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Rodulf, Herule king

Rodulf was king of the Heruli kingdom on the Middle Danube in the period around 500, and possibly of Scandinavian origin. He died in a battle with the neighbouring Lombards which led to the splitting up of the Heruli. He is probably the same Heruli king that Theoderic the Great wrote to in two surviving letters, in one of which Theoderic "adopted" him with a gift of arms. Less certainly, he is also sometimes equated to a King Rodulf that Jordanes mentions as having come from Scandinavia to Italy, to join Theoderic.

Polities in southeastern Europe c.500 AD before the Lombard destruction of the Herulian kingdom

Rodulf was described by Procopius as the king of the Danubian Heruli already three years after the beginning of the reign of Emperor Anastasius (reigned 491-518). Paul the Deacon gave the same name for the Herul king who died when they were defeated by the Lombards, which is normally dated by historians to about 508. After this defeat Procopius reported that while some crossed the Danube into the Roman empire, another part of the Heruli nobility migrated north to the island of Thule (the name Procopius gave to Scandinavia). They passed through the lands of Sclavenes, Warini, and finally the Dani (Danes), before crossing Ocean and settling near the Gauti. He mentions that later generations of Heruli still living near the Danube successfully went to search for royalty in this region in the 540s.

It is uncertain but possible that this Rodulf is the same king of that name who is described in the Getica of Jordanes, as the king of the Ranii on the island of Scandza (what Jordanes called Scandinavia), who left his kingdom near the Danes, and came to Italy, where he succeeded in gaining the "embrace" (gremium) of the Ostrogothic King of Italy, Theodoric the Great. Notably, Jordanes mentions that the Heruli had also been living in this same general area, until they were driven out by the Danes, though his text does not connect this Rodulf to the Scandza Heruli.

The Scandza passage of Jordanes is subject to many different interpretations, and some historians have proposed that Jordanes made errors. For example, Theodor Mommsen believed Jordanes should have described the Scandinavian Rudolf as a Herul, and the historian Herwig Wolfram has described this Scandinavian Rudolf as a Gaut.[1]

Due to the similarity of the circumstances, it has been suggested that the various accounts describe one individual, although this remains uncertain. Historians such as Andrew Merrill have pointed out that the similar elements in the accounts of Jordanes and Procopius may come from a common source, such as Cassiodorus, who worked for Theoderic.

Apart from the name Rudolf, the association with the region of the Dani, their apparent allegiance to Theoderic is notable. Another possible record of Rodulf is thus one of the surviving state papers of Theoderic shows that he adopted a Herule king (who is not named in that passage) as a "son in arms". The letter was made during the time of Cassiodorus's public service in the early 6th century, and is dated to 507-511.

More speculatively, another debated issue is whether Rodulf could be the inspiration for certain aspects of later heroic poetry, possibly including the Norse saga character Hrólfr Kraki.

King of the Heruls edit

The Herul kingdom was centred on Lower Austria and Moravia, north of the Middle Danube.[2] It had existed there since 454, after the Battle of Nedao.[3] Rodulf is the first known king of this kingdom, and the first mention of him which can be associated with a date is the remark of Procopius that implies he was ruling already in the early 490s. This was in the period after Theoderic the Great, took over the Kingdom of Italy from Odoacer. In Italy, Odoacer had been named as a king over the Heruli, and other Danubian peoples who had followed him there. After his murder in 493, the Herules still ruled a kingdom north of the Danube:

When [...] Anastasius took over the Roman empire [491], the Eruli, having no longer anyone in the world whom they could assail, laid down their arms and remained quiet, and they observed peace in this way for a space of three years. But the people themselves, being exceedingly vexed, began to abuse their leader Rodolphus without restraint, and going to him constantly they called him cowardly and effeminate, and railed at him in a most unruly manner, taunting him with certain other names besides.[4]

Procopius thus sees the conflict with the Langobards starting already in the 5th century, around 494. If however the un-named Herule king who was adopted by Theoderic was Rodulf, based on the idea that there was no Herule king after him who Theoderic would have allied to, then the letter announcing his adoption is estimated to be from 507-511, and the war can not have been earlier than that.

Jordanes also wrote about an unnamed king of the Heruli, who has been identified with Rodulf by some historians.[5] He mentioned that Theodoric adopted a king of the Heruli as his "son in arms," by giving him a horse, sword and shield, probably around 507.[6] The letter to the king, which was to be translated and explained by the envoys, stated that the king would "hold the first rank among the peoples."[6][7]

After becoming ruler of Italy, Theodoric traveled to what was described as the previous homeland of the Goths, and thereafter, according to historian Herwig Wolfram, wanted to establish an alliance with the Heruli king Rodulf. According to Wolfram, Rodulf "probably included in his sphere of influence the region north of Lake Balaton."[7]

In another letter from the collection of Cassiodorus, probably from between 507 and 514, Theodoric asks for the assistance of the kings of the Heruli, Thuringi and Varni for a counter-attack against the pressure from the Franks.[5] Procopius implied that the battle which led to Rodulf's death took place around 494, it is therefore considered unlikely to have occurred about 508.[5]

A later account of the battle with the Lombards by Paul the Deacon gives Rodulf a more legitimate casus belli against the Lombards.[8] Rodulf purportedly declared war against the Lombards because his brother was murdered by Tato's daughter Rumetruda, after a falling-out between the two, during his brother's return home.[9]

In the Historia Langobardorum ("History of the Lombards"), Paul the Deacon mentions that Rodulf was among the dead in a battle against the Lombards under Tato, probably in 508.[5][6][7] Theodoric did not manage to intervene in time, and the Heruls thus suffered a crushing defeat.[7] The Heruls were split up as a result of the defeat in the battle.[5] The Lombards took both Rodulf's standard (vexillum) and his helmet, and Paul the Deacon claimed that this broke the courage of the Heruli such that they never had a king again. However Procopius, who was much closer to the events, notes that the Heruli divided and moved, but still had kings.

 
Coin of Theodoric the Great.

King in Scandza edit

 
A modern interpretation of locations of the tribes described by Jordanes in Scandza, some possibly ruled by Rodulf.

King Rodulf (Roduulf rex) of the Ranii is only mentioned once, in the Getica (De origine actibusque Getarum; "The Origin and Deeds of the Goths") which was written by the Roman historian Jordanes. Although he wrote some generations later, one of his sources was the now lost Historia Gothorum ("History of the Goths") of Cassiodorus, who had written his account at the request of Theodoric the Great, King of the Ostrogoths and ruler of Italy.

In the 19th century, the German classicist Theodor Mommsen argued that the Rodulf of the Ranii tribe and the Rodulf of the Heruli tribe constituted the same person. He proposed that Rodulf could have arrived to Theodoric in 489, when he was in Moesia.[10]

Some modern historians have speculated that it could have been this Rodulf or a similar traveler who provided Cassiodorus or Jordanes with the information for their extensive lists and details of Scandinavian peoples and tribes.[11] In any case, Rodulf was not the only Nordic warlord who visited the Goths and potentially could have provided knowledge about Scandinavian tribes.[12] He probably traveled together with a band of warriors.[13]

In the Getica, it is said that Rodulf spurned and fled his own kingdom, in times which were still recent for Jordanes. The way that his text has come to us, Rodulf is described as king of the "Ranii" who are described as one of several peoples living near the Danes. Jordanes describes him as achieving what he desired from Theoderic. The passage, as translated by Christensen, is as follows:

The Dani [...] drove from their homes the Heruli, who lay claim to preeminence among all the nations of Scandza for their tallness. Furthermore there are in the same neighbourhood the Grannii, Augandzi, Eunixi, Taetel, Rugi, Aprochi and Rani, over whom Roduulf was king not many years ago. But he despised his own kingdom and fled to the embrace of Theoderic, king of the Goths, finding there what he desired.[14]

Modern historians are uncertain whether Jordanes intended to say that Rodulf was king of the Ranii tribe alone, or if he ruled all, or any other of the tribes described in the same context.[10]

Historian Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen, who accepted Mommsen's identification, thought Rodulf should actually be read as king of the Heruli, with the short list of neighbouring tribes inserted confusingly, namely the "Granii, Augandzi, Eunixi, Taetel, Rugii, Arochi, Ranii."[15]

In contrast, other historians have proposed that Rodulf had been kings of the list of seven peoples (Granii ... Rani), but most of these can not be identified with any confidence. Since Mommsen's edition of Jordanes, with index notes by Karl Müllenhof, there have been proposals connecting them to Norway.[16] Some modern historians, mostly Norwegian, have continued to make such proposals and imply that Rodulf was a king of all seven of these peoples there.[17] For example, the list has been interpreted as referring to the inhabitants of "Grenland, Halogaland, Telelmark, Ryfylkem, Hordaland, and Ranrike or Romsdal".[18] The vast geographic distances between the tribes, scattered throughout the Norwegian coast, and the unlikeliness of a unified kingdom of such a magnitude at this early point has been cited as an argument against such a possibility.[10][19]

The name of the Rugii, on the other hand, matches another Middle Danubian people, who were neighbours of the Heruli, and they are thought to have migrated from the Baltic Sea. Historian Axel Kristinsson has speculated that it could have been natural for Rodulf to seek out some of his kinsmen, namely the Danubian Rugians who had joined the Ostrogoths after their kingdom was destroyed in 487.[20]

The scientist-explorer Fridtjof Nansen proposed that "Heruli" at first perhaps was a common name for bands of northern warriors, who to a certain degree consisted of Norwegians. In his book In northern mists, Nansen suggested that Rodulf of the Ranii tribe could have migrated south with a band of warriors, and that on arriving at the Danube, pressed by other warlike tribes in the vicinity, he sought alliance with Theodoric. Nansen believed this could have happened before Theodoric's invasion of Italy in 489, at the same time that the Heruli were just north of the Danube, and were the nearest neighbours of the Goths.[21]

In short, although particularly scholars have long identified the unnamed Heruli king and the Rodulfs as the same person,[22] including the Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in an entry by Norwegian historian Claus Krag,[5] others such as historian Walter Goffart and archaeologist Dagfinn Skre have questioned this identification.[23]

Historian A. H. Merrills, on the other hand, has proposed the possibility that associating Rodulf with the scandinavian tribes could have been politically motivated: "The Getica may, of course, be correct in its association of Roduulf with the far north, but the possibility that it merely reflects an ideological distortion should not be overlooked."[24]

Aftermath edit

In the early 6th century, the Lombard king Wacho took Silinga as his third wife, who was said to be the daughter of the last king of the Heruls.[25] This has led some scholars to believe that Silinga was probably a daughter of Rodulf.[26] They had the son Walthari.[27] The marriage between Wacho and Silinga functioned to legitimize the Lombards as the successors to the kingdom of the Heruls.[28]

It has been debated whether Rodulf may have influenced later heroic poetry, since the causes of the war between the Lombards and the Heruli (as reported by Paul the Deacon) concerns related issues. Some have furthermore argued that Rodulf could be the background for the character Hrólfr Kraki who appears in the later sagas. Evidence for this includes the significant similarities between the traditions of, on the one side, the Scyldings of the Skjöldunga saga and the Scylfings of the Swedish sagas, and on the other, historical knowledge of the environment around the Heruli, Goths and Huns.[29]

It has also been speculated that the Ráðulfr mentioned in the Rök runestone (which also mentions Theodoric the Great) could be identical with Rodulf.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ Wolfram (2004) p. 49
  2. ^ Sarantis 2010, p. 366.
  3. ^ Steinacher 2010, p. 340.
  4. ^ Procopius, History of the Wars, VI.14.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Krag (2003) p. 58
  6. ^ a b c Wolfram (2006) p. 50
  7. ^ a b c d Wolfram (1990) p. 318
  8. ^ Goffart (2009) p. 208
  9. ^ Paul the Deacon, 1. XX
  10. ^ a b c Skre (1998) p. 257
  11. ^ Christensen (2002) pp. 270–271, Skre (1998) p. 256, Goffart (2009) p. 64 and Merrills (2005) pp. 128–129
  12. ^ Skre (1998) pp. 256–257
  13. ^ Skre (2008) p. 288
  14. ^ Christensen (2002, p. 268). Latin: Dani, [...] Herulos propriis sedibus expulerunt, qui inter omnes Scandiae nationes nomen sibi ob nimia proceritate affectant praecipuum. Sunt quamquam et horum positura Grannii, Augandzi, Eunixi, Taetel, Rugi, Arochi, Ranii, quibus non ante multos annos Roduulf rex fuit, qui contempto proprio regno ad Theodorici Gothorum regis gremio convolavit et, ut desiderabat, invenit.
  15. ^ Maenchen-Helfen (1973) p. 487
  16. ^ Mommsen's edition can be seen at MGH Auct. ant. 5,1 S. p.60. Many of the index entries contain philological commentary and are by Müllenhof. Rodulf's entry is on p.154.
  17. ^ Krag 2003.
  18. ^ Skre 2020, pp. 44, 260.
  19. ^ Koht (1955) p. 12
  20. ^ Kristinsson (2010) p. 225
  21. ^ a b Nansen (1911) pp. 137–139
  22. ^ Goffart (2009) pp. 335–336
  23. ^ Skre (1998) p. 257 and Goffart (2009) pp. 335–336
  24. ^ Merrills (2005) p. 129
  25. ^ Waldman and Mason (2006) p. 389
  26. ^ Beck, Heinrich; Geuenich, Dieter; Steuer, Heiko, eds. (2006). Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (in German). Vol. 33. Walter de Gruyter. p. 6. ISBN 978-3-11-018388-7.
  27. ^ Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins (in German). Vol. 149. G. Braun. 2001. p. 36.
  28. ^ Wolfram (1995) p. 21
  29. ^ Krag (2003) pp. 58–59

Bibliography edit

Primary sources edit

Modern sources edit

  • Christensen, Arne Søby (2002). Cassiodorus, Jordanes and the History of the Goths. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 9788772897103.
  • Ellegård, Alvar (1987). "Who were the Eruli?". Scandia. 53.
  • Goffart, Walter (2009). Barbarian Tides: The Migration Age and the Later Roman Empire. University of Pennsylvania. ISBN 978-0-8122-2105-3.
  • Helle, Knut (2003). The Cambridge History of Scandinavia. Vol. 1. Cambridge University. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-521-47299-9.
  • Koht, Halvdan (1955). Harald Hårfagre og rikssamlinga (in Norwegian). Aschehoug. p. 12.
  • Krag, Claus (2003). "Rodulf". In Beck, Heinrich; Geuenich, Dieter; Steuer, Heiko (eds.). Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (in German). Vol. 25. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 58–59. ISBN 3-11-017733-1.
  • Kristinsson, Axel (2010). Expansions: Competition and Conquest in Europe since the Bronze Age. ReykjavíkurAkademían. ISBN 978-9979-9922-1-9.
  • Maenchen-Helfen, Otto (1973). The World of the Huns: Studies in Their History and Culture. University of California. p. 487. ISBN 978-0-520-01596-8.
  • Merrills, A. H. (2005). History and Geography in Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84601-1.
  • Nansen, Fridtjof (1911). In northern mists; Arctic exploration in early times. Vol. 1. Library of Alexandria. pp. 137–139. ISBN 978-1-4655-4901-3.
  • Sarantis, Alexander (2010). "The Justinianic Herules". In Curta, Florin (ed.). Neglected Barbarians. ISD. ISBN 9782503531250.
  • Skre, Dagfinn (1998). Herredømmet: bosetning og besittelse på Romerike 200-1350 e. Kr (in Norwegian). University of Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. ISBN 82-00-12854-7.
  • Skre, Dagfinn (2020). Skre, Dagfinn (ed.). Rulership in 1st to 14th century Scandinavia. Royal graves and sites at Avaldsnes and beyond. Ergänzungsbände zum Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde. Vol. 114. doi:10.1515/9783110421101. ISBN 9783110421101. S2CID 238078452.
  • Steinacher, Roland [in German] (2010). "The Herules: Fragments of a History". In Curta, Florin (ed.). Neglected Barbarians. ISD. ISBN 9782503531250.
  • Steinacher, Roland (2017), Rom und die Barbaren. Völker im Alpen- und Donauraum (300-600), Kohlhammer Verlag, ISBN 9783170251700
  • Waldman, Carl & Mason, Catherine (2006). Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-2918-1.
  • Weibull, Lauritz Ulrik Absalon (1925), "Skandza und ihre Völker in Darstellung des Jordanes", Arkiv för Nordisk Filologi, 41
  • Wolfram, Herwig (1990) [First published in Germany in 1979]. History of the Goths (in German). University of California. p. 318. ISBN 0-520-06983-8.
  • Wolfram, Herwig (1995). Salzburg, Bayern, Österreich: Conversio Bagoariorum et Carantanorum und die Quellen ihrer Zeit (in German). Oldenbourg Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7029-0404-3.
  • Wolfram, Herwig (2004). "Origo Gentis: The Literature of Germanic Origins". In Murdoch, Brian; Read, Malcolm Kevin (eds.). Early Germanic Literature and Culture. Boydell & Brewer. pp. 39–54. ISBN 1-57113-199-X.
  • Wolfram, Herwig (2006). "Waffensohn". In Beck, Heinrich; Geuenich, Dieter; Steuer, Heiko (eds.). Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde (in German). Vol. 33. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 49–51. ISBN 978-3-11-018388-7.

rodulf, herule, king, other, uses, rodulf, disambiguation, rodulf, king, heruli, kingdom, middle, danube, period, around, possibly, scandinavian, origin, died, battle, with, neighbouring, lombards, which, splitting, heruli, probably, same, heruli, king, that, . For other uses see Rodulf disambiguation Rodulf was king of the Heruli kingdom on the Middle Danube in the period around 500 and possibly of Scandinavian origin He died in a battle with the neighbouring Lombards which led to the splitting up of the Heruli He is probably the same Heruli king that Theoderic the Great wrote to in two surviving letters in one of which Theoderic adopted him with a gift of arms Less certainly he is also sometimes equated to a King Rodulf that Jordanes mentions as having come from Scandinavia to Italy to join Theoderic Polities in southeastern Europe c 500 AD before the Lombard destruction of the Herulian kingdom Rodulf was described by Procopius as the king of the Danubian Heruli already three years after the beginning of the reign of Emperor Anastasius reigned 491 518 Paul the Deacon gave the same name for the Herul king who died when they were defeated by the Lombards which is normally dated by historians to about 508 After this defeat Procopius reported that while some crossed the Danube into the Roman empire another part of the Heruli nobility migrated north to the island of Thule the name Procopius gave to Scandinavia They passed through the lands of Sclavenes Warini and finally the Dani Danes before crossing Ocean and settling near the Gauti He mentions that later generations of Heruli still living near the Danube successfully went to search for royalty in this region in the 540s It is uncertain but possible that this Rodulf is the same king of that name who is described in the Getica of Jordanes as the king of the Ranii on the island of Scandza what Jordanes called Scandinavia who left his kingdom near the Danes and came to Italy where he succeeded in gaining the embrace gremium of the Ostrogothic King of Italy Theodoric the Great Notably Jordanes mentions that the Heruli had also been living in this same general area until they were driven out by the Danes though his text does not connect this Rodulf to the Scandza Heruli The Scandza passage of Jordanes is subject to many different interpretations and some historians have proposed that Jordanes made errors For example Theodor Mommsen believed Jordanes should have described the Scandinavian Rudolf as a Herul and the historian Herwig Wolfram has described this Scandinavian Rudolf as a Gaut 1 Due to the similarity of the circumstances it has been suggested that the various accounts describe one individual although this remains uncertain Historians such as Andrew Merrill have pointed out that the similar elements in the accounts of Jordanes and Procopius may come from a common source such as Cassiodorus who worked for Theoderic Apart from the name Rudolf the association with the region of the Dani their apparent allegiance to Theoderic is notable Another possible record of Rodulf is thus one of the surviving state papers of Theoderic shows that he adopted a Herule king who is not named in that passage as a son in arms The letter was made during the time of Cassiodorus s public service in the early 6th century and is dated to 507 511 More speculatively another debated issue is whether Rodulf could be the inspiration for certain aspects of later heroic poetry possibly including the Norse saga character Hrolfr Kraki Contents 1 King of the Heruls 2 King in Scandza 3 Aftermath 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Primary sources 5 2 Modern sourcesKing of the Heruls editThe Herul kingdom was centred on Lower Austria and Moravia north of the Middle Danube 2 It had existed there since 454 after the Battle of Nedao 3 Rodulf is the first known king of this kingdom and the first mention of him which can be associated with a date is the remark of Procopius that implies he was ruling already in the early 490s This was in the period after Theoderic the Great took over the Kingdom of Italy from Odoacer In Italy Odoacer had been named as a king over the Heruli and other Danubian peoples who had followed him there After his murder in 493 the Herules still ruled a kingdom north of the Danube When Anastasius took over the Roman empire 491 the Eruli having no longer anyone in the world whom they could assail laid down their arms and remained quiet and they observed peace in this way for a space of three years But the people themselves being exceedingly vexed began to abuse their leader Rodolphus without restraint and going to him constantly they called him cowardly and effeminate and railed at him in a most unruly manner taunting him with certain other names besides 4 Procopius thus sees the conflict with the Langobards starting already in the 5th century around 494 If however the un named Herule king who was adopted by Theoderic was Rodulf based on the idea that there was no Herule king after him who Theoderic would have allied to then the letter announcing his adoption is estimated to be from 507 511 and the war can not have been earlier than that Jordanes also wrote about an unnamed king of the Heruli who has been identified with Rodulf by some historians 5 He mentioned that Theodoric adopted a king of the Heruli as his son in arms by giving him a horse sword and shield probably around 507 6 The letter to the king which was to be translated and explained by the envoys stated that the king would hold the first rank among the peoples 6 7 After becoming ruler of Italy Theodoric traveled to what was described as the previous homeland of the Goths and thereafter according to historian Herwig Wolfram wanted to establish an alliance with the Heruli king Rodulf According to Wolfram Rodulf probably included in his sphere of influence the region north of Lake Balaton 7 In another letter from the collection of Cassiodorus probably from between 507 and 514 Theodoric asks for the assistance of the kings of the Heruli Thuringi and Varni for a counter attack against the pressure from the Franks 5 Procopius implied that the battle which led to Rodulf s death took place around 494 it is therefore considered unlikely to have occurred about 508 5 A later account of the battle with the Lombards by Paul the Deacon gives Rodulf a more legitimate casus belli against the Lombards 8 Rodulf purportedly declared war against the Lombards because his brother was murdered by Tato s daughter Rumetruda after a falling out between the two during his brother s return home 9 In the Historia Langobardorum History of the Lombards Paul the Deacon mentions that Rodulf was among the dead in a battle against the Lombards under Tato probably in 508 5 6 7 Theodoric did not manage to intervene in time and the Heruls thus suffered a crushing defeat 7 The Heruls were split up as a result of the defeat in the battle 5 The Lombards took both Rodulf s standard vexillum and his helmet and Paul the Deacon claimed that this broke the courage of the Heruli such that they never had a king again However Procopius who was much closer to the events notes that the Heruli divided and moved but still had kings nbsp Coin of Theodoric the Great King in Scandza edit nbsp A modern interpretation of locations of the tribes described by Jordanes in Scandza some possibly ruled by Rodulf King Rodulf Roduulf rex of the Ranii is only mentioned once in the Getica De origine actibusque Getarum The Origin and Deeds of the Goths which was written by the Roman historian Jordanes Although he wrote some generations later one of his sources was the now lost Historia Gothorum History of the Goths of Cassiodorus who had written his account at the request of Theodoric the Great King of the Ostrogoths and ruler of Italy In the 19th century the German classicist Theodor Mommsen argued that the Rodulf of the Ranii tribe and the Rodulf of the Heruli tribe constituted the same person He proposed that Rodulf could have arrived to Theodoric in 489 when he was in Moesia 10 Some modern historians have speculated that it could have been this Rodulf or a similar traveler who provided Cassiodorus or Jordanes with the information for their extensive lists and details of Scandinavian peoples and tribes 11 In any case Rodulf was not the only Nordic warlord who visited the Goths and potentially could have provided knowledge about Scandinavian tribes 12 He probably traveled together with a band of warriors 13 In the Getica it is said that Rodulf spurned and fled his own kingdom in times which were still recent for Jordanes The way that his text has come to us Rodulf is described as king of the Ranii who are described as one of several peoples living near the Danes Jordanes describes him as achieving what he desired from Theoderic The passage as translated by Christensen is as follows The Dani drove from their homes the Heruli who lay claim to preeminence among all the nations of Scandza for their tallness Furthermore there are in the same neighbourhood the Grannii Augandzi Eunixi Taetel Rugi Aprochi and Rani over whom Roduulf was king not many years ago But he despised his own kingdom and fled to the embrace of Theoderic king of the Goths finding there what he desired 14 Modern historians are uncertain whether Jordanes intended to say that Rodulf was king of the Ranii tribe alone or if he ruled all or any other of the tribes described in the same context 10 Historian Otto J Maenchen Helfen who accepted Mommsen s identification thought Rodulf should actually be read as king of the Heruli with the short list of neighbouring tribes inserted confusingly namely the Granii Augandzi Eunixi Taetel Rugii Arochi Ranii 15 In contrast other historians have proposed that Rodulf had been kings of the list of seven peoples Granii Rani but most of these can not be identified with any confidence Since Mommsen s edition of Jordanes with index notes by Karl Mullenhof there have been proposals connecting them to Norway 16 Some modern historians mostly Norwegian have continued to make such proposals and imply that Rodulf was a king of all seven of these peoples there 17 For example the list has been interpreted as referring to the inhabitants of Grenland Halogaland Telelmark Ryfylkem Hordaland and Ranrike or Romsdal 18 The vast geographic distances between the tribes scattered throughout the Norwegian coast and the unlikeliness of a unified kingdom of such a magnitude at this early point has been cited as an argument against such a possibility 10 19 The name of the Rugii on the other hand matches another Middle Danubian people who were neighbours of the Heruli and they are thought to have migrated from the Baltic Sea Historian Axel Kristinsson has speculated that it could have been natural for Rodulf to seek out some of his kinsmen namely the Danubian Rugians who had joined the Ostrogoths after their kingdom was destroyed in 487 20 The scientist explorer Fridtjof Nansen proposed that Heruli at first perhaps was a common name for bands of northern warriors who to a certain degree consisted of Norwegians In his book In northern mists Nansen suggested that Rodulf of the Ranii tribe could have migrated south with a band of warriors and that on arriving at the Danube pressed by other warlike tribes in the vicinity he sought alliance with Theodoric Nansen believed this could have happened before Theodoric s invasion of Italy in 489 at the same time that the Heruli were just north of the Danube and were the nearest neighbours of the Goths 21 In short although particularly scholars have long identified the unnamed Heruli king and the Rodulfs as the same person 22 including the Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in an entry by Norwegian historian Claus Krag 5 others such as historian Walter Goffart and archaeologist Dagfinn Skre have questioned this identification 23 Historian A H Merrills on the other hand has proposed the possibility that associating Rodulf with the scandinavian tribes could have been politically motivated The Getica may of course be correct in its association of Roduulf with the far north but the possibility that it merely reflects an ideological distortion should not be overlooked 24 Aftermath editIn the early 6th century the Lombard king Wacho took Silinga as his third wife who was said to be the daughter of the last king of the Heruls 25 This has led some scholars to believe that Silinga was probably a daughter of Rodulf 26 They had the son Walthari 27 The marriage between Wacho and Silinga functioned to legitimize the Lombards as the successors to the kingdom of the Heruls 28 It has been debated whether Rodulf may have influenced later heroic poetry since the causes of the war between the Lombards and the Heruli as reported by Paul the Deacon concerns related issues Some have furthermore argued that Rodulf could be the background for the character Hrolfr Kraki who appears in the later sagas Evidence for this includes the significant similarities between the traditions of on the one side the Scyldings of the Skjoldunga saga and the Scylfings of the Swedish sagas and on the other historical knowledge of the environment around the Heruli Goths and Huns 29 It has also been speculated that the Radulfr mentioned in the Rok runestone which also mentions Theodoric the Great could be identical with Rodulf 21 References edit Wolfram 2004 p 49 Sarantis 2010 p 366 Steinacher 2010 p 340 Procopius History of the Wars VI 14 a b c d e f Krag 2003 p 58 a b c Wolfram 2006 p 50 a b c d Wolfram 1990 p 318 Goffart 2009 p 208 Paul the Deacon 1 XX a b c Skre 1998 p 257 Christensen 2002 pp 270 271 Skre 1998 p 256 Goffart 2009 p 64 and Merrills 2005 pp 128 129 Skre 1998 pp 256 257 Skre 2008 p 288 Christensen 2002 p 268 Latin Dani Herulos propriis sedibus expulerunt qui inter omnes Scandiae nationes nomen sibi ob nimia proceritate affectant praecipuum Sunt quamquam et horum positura Grannii Augandzi Eunixi Taetel Rugi Arochi Ranii quibus non ante multos annos Roduulf rex fuit qui contempto proprio regno ad Theodorici Gothorum regis gremio convolavit et ut desiderabat invenit Maenchen Helfen 1973 p 487 Mommsen s edition can be seen at MGH Auct ant 5 1 S p 60 Many of the index entries contain philological commentary and are by Mullenhof Rodulf s entry is on p 154 Krag 2003 Skre 2020 pp 44 260 Koht 1955 p 12 Kristinsson 2010 p 225 a b Nansen 1911 pp 137 139 Goffart 2009 pp 335 336 Skre 1998 p 257 and Goffart 2009 pp 335 336 Merrills 2005 p 129 Waldman and Mason 2006 p 389 Beck Heinrich Geuenich Dieter Steuer Heiko eds 2006 Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 33 Walter de Gruyter p 6 ISBN 978 3 11 018388 7 Zeitschrift fur die Geschichte des Oberrheins in German Vol 149 G Braun 2001 p 36 Wolfram 1995 p 21 Krag 2003 pp 58 59Bibliography editPrimary sources edit Cassiodorus The Letters of Cassiodorus IV 2 III 3 Jordanes The Origin and Deeds of the Goths 3 24 Paul the Deacon History of the Lombards I XX Procopius The Wars of Justinian VI xiv Modern sources edit Christensen Arne Soby 2002 Cassiodorus Jordanes and the History of the Goths Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 9788772897103 Ellegard Alvar 1987 Who were the Eruli Scandia 53 Goffart Walter 2009 Barbarian Tides The Migration Age and the Later Roman Empire University of Pennsylvania ISBN 978 0 8122 2105 3 Helle Knut 2003 The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Vol 1 Cambridge University p 82 ISBN 978 0 521 47299 9 Koht Halvdan 1955 Harald Harfagre og rikssamlinga in Norwegian Aschehoug p 12 Krag Claus 2003 Rodulf In Beck Heinrich Geuenich Dieter Steuer Heiko eds Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 25 Walter de Gruyter pp 58 59 ISBN 3 11 017733 1 Kristinsson Axel 2010 Expansions Competition and Conquest in Europe since the Bronze Age ReykjavikurAkademian ISBN 978 9979 9922 1 9 Maenchen Helfen Otto 1973 The World of the Huns Studies in Their History and Culture University of California p 487 ISBN 978 0 520 01596 8 Merrills A H 2005 History and Geography in Late Antiquity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84601 1 Nansen Fridtjof 1911 In northern mists Arctic exploration in early times Vol 1 Library of Alexandria pp 137 139 ISBN 978 1 4655 4901 3 Sarantis Alexander 2010 The Justinianic Herules In Curta Florin ed Neglected Barbarians ISD ISBN 9782503531250 Skre Dagfinn 1998 Herredommet bosetning og besittelse pa Romerike 200 1350 e Kr in Norwegian University of Oslo Universitetsforlaget ISBN 82 00 12854 7 Skre Dagfinn 2020 Skre Dagfinn ed Rulership in 1st to 14th century Scandinavia Royal graves and sites at Avaldsnes and beyond Erganzungsbande zum Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde Vol 114 doi 10 1515 9783110421101 ISBN 9783110421101 S2CID 238078452 Steinacher Roland in German 2010 The Herules Fragments of a History In Curta Florin ed Neglected Barbarians ISD ISBN 9782503531250 Steinacher Roland 2017 Rom und die Barbaren Volker im Alpen und Donauraum 300 600 Kohlhammer Verlag ISBN 9783170251700 Waldman Carl amp Mason Catherine 2006 Encyclopedia of European Peoples Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 2918 1 Weibull Lauritz Ulrik Absalon 1925 Skandza und ihre Volker in Darstellung des Jordanes Arkiv for Nordisk Filologi 41 Wolfram Herwig 1990 First published in Germany in 1979 History of the Goths in German University of California p 318 ISBN 0 520 06983 8 Wolfram Herwig 1995 Salzburg Bayern Osterreich Conversio Bagoariorum et Carantanorum und die Quellen ihrer Zeit in German Oldenbourg Verlag ISBN 978 3 7029 0404 3 Wolfram Herwig 2004 Origo Gentis The Literature of Germanic Origins In Murdoch Brian Read Malcolm Kevin eds Early Germanic Literature and Culture Boydell amp Brewer pp 39 54 ISBN 1 57113 199 X Wolfram Herwig 2006 Waffensohn In Beck Heinrich Geuenich Dieter Steuer Heiko eds Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 33 Walter de Gruyter pp 49 51 ISBN 978 3 11 018388 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rodulf Herule king amp oldid 1171639023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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