|
Ancient Rome
Tacitus: Germania
Gary Edward Forsythe: Assistant
Professor of Classical Languages and Literatures, University of Chicago.
Author of The Historian L. Calpurnius Piso Frugi and the Roman
Annalistic Tradition. Robert A. Guisepi: Author
of Ancient Voices
(Re-printed by permission)
"Remember,
Roman, that it is for thee to rule the nations. This shall be thy
task, to impose the ways of peace, to spare the vanquished, and to
tame the proud by war."
Tacitus, an important Roman historian, wrote the most detailed
early description of the Germans at then end of the first century CE..
In doing so, be warned, he was commenting on the Rome of his own time,
as much as on the German themselves.
Note that although this is most of Tacitus' text, some of the
later sections are not in this etext.
The Inhabitants. 0rigins of the Name "Germany. " The Germans
themselves I should regard as aboriginal, and not mixed at all with
other races through immigration or intercourse. For, in former times
it was not by land but on shipboard that those who sought to emigrate
would arrive; and the boundless and, so to speak, hostile ocean beyond
us, is seldom entered by a sail from our world. And, beside the perils
of rough and unknown seas, who would leave Asia, or Africa for Italy
for Germany, with its wild country, its inclement skies, its sullen
manners and aspect, unless indeed it were his home? In their ancient
songs, their only way of remembering or recording the past they
celebrate an earth-born god Tuisco, and his son Mannus, as the origin
of their race, as their founders. To Mannus they assign three sons,
from whose names, they say, the coast tribes are called Ingaevones;
those of the interior, Herminones; all the rest, Istaevones. Some,
with the freedom of conjecture permitted by antiquity, assert that the
god had several descendants, and the nation several appellations, as
Marsi, Gambrivii, Suevi, Vandilij, and that these are nine old names.
The name Germany, on the other hand, they say is modern and newly
introduced, from the fact that the tribes which first crossed the
Rhine and drove out the Gauls, and are now called Tungrians, were then
called Germans. Thus what was the name of a tribe, and not of a race,
gradually prevailed, till all called themselves by this self-invented
name of Germans, which the conquerors had first employed to inspire
terror.
The National War-Songs.... They say that Hercules, too, once
visited them; and when going into battle, they sing of him first of
all heroes. They have also those songs of theirs, by the recital of
which ("baritus," they call it), they rouse their courage, while from
the note they augur the result of the approaching conflict. For, as
their line shouts, they inspire or feel alarm. It is not so much an
articulate sound, as a general cry of valor. They aim chiefly at a
harsh note and a confused roar, putting their shields to their mouth,
so that, by reverberation, it may swell into a fuller and deeper
sound.
Physical Characteristics. For my own part, I agree with
those who think that the tribes of Germany are free from all taint of
intermarriages with foreign nations, and that they appear as a
distinct, unmixed race, like none but themselves. Hence, too, the same
physical peculiarities throughout so vast a population. All have
fierce blue eyes, red hair, huge frames, fit only for a sudden
exertion. They are less able to bear laborious work. Heat and thirst
they cannot in the least endure; to cold and hunger their climate and
their soil inure them.
Climate and Soil. Precious Metals. Their country, though
somewhat various in appearance, yet generally either bristles with
forests or reeks with swamps; it is more rainy on the side of Gaul,
bleaker on that of Noricum and Pannonia. It is productive of grain,
but unfavourable to fruit-bearing trees; it is rich in flocks and
herds, but these are for the most part undersized, and even the cattle
have not their usual beauty or noble head. It is number that is
chiefly valued; they are in fact the most highly prized, indeed the
only riches of the people. Silver and gold the gods have refused to
them, whether in kindness or in anger I cannot say. I would not,
however, affirm that no vein of German soil produces gold or silver,
for who has ever made a search? They care but little to possess or use
them. You may see among them vessels of silver, which have been
presented to their envoys and chieftains, held as cheap as those of
the clay. The border population, however, value gold and silver for
their commercial utility, and are familiar with, and show preference
for, some of our coins. The tribes of the interior use the simpler and
more ancient practice of the barter of commodities. They like the old
and well known money, coins milled, or showing a two-horse chariot.
They likewise prefer silver to gold, not from any special liking, but
because a large number of silver pieces is more convenient for use
among dealers in cheap and common articles.
Arms Military Manoeuvres and Discipline Even iron is not
plentiful with them, as we infer from the character of their weapons.
But few use swords or long lances. They carry a spear (framea
is their name for it), with a narrow and short head, but so sharp and
easy to wield that the same weapon serves, according to circumstances,
for close or distant conflict. As for the horse-soldier, he is
satisfied with a shield and spear; the foot-soldiers also scatter
showers of missiles each man having several and hurling them to an
immense distance, and being naked or lightly clad with a little cloak.
There is no display about their equipment; their shields alone are
marked with very choice colours. A few only have corslets, and just
one or two here and there a metal or leather helmet. Their horses are
remarkable neither for beauty nor for fleetness. Nor are they taught
various evolutions after our fashion, but are driven straight forward,
or so as to make one wheel to the right in such a compact body that
none is left behind another. On the whole, one would say that their
chief strength is in their infantry, which fights along with the
cavalry; admirably adapted to the action of the latter is the
swiftness of certain foot-soldiers, who are picked from the entire
youth of their country, and stationed in front of the line. Their
number is fixed -- a hundred from each canton; and from this they take
their name among their countrymen, so that what was originally a mere
number has no become a title of distinction. Their line of battle is
drawn up in a wedge-like formation. To give ground, provided you
return to the attack, is considered prudence rather than cowardice.
The bodies of their slain they carry off even in indecisive
engagements. To abandon your shield is the basest of crimes; nor may a
man thus disgraced be present at the sacred rites, or enter their
council; many, indeed, after escaping from battle, have ended their
infamy with the halter.
Government. Influence of Women. They choose their kings by
birth, their generals for merit. These kings have not unlimited or
arbitrary power, and the generals do more by example than by
authority. If they are energetic, if they are conspicuous, if they
fight in the front, they lead because they are admired. But to
reprimand, to imprison, even to flog, is permitted to the priests
alone, and that not as a punishment, or at the general's bidding, but,
as it were, by the mandate of the god whom they believe to inspire the
warrior. They also carry with them into battle certain figures and
images taken from their sacred groves. And what most stimulates their
courage is, that their squadrons or battalions, instead of being
formed by chance or by a fortuitous gathering, are composed of
families and clans. Close by them, too, are those dearest to them, so
that they hear the shrieks of women, the cries of infants. They are to
every man the most sacred witnesses of his bravery-they are his most
generous applauders. The soldier brings his wounds to mother and wife,
who shrink not from counting or even demanding them and who administer
food and encouragement to the combatants.
Tradition says that armies already wavering and giving way have
been rallied by women who, with earnest entreaties and bosoms laid
bare, have vividly represented the horrors of captivity, which the
Germans fear with such extreme dread on behalf of their women, that
the strongest tie by which a state can be bound is the being required
to give, among the number of hostages, maidens of noble birth. They
even believe that the sex has a certain sanctity and prescience, and
they do not despise their counsels, or make light of their answers. In
Vespasian's days we saw Veleda, long regarded by many as a divinity.
In former times, too, they venerated Aurinia, and many other women,
but not with servile flatteries, or with sham deification.
Deities. Mercury is the deity whom they chiefly worship, and
on certain days they deem it right to sacrifice to him even with human
victims. Hercules and Mars they appease with more lawful offerings.
Some of the Suevi also sacrifice to Isis. Of the occasion and origin
of this foreign rite I have discovered nothing, but that the image,
which is fashioned like a light galley, indicates an imported worship.
The Germans, however, do not consider it consistent with the grandeur
of celestial beings to confine the gods within walls, or to liken them
to the form of any human countenance. They consecrate woods and
groves, and they apply the names of deities to the abstraction which
they see only in spiritual worship.
Auguries and Method of Divination. Augury and divination by
lot no people practise more diligently. The use of the lots is simple.
A little bough is lopped off a fruit-bearing tree, and cut into small
pieces; these are distinguished by certain marks, and thrown
carelessly and at random over a white garment. In public questions the
priest of the particular state, in private the father of the family,
invokes the gods, and, with his eyes toward heaven, takes up each
piece three times, and finds in them a meaning according to the mark
previously impressed on them. If they prove unfavourable, there is no
further consultation that day about the matter; if they sanction it,
the confirmation of augury is still required. For they are also
familiar with the practice of consulting the notes and flight of
birds. It is peculiar to this people to seek omens and monitions from
horses. Kept at the public expense, in these same woods and groves,
are white horses, pure from the taint of earthly labour; these are
yoked to a sacred car, and accompanied by the priest and the king, or
chief of the tribe, who note their neighings and snortings. No species
of augury is more trusted, not only by the people and by the nobility,
but also by the priests, who regard themselves as the ministers of the
gods, and the horses as acquainted with their will. They have also
another method of observing auspices, by which they seek to learn the
result of an important war. Having taken, by whatever means, a
prisoner from the tribe with whom they are at war, they pit him
against a picked man of their own tribe, each combatant using the
weapons of their country. The victory of the one or the other is
accepted as an indication of the issue.
Councils- About minor matters the chiefs deliberate, about
the more important the whole tribe. Yet even when the final decision
rests with the people, the affair is always thoroughly discussed by
the chiefs. They assemble, except in the case of a sudden emergency,
on certain fixed days, either at new or at full moon; for this they
consider the most auspicious season for the transaction of business.
Instead of reckoning by days as we do, they reckon by nights, and in
this manner fix both their ordinary and their legal appointments.
Night they regard as bringing on day. Their freedom has this
disadvantage, that they do not meet simultaneously or as they are
bidden, but two or three days are wasted in the delays of assembling.
When the multitude think proper, they sit down armed. Silence is
proclaimed by the priests, who have on these occasions the right of
keeping order. Then the king or the chief, according to age, birth,
distinction in war, or eloquence, is heard, more because he has
influence to persuade than because he has power to command. If his
sentiments displease them, they reject them with murmurs; if they are
satisfied, they brandish their spears. The most complimentary form of
assent is to express approbation with their spears.
Punishments. Administration of Justice. In their councils an
accusation may be preferred or a capital crime prosecuted. Penalties
are distinguished according to the offence. Traitors and deserters are
hanged on trees; the coward, the unwarlike, the man stained with
abominable vices, is plunged into the mire of the morass with a hurdle
put over him. This distinction in punishment means that crime, they
think, ought, in being punished, to be exposed, while infamy ought to
be buried out of sight- Lighter offences, too, have penalties
proportioned to them; he who is convicted, is fined in a certain
number of horses or of cattle. Half of the fine is paid to the king or
to the state, half to the person whose wrongs are avenged and to his
relatives. In these same councils they also elect the chief
magistrates, who administer law in the cantons and the towns. Each of
these has a hundred associates chosen from the people, who support him
with their advice and influence.
Training of Youth They transact no public or private
business without being armed. it is not, however, usual for anyone to
wear arms till the state has recognized his power to use them. Then in
the presence of the council one of the chiefs, or the young man's
father, or some kinsman, equips him with a shield and a spear. These
arms are what the "toga" is with us, the first honour with which youth
is invested. Up to this time he is regarded as a member of a
household, after-wards as a member of the commonwealth. Very noble
birth or great services rendered by the father secure for lads the
rank of a chief; such lads attach themselves to men of mature strength
and of long approved valour. It is no shame to be seen among a chief's
followers. Even in his escort there are gradations of rank, dependent
on the choice of the man to whom they are attached. These followers
vie keenly with each others as to who shall rank first with his
chiefs, the chiefs as to who shall have the most numerous and the
bravest followers. It is an honour as well as a source of strength to
be thus always surrounded by a large body of picked youths; it is an
ornament in peace and a defence in war. And not only in his own tribe
but also in the neighboring states it is the renown and glory of a
chief to be distinguished for the number and valour of his followers,
for such a man is courted by embassies, is honoured with presents, and
the very prestige of his name ofen settles a war.
Warlike Ardour of the People.
When they go into battle, it
is a disgrace for the chief to be surpassed in valour, a disgrace for
his followers not to equal the valour of the chief. And it is an
infamy and a reproach for life to have survived the chief, and
returned from the field. To defend, to protect him, to ascribe one's
own brave deeds to his renown, is the height of loyalty. The chief
fights for victory; his vassals fight for their chief. If their native
state sinks into the sloth of prolonged peace and repose, many of its
noble youths voluntarily seek those tribes which are waging some war,
both because inaction is odious to their race, and because they win
renown more readily in the midst of peril, and cannot maintain a
numerous following except by violence and war. Indeed, men look to the
liberality of their chief for their war-horse and their bloodstained
and victorious lance. Feasts and entertainments, which, though
inelegant, are plentifully furnished, are their only pay. The means of
this bounty come from war and rapine. Nor are they as easily persuaded
to plough the earth and to wait for the year's produce as to challenge
an enemy and earn the honour of wounds. Nay, they actually think it
tame and stupid to acquire by the sweat of toil what they might win by
their blood.
Habits in Time of Peace. Whenever they are not fighting,
they pass much of their time in the chase, and still more in idleness,
giving themselves up to sleep and to feasting, the bravest and the
most warlike doing nothing, and surrendering the management of the
household, of the home, and of the land, to the women, the old men,
and all the weakest members of the family. They themselves lie buried
in sloth, a strange combination in their nature that the same men
should be so fond of idleness, so averse to peace. It is the custom of
the states to bestow by voluntary and individual contribution on the
chiefs a present of cattle or of grain, which, while accepted as a
compliment, supplies their wants. They are particularly delighted by
gifts from neighbouring tribes, which are sent not only by individuals
but also by the state, such as choice steeds, heavy armour, trappings,
and neck-chains. We have now taught them to acccept money also.
Arrangement of Their Towns, Subterranean Dwellings It is
well known that the nations of Germany have not cities, and that they
do not even tolerate closely contiguous dwellings. They live scattered
and apart, just as a spring, a meadow, or a wood has attracted them.
Their village they do not arrange in our fashion, with the buildings
connected and joined together, but every person surrounds his dwelling
with an open space, either as a precaution against the disasters of
fire, or because they do not know how to build. No use is made by them
of stone or tile; they employ timber for all purposes, rude masses
without ornament or attractiveness. Some parts of their buildings they
stain more carefully with a clay so clear and bright that it resembles
painting, or a coloured design. They are wont also to dig out
subterranean caves, and pile on them great heaps of dung shelter from
winter and as a receptacle for the year's produce, for by such places
they mitigate the rigour of the cold. And should an enemy approach, he
lays waste the open country, while what is hidden and buried is either
not known to exist, or escapes him from the very fact that it has to
be searched for.
Dress They all wrap themselves in a cloak which is fastened
with a clasp, or, if this is not forthcoming, with a thorn, leaving
the rest of their persons bare. They pass whole days on the hearth by
the fire. The wealthiest are distinguished by a dress which is not
flowing like that of the Sarmatae and Parthi, but is tight, and
exhibits each limb. They also wear the skins of wild beasts; the
tribes on the Rhine and Danube in a careless fashion, those of the
interior with more elegance, as not obtaining other clothing by
commerce. These select certain animals, the hides of which they strip
off and vary them with the spotted skins of beasts, the produce of the
outer ocean, and of seas unknown to us. The women have the same dress
as the men except that they generally wrap themselves in linen
garments, which they embroider with purple, and do not lengthen out
the upper part of their clothing into sleeves. The upper and lower arm
is thus bare, and the nearest part of the bosom is also exposed.
Marriage Laws. Their marriage code, however, is strict, and
indeed no part of their manners is more praiseworthy. Almost alone
among barbarians they are content with one wife, except a very few
among them, and these not from sensuality, but because their noble
birth procures for them many offers of alliance. The wife does not
bring a dower to the husband, but the husband to the wife. The parents
and relatives are present, and pass judgment on the marriage-gifts,
gifts not meant to suit a woman's taste, nor such as a bride would
deck herself with, but oxen, a caparisoned steed, a shield, a lance,
and a sword. With these presents the wife is espoused, and she herself
in her turn brings her husband a gift of arms. This they count their
strongest bond of union, these their sacred mysteries, these their
gods of marriage. Lest the woman should think herself to stand apart
from aspirations after noble deeds and from the perils of war, she is
reminded by the ceremony which inaugurates marriage that she is her
husband's partner in toil and danger, destined to suffer and to dare
with him alike both in in war. The yoked oxen, the harnessed steed,
the gift of arms proclaim this fact. She must live and die with the
feeling that she is receiving what she must hand down to her children
neither tarnished nor depreciated, what future daughters-in-law may
receive, and may be so passed on to her grandchildren.
Thus with their virtue protected they live uncorrupted by the
allurements of public shows or the stimulant of feastings. Clandestine
correspondence is equally unknown to men and women. Very rare for so
numerous a population is adultery, the punishment for which is prompt,
and in the husband's power. Having cut off the hair of the adulteress
and stripped her naked, he expels her from the house in the presence
of her kinsfolk, and then flogs her through the whole village. The
loss of chastity meets with no indulgence; neither beauty, youth, nor
wealth will procure the culprit a husband. No one in Germany laughs at
vice, nor do they call it the fashion to corrupt and to be corrupted.
Still better is the condition of those states in which only maidens
are given in marriage, and where the hopes and expectations of a bride
are then finally terminated. They receive one husband, as having one
body and one life, that they may have no thoughts beyond, no
further-reaching desires, that they may love not so much the husband
as the married state. To limit the number of children or to destroy
any of their subsequent offspring is accounted infamous, and good
habits are here more effectual than good laws elsewhere.
Their Children. Laws Of Succession. In every household the
children, naked and filthy, grow up with those stout frames and limbs
which we so much admire. Every mother suckles her own offspring and
never entrusts it to servants and nurses. The master is not
distinguished from the slave by being brought up with greater
delicacy. Both live amid the same flocks and lie on the same ground
till the freeborn are distinguished by age and recognised by merit.
The young men marry late, and their vigour is thus unimpaired. Nor are
the maidens hurried into marriage; the same age and a similar stature
is required; well-matched and vigorous they wed, and the offspring
reproduce the strength of the parents. Sister's sons are held in as
much esteem by their uncles as by their fathers; indeed, some regard
the relation as even more sacred and binding, and prefer it in
receiving hostages, thinking thus to secure a stronger hold on the
affections and a wider bond for the family. But every man's children
are his heirs and successors, and there are no wills. Should there be
no issue, the next in succession to the property are brothers and his
uncles on either side. The more relatives he has the more numerous his
connections, the more honoured is his old age; nor are there any
advantages in childlessness.
Hereditary Feuds-Fines for Homicide. Hospitality It is a
duty among them to adopt the feuds as well as the friendships of a
father or a kinsman. These feuds are not implacable; even homicide is
expiated by the payment of a certain number of cattle and of sheep,
and the satisfaction is accepted by the entire family, greatly to the
advantage of the state, since feuds are dangerous in proportion to the
people's freedom.
No nation indulges more profusely in entertainments and
hospitality. To exclude any human being from their roof is thought
impious; every German, according to his means, receives his guest with
a well-furnished table. When his supplies are exhausted, he who was
but now the host becomes the guide and companion to further
hospitality, and without invitation they go to the next house. It
matters not; they are entertained with like cordiality. No one
distinguishes between an acquaintance and a stranger, as regards the
rights of hospitality. It is usual to give the departing guest
whatever he may ask for, and a present in return is asked with as
little hesitation. They are greatly charmed with gifts, but they
expect no return for what they give, nor feel any obligation for what
they receive.
Habits of Life. On waking from sleep, which they generally
prolong for a late hour of the day, they take a bath, most often of
warm water, which suits a country where winter is the longest of the
seasons. After their bath they take their meal, each having a separate
seat and table of his own. Then they go armed to business, or no less
often to their festal meetings. To pass an entire day and night in
drinking disgraces no one. Their quarrels, as might be expected with
intoxicated people, are seldom fought out with mere abuse, but
commonly with wounds and bloodshed. Yet it is at their feasts that
they generally consult on the reconciliation of enemies, on the
forming of matrimonial alliances, on the choice of chiefs, finally
even on peace and wai-, for they think that at no time is the mind
more open to simplicity of purpose or more warmed to noble
aspirations. A race without either natural or acquired cunning, they
disclose their hidden thoughts in the freedom of the festivity. Thus
the sentiments of all having been discovered and laid bare, the
discussion is renewed on the following day, and from each occasion its
own peculiar advantage is derived. They deliberate when they have no
power to dissemble; they resolve when error is impossible.
Food A liquor for drinking is made of barley or other grain,
and fermented into a certain resemblance to wine. The dwellers on the
river-bank also buy wine. Their food is of a simple kind, consisting
of wild fruit, fresh game, and curdled milk. They satisfy their hunger
without elaborate preparation and without delicacies. In quenching
their thirst they are equally moderate. If you indulge their love of
drinking by supplying them with as much as they desire, they will be
overcome by their own vices as easily as by the arms of an enemy.
Sports. Passion for Gambling. One and the same kind of
spectacle is always exhibited at every gathering. Naked youths who
practise the sport bound in the dance amid swords and lances that
threaten their lives. Experience gives them skill and skill again
gives grace; profit or pay are out of the question; however reckless
their pastime, its reward is the pleasure of the spectators. Strangely
enough they make games of hazard a serious occupation even when sober,
and so venturesome are they about gaining or losing, that, when every
other resource has failed, on the last and final throw they stake the
freedom of their own persons. The loser goes into voluntary slavery;
though the younger and stronger, he suffers himself to be bound and
sold. Such is their stubborn persistency in a bad practice; they
themselves call it honour. Slaves of this kind the owners part with in
the way of commerce, and also to relieve themselves from the scandal
of such a victory.
Slavery. The other slaves are not employed after our manner
with distinct domestic duties assigned to them, but each one has the
management of a house and home of his own. The master requires from
the slave a certain quantity of grain, of cattle, and of clothing, as
he would from a tenant, and this is the limit of subjection. All other
household functions are discharged by the wife and children. To strike
a slave or to punish him with bonds or with hard labour is a rare
occurrence. They often kill them, not in enforcing strict discipline,
but on the impulse of passion, as they would an enemy, only it is done
with impunity. The freedmen do not rank much above slaves, and are
seldom of any weight in the family, never in the state with the
exception of those tribes which are ruled by kings. There indeed they
rise above the freeborn and the noble; elsewhere the inferiority of
the freedman marks the freedom of the state.
Occupation of Land. Tillage. Of lending money on interest
and increasing it by compounding interest they know nothing-a more
effectual safeguard than if it was prohibited.
Land proportioned to the number of inhabitants is occupied by the
whole community in turn, and afterwards divided among them according
to rank. A wide expanse of plains makes the partition easy. They till
fresh fields every year, and they have still more land than enough;
with the richness and extent of their soil, they do not laboriously
exert themselves in planting orchards, enclosing meadows and watering
gardens. Corn is the only produce required from the earth; hence even
the year itself is not divided by them into as many seasons as with
us. Winter, spring, and summer have both a meaning and a name; the
name and blessings of autumn are alike unknown.
Funeral Rites. In their funerals there is no pomp; they
simply observe the custom of burning the bodies of illustrious men
with certain kinds of wood. They do not heap garments or spices on the
funeral pile. The arms of the dead man and in some cases his horse are
consigned to the fire. A turf mound forms the tomb. Monuments with
their lofty elaborate splendour they reject as oppressive to the dead.
Tears and lamentations they soon dismiss; grief and sorrow but slowly.
It is thought becoming for women to bewail, for men to remember, the
dead.
Such on the whole is the account which I have received of the
origin and manners of the entire German people.
Text to this point from Tacitus, The Agricola and Germania,
A. J. Church and W. J. Brodribb, trans., (London: Macmillan, 1877),
pp. 87- 10
Tacitus goes on to give a geographical account of the
locations of the main German tribes. The following, which completes
the text of the Germania, is from an 18th-century different
translation by Thomas Gordon.
I shall now deduce the institutions and usages of the several
people, as far as they vary one from another; as also an account of
what nations from thence removed, to settle themselves in Gaul.
That the Gauls were in times past more puissant and formidable, is
related by the Prince of authors, the deified Julius [ie Julius
Caesar] and hence it is probable that they too have passed into
Germany. For what a small obstacle must be a river, to restrain any
nation, as each grew more potent, from seizing or changing
habitations; when as yet all habitations were common, and not parted
or appropriated by the founding and terror of Monarchies? The region
therefore between the Hercynian Forest and the rivers Moenus [ie Main]
and Rhine, was occupied by the Helvetians; as was that beyond it by
the Boians, both nations of Gaul. There still remains a place called
Boiemum, which denotes the primitive name and antiquity of the
country, although the inhabitants have been changed. But whether the
Araviscans are derived from the Osians, a nation of Germans passing
into Pannonia, or the Osians from the Araviscans removing from thence
into Germany, is a matter undecided; since they both still use the
language, the same customs and the same laws. For, as of old they
lived alike poor and alike free, equal proved the evils and advantages
on each side the river, and common to both people. The Treverians and
Nervians aspire passionately to the reputation of being descended from
the Germans; since by the glory of this original, they would escape
all imputation of resembling the Gauls in person and effeminacy. Such
as dwell upon the bank of the Rhine, the Vangiones, the Tribocians,
and the Nemetes, are without doubt all Germans. The Ubians are ashamed
of their original; though they have a particular honour to boast, that
of having merited an establishment as a Roman Colony, and still
delight to be called Agrippinensians, after the name of their founder:
they indeed formerly came from beyond the Rhine, and, for the many
proofs of their fidelity, were settled upon the very bank of the
river; not to be there confined or guarded themselves, but to guard
and defend that boundary against the rest of the Germans.
Of all these nations, the Batavians are the most signal in bravery.
They inhabit not much territory upon the Rhine, but possess an island
in it. They were formerly part of the Cattans, and by means of feuds
at home removed to these dwellings; whence they might become a portion
of the Roman Empire. With them this honour still remains, as also the
memorials of their ancient association with us: for they are not under
the contempt of paying tribute, nor subject to be squeezed by the
farmers of the revenue. Free from all impositions and payments, and
only set apart for the purposes of fighting, they are reserved wholly
for the wars, in the same manner as a magazine of weapons and armour.
Under the same degree of homage are the nation of the Mattiacians. For
such is the might and greatness of the Roman People, as to have
carried the awe and esteem of their Empire beyond the Rhine and the
ancient boundaries. Thus the Mattiacians, living upon the opposite
banks, enjoy a settlement and limits of their own; yet in spirit and
inclination are attached to us: in other things resembling the
Batavians, save that as they still breathe their original air, still
possess their primitive soil, they are thence inspired with superior
vigour and keenness. Amongst the people of Germany I would not reckon
those who occupy the lands which are under decimation, though they be
such as dwell beyond the Rhine and the Danube. By several worthless
and vagabond Gauls, and such as poverty rendered daring, that region
was seized as one belonging to no certain possessor: afterwards it
became a skirt of the Empire and part of a province, upon the
enlargement of our bounds and the extending of our garrisons and
frontier.
Beyond these are the Cattans, whose territories begin at the
Hercynian Forest, and consist not of such wide and marshy plains, as
those of the other communities contained within the vast compass of
Germany; but produce ranges of hills, such as run lofty and contiguous
for a long tract, then by degrees sink and decay. Moreover the
Hercynian Forest attends for a while its native Cattans, then suddenly
forsakes them. This people are distinguished with bodies more hardy
and robust, compact limbs, stern countenances, and greater vigour of
spirit. For Germans, they are men of much sense and address.
[Footnote: "Leur intelligence et leur finesse etonnent, dans des
Germains."] They dignify chosen men, listen to such as are set over
them, know how to preserve their post, to discern occasions, to rebate
their own ardour and impatience; how to employ the day, how to
entrench themselves by night. They account fortune amongst things
slippery and uncertain, but bravery amongst such as are never-failing
and secure; and, what is exceeding rare nor ever to be learnt but by a
wholesome course of discipline, in the conduct of the general they
repose more assurance than in the strength of the army. Their whole
forces consist of foot, who besides their arms carry likewise
instruments of iron and their provisions. You may see other Germans
proceed equipped to battle, but the Cattans so as to conduct a
war.[Footnote 10: "Alios ad proelium ire videas, Chattos ad bellum."]
They rarely venture upon excursions or casual encounters. It is in
truth peculiar to cavalry, suddenly to conquer, or suddenly to fly.
Such haste and velocity rather resembles fear. Patience and
deliberation are more akin to intrepidity.
Moreover a custom, practised indeed in other nations of Germany,
yet very rarely and confined only to particulars more daring than the
rest, prevails amongst the Cattans by universal consent. As soon as
they arrive to maturity of years, they let their hair and beards
continue to grow, nor till they have slain an enemy do they ever lay
aside this form of countenance by vow sacred to valour. Over the blood
and spoil of a foe they make bare their face. They allege, that they
have now acquitted themselves of the debt and duty contracted by their
birth, and rendered themselves worthy of their country, worthy of
their parents. Upon the spiritless, cowardly and unwarlike, such
deformity of visage still remains.[Footnote: "Manet squalor."] All
the most brave likewise wear an iron ring (a mark of great dishonour
this in that nation) and retain it as a chain; till by killing an
enemy they become released. Many of the Cattans delight always to bear
this terrible aspect; and, when grown white through age, become awful
and conspicuous by such marks, both to the enemy and their own
countrymen. By them in all engagements the first assault is made: of
them the front of the battle is always composed, as men who in their
looks are singular and tremendous. For even during peace they abate
nothing in the grimness and horror of their countenance. They have no
house to inhabit, no land to cultivate, nor any domestic charge or
care. With whomsoever they come to sojourn, by him they are
maintained; always very prodigal of the substance of others, always
despising what is their own, till the feebleness of old age overtakes
them, and renders them unequal to the efforts of such rigid bravery.
Next to the Cattans, dwell the Usipians and Tencterians; upon the
Rhine now
running in a channel uniform and certain, such as suffices for a
boundary. The Tencterians, besides their wonted glory in war, surpass
in the service and discipline of their cavalry. Nor do the Cattans
derive higher applause from their foot, than the Tencterians from
their horse. Such was the order established by their forefathers, and
what their posterity still pursue. From riding and exercising of
horses, their children borrow their pastimes; in this exercise the
young men find matter for emulating one another, and in this the old
men take pleasure to persevere. Horses are by the father bequeathed as
part of his household and family, horses are conveyed amongst the
rights of succession, and as such the son receives them; but not the
eldest son, like other effects, by priority of birth, but he who
happens to be signal in boldness and superior in war.
Contiguous to the Tencterians formerly dwelt the Bructerians, in
whose room it is said the Chamavians and Angrivarians are now settled;
they who expulsed and almost extirpated the Bructerians, with the
concurrence of the neighbouring nations: whether in detestation of
their arrogance, or allured by the love of spoil, or through the
special favour of the Gods towards us Romans. They in truth even
vouchsafed to gratify us with the sight of the battle. In it there
fell above sixty thousand souls, without a blow struck by the Romans;
but, what is a circumstance still more glorious, fell to furnish them
with a spectacle of joy and recreation. May the Gods continue and
perpetuate amongst these nations, if not any love for us, yet by all
means this their animosity and hate towards each other: since whilst
the destiny of the Empire thus urges it, fortune cannot more signally
befriend us, than in sowing strife amongst our foes.
The Angrivarians and Chamavians are enclosed behind, by the
Dulgibinians and Chasuarians; and by other nations not so much noted:
before, the Frisians face them. The country of Frisia is divided into
two; called the greater and lesser, according to the measure of their
strength. Both nations stretch along the Rhine, quite to the ocean;
and surround vast lakes such as once have borne Roman fleets. We have
moreover even ventured out from thence into the ocean, and upon its
coasts common fame has reported the pillars of Hercules to be still
standing: whether it be that Hercules ever visited these parts, or
that to his renowned name we are wont to ascribe whatever is grand and
glorious everywhere. Neither did Drusus who made the attempt, want
boldness to pursue it: but the roughness of the ocean withstood him,
nor would suffer discoveries to be made about itself, no more than
about Hercules. Thenceforward the enterprise was dropped: nay, more
pious and reverential it seemed, to believe the marvellous feats of
the Gods than to know and to prove them. [Footnote: "Coelum ipsum
petimus stultitia."]
Hitherto, I have been describing Germany towards the west. To the
northward, it winds away with an immense compass. And first of all
occurs the nation of the Chaucians: who though they begin immediately
at the confines of the Frisians, and occupy part of the shore, extend
so far as to border upon all the several people whom I have already
recounted; till at last, by a Circuit, they reach quite to the
boundaries of the Cattans. A region so vast, the Chaucians do not only
possess but fill; a people of all the Germans the most noble, such as
would rather maintain their grandeur by justice than violence. They
live in repose, retired from broils abroad, void of avidity to possess
more, free from a spirit of domineering over others. They provoke no
wars, they ravage no countries, they pursue no plunder. Of their
bravery and power, the chief evidence arises from hence, that, without
wronging or oppressing others, they are come to be superior to all.
Yet they are all ready to arm, and if an exigency require, armies are
presently raised, powerful and abounding as they are in men and
horses; and even when they are quiet and their weapons laid aside,
their credit and name continue equally high.
Along the side of the Chaucians and Cattans dwell the Cheruscans; a
people who finding no enemy to rouse them, were enfeebled by a peace
over lasting and uniform, but such as they failed not to nourish. A
conduct which proved more pleasing than secure; since treacherous is
that repose which you enjoy amongst neighbours that are very powerful
and very fond of rule and mastership. When recourse is once had to the
sword, modesty and fair dealing will be vainly pleaded by the weaker;
names these which are always assumed by the stronger. Thus the
Cheruscans, they who formerly bore the character of good and upright,
are now called cowards and fools; and the fortune of the Cattans who
subdued them, grew immediately to be wisdom. In the ruin of the
Cheruscans, the Fosians, also their neighbours, were involved; and in
their calamities bore an equal share, though in their prosperity they
had been weaker and less considered.
In the same winding tract of Germany live the Cimbrians, close to
the ocean; a community now very small, but great in fame. Nay, of
their ancient renown, many and extensive are the traces and monuments
still remaining; even their entrenchments upon either shore, so vast
in compass that from thence you may even now measure the greatness and
numerous bands of that people, and assent to the account of an army so
mighty. It was on the six hundred and fortieth year of Rome, when of
the arms of the Cimbrians the first mention was made, during the
Consulship of Caecilius Metellus and Papirius Carbo. If from that time
we count to the second Consulship of the Emperor Trajan, the interval
comprehends near two hundred and ten years; so long have we been
conquering Germany. In a course of time, so vast between these two
periods, many have been the blows and disasters suffered on each side.
In truth neither from the Samnites, nor from the Carthaginians, nor
from both Spains, nor from all the nations of Gaul, have we received
more frequent checks and alarms; nor even from the Parthians: for,
more vigorous and invincible is the liberty of the Germans than the
monarchy of the Arsacides. Indeed, what has the power of the East to
allege to our dishonour; but the fall of Crassus, that power which was
itself overthrown and abased by Ventidius, with the loss of the great
King Pacorus bereft of his life? But by the Germans the Roman People
have been bereft of five armies, all commanded by Consuls; by the
Germans, the commanders of these armies, Carbo, and Cassius, and
Scaurus Aurelius, and Servilius Caepio, as also Marcus Manlius, were
all routed or taken: by the Germans even the Emperor Augustus was
bereft of Varus and three legions. Nor without difficulty and loss of
men were they defeated by Caius Marius in Italy, or by the deified
Julius in Gaul, or by Drusus or Tiberius or Germanicus in their native
territories. Soon after, the mighty menaces of Caligula against them
ended in mockery and derision. Thenceforward they continued quiet,
till taking advantage of our domestic division and civil wars, they
stormed and seized the winter entrenchments of the legions, and aimed
at the dominion of Gaul; from whence they were once more expulsed, and
in the times preceding the present, we gained a triumph over them
rather than a victory.
I must now proceed to speak of the Suevians, who are not, like the
Cattans and Tencterians, comprehended in a single people; but divided
into several nations all bearing distinct names, though in general
they are entitled Suevians, and occupy the larger share of Germany.
This people are remarkable for a peculiar custom, that of twisting
their hair and binding it up in a knot. It is thus the Suevians are
distinguished from the other Germans, thus the free Suevians from
their slaves. In other nations, whether from alliance of blood with
the Suevians, or, as is usual, from imitation, this practice is also
found, yet rarely, and never exceeds the years of youth. The Suevians,
even when their hair is white through age, continue to raise it
backwards in a manner stern and staring; and often tie it upon the top
of their head only. That of their Princes, is more accurately
disposed, and so far they study to appear agreeable and comely; but
without any culpable intention. For by it, they mean not to make love
or to incite it: they thus dress when proceeding to war, and deck
their heads so as to add to their height and terror in the eyes of the
enemy.
Of all the Suevians, the Semnones recount themselves to be the most
ancient and most noble. The belief of their antiquity is confirmed by
religious mysteries. At a stated time of the year, all the several
people descended from the same stock, assemble by their deputies in a
wood; consecrated by the idolatries of their forefathers, and by
superstitious awe in times of old. There by publicly sacrificing a
man, they begin the horrible solemnity of their barbarous worship. To
this grove another sort of reverence is also paid. No one enters it
otherwise than bound with ligatures, thence professing his
subordination and meanness, and the power of the Deity there. If he
fall down, he is not permitted to rise or be raised, but grovels along
upon the ground. And of all their superstition, this is the drift and
tendency; that from this place the nation drew their original, that
here God, the supreme Governor of the world, resides, and that all
things else whatsoever are subject to him and bound to obey him. The
potent condition of the Semnones has increased their influence and
authority, as they inhabit an hundred towns; and from the largeness of
their community it comes, that they hold themselves for the head of
the Suevians.
What on the contrary ennobles the Langobards is the smallness of
their number, for that they, who are surrounded with very many and
very powerful nations, derive their security from no obsequiousness or
plying; but from the dint of battle and adventurous deeds. There
follow in order the Reudignians, and Aviones, and Angles, and
Varinians, and Eudoses, and Suardones and Nuithones; all defended by
rivers or forests. Nor in one of these nations does aught remarkable
occur, only that they universally join in the worship of Herthum; that
is to say, the Mother Earth. Her they believe to interpose in the
affairs of man, and to visit countries. In an island of the ocean
stands the wood Castum: in it is a chariot dedicated to the Goddess,
covered over with a curtain, and permitted to be touched by none but
the Priest. Whenever the Goddess enters this her holy vehicle, he
perceives her; and with profound veneration attends the motion of the
chariot, which is always drawn by yoked cows. Then it is that days of
rejoicing always ensue, and in all places whatsoever which she
descends to honour with a visit and her company, feasts and recreation
abound. They go not to war; they touch no arms; fast laid up is every
hostile weapon; peace and repose are then only known, then only
beloved, till to the temple the same priest reconducts the Goddess
when well tired with the conversation of mortal beings. Anon the
chariot is washed and purified in a secret lake, as also the curtains;
nay, the Deity herself too, if you choose to believe it. In this
office it is slaves who minister, and they are forthwith doomed to be
swallowed up in the same lake. Hence all men are possessed with
mysterious terror; as well as with a holy ignorance what that must be,
which none see but such as are immediately to perish. Moreover this
quarter of the Suevians stretches to the middle of Germany.
The community next adjoining, is that of the Hermondurians; (that I
may now follow the course of the Danube, as a little before I did that
of the Rhine) a people this, faithful to the Romans. So that to them
alone of all the Germans, commerce is permitted; not barely upon the
bank of the Rhine, but more extensively, and even in that glorious
colony in the province of Rhoetia. They travel everywhere at their own
discretion and without a guard; and when to other nations, we show no
more than our arms and encampments, to this people we throw open our
houses and dwellings, as to men who have no longing to possess them.
In the territories of the Hermondurians rises the Elbe, a river very
famous and formerly well known to us; at present we only hear it
named.
Close by the Hermondurians reside the Nariscans, and next to them
the Marcomanians and Quadians. Amongst these the Marcomanians are most
signal in force and renown; nay, their habitation itself they acquired
by their bravery, as from thence they formerly expulsed the Boians.
Nor do the Nariscans or Quadians degenerate in spirit. Now this is as
it were the frontier of Germany, as far as Germany is washed by the
Danube. To the times within our memory the Marcomanians and Quadians
were governed by kings, who were natives of their own, descended from
the noble line of Maroboduus and Tudrus. At present they are even
subject to such as are foreigners. But the whole strength and sway of
their kings is derived from the authority of the Romans. From our
arms, they rarely receive any aid; from our money very frequently.
Nor less powerful are the several people beyond them; namely, the
Marsignians, the Gothinians, the Osians and the Burians, who
altogether enclose the Marcomanians and Quadians behind. Of those, the
Marsignians and the Burians in speech and dress resemble the Suevians.
From the Gallic language spoken by the Gothinians, and from that of
Pannonia by the Osians, it is manifest that neither of these people
are Germans; as it is also from their bearing to pay tribute. Upon
them as upon aliens their tribute is imposed, partly by the Sarmatians,
partly by the Quadians. The Gothinians, to heighten their disgrace,
are forced to labour in the iron mines. By all these several nations
but little level country is possessed: they are seated amongst
forests, and upon the ridges and declivities of mountains. For, Suevia
is parted by a continual ridge of mountains; beyond which, live many
distinct nations. Of these the Lygians are most numerous and
extensive, and spread into several communities. It will suffice to
mention the most puissant; even the Arians, Helvicones, Manimians;
Elysians and Naharvalians. Amongst the Naharvalians is shown a grove,
sacred to devotion extremely ancient. Over it a Priest presides
apparelled like a woman; but according to the explication of the
Romans, 'tis Castor and Pollux who are here worshipped. This Divinity
is named Alcis. There are indeed no images here, no traces of an
extraneous superstition: yet their devotion is addressed to young men
and to brothers. Now the Aryans, besides their forces, in which they
surpass the several nations just recounted, are in their persons stern
and truculent; and even humour and improve their natural grimness and
ferocity by art and time. They wear black shields, their bodies are
painted black, they choose dark nights for engaging in battle; and by
the very awe and ghastly hue of their army, strike the enemy with
dread, as none can bear this their aspect so surprising and as it were
quite infernal. For, in all battles the eyes are vanquished first.
Beyond the Lygians dwell the Gothones, under the rule of a King;
and thence held in subjection somewhat stricter than the other German
nations, yet not so strict as to extinguish all their liberty.
Immediately adjoining are the Rugians and Lemovians upon the coast of
the ocean, and of these several nations the characteristics are a
round shield, a short sword and kingly government. Next occur the
communities of the Suiones, situated in the ocean itself; and besides
their strength in men and arms, very powerful at sea. The form of
their vessels varies thus far from ours, that they have prows at each
end, so as to be always ready to row to shore without turning nor are
they moved by sails, nor on their sides have benches of oars placed,
but the rowers ply here and there in all parts of the ship alike, as
in some rivers is done, and change their oars from place to place,
just as they shift their course hither or thither. To wealth also,
amongst them, great veneration is paid, and thence a single ruler
governs them, without all restriction of power, and exacting unlimited
obedience. Neither here, as amongst other nations of Germany, are arms
used indifferently by all, but shut up and warded under the care of a
particular keeper, who in truth too is always a slave: since from all
sudden invasions and attacks from their foes, the ocean protects them:
besides that armed bands, when they are not employed, grow easily
debauched and tumultuous. The truth is, it suits not the interest of
an arbitrary Prince, to trust the care and power of arms either with a
nobleman or with a freeman, or indeed with any man above the condition
of a slave.
Beyond the Suiones is another sea, one very heavy and almost void
of agitation; and by it the whole globe is thought to be bounded and
environed, for that the reflection of the sun, after his setting,
continues till his rising, so bright as to darken the stars. To this,
popular opinion has added, that the tumult also of his emerging from
the sea is heard, that forms divine are then seen, as likewise the
rays about his head. Only thus far extend the limits of nature, if
what fame says be true. Upon the right of the Suevian Sea the Aestyan
nations reside, who use the same customs and attire with the Suevians;
their language more resembles that of Britain. They worship the Mother
of the Gods. As the characteristic of their national superstition,
they wear the images of wild boars. This alone serves them for arms,
this is the safeguard of all, and by this every worshipper of the
Goddess is secured even amidst his foes. Rare amongst them is the use
of weapons of iron, but frequent that of clubs. In producing of grain
and the other fruits of the earth, they labour with more assiduity and
patience than is suitable to the usual laziness of Germans. Nay, they
even search the deep, and of all the rest are the only people who
gather amber. They call it glasing, and find it amongst the shallows
and upon the very shore. But, according to the ordinary incuriosity
and ignorance of Barbarians, they have neither learnt, nor do they
inquire, what is its nature, or from what cause it is produced. In
truth it lay long neglected amongst the other gross discharges of the
sea; till from our luxury, it gained a name and value. To themselves
it is of no use: they gather it rough, they expose it in pieces coarse
and unpolished, and for it receive a price with wonder. You would
however conceive it to be a liquor issuing from trees, for that in the
transparent substance are often seen birds and other animals, such as
at first stuck in the soft gum, and by it, as it hardened, became
quite enclosed. I am apt to believe that, as in the recesses of the
East are found woods and groves dropping frankincense and balms, so in
the isles and continent of the West such gums are extracted by the
force and proximity of the sun; at first liquid and flowing into the
next sea, then thrown by winds and waves upon the opposite shore. If
you try the nature of amber by the application of fire, it kindles
like a torch; and feeds a thick and unctuous flame very high scented,
and presently becomes glutinous like pitch or rosin.
Upon the Suiones, border the people Sitones; and, agreeing with
them in all other things, differ from them in one, that here the
sovereignty is exercised by a woman. So notoriously do they degenerate
not only from a state of liberty, but even below a state of bondage.
Here end the territories of the Suevians.
Whether amongst the Sarmatians or the Germans I ought to account
the Peucinians, the Venedians, and the Fennians, is what I cannot
determine; though the Peucinians, whom some call Basstarnians, speak
the same language with the Germans, use the same attire, build like
them, and live like them, in that dirtiness and sloth so common to
all. Somewhat they are corrupted into the fashion of the Sarmatians by
the inter-marriages of the principal sort with that nation: from
whence the Venedians have derived very many of their customs and a
great resemblance. For they are continually traversing and infesting
with robberies all the forests and mountains lying between the
Peucinians and Fennians. Yet they are rather reckoned amongst the
Germans, for that they have fixed houses, and carry shields, and
prefer travelling on foot, and excel in swiftness. Usages these, all
widely differing from those of the Sarmatians, who live on horseback
and dwell in waggons. In wonderful savageness live the nation of the
Fennians, and in beastly poverty, destitute of arms, of horses, and of
homes; their food, the common herbs; their apparel, skins; their bed,
the earth; their only hope in their arrows, which for want of iron
they point with bones. Their common support they have from the chase,
women as well as men; for with these the former wander up and down,
and crave a portion of the prey. Nor other shelter have they even for
their babes, against the violence of tempests and ravening beasts,
than to cover them with the branches of trees twisted together; this a
reception for the old men, and hither resort the young. Such a
condition they judge more happy than the painful occupation of
cultivating the ground, than the labour of rearing houses, than the
agitations of hope and fear attending the defence of their own
property or the seizing that of others. Secure against the designs of
men, secure against the malignity of the Gods, they have accomplished
a thing of infinite difficulty; that to them nothing remains even to
be wished.
What further accounts we have are fabulous: as that the Hellusians
and Oxiones have the countenances and aspect of men, with the bodies
and limbs of savage beasts. This, as a thing about which I have no
certain information, I shall leave untouched.
Main Page
World History Center
*
Because
we believe primary sources of history far surpass secondary sources,
most of the lives of the following individuals are taken from ancient
historians such as Plutarch, Pliny, Suetonius and Tacitus
|