Everything about Suebians totally explained
The
Suebi or
Suevi (from
Proto-Germanic *
swēbaz based on the
Proto-Germanic root *
swē- meaning "one's own" people, from an
Indo-European root *swe-, the third person
reflexive pronoun) were a group of
Germanic peoples who were first mentioned by
Julius Caesar in connection with
Ariovistus' campaign, c. 58 BC; Ariovistus was defeated by Caesar.
Some Suebi remained a periodic threat against the Romans on the
Rhine until toward the end of the empire the
Alamanni, including elements of Suebi, brushed aside Roman defenses and occupied
Alsace, and from there
Bavaria and
Switzerland. Except for a pocket in
Swabia, and migrants to
Portugal and
Spain, no more was heard of the Suebi.
Early history
Classification in classical sources
Iin the classical sources, the ethnonym
Suebi is used with two different meanings: the specific tribe of Caesar's campaign, "dwelling on the
Main", and "broadly, to cover a large number of tribes in central Germany." The broad view is expressed in
Tacitus'
Germania, a basic written source for the Suebic peoples that states:
We must come now to speak of the Suebi, who do not, like the Chatti or Tencteri, constitute a single nation. They actually occupy more than half of Germany, and are divided into a number of distinct tribes under distinct names, though all generally are called Suebi.
For Tacitus, the Suebi comprise the
Semnones, who are "the oldest and noblest of the Suebi"; the
Langobardi; the seven tribes of
Jutland and
Holstein:
Reudigni,
Aviones,
Anglii,
Varini,
Eudoses,
Suarini,
Nuitones; three tribes along the
Danube:
Naristi,
Marcomanni,
Quadi; the
Marsigni and
Buri. Then there's a mountain range, and beyond that, in the drainage system of the
Vistula, Tacitus places five tribes of the
Lugii including the
Harii,
Helvecones,
Manimi,
Helsii and
Naharvali; the
Gothones,
Rugii,
Lemovii along the
Baltic Sea; and finally the non-Germanic
Aestii, and the
Sitones, beyond the Aestii along the Baltic yet "continuous with the Suiones".
But few clues to the identity of the Suebi are given by Tacitus . They can be identified by their fashion of the hair style called the "
Suebian knot", which "distinguishes the freeman from the slave"; in other words, was intended as a badge of social rank. The same passage points out that chiefs "use an even more elaborate style."
For Tacitus, a second criterion for being Suebian is residence in a territory recognized as
Suebia, not identified by any linguistic coherence, apparently: Tacitus' modern editor Arthur J. Pomeroy concludes "it is clear that there's no monolithic 'Suebic' group, but a series of tribes who may share some customs (for instance, warrior burials) but also vary considerably." The Suebia of Tacitus comprises the entire periphery of the
Baltic Sea, including within it tribes not identified as Suebi by modern historians: the
Sitones, for instance, who must have resided where
Lapland and
Finland where
Finno-Ugrian has been spoken since Antiquity. In addition, on the south shore of the Baltic are the
Aestii, in the territory of modern-day
Baltic language speakers, or where they've been (
Prussia), again equally as ancient as the Germanic-speakers.
A third criterion for
Suebi simply involves sharing in the name
Suebi, which is "indeed genuine and ancient" Tacitus reports.
Maurer's Kulturkreise
Friedrich Maurer, based on the archaeological and literary analysis of Germanic tribes done earlier by
Gustaf Kossinna and his own linguistic work with
isoglosses, divided the Germanic folk of the first century BC through the fourth century AD into five
Kulturkreise or "culture-groups": the
North,
Oder-Vistula,
Elbe,
Weser-Rhine and
North-Sea Germanics. The
Herminones comprising the Suebi (in the narrow sense),
Hermunduri and others, were the Elbe group. Their linguistic descenants speak modern
Upper German. These five groups formed in the
Pre-Roman Iron Age after about 800 BC.
Maurer attributes
Proto Germanic to the
Nordic Bronze Age, which he dates 1200-800 BC according to the information available to him then. The dates have changed a little and a
Pre-Roman Iron Age has been broken out since then to which some assign the Proto Germanic language. It ranged over a region forming a rough triangle, with vertices in south
Scandinavia, the mouth of the
Rhine river and the mouth of the
Vistula. In fact the Baltic Sea was known to the
Romans as the
Mare Suebicum, a name which it no doubt inherited from times when the Suebi inhabited the shores of the Baltic and were probably one with the
Suiones. live in 100 cantons of arable land, of which each canton retains ownership, parceling farm lots to individuals to use for up to one year. They wear animal skins, bathe in rivers, and prohibit wine. They allow trade only to dispose of their booty and otherwise have no goods to export.
They are of a military disposition, drafting yearly 1000 men per canton for service of one year. With these troops they raid
Gaul on the other side of the
Rhine river frequently, thus involving Gaul's protector, the
Roman Republic, whose agent in the field is one of its greatest generals,
Julius Caesar. Lacking a central government and disrespecting all authority, they rely on the services of war chiefs, who in the
age of migrations will become Suebian kings.
As to their location, they live next to the
Cherusci, which places them between the
Rhine river and the middle
Elbe river. Their innermost refuge is
Silva Bacenis, "Beech Wood", which various authors take to be some section of the
Hercynian Forest, such as the
Thuringian Forest, the
Harz Mountains or the
Black Forest. In ancient times Germany was heavily forested and these three forests were more or less continuous. They couldn't have farmed the forests, however, leaving the
Main River bottom and the upper
Elbe as the only possibilities.
In addition to their first known incursion under
Ariovistus in 58 BC, the Suebi posed another threat in 55 BC. The Germanic
Ubii, who had worked out an alliance with Caesar, were complaining of being harassed by the Suebi. Caesar bridged the Rhine, the first known to do so, with a pile bridge, which though considered a marvel, only stood for eighteen days. The Suebi abandoned their towns closest to the Romans, retreated to the forest and assembled an army. Caesar retreated back across the bridge and broke it down, stating that he'd achieved his objective of warning the Suebi. They in turn stopped harassing the Ubii.
Cassius Dio's Suebi
Cassius Dio - who wrote in Greek, though a Roman - starts his account of the Suebi with Caesar's short stay over the Rhine in 55 BC. In Dio it's the
Sugambri who retire to strongholds, but Caesar retreats on hearing that the Suebi were collecting an army to help the Sugambri.
A generation later, shortly before 29 BC the Suebi crossed the Rhine, only to be defeated by
Gaius Carrinas who along with the young
Octavian Caesar celebrated a triumph in 29 BC. Shortly after they turn up fighting a group of
Dacians in a gladiatorial display at Rome celebrating the consecration of the Julian hero-shrine. Dio says that they "dwell across the Rhine (though many cities elsewhere claim their name)" and that they were anciently called
Celts: Earlier he'd explained "...very anciently both peoples dwelling on ether side of the river were called Celts."
A generation later, in 9 BC, consul
Nero Claudius Drusus crossed the Rhine and proceeded against the Germans, starting with the
Chatti. He traversed country "as far as that of the Suebi" and then attacked the
Cherusci to the north of the Suebi. He reached the Elbe. There is no evidence in Dio that he subdued the Suebi. Like Julius Caesar he withdrew to the Rhine shortly but "died on the way of some disease" with the wolves running howling through the camp.
Florus' Suebi
Florus gives a more detailed view of the operations of 9 BC. He reports that the
Cherusci, Suebi and
Sicambri formed an alliance by crucifying twenty Roman centurions, but that
Nero Claudius Drusus defeated them, confiscated their plunder and sold them into slavery. Presumably only the war party was sold, as the Suebi continue to appear in the ancient sources.
Florus' report of the peace brought to Germany by Drusus is glowing but premature. He built "more than five hundred forts" and two bridges guarded by fleets. "He opened a way through the
Hercynian Forest", which implies but still doesn't overtly state that he'd subdued the Suebi. "In a word, there was such peace in Germany that the inhabitants seemed changed ... and the very climate milder and softer than it used to be."
The peace didn't outlast the year. After the death of Drusus the
Cherusci annihilated three legions at the
Battle of Teutoburg Forest and thereafter "... the empire ... was checked on the banks of the Rhine."
Suetonius' Suebi
Suetonius gives the Suebi brief mention in connection with their defeat in 9 BC. He says that the Suebi and
Sugambri "submitted to him and were taken into Gaul and settled in lands near the Rhine" while the other Germani were pushed "to the farther side of the
river Albis." He must have meant the temporary military success of Drusus, as it's unlikely the Rhine was cleared of Germans. Elsewhere he identifies the settlers as 40,000 prisoners of war, only a fraction of the yearly draft of militia.
Strabo's Suebi
Strabo in Book IV of his
Geography—a text in
Greek—says of the
Soēboi that they live "beyond this whole river-country" (the
Rhineland) and "excel all the others in power and numbers." He also places them near the
Hercynian Forest, which, in the words of
Edward Gibbon, "overshadowed a greater part of Germany and Poland." In Book VII Strabo connects all the tribes between the upper Rhine, Danube and Elbe to the Soēboi: the tribes of the
Coldui, including those in
Bohemia, where the
Marcomanni were located; the
Lugii,
Zumi,
Butones,
Mugilones,
Sibini and
Semnones, who were "a large tribe of the Suevi themselves." Some of these tribes were "inside the forest" and some "outside of it."
This passage is the first distinction between narrowly and broadly-conceived Suevi, but evem Strabo's broad conception isn't as broad as Tacitus, for whom "the tribe of the Suevi ... extends from the Rhenus (Rhine) to the Albis (Elbe); and a part of them even dwell on the far side of the Albis, as, for instance, the Hermondori and the
Langobardi." These latter are portrayed as migrants living in small temporary huts and porting their belongings in wagons, living "off their flocks."
Pliny's Suebi
Pliny the Elder wrote a now lost
History of the German Wars and consequently has little to say of the Germans in
Naturalis Historia, but as much of his military service was on the German frontier he's probably authoritative and is believed to have been a source for Tacitus, although the latter doesn't follow what Pliny does say exactly. Pliny divides the Germans into five
genera or "kinds", including the
Hermiones, containing the
gentes or "tribes" of the Suebi,
Hermunduri,
Chatti and
Cherusci. Elsewhere in Pliny is only brief scattered mention.
Ptolemy's Suebi
The geographer,
Ptolemy, in a fairly extensive account of Greater Germany, makes use of the two meanings of Suebi as well.
The Suevi Langobardi are located north of the
Sugambri, who are on the Rhine, a location to the west of Strabo's, perhaps the source of Strabo's migrant wagoneers. To the east of the Longobardi, possibly the same as or continuous with the Suevi Langobardi, are the Suevi Angili, but these are in the interior to the south, extending as far north as the middle Elbe, upstream from the
Chauci, later a constituent of the
Saxons. To the east are the Suevi Semnones between the Elbe and a mysterious river apparently named after them, the Suevus, which empties into the Baltic between the
Oder and the Elbe. And finally there's a tribe called just the Suevi, which appears to be on the Rhine east of the
Ems, about where
Swabia was later located.
Though offering coordinates for rivers, towns and mountains, Ptolemy is imprecise in the location of peoples; certainly, some are repeated with different spellings. He leaves us to guess which towns are associated with which peoples. His list of some 94 towns makes it clear that Tacitus' view of Germanics as rustics isn't quite accurate in fact, although it may have been in values.
Lucan's Suebi
Marcus Annaeus Lucanus gives the location and appearance of the Suebi: "... let the Elbe and Rhine's unconquered head let loose from furthest north the blond (
flavi) Suebi; ... only ward off civil war." This locates the Suebi in a narrow sense and gives a variation on a theme of Tacitus, who asserted the Germans were entirely red-headed.
Tacitus' Suebi
Tacitus'
Germania is the main source for the earliest known Suebi (see above under
Classification in classical sources). Tacitus mentions the sacrifice of humans practiced by the
Semnones in a sacred grove and the murder of slaves used in the rites of
Nerthus practiced by the tribes of
Schleswig-Holstein. The chief priest of the
Naharvali dresses as a woman and that tribe also worships in groves. The
Harii fight at night dyed black. The
Suiones own fleets of rowing vessels with prows at both ends.
The Suebi also are mentioned in the
Annales. After the defeat of 9 BC
Augustus divided the Germans by making a separate peace with the
Sugambri and Suebi under their king
Maroboduus. This is the first mention of any permanent king of the Suebi. Subsequently Augustus placed
Germanicus, the son of Drusus, in charge of the forces of the Rhine and he after dealing with a mutiny of the troops proceeded against the
Cherusci and their allies, breaking their power finally at the battle of Idistavisus, a plain on the
Weser. All eight legions and supporting units of Gauls were required to do that. Germanicus' zeal led finally to his being replaced (17 BC) by his cousin Drusus, Tiberius' son, as
Tiberius thought it best to follow his predecessor's policy of limiting the empire. Germanicus certainly would have involved the Suebi, with unpredictable results.
Arminius, leader of the
Cherusci and allies, now had a free hand. He accused Maroboduus of hiding in the
Hercynian Forest while the other Germans fought for freedom, and accused Maroboduus of being the only king among the Germans. The two groups "turned their arms against each other." The
Semnones and
Langobardi rebelled against their king and went over to the Cherusci. Left with only the
Marcomanni and Herminius' uncle, who had defected, Maroboduus appealed to
Drusus, now governor of
Illyricum, and was given only a pretext of aid.
The resulting battle was indecisive but Maroboduus withdrew to Bohemia and sent for assistance to Tiberius. He was refused on the grounds that he hadn't moved to help
Varus. Drusus encouraged the Germans to finish him off. A force of
Goths under
Catualda, a Marcomannian exile, bought off the nobles and seized the palace. Maroboduus escaped to
Noricum and the Romans offered him refuge in
Ravenna where he remained the rest of his life.
Migration period
Closely related to the
Alamanni and often working in concert with them, the Suebi for the most part stayed on the right bank of the
Rhine until
December 31,
406, when much of the tribe joined the
Vandals and
Alans in breaching the Roman frontier by
crossing the Rhine, perhaps at
Mainz, thus launching an invasion of northern
Gaul.
The "northern Suebi" were mentioned in
569 under
Frankish king
Sigebert I in areas of today's
Saxony-Anhalt. In connection to the Suebi,
Saxons and
Lombards, returning from the
Italian Peninsula in
573, are also mentioned.
While the
Vandals and
Alans clashed with the Roman-allied
Franks for supremacy in Gaul, the Suebi under their king
Hermeric worked their way to the south, eventually crossing the
Pyrenees and entering the
Iberian Peninsula which was out of Imperial rule since the rebellion of
Gerontius and
Maximus in
409.
Political history
Passing through the
Basque country, they settled in the Roman province of
Gallaecia, in north-western
Hispania (modern
Galicia and
northern Portugal), swore fealty to the Emperor
Honorius and were accepted as
foederati and permitted to settle, under their own autonomous governance. Contemporaneously with the self-governing province of
Britannia, the kingdom of the Suebi in Gallaecia became the first of the sub-Roman kingdoms to be formed in the disintegrating territory of the Western Roman Empire. Suebic Gallaecia was the first kingdom separated from the Roman Empire to mint coins.
The Suebic kingdom in
Gallaecia and northern
Lusitania was established at
410 and lasted until
584. Smaller than the
Ostrogothic kingdom of Italy or the
Visigothic kingdom in
Hispania, it never reached major political relevance. After the kingdom of the Suebi was conquered by the Visigoths in 585,
Braulio of
Zaragoza (590 - 651) depicted the region as "the edge of the west in an illiterate country where naught is heard but the sound of
gales".
Settlement and integration in Iberia
The Germanic invaders settled mainly in the areas of
Braga (Bracara Augusta),
Porto (
Portus Cale),
Lugo (Lucus Augusti) and
Astorga (Asturica Augusta). Bracara Augusta, the modern city of
Braga and former capital of Roman Gallaecia, became the capital of the Suebi.
Orosius, at that time resident in Hispania, shows a rather pacific initial settlement, the newcomers working their lands or serving as bodyguards of the locals. Another Germanic group that accompanied the Suebi and settled in Gallaecia were the
Buri. They settled in the region between the rivers
Cávado and
Homem, in the area know as
Terras de Bouro (Lands of the Buri).
As the Suebi quickly adopted the local
Hispano-Roman language, few traces were left of their Germanic tongue, but for their personal names, adopted by most of the Galicians.
Formation of a kingdom
The irruption of Visigoths in the Iberian Peninsula from
416 sent from Aquitania by the Emperor of the West to fight the
Vandals and the
Alans resulted into an ephemeral expansion of the Suebi Kingdom: at its heyday Suebic Gallaecia extended as far as
Mérida and
Seville, and suebic expeditión reached
Saragossa and
Lerida.
In
438 Hermeric ratified the peace with the Hispano-Roman local population and, weary of fighting, abdicated in favour of his son
Rechila, who proved to be a notable general, defeating Andevotus,
Romanae militiae ducem, an later Vitus
magister utriusque militiae.
In
448,
Rechila died, leaving the crown to his son
Rechiar who had converted to Roman Catholicism circa
447. Soon, he married a daughter of the gothic king
Theodoric I, and began a wave of attacks on the
Tarraconense, still a roman province. By
456 the campaigns of
Rechiar clashed with the interests of the
Visigoths, and a large army of Roman federates (Visigoths under the command of
Theodoric II,
Burgundians directed by kings
Gundioc and
Chilperic) crossed the Pyrenees into Hispania, and defeated the suebi near modern day
Astorga. Rechiar was executed after being captured by his brother-in-law, the Visigothic king Theodoric II. The Suebic kingdom then became cornered in the northwest, in Gallaecia and northern Lusitania, and political division and civil war arose among several pretenders to the royal throne.
Twilight of the kingdom
In 561 king Ariamir called the catholic
First Council of Braga, which dealt with the old problem of the
Priscillianism heresy. And eight years after, in 569, king Theodemir called the
First Council of Lugo, in order to increase the number of dioceses within his kingdom.
In 570 the Arian king of the Visigoths,
Leovigild, made his first attack on the Suebi. Between 572 and 574, Leovigild invaded the valley of the
Douro, pushing the Suebi northwards. In 575 the Suebic king,
Miro, made a peace treaty with Leovigild, but in 583 he supported the rebellion of the Catholic Gothic prince
Hermenegild and was overthrown. The kingdom couldn't survive Leovigild's response. First
Andeca in 585 and then
Malaric were defeated and the Suevic kingdom was no more.
Religion
Paganism
Conversion to Arianism
The Suebi remained most pagan and their subjects
Priscillianist until an
Arian missionary named
Ajax, sent by the Visigothic king Theodoric II at the request of the Suebic unifier
Remismund, in 466 converted them and established a lasting Arian church which dominated the people until the conversion to Catholicism in the 560s.
Conversion to Catholicism
Mutually incompatible accounts of the conversion of the Suebi to Catholicism are presented in the primary records:
- The minutes of the First Council of Braga—which met on 1 May 561—state explicitly that the synod was held at the orders of a king named Ariamir. Of the eight assistant bishops, just one bears a Suebic name: Hildemir. While the Catholicism of Ariamir isn't in doubt, that he was the first Catholic monarch of the Suebes since Rechiar has been contested on the grounds that his Catholicism isn't explicitly stated. He was, however, the first Suebic monarch to hold a Catholic synod, and when the Second Council of Braga was held at the request of king Miro, a Catholic himself, in 572, of the twelve assistant bishops five bears Suebic names: Remisol of Viseu, Adoric of Idanha, Wittimer of Ourense, Nitigis of Lugo and Anila of Tui.
- The Historia Suevorum of Isidore of Seville states that a king named Theodemar brought about the conversion of his people from Arianism with the help of the missionary Martin of Dumio.
- According to the Frankish historian Gregory of Tours on the other hand, an otherwise unknown sovereign named Chararic, having heard of Martin of Tours, promised to accept the beliefs of the saint if only his son would be cured of leprosy. Through the relics and intercession of Saint Martin the son was healed; Chararic and the entire royal household converted to the Nicene faith.
- By 589, when the Third Council of Toledo was held, and the Visigoth Kingdom of Toledo converses officially from Arianism to Catholicism, king Reccared I stated in its minutes that also "an infinite number of Suebi have converted", together with the Goths, which implies that the earlier conversion were either superficial or partial. In the same council 4 bishops from Gallaecia abjured of their Arianism. And so, the Suebic conversion is ascribed, not to a Suebe, but to a Visigoth by John of Biclarum, who puts their conversion alongside that of the Goths, occurring under Reccared I in 587–589.
Most scholars have attempted to meld these stories. It has been alleged that Chararic and Theodemir must have been successors of Ariamir, since Ariamir was the first Suebic monarch to lift the ban on Catholic synods; Isidore therefore gets the chronology wrong. Reinhart suggested that Chararic was converted first through the
relics of Saint Martin and that Theodemir was converted later through the preaching of Martin of Dumio. Dahn equated Chararic with Theodemir, even saying that the latter was the name he took upon baptism. If, as Gregory relates, Martin of Dumio died about the year 580 and had been bishop for about thirty years, then the conversion of Chararic must have occurred around 550 at the latest.
Norse mythology
The name of the Suebi also appears in
Norse mythology and in early Scandinavian sources. The earliest attestation is the
Proto-Norse name
Swabaharjaz ("Suebian warrior") on the
Rö runestone and in the place name Svogerslev. was a
Valkyrie who appears in the eddic poem
Helgakviða Hjörvarðssonar. The kingdom
Sváfaland also appears in this poem and in the
Þiðrekssaga.
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