people was that they lived east of the Rhine 36 opposite Gaul on the west side Caesar sought to explain both why his legions stopped at the Rhine and also why the Germani were more dangerous than the Gauls and a constant threat to the empire 37 He also classified the Cimbri and Teutons peoples who had previously invaded Italy as Germani and examples of this threat to Rome 38 39 Although Caesar described the Rhine as the border between Germani and Celts he also describes a group of people he identifies as Germani who live on the west bank of the Rhine in the northeast of Gaul the Germani cisrhenani 40 It is unclear if these Germani were actually Germanic speakers 41 According to the Roman historian Tacitus in his Germania c 98 CE it was among this group specifically the Tungri that the name Germani first arose and was spread to further groups 42 Tacitus continues to mention Germanic tribes on the west bank of the Rhine in the period of the early Empire 43 Caesar s division of the Germani from the Celts was not taken up by most writers in Greek 44 Caesar and authors following him regarded Germania as stretching east of the Rhine for an indeterminate distance bounded by the Baltic Sea and the Hercynian Forest 45 Pliny the Elder and Tacitus placed the eastern border at the Vistula 46 The Upper Danube served as a southern border Between there and the Vistula Tacitus sketched an unclear boundary describing Germania as separated in the south and east from the Dacians and the Sarmatians by mutual fear or mountains 47 This undefined eastern border is related to a lack of stable frontiers in this area such as were maintained by Roman armies along the Rhine and Danube 44 The geographer Ptolemy 2nd century CE applied the name Germania magna Greater Germania Greek Germania Megalh to this area contrasting it with the Roman provinces of Germania Prima and Germania Secunda on the west bank of the Rhine 48 In modern scholarship Germania magna is sometimes also called Germania libera free Germania 49 a name coined by Jacob Grimm around 1835 50 Caesar and following him Tacitus depicted the Germani as sharing elements of a common culture 51 A small number of passages by Tacitus and other Roman authors Caesar Suetonius mention Germanic tribes or individuals speaking a language distinct from Gaulish For Tacitus Germania 43 45 46 language was a characteristic but not defining feature of the Germanic peoples 52 Many of the ascribed ethnic characteristics of the Germani represented them as typically barbarian including the possession of stereotypical vices such as wildness and of virtues such as chastity 53 Tacitus was at times unsure whether a people were Germanic or not expressing his uncertainty about the Bastarnae who he says looked like Sarmatians but spoke like the Germani about the Osi and the Cotini and about the Aesti who were like Suebi but spoke a different language 52 When defining the Germani ancient authors did not differentiate consistently between a territorial definition those living in Germania and an ethnic definition having Germanic ethnic characteristics although the two definitions did not always align 54 The Romans did not regard the eastern Germanic speakers such as Goths Gepids and Vandals as Germani but rather connected them with other non Germanic speaking peoples such as the Huns Sarmatians and Alans 44 Romans described these peoples including those who did not speak a Germanic language as Gothic people gentes Gothicae and most often classified them as Scythians 55 The writer Procopius describing the Ostrogoths Visigoths Vandals Alans and Gepids derived the Gothic peoples from the ancient Getae and described them as sharing similar customs beliefs and a common language 56 Subdivisions edit Further information Ingaevones Herminones and Istaevones nbsp The approximate positions of the three groups and their sub peoples reported by Tacitus Ingvaeones Istvaeones Hermiones and Suebi Several ancient sources list subdivisions of the Germanic tribes Writing in the first century CE Pliny the Elder lists five Germanic subgroups the Vandili the Inguaeones the Istuaeones living near the Rhine the Hermiones in the Germanic interior and the Peucini Basternae living on the lower Danube near the Dacians 57 In chapter 2 of the Germania written about a half century later Tacitus lists only three subgroups the Ingvaeones near the sea the Hermiones in the interior of Germania and the Istvaeones the remainder of the tribes 58 Tacitus says these groups each claimed descent from the god Mannus son of Tuisto 59 Tacitus also mentions a second tradition that there were four sons of either Mannus or Tuisto from whom the groups of the Marsi Gambrivi Suebi and Vandili claim descent 60 61 The Hermiones are also mentioned by Pomponius Mela but otherwise these divisions do not appear in other ancient works on the Germani 60 There are a number of inconsistencies in the listing of Germanic subgroups by Tacitus and Pliny While both Tacitus and Pliny mention some Scandinavian tribes they are not integrated into the subdivisions 57 While Pliny lists the Suebi as part of the Hermiones Tacitus treats them as a separate group 62 Additionally Tacitus s description of a group of tribes as united by the cult of Nerthus Germania 40 as well as the cult of the Alcis controlled by the Nahanarvali Germania 43 and Tacitus s account of the origin myth of the Semnones Germania 39 all suggest different subdivisions than the three mentioned in Germania chapter 2 63 The subdivisions found in Pliny and Tacitus have been very influential for scholarship on Germanic history and language up until recent times 57 However outside of Tacitus and Pliny there are no other textual indications that these groups were important The subgroups mentioned by Tacitus are not used by him elsewhere in his work contradict other parts of his work and cannot be reconciled with Pliny who is equally inconsistent 62 61 Additionally there is no linguistic or archaeological evidence for these subgroups 62 64 New archaeological finds have tended to show that the boundaries between Germanic peoples were very permeable and scholars now assume that migration and the collapse and formation of cultural units were constant occurrences within Germania 65 Nevertheless various aspects such as the alliteration of many of the tribal names in Tacitus s account and the name of Mannus himself suggest that the descent from Mannus was an authentic Germanic tradition 66 Languages editSee also Germanic languages Proto Germanic edit All Germanic languages derive from the Proto Indo European language PIE which is generally thought to have been spoken between 4500 and 2500 BCE 67 The ancestor of Germanic languages is referred to as Proto or Common Germanic 68 and likely represented a group of mutually intelligible dialects 69 They share distinctive characteristics which set them apart from other Indo European sub families of languages such as Grimm s and Verner s law the conservation of the PIE ablaut system in the Germanic verb system notably in strong verbs or the merger of the vowels a and o qualities e a o gt a a ō gt ō 70 During the Pre Germanic linguistic period 2500 500 BCE the proto language was almost certainly influenced by an unknown non Indo European language still noticeable in the Germanic phonology and lexicon 71 b Although Proto Germanic is reconstructed without dialects via the comparative method it is almost certain that it never was a uniform proto language 74 The late Jastorf culture occupied so much territory that it is unlikely that Germanic populations spoke a single dialect and traces of early linguistic varieties have been highlighted by scholars 75 Sister dialects of Proto Germanic itself certainly existed as evidenced by the absence of the First Germanic Sound Shift Grimm s law in some Para Germanic recorded proper names and the reconstructed Proto Germanic language was only one among several dialects spoken at that time by peoples identified as Germanic by Roman sources or archeological data 76 Although Roman sources name various Germanic tribes such as Suevi Alemanni Bauivari etc it is unlikely that the members of these tribes all spoke the same dialect 77 Early attestations edit Definite and comprehensive evidence of Germanic lexical units only occurred after Caesar s conquest of Gaul in the 1st century BCE after which contacts with Proto Germanic speakers began to intensify The Alcis a pair of brother gods worshipped by the Nahanarvali are given by Tacitus as a Latinized form of alhiz a kind of stag and the word sapo hair dye is certainly borrowed from Proto Germanic saipwōn English soap as evidenced by the parallel Finnish loanword saipio 78 The name of the framea described by Tacitus as a short spear carried by Germanic warriors most likely derives from the compound fram ij an forward going one as suggested by comparable semantical structures found in early runes e g raun ij az tester on a lancehead and linguistic cognates attested in the later Old Norse Old Saxon and Old High German languages fremja fremmian and fremmen all mean to carry out 79 nbsp The inscription on the Negau helmet B carved in the Etruscan alphabet during the 3rd 2nd c BCE is generally regarded as Proto Germanic 80 In the absence of earlier evidence it must be assumed that Proto Germanic speakers living in Germania were members of preliterate societies 81 The only pre Roman inscriptions that could be interpreted as Proto Germanic written in the Etruscan alphabet have not been found in Germania but rather in the Venetic region The inscription harikastiteiva ip engraved on the Negau helmet in the 3rd 2nd centuries BCE possibly by a Germanic speaking warrior involved in combat in northern Italy has been interpreted by some scholars as Harigasti Teiwǣ harja gastiz army guest teiwaz god deity which could be an invocation to a war god or a mark of ownership engraved by its possessor 80 The inscription Fariarix farjōn ferry rik ruler carved on tetradrachms found in Bratislava mid 1st c BCE may indicate the Germanic name of a Celtic ruler 82 Linguistic disintegration edit By the time Germanic speakers entered written history their linguistic territory had stretched farther south since a Germanic dialect continuum where neighbouring language varieties diverged only slightly between each other but remote dialects were not necessarily mutually intelligible due to accumulated differences over the distance covered a region roughly located between the Rhine the Vistula the Danube and southern Scandinavia during the first two centuries of the Common Era 83 East Germanic speakers dwelled on the Baltic sea coasts and islands while speakers of the Northwestern dialects occupied territories in present day Denmark and bordering parts of Germany at the earliest date when they can be identified 84 In the 2nd and 3rd centuries CE migrations of East Germanic gentes from the Baltic Sea coast southeastwards into the hinterland led to their separation from the dialect continuum 85 By the late 3rd century CE linguistic divergences like the West Germanic loss of the final consonant z had already occurred within the residual Northwest dialect continuum 86 The latter definitely ended after the 5th and 6th century migrations of Angles Jutes and part of the Saxon tribes towards modern day England 87 Classification edit nbsp Replica of an altar for the Matrons of Vacallina Matronae Vacallinehae from Mechernich Weyer Germany The Germanic languages are traditionally divided between East North and West Germanic branches 88 The modern prevailing view is that North and West Germanic were also encompassed in a larger subgroup called Northwest Germanic 89 Northwest Germanic mainly characterized by the i umlaut and the shift of the long vowel e towards a long a in accented syllables 90 it remained a dialect continuum following the migration of East Germanic speakers in the 2nd 3rd century CE 85 North Germanic or Primitive Norse initially characterized by the monophthongization of the sound ai to a attested from ca 400 BCE 91 a uniform northern dialect or koine attested in runic inscriptions from the 2nd century CE onward 92 it remained practically unchanged until a transitional period that started in the late 5th century 93 and Old Norse a language attested by runic inscriptions written in the Younger Futhark from the beginning of the Viking Age 8th 9th centuries CE 94 West Germanic including Old Saxon attested from the 5th c CE Old English late 5th c Old Frisian 6th c Frankish 6th c Old High German 6th c and possibly Langobardic 6th c which is only scarcely attested 95 they are mainly characterized by the loss of the final consonant z attested from the late 3rd century 96 and by the j consonant gemination attested from ca 400 BCE 97 early inscriptions from the West Germanic areas found on altars where votive offerings were made to the Matronae Vacallinehae Matrons of Vacallina in the Rhineland dated to ca 160 260 CE West Germanic remained a residual dialect continuum until the Anglo Saxon migrations in the 5th 6th centuries CE 87 East Germanic of which only Gothic is attested by both runic inscriptions from the 3rd c CE and textual evidence principally Wulfila s Bible ca 350 380 It became extinct after the fall of the Visigothic Kingdom in the early 8th century 98 The inclusion of the Burgundian and Vandalic languages within the East Germanic group while plausible is still uncertain due to their scarce attestation 99 The latest attested East Germanic language Crimean Gothic has been partially recorded in the 16th century 100 Further internal classifications are still debated among scholars as it is unclear whether the internal features shared by several branches are due to early common innovations or to the later diffusion of local dialectal innovations 101 c History editPrehistory edit nbsp Area of the Nordic Bronze Age culture ca 1200 BC The Germanic speaking peoples speak an Indo European language The leading theory for the origin of Germanic languages suggested by archaeological linguistic and genetic evidence 102 postulates a diffusion of Indo European languages from the Pontic Caspian steppe towards Northern Europe during the third millennium BCE via linguistic contacts and migrations from the Corded Ware culture towards modern day Denmark resulting in cultural mixing with the earlier Funnelbeaker culture 103 d The subsequent culture of the Nordic Bronze Age c 2000 1750 c 500 BCE shows definite cultural and population continuities with later Germanic peoples 8 and is often supposed to have been the culture in which the Germanic Parent Language the predecessor of the Proto Germanic language developed 104 However it is unclear whether these earlier peoples possessed any ethnic continuity with the later Germanic peoples 9 Generally scholars agree that it is possible to speak of Germanic speaking peoples after 500 BCE although the first attestation of the name Germani is not until much later 6 Between around 500 BCE and the beginning of the common era archeological and linguistic evidence suggest that the Urheimat original homeland of the Proto Germanic language the ancestral idiom of all attested Germanic dialects was primarily situated in the southern Jutland peninsula from which Proto Germanic speakers migrated towards bordering parts of Germany and along the sea shores of the Baltic and the North Sea an area corresponding to the extent of the late Jastorf culture 105 e If the Jastorf Culture is the origin of the Germanic peoples then the Scandinavian peninsula would have become Germanic either via migration or assimilation over the course of the same period 106 Alternatively Hermann Ament de has stressed that two other archaeological groups must have belonged to the Germani one on either side of the Lower Rhine and reaching to the Weser and another in Jutland and southern Scandinavia These groups would thus show a polycentric origin for the Germanic peoples 107 The neighboring Przeworsk culture in modern Poland is thought to possibly reflect a Germanic and Slavic component 108 f The identification of the Jastorf culture with the Germani has been criticized by Sebastian Brather who notes that it seems to be missing areas such as southern Scandinavia and the Rhine Weser area which linguists argue to have been Germanic while also not according with the Roman era definition of Germani which included Celtic speaking peoples further south and west 109 nbsp Celtic Germanic contact zone in the Iron Age around 500 BC 1 BCE according to Stefan Schumacher 2007 110 A category of evidence used to locate the Proto Germanic homeland is founded on traces of early linguistic contacts with neighbouring languages Germanic loanwords in the Finnic and Sami languages have preserved archaic forms e g Finnic kuningas from Proto Germanic kuningaz king rengas from hringaz ring etc 111 with the older loan layers possibly dating back to an earlier period of intense contacts between pre Germanic and Finno Permic i e Finno Samic speakers 112 Shared lexical innovations between Celtic and Germanic languages concentrated in certain semantic domains such as religion and warfare indicates intensive contacts between the Germani and Celtic peoples usually identified with the archaeological La Tene culture found in southern Germany and the modern Czech Republic 113 Early contacts probably occurred during the Pre Germanic and Pre Celtic periods dated to the 2nd millennium BCE 114 g and the Celts appear to have had a large amount of influence on Germanic culture from up until the first century CE which led to a high degree of Celtic Germanic shared material culture and social organization 115 Some evidence of linguistic convergence between Germanic and Italic languages whose Urheimat is supposed to have been situated north of the Alps before the 1st millennium BCE have also been highlighted by scholars 116 Shared changes in their grammars also suggest early contacts between Germanic and Balto Slavic languages however some of these innovations are shared with Baltic only which may point to linguistic contacts during a relatively late period at any rate after the initial breakup of Balto Slavic into Baltic and Slavic languages with the similarities to Slavic being seen as remnants of Indo European archaisms or the result of secondary contacts 117 118 h Earliest recorded history edit nbsp Expansion of early Germanic tribes into Central Europe 119 Settlements before 750 BCE New settlements by 500 BCE New settlements by 250 BCE New settlements by 1 CE Further information Pytheas Bastarnae Sciri Germanisation of Gaul Cimbrian War and Gallic Wars According to some authors the Bastarnae or Peucini were the first Germani to be encountered by the Greco Roman world and thus to be mentioned in historical records 120 They appear in historical sources going back as far as the 3rd century BCE through the 4th century CE 121 Another eastern people known from about 200 BCE and sometimes believed to be Germanic speaking are the Sciri Greek Skiroi who are recorded threatening the city of Olbia on the Black Sea 122 Late in the 2nd century BCE Roman and Greek sources recount the migrations of the Cimbri Teutones and Ambrones whom Caesar later classified as Germanic 123 The movements of these groups through parts of Gaul Italy and Hispania resulted in the Cimbrian War 113 101 BCE against the Romans in which the Teutons and Cimbri were victorious over several Roman armies but were ultimately defeated 124 125 126 The first century BCE was a time of the expansion of Germanic speaking peoples at the expense of Celtic speaking polities in modern southern Germany and the Czech Republic 127 128 Before 60 BCE Ariovistus described by Caesar as king of the Germani led a force including Suevi across the Rhine into Gaul near Besancon successfully aiding the Sequani against their enemies the Aedui at the Battle of Magetobriga 129 130 Ariovistus was initially considered an ally of Rome 131 In 58 BCE with increasing numbers of settlers crossing the Rhine to join Ariovistus Julius Caesar went to war with them defeating them at the Battle of Vosges 130 132 In the following years Caesar pursued a controversial campaign to conquer all of Gaul on behalf of Rome establishing the Rhine as a border In 55 BCE he crossed the Rhine into Germania near Cologne Near modern Nijmegen he also massacred a large migrating group of Tencteri and Usipetes who had crossed the Rhine from the east 133 Roman Imperial Period to 375 edit nbsp The Roman province of Germania in existence from 7 BCE to 9 CE The dotted line represents the Limes Germanicus the fortified border constructed following the final withdrawal of Roman forces from Germania Early Roman Imperial period 27 BCE 166 CE edit Further information Roman Iron Age Early Imperial campaigns in Germania and Year of the Four Emperors Throughout the reign of Augustus from 27 BCE until 14 CE the Roman empire expanded into Gaul with the Rhine as a border Starting in 13 BCE there were Roman campaigns across the Rhine for a 28 year period 134 First came the pacification of the Usipetes Sicambri and Frisians near the Rhine then attacks increased further from the Rhine on the Chauci Cherusci Chatti and Suevi including the Marcomanni 135 These campaigns eventually reached and even crossed the Elbe and in 5 CE Tiberius was able to show strength by having a Roman fleet enter the Elbe and meet the legions in the heart of Germania 136 Once Tiberius subdued the Germanic people between the Rhine and the Elbe the region at least up to Weser and possibly up to the Elbe was made the Roman province Germania and provided soldiers to the Roman army 137 138 However within this period two Germanic kings formed larger alliances Both of them had spent some of their youth in Rome the first of them was Maroboduus of the Marcomanni i who had led his people away from the Roman activities into Bohemia which was defended by forests and mountains and had formed alliances with other peoples In 6 CE Rome planned an attack against him but the campaign was cut short when forces were needed for the Illyrian revolt in the Balkans 137 140 Just three years later 9 CE the second of these Germanic figures Arminius of the Cherusci initially an ally of Rome drew a large Roman force into an ambush in northern Germany and destroyed the three legions of Publius Quinctilius Varus at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest 141 Marboduus and Arminius went to war with each other in 17 CE Arminius was victorious and Marboduus was forced to flee to the Romans 142 Following the Roman defeat at the Teutoburg Forest Rome gave up on the possibility of fully integrating this region into the empire 143 Rome launched successful campaigns across the Rhine between 14 and 16 CE under Tiberius and Germanicus but the effort of integrating Germania now seemed to outweigh its benefits 144 In the reign of Augustus s successor Tiberius it became state policy to expand the empire no further than the frontier based roughly upon the Rhine and Danube recommendations that were specified in the will of Augustus and read aloud by Tiberius himself 145 Roman intervention in Germania led to a shifting and unstable political situation in which pro and anti Roman parties vied for power Arminius was murdered in 21 CE by his fellow Germanic tribesmen due in part to these tensions and for his attempt to claim supreme kingly power for himself 142 In the wake of Arminius s death Roman diplomats sought to keep the Germanic peoples divided and fractious 146 Rome established relationships with individual Germanic kings that are often discussed as being similar to client states however the situation on the border was always unstable with rebellions by the Frisians in 28 CE and attacks by the Chauci and Chatti in the 60s CE 147 The most serious threat to the Roman order was the Revolt of the Batavi in 69 CE during the civil wars following the death of Nero known as the Year of the Four Emperors 148 The Batavi had long served as auxiliary troops in the Roman army as well as in the imperial bodyguard as the so called Numerus Batavorum often called the Germanic bodyguard 149 The uprising was led by Gaius Julius Civilis a member of the Batavian royal family and Roman military officer and attracted a large coalition of people both inside and outside of the Roman territory The revolt ended following several defeats with Civilis claiming to have only supported the imperial claims of Vespasian who was victorious in the civil war 150 nbsp A bog body the Osterby Man displaying the Suebian knot a hairstyle which according to Tacitus was common among Germanic warriors 151 The century after the Batavian Revolt saw mostly peace between the Germanic peoples and Rome In 83 CE Emperor Domitian of the Flavian dynasty attacked the Chatti north of Mainz Mogontiacum 152 This war would last until 85 CE Following the end of the war with the Chatti Domitian reduced the number of Roman soldiers on the upper Rhine and shifted the Roman military to guarding the Danube frontier beginning the construction of the limes the longest fortified border in the empire 153 The period afterwards was peaceful enough that the emperor Trajan reduced the number of soldiers on the frontier 154 According to Edward James the Romans appear to have reserved the right to choose rulers among the barbarians on the frontier 155 Marcomannic Wars to 375 CE edit Further information Marcomannic Wars and Crisis of the Third Century Following sixty years of quiet on the frontier 166 CE saw a major incursion of peoples from north of the Danube during the reign of Marcus Aurelius beginning the Marcomannic Wars 156 By 168 during the Antonine plague barbarian hosts consisting of Marcomanni Quadi and Sarmatian Iazyges attacked and pushed their way to Italy 157 They advanced as far as Upper Italy destroyed Opitergium Oderzo and besieged Aquileia 158 The Romans had finished the war by 180 through a combination of Roman military victories the resettling of some peoples on Roman territory and by making alliances with others 159 Marcus Aurelius s successor Commodus chose not to permanently occupy any territory conquered north of the Danube and the following decades saw an increase in the defenses at the limes 158 The Romans renewed their right to choose the kings of the Marcomanni and Quadi and Commodus forbid them to hold assemblies unless a Roman centurion was present 160 nbsp Depiction of Romans fighting Goths on the Ludovisi Battle sarcophagus c 250 260 CE The period after the Marconmannic Wars saw the emergence of peoples with new names along the Roman frontiers which were probably formed by the merger of smaller groups 159 These new confederacies or peoples tended to border the Roman imperial frontier 161 Many ethnic names from earlier periods disappear 162 The Alamanni emerged along the upper Rhine and are mentioned in Roman sources from the third century onward 163 The Goths begin to be mentioned along the lower Danube where they attacked the city of Histria in 238 164 The Franks are first mentioned occupying territory between the Rhine and Weser 165 The Lombards seem to have moved their center of power to the central Elbe 61 Groups such as the Alamanni Goths and Franks were not unified polities they formed multiple loosely associated groups who often fought each other and some of whom sought Roman friendship 166 The Romans also begin to mention seaborne attacks by the Saxons a term used generically in Latin for Germanic speaking pirates A system of defenses on both sides of the English Channel the Saxon Shore was established to deal with their raids 167 168 From 250 onward the Gothic peoples formed the single most potent threat to the northern frontier of Rome 165 In 250 CE a Gothic king Cniva led Goths with Bastarnae Carpi Vandals and Taifali into the empire laying siege to Philippopolis He followed his victory there with another on the marshy terrain at Abrittus a battle which cost the life of Roman emperor Decius 164 In 253 254 further attacks occurred reaching Thessalonica and possibly Thrace 169 In 267 268 there were large raids led by the Herules in 267 268 and a mixed group of Goths and Herules in 269 270 Gothic attacks were abruptly ended in the years after 270 after a Roman victory in which the Gothic king Cannabaudes was killed 170 The Roman limes largely collapsed in 259 260 171 during the Crisis of the Third Century 235 284 61 and Germanic raids penetrated as far as northern Italy 172 The limes on the Rhine and upper Danube was brought under control again in 270s and by 300 the Romans had reestablished control over areas they had abandoned during the crisis 172 From the later third century onward the Roman army relied increasingly on troops of Barbarian origin often recruited from Germanic peoples with some functioning as senior commanders in the Roman army 173 In the 4th century warfare along the Rhine frontier between the Romans and Franks and Alemanni seems to have mostly consisted of campaigns of plunder during which major battles were avoided 174 The Romans generally followed a policy of trying to prevent strong leaders from emerging among the barbarians using treachery kidnapping and assassination paying off rival tribes to attack them or by supporting internal rivals 175 Migration Period ca 375 568 edit Main article Migration Period nbsp 2nd century to 6th century simplified migrations The Migration Period is traditionally cited by historians as beginning in 375 CE under the assumption that the appearance of the Huns prompted the Visigoths to seek shelter within the Roman Empire in 376 176 The end of the migration period is usually set at 568 when the Lombards invaded Italy During this time period numerous barbarian groups invaded the Roman Empire and established new kingdoms within its boundaries 177 These Germanic migrations traditionally mark the transition between antiquity and the beginning of the early Middle Ages 178 The reasons for the migrations of the period are unclear but scholars have proposed overpopulation climate change bad harvests famines and adventurousness as possible reasons 179 Migrations were probably carried out by relatively small groups rather than entire peoples 180 Early Migration Period before 375 420 edit The Greuthungi a Gothic group in modern Ukraine under the rule of Ermanaric were among the first peoples attacked by the Huns apparently facing Hunnic pressure for some years 181 Following Ermanaric s death the Greuthungi s resistance broke and they moved toward the Dniester river 182 A second Gothic group the Tervingi under King Athanaric constructed a defensive earthwork against the Huns near the Dniester 183 However these measures did not stop the Huns and the majority of the Tervingi abandoned Athanaric they subsequently fled accompanied by a contingent of Greuthungi to the Danube in 376 seeking asylum in the Roman Empire 184 The emperor Valens chose only to admit the Tervingi who were settled in the Roman provinces of Thrace and Moesia 183 185 Due to mistreatment by the Romans the Tervingi revolted in 377 starting the Gothic War joined by the Greuthungi 186 183 j The Goths and their allies defeated the Romans first at Marcianople then defeated and killed emperor Valens in the Battle of Adrianople in 378 destroying two thirds of Valens army 188 189 Following further fighting peace was negotiated in 382 granting the Goths considerable autonomy within the Roman Empire 190 However these Goths who would be known as the Visigoths revolted several more times 191 finally coming to be ruled by Alaric 192 In 397 the disunited eastern Empire submitted to some of his demands possibly giving him control over Epirus 193 In the aftermath of the large scale Gothic entries into the empire the Franks and Alemanni became more secure in their positions in 395 when Stilicho the barbarian generalissimo who held power in the western Empire made agreements with them 194 nbsp A replica of an ivory diptych probably depicting Stilicho on the right the son of a Vandal father and a Roman mother who became the most powerful man in the Western Roman Empire from 395 to 408 CE 195 196 In 401 Alaric invaded Italy coming to an understanding with Stilicho in 404 5 197 This agreement allowed Stilicho to fight against the force of Radagaisus who had crossed the Middle Danube in 405 6 and invaded Italy only to be defeated outside Florence 198 That same year a large force of Vandals Suevi Alans and Burgundians crossed the Rhine fighting the Franks but facing no Roman resistance 199 In 409 the Suevi Vandals and Alans crossing the Pyrenees into Spain where they took possession of the northern part of the peninsula 200 The Burgundians seized the land around modern Speyer Worms and Strasbourg territory that was recognized by the Roman Emperor Honorius 201 When Stilicho fell from power in 408 Alaric invaded Italy again and eventually sacked Rome in 410 Alaric died shortly thereafter 202 The Visigoths withdrew into Gaul where they faced a power struggle until the succession of Wallia in 415 and his son Theodoric I in 417 18 203 Following successful campaigns against them by the Roman emperor Flavius Constantius the Visigoths were settled as Roman allies in Gaul between modern Toulouse and Bourdeaux 204 205 Other Goths including those of Athanaric continued to live outside the empire with three groups crossing into the Roman territory after the Tervingi 206 The Huns gradually conquered Gothic groups north of the Danube of which at least six are known from 376 to 400 Those in Crimea may never have been conquered 207 The Gepids also formed an important Germanic people under Hunnic rule the Huns had largely conquered them by 406 208 One Gothic group under Hunnic domination was ruled by the Amal dynasty who would form the core of the Ostrogoths 209 The situation outside the Roman empire in 410s and 420s is poorly attested but it is clear that the Huns continued to spread their influence onto the middle Danube 210 The Hunnic Empire c 420 453 edit Further information Decline of the Western Roman Empire and Barbarian kingdoms In 428 the Vandal leader Geiseric moved his forces across the strait of Gibraltar into north Africa Within two years they had conquered most of north Africa 211 By 434 following a renewed political crisis in Rome the Rhine frontier had collapsed and in order to restore it the Roman magister militum Flavius Aetius engineered the destruction of the Burgundian kingdom in 435 436 possibly with Hunnic mercenaries and launched several successful campaigns against the Visigoths 212 In 439 the Vandals conquered Carthage which served as an excellent base for further raids throughout the Mediterranean and became the basis for the Vandal Kingdom 213 The loss of Carthage forced Aetius to make peace with the Visigoths in 442 effectively recognizing their independence within the boundaries of the empire 214 During the resulting peace Aetius resettled the Burgundians in Sapaudia in southern Gaul 215 In the 430s Aetius negotiated peace with the Suevi in Spain leading to a practical loss of Roman control in the province 216 Despite the peace the Suevi expanded their territory by conquering Merida in 439 and Seville in 441 217 By 440 Attila and the Huns had come to rule a multi ethnic empire north of the Danube two of the most important peoples within this empire were the Gepids and the Goths 218 The Gepid king Ardaric came to power around 440 and participated in various Hunnic campaigns 208 In 450 the Huns interfered in a Frankish succession dispute leading in 451 to an invasion of Gaul Aetius by uniting a coalition of Visigoths part of the Franks and others was able to defeat the Hunnic army at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains 219 In 453 Attila died unexpectedly and an alliance led by Ardaric s Gepids rebelled against the rule of his sons defeating them in the Battle of Nedao 208 Either before or after Attila s death Valamer a Gothic ruler of the Amal dynasty seems to have consolidated power over a large part of the Goths in the Hunnic domain 220 For the next 20 years the former subject peoples of the Huns would fight among each other for preeminence 221 The arrival of the Saxons in Britain is traditionally dated to 449 however archaeology indicates they had begun arriving in Britain earlier 222 Latin sources used Saxon generically for seaborne raiders meaning that not all of the invaders belonged to the continental Saxons 167 According to the British monk Gildas c 500 c 570 this group had been recruited to protect the Romano British from the Picts but had revolted 223 They quickly established themselves as rulers on the eastern part of the island 224 After the death of Attila 453 568 edit nbsp Barbarian kingdoms and peoples after the end of the Western Roman Empire in 476 CE nbsp Mausoleum of Theodoric the Great In 455 in the aftermath of the death of Aetius in 453 and the murder of emperor Valentinian III in 455 225 the Vandals invaded Italy and sacked Rome in 455 226 In 456 the Romans persuaded the Visigoths to fight the Suevi who had broken their treaty with Rome The Visigoths and a force of Burgundians and Franks defeated the Suevi at the Battle of Campus Paramus reducing Suevi control to northwestern Spain 217 The Visigoths went on to conquer all of the Iberian Peninsula by 484 except a small part that remained under Suevian control 227 The Ostrogoths led by Valamer s brother Thiudimer invaded the Balkans in 473 Thiudimer s son Theodoric succeeded him in 476 228 In that same year a barbarian commander in the Roman Italian army Odoacer mutinied and removed the final western Roman emperor Romulus Augustulus 229 Odoacer ruled Italy for himself largely continuing the policies of Roman imperial rule 230 He destroyed the Kingdom of the Rugians in modern Austria in 487 488 231 Theodoric meanwhile successfully extorted the Eastern Empire through a series of campaigns in the Balkans The eastern emperor Zeno agreed to send Theodoric to Italy in 487 8 232 After a successful invasion Theodoric killed and replaced Odoacer in 493 founding a new Ostrogothic kingdom 233 Theodoric died in 526 amid increasing tensions with the eastern empire 234 Toward the end of the migration period in the early 500s Roman sources portray a completely changed ethnic landscape outside of the empire the Marcomanni and Quadi disappeared as had the Vandals Instead the Thuringians Rugians Sciri Herules Goths and Gepids are mentioned as occupying the Danube frontier 235 From the mid 5th century onward the Alamanni had greatly expanded their territory in all directions and launched numerous raids into Gaul 236 The territory under the Frankish influence had grown to encompass northern Gaul and Germania to the Elbe 237 The Frankish king Clovis I united the various Frankish groups in 490s 238 and conquered the Alamanni by 506 239 From the 490s onward Clovis waged wars against the Visigoths defeating them in 507 and taking control of most of Gaul 238 Clovis s heirs conquered the Thuringians by 530 and the Burgundians by 532 240 The continental Saxons composed of many subgroups were made tributary to the Franks as were the Frisians who faced an attack by the Danes under Hygelac in 533 241 The Vandal and Ostrogothic kingdoms were destroyed in 534 and 555 respectively by the Eastern Roman Byzantine empire under Justinian 242 Around 500 a new ethnic identity appears in modern southern Germany the Baiuvarii Bavarians under the patronage of Theodoric s Ostrogothic kingdom and then of the Franks 231 The Lombards moving out of Bohemia destroyed the kingdom of the Heruli in Pannonia in 510 In 568 after destroying the Gepid kingdom the last Germanic kingdom in the Carpathian basin 231 the Lombards under Alboin invaded northern Italy eventually conquering most of it 243 This invasion has traditionally been regarded as the end of the migration period 177 The eastern part of Germania formerly inhabited by the Goths Gepids Vandals and Rugians was gradually Slavicized a process enabled by the invasion of the nomadic Avars 244 Early Middle Ages to c 800 edit Further information Early Middle Ages nbsp Frankish expansion from the early kingdom of Clovis I 481 to the divisions of Charlemagne s Empire 843 870 nbsp The Sutton Hoo helmet from c 625 in the British Museum Merovingian Frankia became divided into three subkingdoms Austrasia in the east around the Rhine and Meuse Neustria in the west around Paris and Burgundy in the southeast around Chalon sur Saone 245 The Franks ruled a multilingual and multi ethnic kingdom divided between a mostly Romance speaking West and a mostly Germanic speaking east that integrated former Roman elites but remained centered on a Frankish ethnic identity 246 In 687 the Pippinids came to control the Merovingian rulers as mayors of the palace in Neustria Under their direction the subkingdoms of Frankia were reunited 247 Following the mayoralty of Charles Martel the Pippinids replaced the Merovingians as kings in 751 when Charles s son Pepin the Short became king and founded the Carolingian dynasty His son Charlemagne would go on to conquer the Lombards Saxons and Bavarians 248 Charlemagne was crowned Roman emperor in 800 and regarded his residence of Aachen as the new Rome 249 Following their invasion in 568 the Lombards quickly conquered larger parts of the Italian peninsula 250 From 574 to 584 a period without a single Lombard ruler the Lombards nearly collapsed 251 until a more centralized Lombard polity emerged under King Agilulf in 590 252 The invading Lombards only ever made up a very small percentage of the Italian population however Lombard ethnic identity expanded to include people of both Roman and barbarian descent 253 Lombard power reached its peak during the reign of King Liutprand 712 744 254 After Liutprand s death the Frankish King Pippin the Short invaded in 755 greatly weakening the kingdom 254 The Lombard kingdom was finally annexed by Charlemagne in 773 255 After a period of weak central authority the Visigothic kingdom came under the rule of Liuvigild who conquered the Kingdom of the Suebi in 585 256 A Visigothic identity that was distinct from the Romance speaking population they ruled had disappeared by 700 with the removal of all legal differences between the two groups 257 In 711 a Muslim army landed at Grenada the entire Visigothic kingdom would be conquered by the Umayyad Caliphate by 725 258 In what would become England the Anglo Saxons were divided into several competing kingdoms the most important of which were Northumbria Mercia and Wessex 259 In the 7th century Northumbria established overlordship over the other Anglo Saxon Kingdoms until Mercia revolted under Wulfhere in 658 Subsequently Mercia would establish dominance until 825 with the death of King Cenwulf 259 Few written sources report on Vendel period Scandinavia from 400 to 700 however this period saw profound societal changes and the formation of early states with connections to the Anglo Saxon and Frankish kingdoms 260 In 793 the first recorded Viking raid occurred at Lindisfarne ushering in the Viking Age 261 Religion editGermanic paganism edit Main articles Germanic paganism Proto Germanic folklore Germanic mythology and List of Germanic deities nbsp Wooden idols from Oberdorla moor modern Thuringia The idols were found in context with animal bones and other evidence of sacrificial rites 262 Germanic paganism refers to the traditional culturally significant religion of the Germanic speaking peoples 263 It did not form a uniform religious system across Germanic speaking Europe but varied from place to place people to people and time to time In many contact areas e g Rhineland and eastern and northern Scandinavia it was similar to neighboring religions such as those of the Slavs Celts and Finnic peoples 264 The term is sometimes applied as early as the Stone Age Bronze Age or the earlier Iron Age but it is more generally restricted to the time period after the Germanic languages had become distinct from other Indo European languages From the first reports in Roman sources to the final conversion to Christianity Germanic paganism thus covers a period of around one thousand years 265 Scholars are divided as to the degree of continuity between the religious practices of the earlier Germanic peoples and those attested in later Norse paganism and elsewhere while some scholars argue that Tacitus early medieval sources and the Norse sources indicate religious continuity other scholars are highly skeptical of such arguments 266 Like their neighbors and other historically related peoples the ancient Germanic peoples venerated numerous indigenous deities These deities are attested throughout literature authored by or written about Germanic speaking peoples including runic inscriptions contemporary written accounts and in folklore after Christianization As an example the second of the two Merseburg charms two Old High German examples of alliterative verse from a manuscript dated to the ninth century mentions six deities Woden Balder Sinthgunt Sunna Frija and Volla 267 With the exception of Sinthgunt proposed cognates to these deities occur in other Germanic languages such as Old English and Old Norse By way of the comparative method philologists are then able to reconstruct and propose early Germanic forms of these names from early Germanic mythology Compare the following table Old High German Old Norse Old English Proto Germanic reconstruction Notes Wuotan 268 odinn 268 Wōden 268 Wōđanaz 268 A deity similarly associated with healing magic in the Old English Nine Herbs Charm and particular forms of magic throughout the Old Norse record This deity is strongly associated with extensions of Frijjō see below Balder 269 Baldr 269 Baeldaeg 269 Balđraz 269 In Old Norse texts where the only description of the deity occurs Baldr is a son of the god Odin and is associated with beauty and light Sunne 270 Sol 270 Sigel 270 Sowelō Sōel 271 272 A theonym identical to the proper noun Sun A goddess and the personified Sun Volla 273 Fulla 273 Unattested Fullōn 273 A goddess associated with extensions of the goddess Frijjō see below The Old Norse record refers to Fulla as a servant of the goddess Frigg while the second Merseburg Charm refers to Volla as Friia s sister Friia 274 Frigg 274 Frig 274 Frijjō 274 Associated with the goddess Volla Fulla in both the Old High German and Old Norse records this goddess is also strongly associated with the god Odin see above in both the Old Norse and Langobardic records The structure of the magic formula in this charm has a long history prior to this attestation it is first known to have occurred in Vedic India where it occurs in the Atharvaveda dated to around 500 BCE 275 Numerous other beings common to various groups of ancient Germanic peoples receive mention throughout the ancient Germanic record One such type of entity a variety of supernatural women is also mentioned in the first of the two Merseburg Charms Old High German Old Norse Old English Proto Germanic reconstruction Notes itis 276 dis 276 ides 276 đisō 276 A type of goddess like supernatural entity The West Germanic forms present some linguistic difficulties but the North Germanic and West Germanic forms are used explicitly as cognates compare Old English ides Scildinga and Old Norse dis Skjǫldunga 277 Other widely attested entities from the North and West Germanic folklore include elves dwarfs and the mare For more discussion on these entities see Proto Germanic folklore The great majority of material describing Germanic mythology stems from the North Germanic record The body of myths among the North Germanic speaking peoples is known today as Norse mythology and is attested in numerous works the most expansive of which are the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda While these texts were composed in the 13th century they frequently quote genres of traditional alliterative verse known today as eddic poetry and skaldic poetry dating to the pre Christian period 278 nbsp An image of a museum reproduction of one of the two golden horns of Gallehus found in Denmark and dating to the early fifth century Composed in Proto Norse the Elder Futhark inscription on the horn features the earliest known generally accepted example of Germanic alliterative verse West Germanic mythology that of speakers of e g Old English and Old High German is comparatively poorly attested Notable texts include the Old Saxon Baptismal Vow and the Old English Nine Herbs Charm While most extant references are simply to deity names some narratives do survive into the present such as the Lombard origin myth which details a tradition among the Lombards that features the deities Frea cognate with Old Norse Frigg and Godan cognate with Old Norse odinn Attested in the 7th century Origo Gentis Langobardorum and the 8th century Historia Langobardorum from the Italian Peninsula the narrative strongly corresponds in numerous ways with the prose introduction to the eddic poem Grimnismal recorded in 13th century Iceland 279 280 Very few texts make up the corpus of Gothic and other East Germanic languages and East Germanic paganism and its associated mythic body is especially poorly attested Notable topics that provide insight into the matter of East Germanic paganism include the Ring of Pietroassa which appears to be a cult object see also Gothic runic inscriptions and the mention of the Gothic Anses cognate with Old Norse AEsir pagan gods by Jordanes 281 Practices associated with the religion of the ancient Germanic peoples see fewer attestations However elements of religious practices are discernable throughout the textual record associated with the ancient Germanic peoples including a focus on sacred groves and trees the presence of seeresses and numerous vocabulary items The archaeological record has yielded a variety of depictions of deities a number of them associated with depictions of the ancient Germanic peoples see Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe Notable from the Roman period are the Matres and Matronae some having Germanic names to whom devotional altars were set up in regions of Germania Eastern Gaul and Northern Italy with a small distribution elsewhere that were occupied by the Roman army from the first to the fifth century 282 Germanic mythology and religious practice is of particular interest to Indo Europeanists scholars who seek to identify aspects of ancient Germanic culture both in terms of linguistic correspondence and by way of motifs stemming from Proto Indo European culture including Proto Indo European mythology The primordial being Ymir attested solely in Old Norse sources makes for a commonly cited example In Old Norse texts the death of this entity results in creation of the cosmos a complex of motifs that finds strong correspondence elsewhere in the Indo European sphere notably in Vedic mythology 283 Conversion to Christianity edit Main article Christianisation of the Germanic peoples nbsp Page from the Codex Argenteus containing the Gothic Bible translated by Wulfila Germanic peoples began entering the Roman Empire in large numbers at the same time that Christianity was spreading there 284 and this connection was a major factor encouraging conversion 285 The East Germanic peoples the Langobards and the Suevi in Spain converted to Arian Christianity 286 a form of Christianity that believed that God the Father was superior to God the Son 287 The first Germanic people to convert to Arianism were the Visigoths at the latest in 376 when they entered the Roman Empire This followed a longer period of missionary work by both Orthodox Christians and Arians such as the Arian Wulfila who was made missionary bishop of the Goths in 341 and translated the Bible into Gothic 288 The Arian Germanic peoples all eventually converted to Nicene Christianity which had become the dominant form of Christianity within the Roman Empire the last to convert were the Visigoths in Spain under their king Reccared in 587 289 The areas of the Roman Empire conquered by the Franks Alemanni and Baiuvarii were mostly Christian already but it appears that Christianity declined there 290 In 496 the Frankish king Clovis I converted to Nicene Christianity This began a period of missionizing within Frankish territory 291 The Anglo Saxons gradually converted following a mission sent by Pope Gregory the Great in 595 292 In the 7th century Frankish supported missionary activity spread out of Gaul led by figures of the Anglo Saxon mission such as Saint Boniface 293 The Saxons initially rejected Christianization 294 but were eventually forcibly converted by Charlemagne as a result of their conquest in the Saxon Wars in 776 777 295 While attempts to convert the Scandinavian peoples began in 831 they were mostly unsuccessful until the 10th and 11th centuries 296 The last Germanic people to convert were the Swedes although the Geats had converted earlier The pagan Temple at Uppsala seems to have continued to exist into the early 1100s 297 Society and culture editRunic writing edit Main article Runes nbsp The Vimose Comb housed at the National Museum of Denmark and dating to around from c 160 CE bears the oldest generally accepted runic inscription 298 Germanic speakers developed a native script the runes or the futhark and the earliest known form of which consists of 24 characters The runes are generally held to have been used exclusively by Germanic speaking populations k All known early runic inscriptions are found in Germanic contexts with the potential exception of one inscription which may indicate cultural transfer between the Germanic speakers to Slavic speakers and may potentially be the earliest known writing among Slavic speakers l Like other indigenous scripts of Europe the runes ultimately developed from the Phoenician alphabet but unlike similar scripts the runes were not replaced by the Latin alphabet by the first century BCE Runes remained in use among the Germanic peoples throughout their history despite the significant influence of Rome m The precise date that Germanic speakers developed the runic alphabet is unknown with estimates varying from 100 BCE to 100 CE 303 Generally accepted inscriptions in the oldest attested form of the script called the Elder Futhark date from 200 to 700 CE 304 The word rune is widely attested among Germanic languages where it developed from Proto Germanic runa and held a primary meaning of secret 305 but also other meanings such as whisper mystery closed deliberation and council 306 In most cases runes appear not to have been used for everyday communication and knowledge of them may have generally been limited to a small group 303 for whom the term erilaR is attested from the sixth century onward 307 The letters of the Elder Futhark are arranged in an order called the futhark so named after its first six characters 308 The alphabet is supposed to have been extremely phonetic and each letter could also represent a word or concept so that for instance the f rune also stood for fehu cattle property Such examples are known as Begriffsrunen concept runes 309 Runic inscriptions are found on organic materials such as wood bone horn ivory and animal hides as well as on stone and metal 310 Inscriptions tend to be short 303 and are difficult to interpret as profane or magical They include names inscriptions by the maker of an object memorials to the dead as well as inscriptions that are religious or magical in nature 311 Personal names edit nbsp The Istaby Stone DR359 is a runestone that features a Proto Norse Elder Futhark inscription describing three generations of men Their names share the common element of wolf wulfaz and alliterate Germanic personal names are commonly dithematic consisting of two components that may be combined freely such as the Old Norse female personal name Sigridr consisting of sigr victory fridr beloved As summarized by Per Vikstrand The old Germanic personal names are from a social and ideological point of view characterized by three main features religion heroism and family bonds The religious aspect of Germanic names seems to be an inherited Indo European trace which the Germanic languages share with Greek and other Indo European languages 312 One point of debate surrounding Germanic name giving practice is whether name elements were considered semantically meaningful when combined 312 Whatever the case an element of a name could be inherited by a male or female s offspring leading to an alliterative lineage related see alliterative verse The runestone D359 in Istaby Sweden provides one such example where three generations of men are connected by way of the element wulfaz meaning wolf the alliterative Hathuwulfaz Heruwulfaz and Hariwulfaz 312 Sacral components to Germanic personal names are also attested including elements such as hailaga and wiha both usually translated as holy sacred see for example Ve and deity names theonyms Deity names as first components of personal names are attested primarily in Old Norse names where they commonly reference in particular the god Thor Old Norse THorr 313 Poetry and legend edit Main articles Alliterative verse and Germanic heroic legend The ancient Germanic speaking peoples were a largely oral culture Written literature in Germanic languages is not recorded until the 6th century Gothic Bible or the 8th century in modern England and Germany 314 The philologist Andreas Heusler proposed the existence of various genres of literature in the Old Germanic period which were largely based on genres found in high medieval Old Norse poetry These include ritual poetry epigrammatic poetry Spruchdichtung memorial verses Merkdichtung lyric narrative poetry and praise poetry 315 Heinrich Beck suggests that on the basis of Latin mentions in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages the following genres can be adduced origo gentis the origin of a people or their rulers the fall of heroes casus heroici praise poetry and laments for the dead 316 Some stylistic aspects of later Germanic poetry appear to have origins in the Indo European period as shown by comparison with ancient Greek and Sanskrit poetry 317 Originally the Germanic speaking peoples shared a metrical and poetic form alliterative verse which is attested in very similar forms in Old Saxon Old High German and Old English and in a modified form in Old Norse 318 Alliterative verse is not attested in the small extant Gothic corpus 319 The poetic forms diverge among the different languages from the 9th century onward 320 Later Germanic peoples shared a common legendary tradition These heroic legends mostly involve historical personages who lived during the migration period 4th 6th centuries AD placing them in highly ahistorical and mythologized settings 321 n they originate and develop as part of an oral tradition 323 324 Some early Gothic heroic legends are already found in Jordanes Getica c 551 325 The close link between Germanic heroic legend and Germanic language and possibly poetic devices is shown by the fact that the Germanic speakers in Francia who adopted a Romance language do not preserve Germanic legends but rather developed their own heroic folklore excepting the figure of Walter of Aquitaine 326 Germanic law edit Main article Early Germanic law nbsp Germanic bracteate from Funen Denmark Until the middle of the 20th century the majority of scholars assumed the existence of a distinct Germanic legal culture and law 327 Early ideas about Germanic law have come under intense scholarly scrutiny since the 1950s and specific aspects of it such as the legal importance of Sippe retinues and loyalty and the concept of outlawry can no longer be justified 328 329 Besides the assumption of a common Germanic legal tradition and the use of sources of different types from different places and time periods 328 there are no native sources for early Germanic law 330 331 The earliest written legal sources the Leges Barbarorum were all written under Roman and Christian influence and often with the help of Roman jurists 332 and contain large amounts of Vulgar Latin Law an unofficial legal system that functioned in the Roman provinces 333 As of 2023 scholarly consensus is that Germanic law is best understood in contrast with Roman law in that whereas Roman law was learned and the same across regions Germanic law was not learned and incorporated regional peculiarities 334 Common elements include an emphasis on orality gesture formulaic language legal symbolism and ritual 335 Some items in the Leges such as the use of vernacular words may reveal aspects of originally Germanic or at least non Roman law Legal historian Ruth Schmidt Wiegand writes that this vernacular often in the form of Latinized words belongs to the oldest layers of a Germanic legal language and shows some similarities to Gothic 336 337 Warfare edit nbsp Image of Romans fighting the Marcomanni on the Column of Marcus Aurelius 193 CE Main articles Early Germanic warfare and Military organization of the Germanic peoples Warfare seems to have been a constant in Germanic society 338 including conflicts among and within Germanic peoples 339 There is no common Germanic word for war and it was not necessarily differentiated from other forms of violence 340 Historical information on Germanic warfare almost entirely depends on Greco Roman sources 341 however their accuracy has been questioned 342 The core of the army was formed by the comitatus retinue a group of warriors following a chief 343 As retinues grew larger their names could become associated with entire peoples Many retinues functioned as auxilia mercenary units in the Roman army 344 Roman sources stress perhaps partially as a literary topos that the Germanic peoples fought without discipline 345 346 Germanic warriors fought mostly on foot 347 in tight formations in close combat 348 Tacitus mentions a single formation as used by the Germani the wedge Latin cuneus 349 Cavalry was rare in the Roman period it mostly consisted of chiefs and their immediate retinues 347 who may have dismounted to fight 350 However East Germanic peoples such as the Goths developed cavalry forces armed with lances due to contact with various nomadic peoples 351 Archaeological finds mostly in the form of grave goods indicate that most warriors were armed with spear shield and often with swords 348 Higher status individuals were often buried with spurs for riding 350 The only archaeological evidence for helmets and chain mail shows them to be of Roman manufacture 352 Economy and material culture editAgriculture and population density edit Unlike agriculture in the Roman provinces which was organized around the large farms known as villae rusticae Germanic agriculture was organized around villages When Germanic peoples expanded into northern Gaul in the 4th and 5th centuries CE they brought this village based agriculture with them which increased the agricultural productivity of the land Heiko Steuer suggests this means that Germania was more agriculturally productive than is generally assumed 353 Villages were not distant from each other but often within sight revealing a fairly high population density and contrary to the assertions of Roman sources only about 30 of Germania was covered in forest about the same percentage as today 354 Based on pollen samples and the finds of seeds and plant remains the chief grains cultivated in Germania were barley oats and wheat both Einkorn and emmer while the most common vegetables were beans and peas Flax was also grown 355 Agriculture in Germania relied heavily on animal husbandry primarily the raising of cattle which were smaller than their Roman counterparts 356 Both cultivation and animal husbandry methods improved with time with examples being the introduction of rye which grew better in Germania and the introduction of the three field system 357 Crafts edit It is unclear if there was a special class of craftsmen in Germania however archaeological finds of tools are frequent 358 Many everyday items such as dishes were made out of wood and archaeology has found the remains of wooden well construction 359 The 4th century CE Nydam and Illerup ships show highly developed knowledge of ship construction while elite graves have revealed wooden furniture with complex joinery 360 Products made from ceramics included cooking drinking and storage vessels as well as lamps While originally formed by hand the period around 1 CE saw the introduction of the potter s wheel 361 Some of the ceramics produced on potter s wheels seem to have been done in direct imitation of Roman wares 362 and may have been produced by Romans in Germania or by Germani who had learned Roman techniques while serving in the Roman army 363 The shape and decoration of Germanic ceramics vary by region and archaeologists have traditionally used these variations to determine larger cultural areas 364 Many ceramics were probably produced locally in hearths but large pottery kilns have also been discovered and it seems clear that there were areas of specialized production 362 Metalworking edit nbsp A 5th century CE gold collar from Alleberg Sweden It displays Germanic filigree work 365 Despite the claims of Roman writers such as Tacitus that the Germani had little iron and lacked expertise in working it deposits of iron were commonly found in Germania and Germanic smiths were skillful metalworkers 366 Smithies are known from multiple settlements and smiths were often buried with their tools 367 An iron mine discovered at Rudki in the Lysogory mountains of modern central Poland operated from the 1st to the 4th centuries CE and included a substantial smelting workshop similar facilities have been found in Bohemia 368 The remains of large smelting operations have been discovered by Ribe in Jutland 4th to 6th century CE 369 as well as at Glienick in northern Germany and at Heeten in the Netherlands both 4th century CE 370 Germanic smelting furnaces may have produced metal that was as high quality as that produced by the Romans 371 In addition to large scale production nearly every individual settlement seems to have produced some iron for local use 369 Iron was used for agricultural tools tools for various crafts and for weapons 372 Lead was needed in order to make molds and for the production of jewelry however it is unclear if the Germani were able to produce lead While lead mining is known from within the Siegerland across the Rhine from the Roman Empire it is sometimes theorized that this was the work of Roman miners 373 Another mine within Germania was near modern Soest where again it is theorized that lead was exported to Rome 374 The neighboring Roman provinces of Germania superior and Germania inferior produced a great deal of lead which has been found stamped as plumbum Germanicum Germanic lead in Roman shipwrecks 375 Deposits of gold are not found naturally within Germania and had to either be imported 376 or could be found having naturally washed down rivers 377 The earliest known gold objects made by Germanic craftsmen are mostly small ornaments dating from the later 1st century CE 376 Silver working likewise dates from the first century CE and silver often served as a decorative element with other metals 378 From the 2nd century onward increasingly complex gold jewelry was made often inlaid with precious stones and in a polychrome style 379 Inspired by Roman metalwork Germanic craftsmen also began working with gold and silver gilt foils on belt buckles jewelry and weapons 365 Pure gold objects produced in the late Roman period included torcs with snakeheads often displaying filigree and cloisonne work techniques that dominated throughout Germanic Europe 380 Clothing and textiles edit nbsp A pair of trousers with attached stockings found in the Thorsberg moor 3rd century CE 381 Clothing does not generally preserve well archaeologically Early Germanic clothing is shown on some Roman stone monuments such as Trajan s Column and the Column of Marcus Aurelius and is occasionally discovered in finds from in moors 382 mostly from Scandinavia 383 Frequent finds include long trousers sometimes including connected stockings shirt like gowns Kittel with long sleeves large pieces of cloth and capes with fur on the inside 384 All of these are thought to be male clothing while finds of tubular garments are thought to be female clothing These would have reached to the ankles and would likely have been held in place by brooches at the height of the shoulders as shown on Roman monuments 385 On Roman depictions the dress was gathered below the breast or at the waist and there are frequently no sleeves Sometimes a blouse or skirt is depicted below the dress along with a neckerchief around the throat 386 By the middle of the 5th century CE both men and women among the continental Germanic peoples came to wear a Roman style tunic as their most important piece of clothing This was secured at the waist and likely adopted due to intensive contact with the Roman world 387 The Romans typically depict Germanic men and women as bareheaded although some head coverings have been found Although Tacitus mentions an undergarment made of linen no examples of these have been found 386 Surviving examples indicate that Germanic textiles were of high quality and mostly made of flax and wool 381 Roman depictions show the Germani wearing materials that were only lightly worked 388 Surviving examples indicate that a variety of weaving techniques were used 386 Leather was used for shoes belts and other gear 389 Spindles sometimes made of glass or amber and the weights from looms and distaffs are frequently found in Germanic settlements 381 Trade edit nbsp The Minerva Bowl part of the Hildesheim Treasure likely a Roman diplomatic gift 390 The treasure may date from the reign of Nero 37 68 CE or the early Flavian dynasty 69 96 CE 391 Archaeology shows that from at least the turn of the 3rd century CE larger regional settlements in Germania existed that were not exclusively involved in an agrarian economy and that the main settlements were connected by paved roads The entirety of Germania was within a system of long distance trade 392 Migration period seaborne trade is suggested by Gudme on the Danish island of Funen and other harbors on the Baltic 393 Roman trade with Germania is poorly documented 394 Roman merchants crossing the Alps for Germania are recorded already by Caesar in the 1st century BCE 390 During the imperial period most trade probably took place in trading posts in Germania or at major Roman bases 395 The most well known Germanic export to the Roman Empire was amber with a trade centered on the Baltic coast 396 Economically however amber is likely to have been fairly unimportant 397 The use of Germanic loanwords in surviving Latin texts suggests that besides amber glaesum the Romans also imported the feathers of Germanic geese ganta and hair dye sapo Germanic slaves were also a major commodity 398 Archaeological discoveries indicate that lead was exported from Germania as well perhaps mined in Roman Germanic joint ventures 399 Products imported from Rome are found archaeologically throughout the Germanic sphere and include vessels of bronze and silver glassware pottery brooches other products such as textiles and foodstuffs may have been just as important 400 Rather than mine and smelt non ferrous metals themselves Germanic smiths seem to have often preferred to melt down finished metal objects from Rome which were imported in large numbers including coins metal vessels and metal statues 401 Tacitus mentions in Germania chapter 23 that the Germani living along the Rhine bought wine and Roman wine has been found in Denmark and northern Poland 390 Finds of Roman silver coinage and weapons might have been war booty or the result of trade while high quality silver items may have been diplomatic gifts 402 Roman coinage may have acted as a form of currency as well 403 Genetics editSee also Battle Axe culture Genetics Bell Beaker culture Genetics and Nordic Bronze Age Genetics The use of genetic studies to investigate the Germanic past is controversial with scholars such as Guy Halsall suggesting it could represent a hearkening back to 19th century ideas of race 404 Sebastian Brather Wilhelm Heizmann and Steffen Patzold write that genetics studies are of great use for demographic history but cannot give us any information about cultural history 405 In a 2013 book which reviewed studies made up until then scholars noted that most Germanic speakers today have a Y DNA that is a mixture including haplogroup I1 R1a1a R1b P312 and R1b U106 however the authors also note that these groups are older than Germanic languages and found among speakers of other languages 406 Modern reception editThe rediscovery of Tacitus s Germania in the 1450s was used by German humanists to claim a glorious classical past for their nation that could compete with that of Greece and Rome 407 and to equate the Germanic with the German 408 While the humanists notion of the Germanic was initially vague later it was narrowed and used to support a notion of German ic superiority to other nations 409 Equally important was Jordanes s Getica rediscovered by Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini in the mid 15th century and first printed in 1515 by Konrad Peutinger which depicted Scandinavia as the womb of nations Latin vagina nationum from which all the historical northeastern European barbarians migrated in the distant past 410 While treated with suspicion by German scholars who preferred the indigenous origin given by Tacitus this motif became very popular in contemporary Swedish Gothicism as it supported Sweden s imperial ambitions 411 Peutinger printed the Getica together with Paul the Deacon s History of the Lombards so that the Germania the Getica and the History of the Lombards formed the basis for the study of the Germanic past 412 Scholars did not clearly differentiate between the Germanic peoples Celtic peoples and the Scythian peoples until the late 18th century with the discovery of Indo European and the establishment of language as the primary criterion for nationality Before that time German scholars considered the Celtic peoples to be part of the Germanic group 413 The beginning of Germanic philology proper starts around the turn of the 19th century with Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm being the two most significant founding figures Their oeuvre included various monumental works on linguistics culture and literature 414 Jacob Grimm offered many arguments identifying the Germans as the most Germanic of the Germanic speaking peoples many of which were taken up later by others who sought to equate Germanicness German Germanentum with Germanness German Deutschtum 415 Grimm also argued that the Scandinavian sources were while much later more pure attestations of Germanness than those from the south an opinion that remains common today 416 German nationalist thinkers of the volkisch movement placed a great emphasis on the connection of modern Germans to the Germania using Tacitus to prove the purity and virtue of the German people which had allowed them to conquer the decadent Romans 417 German historians used the Germanic past to argue for a liberal democratic form of government and a unified German state 418 Contemporary Romantic nationalism in Scandinavia placed more weight on the Viking Age resulting in the movement known as Scandinavism 419 In the late 19th century Gustaf Kossinna developed several widely accepted theories tying archaeological finds of specific assemblages of objects Kossina used his theories to extend Germanic identity back to the Neolithic period and to state with confidence when and where various Germanic and other peoples had migrated within Europe 420 In the 1930s and 40s the Nazi Party made use of notions of Germanic purity reaching back into the earliest prehistoric times 10 Nazi ideologues also used the Germanic nature of peoples such as the Franks and Goths to justify territorial annexations in northern France Ukraine and the Crimea 421 Scholars reinterpreted Germanic culture to justify the Nazis rule as anchored in the Germanic past emphasizing noble leaders and warlike retinues who dominated surrounding peoples 422 After 1945 these associations led to a scholarly backlash and re examining of Germanic origins 10 Many medieval specialists have even demanded that scholars avoid the term Germanic altogether since it is too emotionally charged adding that it has been politically abused and creates more confusion than clarity 423 See also editList of early Germanic peoplesNotes edit The earlier Nordic Bronze Age of southern Scandinavia also shows definite population and material continuities with the Jastorf Culture 8 but it is unclear whether these indicate ethnic continuity 9 The reconstruction of such loanwords remains a difficult task since no descendant language of substrate dialects is attested and plausible etymological explanations have been found for many Germanic lexemes previously regarded as of non Indo European origin The English term sword long regarded as without etymology was found to be cognate with the Ancient Greek aor the sword hung to the shoulder with valuable rings both descending from the PIE root swerd denoting the suspended sword Similarly the word hand could descend from a PGer form handu pike lt handuga having a pike possibly related to Greek kentein to stab poke and kentron stinging agent pricker 72 However there is still a set of words of Proto Germanic origin attested in Old High German since the 8th c which have found so far no competing Indo European etymologies however unlikely e g Adel aristocratic lineage Asch barge Beute board Loch lock Saule pillar etc 73 Rubekeil 2017 pp 996 997 West Germanic There seems to be a principal distinction between the northern and the southern part of this group the demarcation between both parts however is a matter of controversy The northern part North Sea Gmc or Ingvaeonic is the larger one but it is a moot point whether Old Saxon and Old Low Franconian really belong to it and if yes to what extent they participate in all its characteristic developments As a whole there are arguments for a close relationship between Anglo Frisian on the one hand and Old Saxon and Old Low Franconian on the other there are however counter arguments as well The question as to whether the common features are old and inherited or have emerged by connections over the North Sea is still controversial Iversen amp Kroonen 2017 p 521 In the more than 250 years ca 2850 2600 B C E when late Funnel Beaker farmers coexisted with the new Single Grave culture communities within a relatively small area of present day Denmark processes of cultural and linguistic exchange were almost inevitable if not widespread Ringe 2006 p 85 Early Jastorf at the end of the 7th century BCE is almost certainly too early for the last common ancestor of the attested languages but later Jastorf culture and its successors occupy so much territory that their populations are most unlikely to have spoken a single dialect even granting that the expansion of the culture was relatively rapid It follows that our reconstructed PGmc was only one of the dialects spoken by peoples identified archeologically or by the Romans as Germans the remaining Germanic peoples spoke sister dialects of PGmc Polome 1992 p 51 if the Jastorf culture and probably the neighboring Harpstedt culture to the west constitute the Germanic homeland a spread of Proto Germanic northwards and eastwards would have to be assumed which might explain both the archaisms and the innovative features of North Germanic and East Germanic and would fit nicely with recent views locating the homeland of the Goths in Poland Mallory and Adams observe The Przeworsk Culture shows continuity with preceding cultures Lusatian and insures that the Slavic homeland was in its territory from whence the Venedi one of the earliest historically attested Slavic tribes are specifically derived On the other hand Germanicists have argued that the Przeworsk culture was occupied by the Elbe Germanic tribes and there are also those who argue that the Przeworsk reflects both a Germanic and Slavic component 108 Koch 2020 pp 79 80 New words shared between these languages at this period are not detectable as loanwords The smaller number that do show Celtic innovations probably post date the transition from Pre Celtic to Proto Celtic 1200 BC For example the Celto Germanic group name giving Proto Germanic Burgunthaz and Pro Celtic Brigantes was Bhr ghn tes which then independently underwent the Germanic and Celtic treatments of Proto Indo European syllabic r and n It would be unlikely for the name to have its attested Germanic form if it had been borrowed from Celtic after 1200 BC and probably impossible after 900 BC Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 581 582 Also eine Gemeinsamkeit von Germ Balt und Slaw wobei die Neuerungen vor allem in einer Gemeinsamkeit von Germ und Balt zum Ausdruck kommen die Gemeinsamkeit von Germ und Slaw beruht mehr auf der Bewahrung urspr Verhaltnisse und weist damit nicht auf engere Gemeinsamkeiten im Verlauf der Entwicklung Die Kontakte zum Extrem auf der anderen Seite dem Slaw sind wohl nur als eine Begleiterscheinung der Kontakte zum Balt aufzufassen Diese Kontakte zum Balt mussen allerdings teilweise recht alt sein Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 166 167 as for the Balto Slavic connection other pieces of evidence show shared innovations with Baltic only not with Slavic which indicates a period of contact and joint development between Germanic and Balto Slavic languages during a relatively late time period and in any event after the initial breakup of Balto Slavic Tacitus referred to him as king of the Suevians 139 During the initial stage of the conflict between the Romans and the Tervingi the Greuthungi had crossed the Danube into the Empire 187 The indigenous ancient alphabet of Germania the futhark consisted of twenty four characters named runes 299 The discovery of a rune inscribed bone from Lany Breclav Moravia Czech Republic challenges the prevalent opinion that the older futhark was used exclusively by Germanic speaking populations 300 Runes are an alphabetic script called futhark used among Germanic tribes The find reported here renders six of the last eight runes of the older futhark making it the first find containing the final part of the older futhark in South Germanic inscriptions and the only one found in a non Germanic context 301 For unknown reasons the Latin or Roman alphabet was not adapted in the North but instead an alphabet was created that reflected Roman influence but deviated in crucial features History of writing in the Mediterranean area shows that there were many indigenous scripts all somehow descending from the Phoenician mother script but they were all replaced in ultimately the first century BC by the Roman script the writing system of the leading culture 302 Historian Shami Ghosh for instance argues It is certainly the case that the Goths Lombards Franks Angles Saxons and Burgundians were all Germanic peoples in that their vernacular tongue belonged to the Germanic sub group of the Indo European family of languages It is also the case that the corpus of what literary scholars define as Germanic heroic poetry does contain narratives that have as a historical core events that took place largely in the period c 300 c 600 insofar as any of these narratives can in fact be related to any sort of historical realities at all But there is little evidence from before the eighth century at least for any sense even of an awareness of an inter relatedness among these peoples and certainly not of any perception among them of any significance of such inter relatedness any sort of knowledge of and meaning granted to a common Germanentum or Germanic ness that has any relation to the burden of significance such a concept has borne in modern scholarship Furthermore the historical links between the extant heroic texts and any verifiable historical fact are both invariably slender and often quite tenuous and therefore should not be overvalued 322 References editCitations edit a b c d e Steuer 2021 p 30 a b Steuer 2021 p 3 a b Steuer 2021 p 28 a b Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 383 385 Steinacher 2022 p 292 a b Steuer 2021 p 32 Steuer 2021 p 89 1310 a b Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 636 a b Todd 1999 p 11 a b c Todd 1999 p 9 Wolfram 1988 p 5 Pfeifer 2000 p 434 Pohl 2004a p 58 a b Pohl 2004a p 1 Steinacher 2020 pp 48 57 Pohl 2004a p 4 a b Green 1998 p 8 Winkler 2016 p xxii Kulikowski 2020 p 19 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 380 381 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 379 380 Harland amp Friedrich 2020 pp 2 3 Steinacher 2022 pp 292 293 Brather Heizmann amp Patzold 2021 p 31 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 381 382 Harland amp Friedrich 2020 p 6 Steuer 2021 pp 29 35 Pohl 2004a pp 50 51 Neidorf 2018 p 865 Harland 2021 p 28 Harland amp Friedrich 2020 p 10 a b Brather Heizmann amp Patzold 2021 p 34 Steuer 2021 p 29 Steuer 2021 pp 1275 1277 Steinacher 2020 pp 35 39 Riggsby 2010 p 51 Steinacher 2020 pp 36 37 Steinacher 2020 pp 37 38 Pohl 2004a p 11 Pohl 2004a pp 52 53 Pohl 2004a pp 53 54 Pohl 2004a pp 54 55 Pohl 2004a p 19 a b c Pohl 2004a p 3 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 376 511 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 377 Krebs 2011 p 204 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 510 511 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 513 Steinacher 2022 p 293 Liebeschuetz 2015 p 97 a b Pohl 2004a pp 9 10 Pohl 2004a pp 4 5 Pohl 2004a p 53 Steinacher 2020 p 47 Steinacher 2020 pp 47 48 a b c Rubekeil 2017 p 986 Tacitus 1948 p 102 Wolters 2001 p 567 a b Wolters 2001 p 568 a b c d Pohl 2004a p 57 a b c Wolters 2001 p 470 Wolters 2001 pp 470 471 Steuer 2021 p 59 Steuer 2021 pp 125 126 Wolters 2001 p 471 Ringe 2006 p 84 Anthony 2007 pp 57 58 Iversen amp Kroonen 2017 p 519 Penzl 1972 p 1232 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 593 Stiles 2017 p 889 Rubekeil 2017 p 989 Schrijver 2014 p 197 Seebold 2017 p 978 Iversen amp Kroonen 2017 p 518 Seebold 2017 pp 978 979 Seebold 2017 pp 979 980 Ringe 2006 p 85 Nedoma 2017 p 875 Seebold 2017 p 975 Rubekeil 2017 p 989 Ringe 2006 p 85 Rubekeil 2017 p 989 Ringe 2006 p 85 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 595 Kroonen 2013 p 422 Rubekeil 2017 p 990 Rubekeil 2017 p 990 a b Todd 1999 p 13 Green 1998 p 108 Ringe 2006 p 152 Sanders 2010 p 27 Nedoma 2017 p 875 Green 1998 p 13 Nedoma 2017 p 876 Nedoma 2017 p 875 Fortson 2004 pp 338 339 Nedoma 2017 p 876 Ringe 2006 p 85 Nedoma 2017 p 879 a b Nedoma 2017 pp 879 881 Rubekeil 2017 p 995 Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 158 160 Nedoma 2017 pp 876 877 a b Nedoma 2017 p 881 Fortson 2004 p 339 Rubekeil 2017 p 993 Fortson 2004 p 339 Seebold 2017 p 976 Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 158 160 Stiles 2017 pp 903 905 Schrijver 2014 p 185 Rubekeil 2017 p 992 Rubekeil 2017 p 991 Nedoma 2017 p 877 Nedoma 2017 p 878 Rubekeil 2017 pp 987 991 997 Nedoma 2017 pp 881 883 Nedoma 2017 pp 877 881 Rubekeil 2017 p 992 Nedoma 2017 p 879 Rubekeil 2017 pp 987 997 998 Nedoma 2017 p 880 Fortson 2004 p 339 Anthony 2007 p 360 Seebold 2017 p 978 Heyd 2017 pp 348 349 Kristiansen et al 2017 p 340 Reich 2018 pp 110 111 Anthony 2007 pp 360 367 368 Seebold 2017 p 978 Kristiansen et al 2017 p 340 Iversen amp Kroonen 2017 pp 512 513 Koch 2020 p 38 Polome 1992 p 51 Fortson 2004 p 338 Ringe 2006 p 85 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 635 Pohl 2004a pp 49 50 a b Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 470 Brather 2004 pp 181 183 Koch 2020 p 19 Fortson 2004 p 338 Kroonen 2013 pp 247 311 Nedoma 2017 p 876 Schrijver 2014 p 197 Nedoma 2017 p 876 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 579 589 Steuer 2021 p 113 Koch 2020 pp 79 80 Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 161 163 Koch 2020 pp 79 80 Green 1998 pp 145 159 Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 161 163 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 581 582 Simmelkjaer Sandgaard Hansen amp Kroonen 2022 pp 166 167 Kinder 1988 p 108 Macialowicz Rudnicki amp Strobin 2016 pp 136 138 Todd 1999 p 23 Chaniotis 2013 pp 209 211 Kaul amp Martens 1995 pp 133 153 154 Harris 1979 pp 245 247 Burns 2003 pp 72 Woolf 2012 pp 105 107 Todd 1999 p 22 Pohl 2004a p 13 Vanderhoeven amp Vanderhoeven 2004 p 144 a b Todd 1999 p 45 Goldsworthy 2006 p 204 Steuer 2006 p 230 Goldsworthy 2009 p 212 note 2 Wells 2004 p 155 Gruen 2006 pp 180 182 Gruen 2006 p 183 a b Haller amp Dannenbauer 1970 p 30 Steuer 2021 p 995 Tacitus Annales 2 26 Archived 23 April 2023 at the Wayback Machine Goldsworthy 2016 p 275 Goldsworthy 2016 pp 276 277 a b Pohl 2004a p 15 Steuer 2021 p 994 Haller amp Dannenbauer 1970 pp 30 31 Wells 1995 p 98 Pohl 2004a p 16 Pohl 2004a pp 16 17 Pohl 2004a p 17 Roymans 2004 pp 57 58 Pohl 2004a pp 17 18 Steuer 2021 p 683 Pohl 2004a p 18 Todd 1999 pp 52 53 Pohl 2004a p 25 James 2014 p 31 Todd 1999 p 54 Ward Heichelheim amp Yeo 2016 p 340 a b Pohl 2004a p 26 a b Todd 1999 p 55 James 2014 p 32 Halsall 2007 p 120 Pohl 2004a pp 26 27 Geary 1999 p 109 a b Todd 1999 p 140 a b Todd 1999 p 56 James 2014 pp 40 45 a b Wolfram 1997 p 244 James 2014 p 122 Heather 2009 p 112 Todd 1999 pp 141 142 Todd 1999 p 57 a b Pohl 2004a p 27 Todd 1999 pp 59 61 Pohl 2004a p 35 Halsall 2007 p 125 Springer 2010 pp 1020 1021 a b Springer 2010 p 1021 Brather 2010 p 1034 Brather 2010 p 1035 1036 Brather 2010 p 1036 Heather 1996 p 101 Heather 1996 pp 98 100 a b c Todd 1999 p 143 Heather 1996 p 100 Heather 1996 p 131 Heather 1996 pp 131 132 Goldsworthy 2009b p 252 Halsall 2007 pp 176 178 Wolfram 1997 pp 79 87 Heather 1996 pp 135 137 Heather 1996 pp 138 139 Todd 1999 p 145 Heather 1996 pp 143 144 Halsall 2007 p 199 Todd 1999 p 61 Wolfram 1997 p 89 Todd 1999 pp 145 146 Heather 2009 p 182 Halsall 2007 p 211 Todd 1999 p 172 Todd 1999 p 197 Heather 1996 pp 147 148 Heather 1996 pp 147 149 Heather 1996 p 150 Halsall 2007 pp 228 230 Heather 1996 pp 102 103 Heather 1996 pp 111 112 a b c Todd 1999 p 223 Heather 1996 pp 113 114 Goffart 2006 p 109 Todd 1999 p 176 Halsall 2007 pp 243 244 Todd 1999 pp 176 177 Halsall 2007 p 245 247 Halsall 2007 p 248 Halsall 2007 p 240 a b Todd 1999 p 174 Heather 1996 p 109 Halsall 2007 pp 251 253 Heather 1996 p 116 Heather 1996 pp 151 152 James 2014 p 65 James 2014 p 64 Wolfram 1997 p 242 Halsall 2007 p 255 Todd 1999 p 177 Todd 1999 p 153 Heather 1996 pp 154 155 Halsall 2007 p 280 Halsall 2007 pp 284 285 a b c Pohl 2004a p 42 Heather 1996 pp 216 217 Heather 1996 pp 219 220 Todd 1999 p 170 Goffart 2006 p 111 Pohl 2004a p 31 Pohl 2004a p 34 a b Todd 1999 p 184 Pohl 2004a p 32 Todd 1999 p 200 240 Pohl 2004a pp 39 40 Halsall 2007 p 284 Todd 1999 p 226 Pohl 2004a p 41 2 Beck amp Quak 2010 p 853 Beck amp Quak 2010 pp 857 858 Beck amp Quak 2010 p 863 864 Beck amp Quak 2010 p 864 865 Todd 1999 p 193 Todd 1999 pp 226 227 Wolfram 1997 pp 293 294 Todd 1999 p 228 Nedoma amp Scardigli 2010 p 129 a b Todd 1999 p 234 Wolfram 1997 p 300 Todd 1999 pp 158 174 Heather 1996 pp 297 298 Wolfram 1997 pp 277 278 a b Kuhn amp Wilson 2010 p 614 Todd 1999 pp 210 219 Capelle amp Brather 2010 pp 157 158 Steuer 2021 pp 641 642 Hultgard 2010 p 863 Hultgard 2010 pp 865 866 Hultgard 2010 pp 866 867 Schjodt 2020 p 265 For general discussion regarding the Merseburg Charms see for example Lindow 2001 pp 227 28 and Simek 1993 pp 84 278 279 a b c d Orel 2003 p 469 a b c d Orel 2003 p 33 a b c Orel 2003 pp 361 385 387 Orel 2003 p 385 Magnusson 1989 pp 463 464 a b c Orel 2003 p 118 a b c d Orel 2003 p 114 The Atharveda charm is specifically charm 12 of book four of the Atharveda See discussion in for example Storms 2013 pp 107 112 a b c d Orel 2003 p 72 Kroonen 2013 pp 96 114 115 For a concise overview of sources on Germanic mythology see Simek 1993 pp 298 300 Simek 1993 pp 298 300 On the correspondences between the prose introduction to Grimnismal and the Langobardic origin myth see for example Lindow 2001 p 129 Regarding the Ring of Pietroassa see for example discussion in MacLeod amp Mees 2006 pp 173 174 On Gothic Anses see for example Orel 2003 p 21 Simek 1993 pp 204 205 See discussion in for example Puhvel 1989 pp 189 221 and Witzel 2017 pp 365 369 Cusack 1998 p 35 Duwel 2010a p 356 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 p 350 Duwel 2010a p 802 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 350 353 Cusack 1998 pp 50 51 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 360 362 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 362 364 Stenton 1971 pp 104 128 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 364 371 Padberg 2010 p 588 Padberg 2010 pp 588 589 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 389 391 Schaferdiek amp Gschwantler 2010 pp 401 404 Duwel 2004 p 139 Looijenga 2020 p 820 Machacek et al 2021 p 4 Machacek et al 2021 p 1 2 Looijenga 2020 p 819 a b c Green 1998 p 254 Duwel 2004 p 125 Duwel 2004 p 121 Green 1998 p 255 Duwel 2004 p 132 Duwel 2004 pp 121 122 Duwel 2004 p 123 Duwel 2010b pp 999 1006 Duwel 2004 pp 131 132 a b c Vikstrand 2020 p 127 Vikstrand 2020 p 129 132 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 609 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 614 615 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 616 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 609 611 Haymes amp Samples 1996 pp 39 40 Goering 2020 p 242 Millet 2008 pp 27 28 Millet 2008 pp 4 7 Ghosh 2016 p 8 Millet 2008 pp 11 13 Tiefenbach Reichert amp Beck 1999 pp 267 268 Haubrichs 2004 p 519 Ghosh 2007 p 249 Dilcher 2011 pp 241 242 a b Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 p 811 Dilcher 2011 p 245 Timpe amp Scardigli 2010 pp 798 799 Dilcher 2011 p 243 Luck 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Roman History Historia Augusta Jordanes Getica Titus Livy History of Rome Paul the Deacon History of the Langobards in Latin Pliny the Elder Natural Histories Pomponius Mela Description of the World Procopius Gothic War Ptolemy Geography Strabo Geography Suetonius 12 Caesars Tacitus Germania Tacitus The History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Germanic peoples amp oldid 1221335230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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