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Classification of Ancient Germanic Tribes

 

Record Languages Tribes Settlement
- 4th c. B.C. – Pytheas, Greek astronomer and geographer - 1st c. B.C. – Julius Caesar< Roman general and statesman - 1st c. A.D. – Pliny the Elder, Roman naturalist: classification of the Germanic tribes:   East Germanic   The Vindili (including the Goths and the Burgundians)   Eastern part of Germanic territory
  Western Germanic The Ingaevones North-western part of Germanic territory, the shores of the Northern Sea, modern Netherlands
    The Istsaevones The western part of the Germanic territory, on the Rhine (the Franks)
    The Hermiones Southern part of the Germanic territory (southern Germany)
  Northern Germanic The Hilleveones Scandinavia
- 2nd c. A.D. Cornelius Tacitus, Roman historian     Characterized the     social structure of the     old Germanic tribes

 

Material Culture

According to Julius Caesar, the Germans were pastoralists, and the bulk of their foodstuffs—milk, cheese, and meat—came from their flocks and herds. Some farming was also carried out, the main crops being grain, root crops, and vegetables. Both the cattle and the horses of the Germans were of poor quality by Roman standards. The Iron Age had begun in Germany about four centuries before the days of Caesar, but even in his time metal appears to have been a luxury material for domestic utensils, most of which were made of wood, leather, or clay. Of the larger metal objects used by them, most were still made of bronze, though this was not the case with weapons. Pottery was for the most part still made by hand, and pots turned on the wheel were relatively rare. The degree to which trade was developed in early Germany is obscure. There was certainly a slave trade, and many slaves were sold to the Romans. Such potters as used the wheel—and these were very few—and smiths and miners no doubt sold their products. But in general the average Germanic village is unlikely to have used many objects that had not been made at home. Foreign merchants dealing in Italian as well as Celtic wares were active in Germany in Caesar's time and supplied prosperous warriors with such goods as wine and bronze vessels. But from the reign of Augustus onward, there was a huge increase in German imports from the Roman Empire. The German leaders were now able to buy whole categories of goods—glass vessels, red tableware, Roman weapons, brooches, statuettes, ornaments of various kinds, and other objects—that had not reached them before. These Roman products brought their owners much prestige, but how the Germans paid for them is not fully known.

 

Warfare

 

In the period of the early Roman Empire, German weapons, both offensive and defensive, were characterized by shortage of metal. Their chief weapon was a long lance, and few carried swords. Helmets and breastplates were almost unknown. A light wooden or wicker shield, sometimes fitted with an iron rim and sometimes strengthened with leather, was the only defensive weapon. This lack of adequate equipment explains the swift, fierce rush with which the Germans would charge the ranks of the heavily armed Romans. If they became entangled in a prolonged, hand-to-hand grapple, where their light shields and thrusting spears were confronted with Roman swords and armour, they had little hope of success. Even by the 6th century, few of the Germanic peoples had adequate military equipment.



 

 


Date: 2015-01-12; view: 1275


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