We are working to restore the Unionpedia app on the Google Play Store
OutgoingIncoming
🌟We've simplified our design for better navigation!
Instagram Facebook X LinkedIn

Germanic peoples

Index Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples were tribal groups who once occupied Northwestern and Central Europe and Scandinavia during antiquity and into the early Middle Ages. [1]

Table of Contents

  1. 435 relations: Aachen, Aedui, Aesti, Agilulf, Alans, Alaric I, Alboin, Alcis (gods), Alemanni, Alliterative verse, Amal dynasty, Ambrones, Ancient Greek, Andreas Heusler, Angles (tribe), Anglo-Saxon mission, Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Anglo-Saxons, Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe, Antonine Plague, Archaeology of Northern Europe, Ardaric, Arianism, Ariovistus, Arminius, Athanaric, Athanaric's Wall, Atharvaveda, Attila, Augustus, Austrasia, Auxilia, Æsir, Łysogóry, Baiuvarii, Baldr, Baltic Finnic peoples, Baltic languages, Balto-Slavic languages, Balts, Barbarian kingdoms, Bastarnae, Batavi (Germanic tribe), Battle of Abritus, Battle of Adrianople, Battle of Magetobriga, Battle of Nedao, Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, Battle of Vosges (58 BC), ... Expand index (385 more) »

  2. 2nd-millennium BC establishments
  3. Indo-European peoples

Aachen

Aachen (French: Aix-la-Chapelle; Oche; Aquae Granni or Aquisgranum) is the 13th-largest city in North Rhine-Westphalia and the 27th-largest city of Germany, with around 261,000 inhabitants.

See Germanic peoples and Aachen

Aedui

The Aedui or Haedui (Gaulish: *Aiduoi, 'the Ardent'; Aἴδουοι) were a Gallic tribe dwelling in what is now the region of Burgundy during the Iron Age and the Roman period.

See Germanic peoples and Aedui

Aesti

The Aesti (also Aestii, Astui or Aests) were an ancient people first described by the Roman historian Tacitus in his treatise Germania (circa 98 AD).

See Germanic peoples and Aesti

Agilulf

Agilulf (555 – April 616), called the Thuringian and nicknamed Ago, was a duke of Turin and king of the Lombards from 591 until his death.

See Germanic peoples and Agilulf

Alans

The Alans (Latin: Alani) were an ancient and medieval Iranic nomadic pastoral people who migrated to what is today North Caucasus – while some continued on to Europe and later North-Africa.

See Germanic peoples and Alans

Alaric I

Alaric I (𐌰𐌻𐌰𐍂𐌴𐌹𐌺𐍃, Alarīks, "ruler of all"; c. 370 – 411 AD) was the first king of the Visigoths, from 395 to 410.

See Germanic peoples and Alaric I

Alboin

Alboin (530s – 28 June 572) was king of the Lombards from about 560 until 572.

See Germanic peoples and Alboin

Alcis (gods)

The Alcis or Alci (Proto-Germanic alhiz ~ algiz) were a pair of divine young brothers worshipped by the Naharvali, an ancient Germanic tribe from Central Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Alcis (gods)

Alemanni

The Alemanni or Alamanni were a confederation of Germanic tribes.

See Germanic peoples and Alemanni

Alliterative verse

In prosody, alliterative verse is a form of verse that uses alliteration as the principal device to indicate the underlying metrical structure, as opposed to other devices such as rhyme.

See Germanic peoples and Alliterative verse

Amal dynasty

The Amali – also called Amals, Amalings or Amalungs – were a leading dynasty of the Goths, a Germanic people who confronted the Roman Empire during the decline of the Western Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Amal dynasty

Ambrones

The Ambrones (Ἄμβρωνες) were an ancient tribe mentioned by Roman authors.

See Germanic peoples and Ambrones

Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek (Ἑλληνῐκή) includes the forms of the Greek language used in ancient Greece and the ancient world from around 1500 BC to 300 BC.

See Germanic peoples and Ancient Greek

Andreas Heusler

Andreas Heusler (10 August 1865 – 28 February 1940) was a Swiss philologist who specialized in Germanic studies.

See Germanic peoples and Andreas Heusler

Angles (tribe)

The Angles were one of the main Germanic peoples who settled in Great Britain in the post-Roman period.

See Germanic peoples and Angles (tribe)

Anglo-Saxon mission

Anglo-Saxon missionaries were instrumental in the spread of Christianity in the Frankish Empire during the 8th century, continuing the work of Hiberno-Scottish missionaries which had been spreading Celtic Christianity across the Frankish Empire as well as in Scotland and Anglo-Saxon England itself during the 6th century (see Anglo-Saxon Christianity).

See Germanic peoples and Anglo-Saxon mission

Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain

The settlement of Great Britain by diverse Germanic peoples led to the development of a new Anglo-Saxon cultural identity and shared Germanic language, Old English, which was most closely related to Old Frisian on the other side of the North Sea.

See Germanic peoples and Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain

Anglo-Saxons

The Anglo-Saxons, the English or Saxons of Britain, were a cultural group who spoke Old English and inhabited much of what is now England and south-eastern Scotland in the Early Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Anglo-Saxons

Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe

Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines, sometimes called pole gods, have been found at many archaeological sites in Central and Northern Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Anthropomorphic wooden cult figurines of Central and Northern Europe

Antonine Plague

The Antonine Plague of AD 165 to 180, also known as the Plague of Galen (after Galen, the Greek physician who described it), was a prolonged and destructive epidemic, which impacted the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Antonine Plague

Archaeology of Northern Europe

The archaeology of Northern Europe studies the prehistory of Scandinavia and the adjacent North European Plain, roughly corresponding to the territories of modern Sweden, Norway, Denmark, northern Germany, Poland and the Netherlands.

See Germanic peoples and Archaeology of Northern Europe

Ardaric

Ardaric (Ardaricus; c. 450 AD) was the king of the Gepids, a Germanic tribe closely related to the Goths.

See Germanic peoples and Ardaric

Arianism

Arianism (Ἀρειανισμός) is a Christological doctrine considered heretical by all modern mainstream branches of Christianity.

See Germanic peoples and Arianism

Ariovistus

Ariovistus was a leader of the Suebi and other allied Germanic peoples in the second quarter of the 1st century BC.

See Germanic peoples and Ariovistus

Arminius

Arminius (18/17 BC–AD 21) was a chieftain of the Germanic Cherusci tribe who is best known for commanding an alliance of Germanic tribes at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in AD 9, in which three Roman legions under the command of general and governor Publius Quinctilius Varus were destroyed.

See Germanic peoples and Arminius

Athanaric

Athanaric or Atanaric (Athanaricus; died 381) was king of several branches of the Thervingian Goths for at least two decades in the 4th century.

See Germanic peoples and Athanaric

Athanaric's Wall

Athanaric's Wall, also called Lower Trajan's Wall or Southern Trajan's Wall, was a fortification line probably erected by Athanaric (the king of the Thervingi), between the banks of river Gerasius (modern Prut) and the Danube to the land of Taifali (modern Oltenia).

See Germanic peoples and Athanaric's Wall

Atharvaveda

The Atharvaveda or Atharva Veda (अथर्ववेद,, from अथर्वन्, and वेद, "knowledge") or Atharvana Veda (अथर्वणवेद) is the "knowledge storehouse of atharvāṇas, the procedures for everyday life".

See Germanic peoples and Atharvaveda

Attila

Attila, frequently called Attila the Hun, was the ruler of the Huns from 434 until his death, in early 453.

See Germanic peoples and Attila

Augustus

Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus (born Gaius Octavius; 23 September 63 BC – 19 August AD 14), also known as Octavian (Octavianus), was the founder of the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Augustus

Austrasia

Austrasia was the northeastern kingdom within the core of the Frankish empire during the Early Middle Ages, centring on the Meuse, Middle Rhine and the Moselle rivers.

See Germanic peoples and Austrasia

Auxilia

The auxilia were introduced as non-citizen troops attached to the citizen legions by Augustus after his reorganisation of the Imperial Roman army from 27 BC.

See Germanic peoples and Auxilia

Æsir

Æsir (Old Norse; singular: áss) or ēse (Old English; singular: ōs) are gods in Germanic paganism.

See Germanic peoples and Æsir

Łysogóry

Łysogóry is the largest mountain range in the Świętokrzyskie Mountains of central Poland.

See Germanic peoples and Łysogóry

Baiuvarii

The Baiuvarii, Bavarii, or Bavarians (Bajuwaren) were a Germanic people who lived in or near modern-day Bavaria (which is named after them), Austria, and South Tyrol.

See Germanic peoples and Baiuvarii

Baldr

Baldr (Old Norse also Balder, Baldur) is a god in Germanic mythology.

See Germanic peoples and Baldr

Baltic Finnic peoples

The Baltic Finnic peoples, often simply referred to as the Finnic peoples, are the peoples inhabiting the Baltic Sea region in Northern and Eastern Europe who speak Finnic languages.

See Germanic peoples and Baltic Finnic peoples

Baltic languages

The Baltic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family spoken natively or as a second language by a population of about 6.5–7.0 million people mainly in areas extending east and southeast of the Baltic Sea in Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Baltic languages

Balto-Slavic languages

The Balto-Slavic languages form a branch of the Indo-European family of languages, traditionally comprising the Baltic and Slavic languages.

See Germanic peoples and Balto-Slavic languages

Balts

The Balts or Baltic peoples (baltai, balti) are a group of peoples inhabiting the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea who speak Baltic languages. Germanic peoples and balts are indo-European peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Balts

Barbarian kingdoms

The barbarian kingdoms were states founded by various non-Roman, primarily Germanic, peoples in Western Europe and North Africa following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century.

See Germanic peoples and Barbarian kingdoms

Bastarnae

The Bastarnae (Latin variants: Bastarni or Basternae; Βαστάρναι or Βαστέρναι), sometimes called the Peuci or Peucini (Πευκῖνοι), were an ancient people who between 200 BC and 300 AD inhabited areas north of the Roman frontier on the Lower Danube.

See Germanic peoples and Bastarnae

Batavi (Germanic tribe)

The Batavi were an ancient Germanic tribe that lived around the modern Dutch Rhine delta in the area that the Romans called Batavia, from the second half of the first century BC to the third century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Batavi (Germanic tribe)

Battle of Abritus

The Battle of Abritus, also known as the Battle of Forum Terebronii, occurred near Abritus (modern Razgrad) in the Roman province of Moesia Inferior in the summer of 251.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of Abritus

Battle of Adrianople

The Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378), sometimes known as the Battle of Hadrianopolis, was fought between an Eastern Roman army led by the Eastern Roman Emperor Valens and Gothic rebels (largely Thervings as well as Greutungs, non-Gothic Alans, and various local rebels) led by Fritigern.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of Adrianople

Battle of Magetobriga

The Battle of Magetobriga (Amagetobria, Magetobria, Mageto'Bria, Admageto'Bria) was fought in 63 BC between rival tribes in Gaul.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of Magetobriga

Battle of Nedao

The Battle of Nedao was fought in Pannonia in 454 CE between the Huns and their former Germanic vassals.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of Nedao

Battle of the Catalaunian Plains

The Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (or Fields), also called the Battle of the Campus Mauriacus, Battle of Châlons, Battle of Troyes or the Battle of Maurica, took place on June 20, 451 AD, between a coalition, led by the Roman general Flavius Aetius and the Visigothic king Theodoric I, against the Huns and their vassals, commanded by their king, Attila.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of the Catalaunian Plains

Battle of the Teutoburg Forest

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, described as the Varus Disaster or Varian Disaster (Clades Variana) by Roman historians, was a major battle between Germanic tribes and the Roman Empire that took place somewhere near modern Kalkriese from September 8–11, 9 AD, when an alliance of Germanic peoples ambushed three Roman legions led by Publius Quinctilius Varus and their auxiliaries.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of the Teutoburg Forest

Battle of Vosges (58 BC)

The Battle of Vosges, also referred to as the Battle of Vesontio, was fought on September 14, 58 BC between the Germanic tribe of the Suebi, under the leadership of Ariovistus, and six Roman legions under the command of Gaius Julius Caesar.

See Germanic peoples and Battle of Vosges (58 BC)

Bellum Batonianum

The Bellum Batonianum (Latin for 'War of the Batos') was a military conflict fought in the Roman province of Illyricum in the 1st century AD, in which an alliance of native peoples of the two regions of Illyricum, Dalmatia and Pannonia, revolted against the Romans.

See Germanic peoples and Bellum Batonianum

Besançon

Besançon (archaic Bisanz; Vesontio) is the prefecture of the department of Doubs in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté.

See Germanic peoples and Besançon

Bohemia

Bohemia (Čechy; Böhmen; Čěska; Czechy) is the westernmost and largest historical region of the Czech Republic.

See Germanic peoples and Bohemia

Bracteate

A bracteate (from the Latin bractea, a thin piece of metal) is a flat, thin, single-sided gold medal worn as jewelry that was produced in Northern Europe predominantly during the Migration Period of the Germanic Iron Age (including the Vendel era in Sweden).

See Germanic peoples and Bracteate

Bratislava

Bratislava (German: Pressburg or Preßburg,; Hungarian: Pozsony; Slovak: Prešporok), is the capital and largest city of Slovakia and the fourth largest of all cities on Danube river.

See Germanic peoples and Bratislava

Brill Publishers

Brill Academic Publishers, also known as E. J. Brill, Koninklijke Brill, Brill, is a Dutch international academic publisher of books and journals.

See Germanic peoples and Brill Publishers

Bronze Age

The Bronze Age was a historical period lasting from approximately 3300 to 1200 BC.

See Germanic peoples and Bronze Age

Brothers Grimm

The Brothers Grimm (die Brüder Grimm or die Gebrüder Grimm), Jacob (1785–1863) and Wilhelm (1786–1859), were German academics who together collected and published folklore.

See Germanic peoples and Brothers Grimm

Burgundians

The Burgundians were an early Germanic tribe or group of tribes.

See Germanic peoples and Burgundians

Cannabaudes

Cannabaudes or Cannabas (died 271) was a third-century leader of the Gothic tribe of the Tervings, who died in a battle against the Roman emperor Aurelian.

See Germanic peoples and Cannabaudes

Carolingian dynasty

The Carolingian dynasty (known variously as the Carlovingians, Carolingus, Carolings, Karolinger or Karlings) was a Frankish noble family named after Charles Martel and his grandson Charlemagne, descendants of the Arnulfing and Pippinid clans of the 7th century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Carolingian dynasty

Carthage

Carthage was an ancient city in Northern Africa, on the eastern side of the Lake of Tunis in what is now Tunisia.

See Germanic peoples and Carthage

Celtic languages

The Celtic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family, descended from Proto-Celtic.

See Germanic peoples and Celtic languages

Celts

The Celts (see pronunciation for different usages) or Celtic peoples were a collection of Indo-European peoples. Germanic peoples and Celts are indo-European peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Celts

Central Europe

Central Europe is a geographical region of Europe between Eastern, Southern, Western and Northern Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Central Europe

Chain mail

Chain mail (also known as chain-mail, mail or maille) is a type of armour consisting of small metal rings linked together in a pattern to form a mesh.

See Germanic peoples and Chain mail

Chalon-sur-Saône

Chalon-sur-Saône (literally Chalon on Saône) is a city in the Saône-et-Loire department in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté in eastern France.

See Germanic peoples and Chalon-sur-Saône

Charlemagne

Charlemagne (2 April 748 – 28 January 814) was King of the Franks from 768, King of the Lombards from 774, and Emperor, of what is now known as the Carolingian Empire, from 800, holding these titles until his death in 814.

See Germanic peoples and Charlemagne

Charles Martel

Charles Martel (– 22 October 741), Martel being a sobriquet in Old French for "The Hammer", was a Frankish political and military leader who, as Duke and Prince of the Franks and Mayor of the Palace, was the de facto ruler of the Franks from 718 until his death.

See Germanic peoples and Charles Martel

Chatti

The Chatti (also Chatthi or Catti) were an ancient Germanic tribe whose homeland was near the upper Weser (Visurgis) river.

See Germanic peoples and Chatti

Chauci

The Chauci were an ancient Germanic tribe living in the low-lying region between the Rivers Ems and Elbe, on both sides of the Weser and ranging as far inland as the upper Weser.

See Germanic peoples and Chauci

Cherusci

The Cherusci were a Germanic tribe that inhabited parts of the plains and forests of northwestern Germany in the area of the Weser River and present-day Hanover during the first centuries BC and AD.

See Germanic peoples and Cherusci

Christianity

Christianity is an Abrahamic monotheistic religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.

See Germanic peoples and Christianity

Cimbri

The Cimbri (Κίμβροι,; Cimbri) were an ancient tribe in Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Cimbri

Cimbrian War

The Cimbrian or Cimbric War (113–101 BC) was fought between the Roman Republic and the Germanic and Celtic tribes of the Cimbri and the Teutons, Ambrones and Tigurini, who migrated from the Jutland peninsula into Roman-controlled territory, and clashed with Rome and her allies.

See Germanic peoples and Cimbrian War

Client state

In the field of international relations, a client state, is a state that is economically, politically, and militarily subordinated to a more powerful controlling state.

See Germanic peoples and Client state

Cloisonné

Cloisonné is an ancient technique for decorating metalwork objects with colored material held in place or separated by metal strips or wire, normally of gold.

See Germanic peoples and Cloisonné

Clovis I

Clovis (Chlodovechus; reconstructed Frankish: *Hlōdowig; – 27 November 511) was the first king of the Franks to unite all of the Franks under one ruler, changing the form of leadership from a group of petty kings to rule by a single king and ensuring that the kingship was passed down to his heirs.

See Germanic peoples and Clovis I

Cniva

Cniva (mid-3rd century AD) was a Gothic king who invaded the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Cniva

Coenwulf of Mercia

Coenwulf (also spelled Cenwulf, Kenulf, or Kenwulph; Coenulfus) was the King of Mercia from December 796 until his death in 821.

See Germanic peoples and Coenwulf of Mercia

Cognate

In historical linguistics, cognates or lexical cognates are sets of words that have been inherited in direct descent from an etymological ancestor in a common parent language.

See Germanic peoples and Cognate

Cologne

Cologne (Köln; Kölle) is the largest city of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the fourth-most populous city of Germany with nearly 1.1 million inhabitants in the city proper and over 3.1 million people in the Cologne Bonn urban region.

See Germanic peoples and Cologne

Column of Marcus Aurelius

The Column of Marcus Aurelius (Columna Centenaria Divorum Marci et Faustinae, Colonna di Marco Aurelio) is a Roman victory column in Piazza Colonna, Rome, Italy.

See Germanic peoples and Column of Marcus Aurelius

Comitatus

In ancient times, comitatus was an armed escort or retinue, especially in the context of Germanic warrior culture for a warband tied to a leader by an oath of fealty.

See Germanic peoples and Comitatus

Commodus

Commodus (31 August 161 – 31 December 192) was a Roman emperor who ruled from 177 until his assassination in 192.

See Germanic peoples and Commodus

Common Era

Common Era (CE) and Before the Common Era (BCE) are year notations for the Gregorian calendar (and its predecessor, the Julian calendar), the world's most widely used calendar era.

See Germanic peoples and Common Era

Comparative method

In linguistics, the comparative method is a technique for studying the development of languages by performing a feature-by-feature comparison of two or more languages with common descent from a shared ancestor and then extrapolating backwards to infer the properties of that ancestor.

See Germanic peoples and Comparative method

Compound (linguistics)

In linguistics, a compound is a lexeme (less precisely, a word or sign) that consists of more than one stem.

See Germanic peoples and Compound (linguistics)

Constantius III

Constantius III (died 2 September 421) was briefly Western Roman emperor in 421, having earned the throne through his capability as a general under Honorius.

See Germanic peoples and Constantius III

Corded Ware culture

The Corded Ware culture comprises a broad archaeological horizon of Europe between – 2350 BC, thus from the late Neolithic, through the Copper Age, and ending in the early Bronze Age.

See Germanic peoples and Corded Ware culture

Crimean Gothic

Crimean Gothic was a Germanic, probably East Germanic, language spoken by the Crimean Goths in some isolated locations in Crimea until the late 18th century.

See Germanic peoples and Crimean Gothic

Crimean Goths

The Crimean Goths were Greuthungi-Gothic tribes or Western Germanic tribes who bore the name Gothi, a title applied to various Germanic tribes who remained in the lands around the Black Sea, especially in Crimea.

See Germanic peoples and Crimean Goths

Crisis of the Third Century

The Crisis of the Third Century, also known as the Military Anarchy or the Imperial Crisis (235–285), was a period in Roman history during which the Roman Empire had nearly collapsed under the combined pressure of repeated foreign invasions, civil wars and economic disintegration.

See Germanic peoples and Crisis of the Third Century

Crossing of the Rhine

The crossing of the Rhine River by a mixed group of barbarians which included Vandals, Alans and Suebi is traditionally considered to have occurred on the last day of the year 406 (December 31, 406).

See Germanic peoples and Crossing of the Rhine

Danube

The Danube (see also other names) is the second-longest river in Europe, after the Volga in Russia.

See Germanic peoples and Danube

Decius

Gaius Messius Quintus Trajanus Decius (201June 251), known as Trajan Decius or simply Decius, was Roman emperor from 249 to 251.

See Germanic peoples and Decius

Deer

A deer (deer) or true deer is a hoofed ruminant ungulate of the family Cervidae (informally the deer family).

See Germanic peoples and Deer

Dialect

Dialect (from Latin,, from the Ancient Greek word, 'discourse', from, 'through' and, 'I speak') refers to two distinctly different types of linguistic relationships.

See Germanic peoples and Dialect

Dialect continuum

A dialect continuum or dialect chain is a series of language varieties spoken across some geographical area such that neighboring varieties are mutually intelligible, but the differences accumulate over distance so that widely separated varieties may not be.

See Germanic peoples and Dialect continuum

Distaff

A distaff (also called a rock"Rock." The Oxford English Dictionary. 2nd ed. 1989.) is a tool used in spinning.

See Germanic peoples and Distaff

Dniester

The Dniester is a transboundary river in Eastern Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Dniester

Domitian

Domitian (Domitianus; 24 October 51 – 18 September 96) was Roman emperor from 81 to 96.

See Germanic peoples and Domitian

Dwarf (folklore)

A dwarf is a type of supernatural being in Germanic folklore.

See Germanic peoples and Dwarf (folklore)

Early Middle Ages

The Early Middle Ages (or early medieval period), sometimes controversially referred to as the Dark Ages, is typically regarded by historians as lasting from the late 5th to the 10th century.

See Germanic peoples and Early Middle Ages

Early Slavs

The early Slavs were speakers of Indo-European dialects who lived during the Migration Period and the Early Middle Ages (approximately from the 5th to the 10th centuries AD) in Central, Eastern and Southeast Europe and established the foundations for the Slavic nations through the Slavic states of the Early and High Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Early Slavs

East Francia

East Francia (Latin: Francia orientalis) or the Kingdom of the East Franks (Regnum Francorum orientalium) was a successor state of Charlemagne's empire ruled by the Carolingian dynasty until 911.

See Germanic peoples and East Francia

East Germanic languages

The East Germanic languages, also called the Oder-Vistula Germanic languages, are a group of extinct Germanic languages that were spoken by East Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and East Germanic languages

Edward James (historian)

Edward Frederick James (born 14 May 1947) is a British scholar of medieval history and science fiction.

See Germanic peoples and Edward James (historian)

Einkorn wheat

Einkorn wheat (from German Einkorn, literally "single grain") can refer either to a wild species of wheat (Triticum) or to its domesticated form.

See Germanic peoples and Einkorn wheat

Elbe

The Elbe (Labe; Ilv or Elv; Upper and Łobjo) is one of the major rivers of Central Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Elbe

Elder Futhark

The Elder Futhark (or Fuþark), also known as the Older Futhark, Old Futhark, or Germanic Futhark, is the oldest form of the runic alphabets.

See Germanic peoples and Elder Futhark

Elf

An elf (elves) is a type of humanoid supernatural being in Germanic folklore.

See Germanic peoples and Elf

Emmer

Emmer wheat or hulled wheat is a type of awned wheat.

See Germanic peoples and Emmer

English Channel

The English Channel, also known as the Channel, is an arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates Southern England from northern France.

See Germanic peoples and English Channel

Epirus

Epirus is a geographical and historical region in southeastern Europe, now shared between Greece and Albania.

See Germanic peoples and Epirus

Ermanaric

Ermanaric (died 376) was a Greuthungian Gothic king who before the Hunnic invasion evidently ruled a sizable portion of Oium, the part of Scythia inhabited by the Goths at the time.

See Germanic peoples and Ermanaric

Etruscan alphabet

The Etruscan alphabet was used by the Etruscans, an ancient civilization of central and northern Italy, to write their language, from about 700 BC to sometime around 100 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Etruscan alphabet

Fall of the Western Roman Empire

The fall of the Western Roman Empire, also called the fall of the Roman Empire or the fall of Rome, was the loss of central political control in the Western Roman Empire, a process in which the Empire failed to enforce its rule, and its vast territory was divided between several successor polities.

See Germanic peoples and Fall of the Western Roman Empire

Feud

A feud, also known in more extreme cases as a blood feud, vendetta, faida, clan war, gang war, private war, or mob war, is a long-running argument or fight, often between social groups of people, especially families or clans.

See Germanic peoples and Feud

Filigree

Filigree (also less commonly spelled filagree, and formerly written filigrann or filigrene) is a form of intricate metalwork used in jewellery and other small forms of metalwork.

See Germanic peoples and Filigree

Finnic languages

The Finnic or Baltic Finnic languages constitute a branch of the Uralic language family spoken around the Baltic Sea by the Baltic Finnic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Finnic languages

Finno-Permic languages

The Finno-Permic or Finno-Permian languages, sometimes just Finnic or Fennic languages, are a proposed subdivision of the Uralic languages which comprise the Balto-Finnic languages, Sámi languages, Mordvinic languages, Mari language, Permic languages and likely a number of extinct languages.

See Germanic peoples and Finno-Permic languages

Finno-Samic languages

The Finno-Samic languages are a hypothetical subgroup of the Uralic family, and are made up of 22 languages classified into either the Sami languages, which are spoken by the Sami people who inhabit the Sápmi region of northern Fennoscandia, or Finnic languages, which include the major languages Finnish and Estonian.

See Germanic peoples and Finno-Samic languages

Flavian dynasty

The Flavian dynasty, lasting from AD 69 to 96, was the second dynastic line of emperors to rule the Roman Empire following the Julio-Claudians, encompassing the reigns of Vespasian and his two sons, Titus and Domitian.

See Germanic peoples and Flavian dynasty

Flavius Aetius

Flavius Aetius (also spelled Aëtius;; 390 – 454) was a Roman general and statesman of the closing period of the Western Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Flavius Aetius

Flax

Flax, also known as common flax or linseed, is a flowering plant, Linum usitatissimum, in the family Linaceae.

See Germanic peoples and Flax

Francia

The Kingdom of the Franks (Regnum Francorum), also known as the Frankish Kingdom, the Frankish Empire (Imperium Francorum) or Francia, was the largest post-Roman barbarian kingdom in Western Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Francia

Frankish language

Frankish (reconstructed endonym: *italic), also known as Old Franconian or Old Frankish, was the West Germanic language spoken by the Franks from the 5th to 9th century.

See Germanic peoples and Frankish language

Franks

Aristocratic Frankish burial items from the Merovingian dynasty The Franks (Franci or gens Francorum;; Francs.) were a western European people during the Roman Empire and Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Franks

Frigg

Frigg (Old Norse) is a goddess, one of the Æsir, in Germanic mythology.

See Germanic peoples and Frigg

Frisians

The Frisians are an ethnic group indigenous to the coastal regions of the Netherlands, north-western Germany and southern Denmark, and during the Early Middle Ages in the north-western coastal zone of Flanders, Belgium.

See Germanic peoples and Frisians

Fulla

Fulla (Old Norse:, possibly 'bountiful') or Volla (Old High German, 'plenitude') is a goddess in Germanic mythology.

See Germanic peoples and Fulla

Funen

Funen (Fyn), with an area of, is the third-largest island of Denmark, after Zealand and Vendsyssel-Thy.

See Germanic peoples and Funen

Funnelbeaker culture

The Funnel(-neck-)beaker culture, in short TRB or TBK (Trichter(-rand-)becherkultur, Trechterbekercultuur; Tragtbægerkultur), was an archaeological culture in north-central Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Funnelbeaker culture

Gaiseric

Gaiseric (– 25 January 477), also known as Geiseric or Genseric (Gaisericus, Geisericus; reconstructed Vandalic: *Gaisarīx) was king of the Vandals and Alans from 428 to 477.

See Germanic peoples and Gaiseric

Gaius Julius Civilis

Gaius Julius Civilis (AD 25 –) was the leader of the Batavian rebellion against the Romans in 69 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Gaius Julius Civilis

Gaul

Gaul (Gallia) was a region of Western Europe first clearly described by the Romans, encompassing present-day France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, and Northern Italy.

See Germanic peoples and Gaul

Gaulish

Gaulish is an extinct Celtic language spoken in parts of Continental Europe before and during the period of the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Gaulish

Gauls

The Gauls (Galli; Γαλάται, Galátai) were a group of Celtic peoples of mainland Europe in the Iron Age and the Roman period (roughly 5th century BC to 5th century AD).

See Germanic peoples and Gauls

Geats

The Geats (gēatas; gautar; götar), sometimes called Goths, were a large North Germanic tribe who inhabited italic ("land of the Geats") in modern southern Sweden from antiquity until the Late Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Geats

Gepids

The Gepids (Gepidae, Gipedae; Gḗpaides) were an East Germanic tribe who lived in the area of modern Romania, Hungary, and Serbia, roughly between the Tisza, Sava, and Carpathian Mountains.

See Germanic peoples and Gepids

German History (journal)

German History is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal of German history.

See Germanic peoples and German History (journal)

Germani cisrhenani

The Germani cisrhenani (Latin cis-rhenanus "on this side of the Rhine", referring to the Roman or western side), or "Left bank Germani", were a group of Germanic peoples who lived west of the Lower Rhine at the time of the Gallic Wars in the mid-1st century BC.

See Germanic peoples and Germani cisrhenani

Germania

Germania, also called Magna Germania (English: Great Germania), Germania Libera (English: Free Germania), or Germanic Barbaricum to distinguish it from the Roman province of the same name, was a historical region in north-central Europe during the Roman era, which was associated by Roman authors with the Germanic people.

See Germanic peoples and Germania

Germania Antiqua

Germania (also sometimes called Germania Antiqua) was a short-lived Roman province for the duration of 16 years under Augustus, from 7 BC to AD 9.

See Germanic peoples and Germania Antiqua

Germania Inferior

Germania Inferior ("Lower Germania") was a Roman province from AD 85 until the province was renamed Germania Secunda in the 4th century AD, on the west bank of the Rhine bordering the North Sea.

See Germanic peoples and Germania Inferior

Germania Superior

Germania Superior ("Upper Germania") was an imperial province of the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Germania Superior

Germanic heroic legend

Germanic heroic legend (germanische Heldensage) is the heroic literary tradition of the Germanic-speaking peoples, most of which originates or is set in the Migration Period (4th-6th centuries AD).

See Germanic peoples and Germanic heroic legend

Germanic languages

The Germanic languages are a branch of the Indo-European language family spoken natively by a population of about 515 million people mainly in Europe, North America, Oceania and Southern Africa.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic languages

Germanic law

Germanic law is a scholarly term used to describe a series of commonalities between the various law codes (the Leges Barbarorum, 'laws of the barbarians', also called Leges) of the early Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic law

Germanic mythology

Germanic mythology consists of the body of myths native to the Germanic peoples, including Norse mythology, Anglo-Saxon mythology, and Continental Germanic mythology.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic mythology

Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism or Germanic religion refers to the traditional, culturally significant religion of the Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic paganism

Germanic parent language

The Germanic parent language (GPL), also known as Pre-Germanic Indo-European (PreGmc) or Pre-Proto-Germanic (PPG), is the stage of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family that was spoken, after the branch had diverged from Proto-Indo-European but before it evolved into Proto-Germanic during the First Germanic Sound Shift.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic parent language

Germanic philology

Germanic philology is the philological study of the Germanic languages, particularly from a comparative or historical perspective.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic philology

Germanic strong verb

In the Germanic languages, a strong verb is a verb that marks its past tense by means of changes to the stem vowel.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic strong verb

Germanic substrate hypothesis

The Germanic substrate hypothesis attempts to explain the purportedly distinctive nature of the Germanic languages within the context of the Indo-European languages.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic substrate hypothesis

Germanic umlaut

The Germanic umlaut (sometimes called i-umlaut or i-mutation) is a type of linguistic umlaut in which a back vowel changes to the associated front vowel (fronting) or a front vowel becomes closer to (raising) when the following syllable contains,, or.

See Germanic peoples and Germanic umlaut

Germanic verbs

The Germanic language family is one of the language groups that resulted from the breakup of Proto-Indo-European (PIE).

See Germanic peoples and Germanic verbs

Germans

Germans are the natives or inhabitants of Germany, or sometimes more broadly any people who are of German descent or native speakers of the German language.

See Germanic peoples and Germans

Getae

The Getae or Gets (Γέται, singular Γέτης) were a Thracian-related tribe that once inhabited the regions to either side of the Lower Danube, in what is today northern Bulgaria and southern Romania.

See Germanic peoples and Getae

Getica

De origine actibusque Getarum (The Origin and Deeds of the Getae), commonly abbreviated Getica, written in Late Latin by Jordanes in or shortly after 551 AD, claims to be a summary of a voluminous account by Cassiodorus of the origin and history of the Gothic people, which is now lost.

See Germanic peoples and Getica

Gildas

Gildas (English pronunciation:, Breton: Gweltaz) — also known as Gildas Badonicus, Gildas fab Caw (in Middle Welsh texts and antiquarian works) and Gildas Sapiens (Gildas the Wise) — was a 6th-century British monk best known for his scathing religious polemic, which recounts the history of the Britons before and during the coming of the Saxons.

See Germanic peoples and Gildas

Gothic Bible

The Gothic Bible or Wulfila Bible is the Christian Bible in the Gothic language spoken by the Eastern Germanic (Gothic) tribes in the Early Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Gothic Bible

Gothic language

Gothic is an extinct East Germanic language that was spoken by the Goths.

See Germanic peoples and Gothic language

Gothic runic inscriptions

Very few Elder Futhark inscriptions in the Gothic language have been found in the territory historically settled by the Goths (Wielbark culture, Chernyakhov culture).

See Germanic peoples and Gothic runic inscriptions

Gothic War (376–382)

Between 376 and 382 the Goths fought against the Eastern Roman Empire, one of several Gothic Wars in Roman history.

See Germanic peoples and Gothic War (376–382)

Gothicism

Gothicism or Gothism (Göticism; Gothicismus) was a dacianistic cultural movement in Sweden, which took honor in being a Swede, who were related to the illustrious Goths as the Goths originated from Götaland.

See Germanic peoples and Gothicism

Goths

The Goths (translit; Gothi, Gótthoi) were Germanic people who played a major role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the emergence of medieval Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Goths

Gotini

The Gotini (in Tacitus), who are generally equated to the Cotini in other sources, were a Gaulish tribe living during Roman times in the mountains approximately near the modern borders of the Czech Republic, Poland, and Slovakia.

See Germanic peoples and Gotini

Grímnismál

Grímnismál (Old Norse:; 'The Lay of Grímnir') is one of the mythological poems of the Poetic Edda.

See Germanic peoples and Grímnismál

Greco-Roman world

The Greco-Roman civilization (also Greco-Roman culture or Greco-Latin culture; spelled Graeco-Roman in the Commonwealth), as understood by modern scholars and writers, includes the geographical regions and countries that culturally—and so historically—were directly and intimately influenced by the language, culture, government and religion of the Greeks and Romans.

See Germanic peoples and Greco-Roman world

Greuthungi

The Greuthungi (also spelled Greutungi) were a Gothic people who lived on the Pontic steppe between the Dniester and Don rivers in what is now Ukraine, in the 3rd and the 4th centuries.

See Germanic peoples and Greuthungi

Grimm's law

Grimm's law, also known as the First Germanic Sound Shift, is a set of sound laws describing the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) stop consonants as they developed in Proto-Germanic in the first millennium BC, first discovered by Rasmus Rask but systematically put forward by Jacob Grimm.

See Germanic peoples and Grimm's law

Gudme

Gudme is a town in central Denmark with a population of 925 (1 January 2024), The Mobile Database from Statistics Denmark located in Svendborg municipality on the island of Funen in Region of Southern Denmark.

See Germanic peoples and Gudme

Gullgubber

Gullgubber (Norwegian) or guldgubber (Danish), guldgubbar (Swedish), are art-objects, amulets, or offerings found in Scandinavia and dating to the Nordic Iron Age.

See Germanic peoples and Gullgubber

Gustaf Kossinna

Gustaf Kossinna (28 September 1858 – 20 December 1931) was a German philologist and archaeologist who was Professor of German Archaeology at the University of Berlin.

See Germanic peoples and Gustaf Kossinna

Guy Halsall

Guy Halsall (born 1964) is an English historian and academic, specialising in Early Medieval Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Guy Halsall

Haplogroup I-M253

Haplogroup I-M253, also known as I1, is a Y chromosome haplogroup.

See Germanic peoples and Haplogroup I-M253

Heiko Steuer

Heiko Steuer (born 30 October 1939) is a German archaeologist, notable for his research into social and economic history in early Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Heiko Steuer

Heinrich Beck (philologist)

Heinrich Beck (born 2 April 1929 – 5 June 2019) was a German philologist who specialized in Germanic studies.

See Germanic peoples and Heinrich Beck (philologist)

Hercynian Forest

The Hercynian Forest was an ancient and dense forest that stretched across Western Central Europe, from Northeastern France to the Carpathian Mountains, including most of Southern Germany, though its boundaries are a matter of debate.

See Germanic peoples and Hercynian Forest

Herwig Wolfram

Herwig Wolfram (born 14 February 1934) is an Austrian historian who is Professor Emeritus of Medieval History and Auxiliary Sciences of History at the University of Vienna and the former Director of the.

See Germanic peoples and Herwig Wolfram

Hispania

Hispania (Hispanía; Hispānia) was the Roman name for the Iberian Peninsula.

See Germanic peoples and Hispania

Historical Vedic religion

The historical Vedic religion, also known as Vedicism and Vedism, sometimes called "Ancient Hinduism", constituted the religious ideas and practices prevalent amongst the Indo-Aryan peoples of the northwest Indian subcontinent (Punjab and the western Ganges plain) during the Vedic period (1500–500 BCE).

See Germanic peoples and Historical Vedic religion

History of the Lombards

The History of the Lombards or the History of the Langobards (Historia Langobardorum) is the chief work by Paul the Deacon, written in the late 8th century.

See Germanic peoples and History of the Lombards

Histria (ancient city)

Histria or Istros (Ἰστρίη) was founded as a Greek colony or polis (πόλις, city) on the western coast of the Black Sea near the mouth of the Danube (known as Ister in Ancient Greek) whose banks are today about 70 km away.

See Germanic peoples and Histria (ancient city)

Holy Roman Emperor

The Holy Roman Emperor, originally and officially the Emperor of the Romans (Imperator Romanorum, Kaiser der Römer) during the Middle Ages, and also known as the Roman-German Emperor since the early modern period (Imperator Germanorum, Roman-German emperor), was the ruler and head of state of the Holy Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Holy Roman Emperor

Honorius (emperor)

Honorius (9 September 384 – 15 August 423) was Roman emperor from 393 to 423.

See Germanic peoples and Honorius (emperor)

Humanism

Humanism is a philosophical stance that emphasizes the individual and social potential, and agency of human beings, whom it considers the starting point for serious moral and philosophical inquiry.

See Germanic peoples and Humanism

Huns

The Huns were a nomadic people who lived in Central Asia, the Caucasus, and Eastern Europe between the 4th and 6th centuries AD.

See Germanic peoples and Huns

Hygelac

Hygelac (Hygelāc; Hugleikr; Hugilaikaz; Ch(l)ochilaicus or Hugilaicus; died 516 or 521) was a king of the Geats according to the poem Beowulf.

See Germanic peoples and Hygelac

Illyrian language

The Illyrian language was an Indo-European language or group of languages spoken by the Illyrians in Southeast Europe during antiquity.

See Germanic peoples and Illyrian language

Indo-European ablaut

In linguistics, the Indo-European ablaut (from German Ablaut) is a system of apophony (regular vowel variations) in the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE).

See Germanic peoples and Indo-European ablaut

Indo-European languages

The Indo-European languages are a language family native to the overwhelming majority of Europe, the Iranian plateau, and the northern Indian subcontinent.

See Germanic peoples and Indo-European languages

Iranian peoples

The Iranian peoples or Iranic peoples are a diverse grouping of peoples who are identified by their usage of the Iranian languages (branch of the Indo-European languages) and other cultural similarities.

See Germanic peoples and Iranian peoples

Iron Age

The Iron Age is the final epoch of the three historical Metal Ages, after the Chalcolithic and Bronze Age. Germanic peoples and Iron Age are 2nd-millennium BC establishments.

See Germanic peoples and Iron Age

Istaby Runestone

The Istaby Runestone, listed in the Rundata catalog as DR 359, is a runestone with an inscription in Proto-Norse which was raised in Istaby, Blekinge, Sweden, during the Vendel era (–790).

See Germanic peoples and Istaby Runestone

Italian Peninsula

The Italian Peninsula (Italian: penisola italica or penisola italiana), also known as the Italic Peninsula, Apennine Peninsula or Italian Boot, is a peninsula extending from the southern Alps in the north to the central Mediterranean Sea in the south, which comprises much of the country of Italy and the enclaved microstates of San Marino and Vatican City.

See Germanic peoples and Italian Peninsula

Italic languages

The Italic languages form a branch of the Indo-European language family, whose earliest known members were spoken on the Italian Peninsula in the first millennium BC.

See Germanic peoples and Italic languages

Italy

Italy, officially the Italian Republic, is a country in Southern and Western Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Italy

Jacob Grimm

Jacob Ludwig Karl Grimm (4 January 1785 – 20 September 1863), also known as Ludwig Karl, was a German author, linguist, philologist, jurist, and folklorist.

See Germanic peoples and Jacob Grimm

Jastorf culture

The Jastorf culture was an Iron Age material culture in what is now northern Germany and the southern Scandinavian Peninsula, spanning the 6th to 1st centuries BC, forming the southern part of the Pre-Roman Iron Age.

See Germanic peoples and Jastorf culture

Joinery

Joinery is a part of woodworking that involves joining pieces of wood, engineered lumber, or synthetic substitutes (such as laminate), to produce more complex items.

See Germanic peoples and Joinery

Jordanes

Jordanes (Greek: Ιορδάνης), also written as Jordanis or Jornandes, was a 6th-century Eastern Roman bureaucrat, widely believed to be of Gothic descent, who became a historian later in life.

See Germanic peoples and Jordanes

Julius Caesar

Gaius Julius Caesar (12 July 100 BC – 15 March 44 BC) was a Roman general and statesman.

See Germanic peoples and Julius Caesar

Justinian I

Justinian I (Iūstīniānus,; Ioustinianós,; 48214 November 565), also known as Justinian the Great, was the Eastern Roman emperor from 527 to 565.

See Germanic peoples and Justinian I

Jutes

The Jutes were one of the Germanic tribes who settled in Great Britain after the departure of the Romans.

See Germanic peoples and Jutes

Jutland

Jutland (Jylland, Jyske Halvø or Cimbriske Halvø; Jütland, Kimbrische Halbinsel or Jütische Halbinsel) is a peninsula of Northern Europe that forms the continental portion of Denmark and part of northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein).

See Germanic peoples and Jutland

Kathryn Welch

Kathryn Welch is an honorary associate professor in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Sydney, and a specialist in Roman Republican and early Imperial History.

See Germanic peoples and Kathryn Welch

Kingdom of Burgundy

Kingdom of Burgundy was a name given to various states located in Western Europe during the Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Kingdom of Burgundy

Konrad Peutinger

Konrad Peutinger (14 October 1465 – 28 December 1547) was a German humanist, jurist, diplomat, politician, economist and archaeologist, serving as Emperor Maximilian I's chief archaeological adviser.

See Germanic peoples and Konrad Peutinger

La Tène culture

The La Tène culture was a European Iron Age culture.

See Germanic peoples and La Tène culture

Late antiquity

Late antiquity is sometimes defined as spanning from the end of classical antiquity to the local start of the Middle Ages, from around the late 3rd century up to the 7th or 8th century in Europe and adjacent areas bordering the Mediterranean Basin depending on location.

See Germanic peoples and Late antiquity

Latin script

The Latin script, also known as the Roman script, is a writing system based on the letters of the classical Latin alphabet, derived from a form of the Greek alphabet which was in use in the ancient Greek city of Cumae in Magna Graecia.

See Germanic peoples and Latin script

Lead

Lead is a chemical element; it has symbol Pb (from Latin plumbum) and atomic number 82.

See Germanic peoples and Lead

Leonard Neidorf

Leonard Neidorf (born) is an American philologist who is Professor of English at Nanjing University.

See Germanic peoples and Leonard Neidorf

Lexical innovation

In linguistics, specifically the sub-field of lexical semantics, the concept of lexical innovation includes the use of neologism or new meanings (so-called semantic augmentation) in order to introduce new terms into a language's lexicon.

See Germanic peoples and Lexical innovation

Lexicon

A lexicon (plural: lexicons, rarely lexica) is the vocabulary of a language or branch of knowledge (such as nautical or medical).

See Germanic peoples and Lexicon

Liberalism

Liberalism is a political and moral philosophy based on the rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, right to private property and equality before the law.

See Germanic peoples and Liberalism

Limes (Roman Empire)

Limes (Latin;,: limites) is a term used primarily for the Germanic border defence or delimiting system of Ancient Rome marking the borders of the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Limes (Roman Empire)

Limes Germanicus

The Limes Germanicus (Latin for Germanic frontier), or 'Germanic Limes', is the name given in modern times to a line of frontier (limes) fortifications that bounded the ancient Roman provinces of Germania Inferior, Germania Superior and Raetia, dividing the Roman Empire and the unsubdued Germanic tribes from the years 83 to about 260 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Limes Germanicus

Lindisfarne

Lindisfarne, also called Holy Island, is a tidal island off the northeast coast of England, which constitutes the civil parish of Holy Island in Northumberland.

See Germanic peoples and Lindisfarne

Linguistic homeland

In historical linguistics, the homeland or Urheimat (from German ur- "original" and Heimat, home) of a proto-language is the region in which it was spoken before splitting into different daughter languages.

See Germanic peoples and Linguistic homeland

List of early Germanic peoples

The list of early Germanic peoples is a register of ancient Germanic cultures, tribal groups, and other alliances of Germanic tribes and civilisations in ancient times.

See Germanic peoples and List of early Germanic peoples

List of Germanic deities

In Germanic paganism, the indigenous religion of the ancient Germanic peoples who inhabit Germanic Europe, there were a number of different gods and goddesses.

See Germanic peoples and List of Germanic deities

Literary topos

In classical Greek rhetoric, topos, pl. topoi, (from τόπος "place", elliptical for τόπος κοινός tópos koinós, 'common place'), in Latin locus (from locus communis), refers to a method for developing arguments.

See Germanic peoples and Literary topos

Liutprand, King of the Lombards

Liutprand was the king of the Lombards from 712 to 744 and is chiefly remembered for his multiple phases of law-giving, in fifteen separate sessions from 713 to 735 inclusive, and his long reign, which brought him into a series of conflicts, mostly successful, with most of Italy.

See Germanic peoples and Liutprand, King of the Lombards

Liuvigild

Liuvigild, Leuvigild, Leovigild, or Leovigildo (Spanish and Portuguese), (519 – 586) was a Visigothic King of Hispania and Septimania from 568 to 586.

See Germanic peoples and Liuvigild

Lombardic language

Lombardic or Langobardic (Langobardisch) is an extinct West Germanic language that was spoken by the Lombards (Langobardi), the Germanic people who settled in Italy in the sixth century.

See Germanic peoples and Lombardic language

Lombards

The Lombards or Longobards (Longobardi) were a Germanic people who conquered most of the Italian Peninsula between 568 and 774.

See Germanic peoples and Lombards

Loom

A loom is a device used to weave cloth and tapestry.

See Germanic peoples and Loom

Lower Rhine

Lower Rhine (Niederrhein,; kilometres 660 to 1,033 of the Rhine) refers to the section of the Rhine between Bonn in Germany and the North Sea at Hook of Holland in the Netherlands, including the Nederrijn (Nether Rhine) within the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta; alternatively, Lower Rhine may also refer to just the part upstream of Pannerdens Kop (km 660–865.5), excluding the Nederrijn.

See Germanic peoples and Lower Rhine

Mannus

Mannus, according to the Roman writer Tacitus, was a figure in the creation myths of the Germanic tribes.

See Germanic peoples and Mannus

Marcianopolis

Marcianopolis or Marcianople (Greek: Μαρκιανούπολις), also known as Parthenopolis was an ancient Greek, then Roman capital city and archbishopric in Moesia Inferior.

See Germanic peoples and Marcianopolis

Marcomanni

The Marcomanni were a Germanic people.

See Germanic peoples and Marcomanni

Marcomannic Wars

The Marcomannic Wars (Latin: bellum Germanicum et Sarmaticum, "German and Sarmatian War") were a series of wars lasting from about 166 until 180 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Marcomannic Wars

Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (English:; 26 April 121 – 17 March 180) was Roman emperor from 161 to 180 and a Stoic philosopher.

See Germanic peoples and Marcus Aurelius

Mare (folklore)

A mare (mære, mare,; mara in Old High German, Old Norse, and Swedish) is a malicious entity in Germanic and Slavic folklore that walks on people's chests while they sleep, bringing on nightmares.

See Germanic peoples and Mare (folklore)

Maroboduus

Maroboduus (d. AD 37), also known as Marbod, was a king of the Marcomanni, who were a Germanic Suebian people.

See Germanic peoples and Maroboduus

Matres and Matronae

The Matres (Latin for "mothers") and Matronae (Latin for "matrons") were female deities venerated in Northwestern Europe, of whom relics are found dating from the first to the fifth century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Matres and Matronae

Mayor of the palace

Under the Merovingian dynasty, the mayor of the palace or majordomo.

See Germanic peoples and Mayor of the palace

Mercia

Mercia (Miercna rīċe, "kingdom of the border people"; Merciorum regnum) was one of the three main Anglic kingdoms founded after Sub-Roman Britain was settled by Anglo-Saxons in an era called the Heptarchy.

See Germanic peoples and Mercia

Merseburg charms

The Merseburg charms, Merseburg spells, or Merseburg incantations (die Merseburger Zaubersprüche) are two medieval magic spells, charms or incantations, written in Old High German.

See Germanic peoples and Merseburg charms

Meuse

The Meuse (Moûze) or Maas (Maos or Maas) is a major European river, rising in France and flowing through Belgium and the Netherlands before draining into the North Sea from the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta.

See Germanic peoples and Meuse

Middle Ages

In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages or medieval period (also spelt mediaeval or mediæval) lasted from approximately 500 to 1500 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Middle Ages

Migration Period

The Migration Period (circa 300 to 600 AD), also known as the Barbarian Invasions, was a period in European history marked by large-scale migrations that saw the fall of the Western Roman Empire and subsequent settlement of its former territories by various tribes, and the establishment of the post-Roman kingdoms.

See Germanic peoples and Migration Period

Migration Period art

Migration Period art denotes the artwork of the Germanic peoples during the Migration period (c. 300 – 900).

See Germanic peoples and Migration Period art

Migration Period spear

The spear or lance, together with the bow, the sword, the seax and the shield, was the main equipment of the Germanic warriors during the Migration Period and the Early Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Migration Period spear

Moesia

Moesia (Latin: Moesia; Moisía) was an ancient region and later Roman province situated in the Balkans south of the Danube River.

See Germanic peoples and Moesia

Monophthongization

Monophthongization is a sound change by which a diphthong becomes a monophthong, a type of vowel shift.

See Germanic peoples and Monophthongization

Moorland

Moorland or moor is a type of habitat found in upland areas in temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands and montane grasslands and shrublands biomes, characterised by low-growing vegetation on acidic soils.

See Germanic peoples and Moorland

Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula

The Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, also known as the Arab conquest of Spain, by the Umayyad Caliphate occurred between approximately 711 and the 720s.

See Germanic peoples and Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula

Mutual intelligibility

In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between languages or dialects in which speakers of different but related varieties can readily understand each other without prior familiarity or special effort.

See Germanic peoples and Mutual intelligibility

Nahanarvali

The Nahanarvali, also known as the Nahavali, Naha-Narvali, and Nahanavali, were a Germanic tribe mentioned by the Roman scholar Tacitus in his Germania.

See Germanic peoples and Nahanarvali

National Museum of Denmark

The National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) in Copenhagen is Denmark's largest museum of cultural history, comprising the histories of Danish and foreign cultures, alike.

See Germanic peoples and National Museum of Denmark

Nationalism

Nationalism is an idea and movement that holds that the nation should be congruent with the state.

See Germanic peoples and Nationalism

Nazi Party

The Nazi Party, officially the National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP), was a far-right political party in Germany active between 1920 and 1945 that created and supported the ideology of Nazism.

See Germanic peoples and Nazi Party

Negau helmets

The Negau helmets are 26 bronze helmets (23 of which are preserved) dating to –350 BC, found in 1812 in a cache in Ženjak, near Negau, Duchy of Styria (now Negova, Slovenia).

See Germanic peoples and Negau helmets

Neolithic

The Neolithic or New Stone Age (from Greek νέος 'new' and λίθος 'stone') is an archaeological period, the final division of the Stone Age in Europe, Asia and Africa.

See Germanic peoples and Neolithic

Nero

Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus (born Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus; 15 December AD 37 – 9 June AD 68) was a Roman emperor and the final emperor of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, reigning from AD 54 until his death in AD 68.

See Germanic peoples and Nero

Nerthus

In Germanic paganism, Nerthus is a goddess associated with a ceremonial wagon procession.

See Germanic peoples and Nerthus

Neustria

Neustria was the western part of the Kingdom of the Franks during the Early Middle Ages, in contrast to the eastern Frankish kingdom, Austrasia.

See Germanic peoples and Neustria

Nicene Creed

The Nicene Creed (Sýmvolon tis Nikéas), also called the Creed of Constantinople, is the defining statement of belief of mainstream Christianity and in those Christian denominations that adhere to it.

See Germanic peoples and Nicene Creed

Nijmegen

Nijmegen (Nijmeegs: italics) is the largest city in the Dutch province of Gelderland and the tenth largest of the Netherlands as a whole.

See Germanic peoples and Nijmegen

Nine Herbs Charm

The Nine Herbs Charm, Nigon Wyrta Galdor, Lay of the Nine Healing Herbs, or Nine Wort Spell (among other names) is an Old English charm recorded in the tenth century CE.

See Germanic peoples and Nine Herbs Charm

Non-ferrous metal

In metallurgy, non-ferrous metals are metals or alloys that do not contain iron (allotropes of iron, ferrite, and so on) in appreciable amounts.

See Germanic peoples and Non-ferrous metal

Nordic Bronze Age

The Nordic Bronze Age (also Northern Bronze Age, or Scandinavian Bronze Age) is a period of Scandinavian prehistory from. Germanic peoples and Nordic Bronze Age are 2nd-millennium BC establishments.

See Germanic peoples and Nordic Bronze Age

Norse mythology

Norse, Nordic, or Scandinavian mythology, is the body of myths belonging to the North Germanic peoples, stemming from Old Norse religion and continuing after the Christianization of Scandinavia, and into the Nordic folklore of the modern period.

See Germanic peoples and Norse mythology

North Germanic languages

The North Germanic languages make up one of the three branches of the Germanic languages—a sub-family of the Indo-European languages—along with the West Germanic languages and the extinct East Germanic languages.

See Germanic peoples and North Germanic languages

Northumbria

Northumbria (Norþanhymbra rīċe; Regnum Northanhymbrorum) was an early medieval Anglo-Saxon kingdom in what is now Northern England and south-east Scotland.

See Germanic peoples and Northumbria

Northwest Germanic

Northwest Germanic is a proposed grouping of the Germanic languages, representing the current consensus among Germanic historical linguists.

See Germanic peoples and Northwest Germanic

Numerus Batavorum

The Numerus Batavorum, also called the cohors Germanorum,Suetonius, Galba.

See Germanic peoples and Numerus Batavorum

Odin

Odin (from Óðinn) is a widely revered god in Germanic paganism.

See Germanic peoples and Odin

Odoacer

Odoacer (– 15 March 493 AD), also spelled Odovacer or Odovacar, was a barbarian soldier and statesman from the Middle Danube who deposed the Western Roman child emperor Romulus Augustulus and became the ruler of Italy (476–493).

See Germanic peoples and Odoacer

Old English

Old English (Englisċ or Ænglisc), or Anglo-Saxon, was the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the early Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Old English

Old Frisian

Old Frisian was a West Germanic language spoken between the 8th and 16th centuries along the North Sea coast, roughly between the mouths of the Rhine and Weser rivers.

See Germanic peoples and Old Frisian

Old High German

Old High German (OHG; Althochdeutsch (Ahdt., Ahd.)) is the earliest stage of the German language, conventionally identified as the period from around 500/750 to 1050.

See Germanic peoples and Old High German

Old Irish

Old Irish, also called Old Gaelic (Goídelc, Ogham script: ᚌᚑᚔᚇᚓᚂᚉ; Sean-Ghaeilge; Seann-Ghàidhlig; Shenn Yernish or Shenn Ghaelg), is the oldest form of the Goidelic/Gaelic language for which there are extensive written texts.

See Germanic peoples and Old Irish

Old Norse

Old Norse, Old Nordic, or Old Scandinavian is a stage of development of North Germanic dialects before their final divergence into separate Nordic languages.

See Germanic peoples and Old Norse

Old Norse religion

Old Norse religion, also known as Norse paganism, is a branch of Germanic religion which developed during the Proto-Norse period, when the North Germanic peoples separated into a distinct branch of the Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Old Norse religion

Old Saxon

Old Saxon (altsächsische Sprache), also known as Old Low German (altniederdeutsche Sprache), was a Germanic language and the earliest recorded form of Low German (spoken nowadays in Northern Germany, the northeastern Netherlands, southern Denmark, the Americas and parts of Eastern Europe).

See Germanic peoples and Old Saxon

Old Saxon Baptismal Vow

The Old Saxon Baptismal Vow, also called the Old Saxon Catechism, Utrecht Baptismal Vow and Abrenuntiatio Diaboli, is a baptismal vow that was found in a ninth-century manuscript in a monastery library in Mainz, Germany.

See Germanic peoples and Old Saxon Baptismal Vow

Oral tradition

Oral tradition, or oral lore, is a form of human communication in which knowledge, art, ideas and culture are received, preserved, and transmitted orally from one generation to another.

See Germanic peoples and Oral tradition

Orality

Orality is thought and verbal expression in societies where the technologies of literacy (especially writing and print) are unfamiliar to most of the population.

See Germanic peoples and Orality

Origo gentis

In medieval studies, an origo gentis is the origin story of a gens (people).

See Germanic peoples and Origo gentis

Origo Gentis Langobardorum

The Origo Gentis Langobardorum (Latin for "Origin of the tribe of the Lombards") is a short, 7th-century AD Latin account offering a founding myth of the Longobard people.

See Germanic peoples and Origo Gentis Langobardorum

Osi (tribe)

The Osi or Osii were an ancient tribe dwelling north of the Marcomanni and Quadi, in a woody and mountainous country.

See Germanic peoples and Osi (tribe)

Ostrogoths

The Ostrogoths (Ostrogothi, Austrogothi) were a Roman-era Germanic people.

See Germanic peoples and Ostrogoths

Oxford University Press

Oxford University Press (OUP) is the publishing house of the University of Oxford.

See Germanic peoples and Oxford University Press

Pannonian Avars

The Pannonian Avars were an alliance of several groups of Eurasian nomads of various origins.

See Germanic peoples and Pannonian Avars

Pannonian Basin

The Pannonian Basin, or Carpathian Basin, is a large sedimentary basin situated in southeast Central Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Pannonian Basin

Paris

Paris is the capital and largest city of France.

See Germanic peoples and Paris

Paul the Deacon

Paul the Deacon (720s 13 April in 796, 797, 798, or 799 AD), also known as Paulus Diaconus, Warnefridus, Barnefridus, or Winfridus, and sometimes suffixed Cassinensis (i.e. "of Monte Cassino"), was a Benedictine monk, scribe, and historian of the Lombards.

See Germanic peoples and Paul the Deacon

Pepin the Short

Pepin the Short (Pépin le Bref; – 24 September 768), was King of the Franks from 751 until his death in 768.

See Germanic peoples and Pepin the Short

Philippopolis (Thrace)

Philippopolis (Φιλιππούπολις, Φιλιππόπολις) is one of the names of the ancient city (amongst which are Thracian Eumolpia/Pulpudeva, Roman Trimontium) situated where Plovdiv is today.

See Germanic peoples and Philippopolis (Thrace)

Philology

Philology is the study of language in oral and written historical sources.

See Germanic peoples and Philology

Phoenician alphabet

The Phoenician alphabet is an abjad (consonantal alphabet) used across the Mediterranean civilization of Phoenicia for most of the 1st millennium BC.

See Germanic peoples and Phoenician alphabet

Phonology

Phonology is the branch of linguistics that studies how languages systematically organize their phones or, for sign languages, their constituent parts of signs.

See Germanic peoples and Phonology

Picts

The Picts were a group of peoples in what is now Scotland north of the Firth of Forth, in the Early Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Picts

Pippinids

The Pippinids and the Arnulfings were two Frankish aristocratic families from Austrasia during the Merovingian period.

See Germanic peoples and Pippinids

Pliny the Elder

Gaius Plinius Secundus (AD 23/24 AD 79), called Pliny the Elder, was a Roman author, naturalist, natural philosopher, naval and army commander of the early Roman Empire, and a friend of the emperor Vespasian.

See Germanic peoples and Pliny the Elder

Poetic Edda

The Poetic Edda is the modern name for an untitled collection of Old Norse anonymous narrative poems in alliterative verse.

See Germanic peoples and Poetic Edda

Pomponius Mela

Pomponius Mela, who wrote around AD 43, was the earliest known Roman geographer.

See Germanic peoples and Pomponius Mela

Pontic Olbia

Pontic Olbia (Ὀλβία Ποντική; Olviia) or simply Olbia is an archaeological site of an ancient Greek city on the shore of the Southern Bug estuary (Hypanis or Ὕπανις) in Ukraine, near the village of Parutyne.

See Germanic peoples and Pontic Olbia

Pontic–Caspian steppe

The Pontic–Caspian Steppe is a steppe extending across Eastern Europe to Central Asia, formed by the Caspian and Pontic steppes.

See Germanic peoples and Pontic–Caspian steppe

Pope Gregory I

Pope Gregory I (Gregorius I; – 12 March 604), commonly known as Saint Gregory the Great, was the 64th Bishop of Rome from 3 September 590 to his death.

See Germanic peoples and Pope Gregory I

Pope Pius II

Pope Pius II (Pius PP., Pio II), born Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini (Aeneas Silvius Bartholomeus; 18 October 1405 – 14 August 1464), was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 19 August 1458 to his death.

See Germanic peoples and Pope Pius II

Potter's wheel

In pottery, a potter's wheel is a machine used in the shaping (known as throwing) of clay into round ceramic ware.

See Germanic peoples and Potter's wheel

Procopius

Procopius of Caesarea (Προκόπιος ὁ Καισαρεύς Prokópios ho Kaisareús; Procopius Caesariensis; –565) was a prominent late antique Greek scholar and historian from Caesarea Maritima.

See Germanic peoples and Procopius

Prose Edda

The Prose Edda, also known as the Younger Edda, Snorri's Edda (Snorra Edda) or, historically, simply as Edda, is an Old Norse textbook written in Iceland during the early 13th century.

See Germanic peoples and Prose Edda

Proto-Germanic folklore

Proto-Germanic paganism was the beliefs of the speakers of Proto-Germanic and includes topics such as the Germanic mythology, legendry, and folk beliefs of early Germanic culture.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Germanic folklore

Proto-Germanic language

Proto-Germanic (abbreviated PGmc; also called Common Germanic) is the reconstructed proto-language of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Germanic language

Proto-Indo-European language

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the reconstructed common ancestor of the Indo-European language family.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Indo-European language

Proto-Indo-European mythology

Proto-Indo-European mythology is the body of myths and deities associated with the Proto-Indo-Europeans, speakers of the hypothesized Proto-Indo-European language.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Indo-European mythology

Proto-Indo-European society

Proto-Indo-European society is the reconstructed culture of Proto-Indo-Europeans, the ancient speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language, ancestor of all modern Indo-European languages.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Indo-European society

Proto-language

In the tree model of historical linguistics, a proto-language is a postulated ancestral language from which a number of attested languages are believed to have descended by evolution, forming a language family.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-language

Proto-Norse language

Proto-Norse (also called Ancient Nordic, Ancient Scandinavian, Ancient Norse, Primitive Norse, Proto-Nordic, Proto-Scandinavian and Proto-North Germanic) was an Indo-European language spoken in Scandinavia that is thought to have evolved as a northern dialect of Proto-Germanic in the first centuries CE.

See Germanic peoples and Proto-Norse language

Przeworsk culture

The Przeworsk culture was an Iron Age material culture in the region of what is now Poland, that dates from the 3rd century BC to the 5th century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Przeworsk culture

Ptolemy

Claudius Ptolemy (Πτολεμαῖος,; Claudius Ptolemaeus; AD) was an Alexandrian mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, geographer, and music theorist who wrote about a dozen scientific treatises, three of which were important to later Byzantine, Islamic, and Western European science.

See Germanic peoples and Ptolemy

Publius Quinctilius Varus

Publius Quinctilius Varus (Cremona, 46 BC – near Kalkriese, AD 9) was a Roman general and politician under the first Roman emperor Augustus.

See Germanic peoples and Publius Quinctilius Varus

Quadi

The Quadi were a Germanic.

See Germanic peoples and Quadi

Raalte

Raalte is a municipality and a town in the heart of the region of Salland in the Dutch province of Overijssel.

See Germanic peoples and Raalte

Radagaisus

Radagaisus (died 23 August 406) was a Gothic king who led an invasion of Roman Italy in late 405 and the first half of 406.

See Germanic peoples and Radagaisus

Reccared I

Reccared I (or Recared; Flavius Reccaredus; Flavio Recaredo; 559 – December 601; reigned 586–601) was Visigothic King of Hispania and Septimania.

See Germanic peoples and Reccared I

Renaissance humanism

Renaissance humanism was a worldview centered on the nature and importance of humanity that emerged from the study of Classical antiquity.

See Germanic peoples and Renaissance humanism

Revolt of the Batavi

The Revolt of the Batavi took place in the Roman province of Germania Inferior ("Lower Germania") between AD 69 and 70.

See Germanic peoples and Revolt of the Batavi

Rhine

--> The Rhine is one of the major European rivers.

See Germanic peoples and Rhine

Rhineland

The Rhineland (Rheinland; Rhénanie; Rijnland; Rhingland; Latinised name: Rhenania) is a loosely defined area of Western Germany along the Rhine, chiefly its middle section.

See Germanic peoples and Rhineland

Ribe

Ribe is a town in south-west Jutland, Denmark, with a population of 8,295 (2024).

See Germanic peoples and Ribe

Ring of Pietroassa

The Ring of Pietroassa or Buzău torc is a gold torc-like necklace found in a ring barrow in Pietroassa (now Pietroasele), Buzău County, southern Romania (formerly Wallachia), in 1837.

See Germanic peoples and Ring of Pietroassa

Roman emperor

The Roman emperor was the ruler and monarchical head of state of the Roman Empire, starting with the granting of the title augustus to Octavian in 27 BC.

See Germanic peoples and Roman emperor

Roman law

Roman law is the legal system of ancient Rome, including the legal developments spanning over a thousand years of jurisprudence, from the Twelve Tables, to the (AD 529) ordered by Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I. Roman law forms the basic framework for civil law, the most widely used legal system today, and the terms are sometimes used synonymously.

See Germanic peoples and Roman law

Roman people

The Roman people was the body of Roman citizens (Rōmānī; Ῥωμαῖοι) during the Roman Kingdom, the Roman Republic, and the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Roman people

Romano-British culture

The Romano-British culture arose in Britain under the Roman Empire following the Roman conquest in AD 43 and the creation of the province of Britannia.

See Germanic peoples and Romano-British culture

Romantic nationalism

Romantic nationalism (also national romanticism, organic nationalism, identity nationalism) is the form of nationalism in which the state claims its political legitimacy as an organic consequence of the unity of those it governs.

See Germanic peoples and Romantic nationalism

Romanticism

Romanticism (also known as the Romantic movement or Romantic era) was an artistic and intellectual movement that originated in Europe towards the end of the 18th century.

See Germanic peoples and Romanticism

Romulus Augustulus

Romulus Augustus (after 511), nicknamed Augustulus, was Roman emperor of the West from 31 October 475 until 4 September 476.

See Germanic peoples and Romulus Augustulus

Rune

A rune is a letter in a set of related alphabets known as runic alphabets native to the Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Rune

Runic inscriptions

A runic inscription is an inscription made in one of the various runic alphabets.

See Germanic peoples and Runic inscriptions

Sack of Rome (410)

The Sack of Rome on 24 August 410 AD was undertaken by the Visigoths led by their king, Alaric.

See Germanic peoples and Sack of Rome (410)

Sack of Rome (455)

The Sack of Rome in 455 AD marked a pivotal moment in European history when the Vandals, a Germanic tribe led by King Genseric, invaded the city.

See Germanic peoples and Sack of Rome (455)

Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology

Trees hold a particular role in Germanic paganism and Germanic mythology, both as individuals (sacred trees) and in groups (sacred groves).

See Germanic peoples and Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology

Saint Boniface

Boniface (born Wynfreth; 675 – 5 June 754) was an English Benedictine monk and leading figure in the Anglo-Saxon mission to the Germanic parts of Francia during the eighth century.

See Germanic peoples and Saint Boniface

Sapaudia

Sapaudia or Sabaudia was an Alpine territory of Late antiquity and the Dark Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Sapaudia

Sarmatians

The Sarmatians (Sarmatai; Latin: Sarmatae) were a large confederation of ancient Iranian equestrian nomadic peoples who dominated the Pontic steppe from about the 3rd century BC to the 4th century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Sarmatians

Saxon Shore

The Saxon Shore (litus Saxonicum) was a military command of the Late Roman Empire, consisting of a series of fortifications on both sides of the Channel.

See Germanic peoples and Saxon Shore

Saxon Wars

The Saxon Wars were the campaigns and insurrections of the thirty-three years from 772, when Charlemagne first entered Saxony with the intent to conquer, to 804, when the last rebellion of tribesmen was defeated.

See Germanic peoples and Saxon Wars

Saxons

The Saxons, sometimes called the Old Saxons, were the Germanic people of "Old" Saxony (Antiqua Saxonia) which became a Carolingian "stem duchy" in 804, in what is now northern Germany.

See Germanic peoples and Saxons

Sámi languages

Sámi languages, in English also rendered as Sami and Saami, are a group of Uralic languages spoken by the Indigenous Sámi people in Northern Europe (in parts of northern Finland, Norway, Sweden, and extreme northwestern Russia).

See Germanic peoples and Sámi languages

Sól (Germanic mythology)

Sól (Old Norse:, "Sun")Orchard (1997:152).

See Germanic peoples and Sól (Germanic mythology)

Scandinavia

Scandinavia is a subregion of Northern Europe, with strong historical, cultural, and linguistic ties between its constituent peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Scandinavia

Scandinavism

Scandinavism (skandinavisme; skandinavisme; skandinavism), also called Scandinavianism or pan-Scandinavianism,.

See Germanic peoples and Scandinavism

Sciri

The Sciri, or Scirians, were a Germanic people.

See Germanic peoples and Sciri

Scythians

The Scythians or Scyths (but note Scytho- in composition) and sometimes also referred to as the Pontic Scythians, were an ancient Eastern Iranic equestrian nomadic people who had migrated during the 9th to 8th centuries BC from Central Asia to the Pontic Steppe in modern-day Ukraine and Southern Russia, where they remained established from the 7th century BC until the 3rd century BC.

See Germanic peoples and Scythians

Sebastian Brather

Sebastian Brather (born 28 June 1964) is a German medieval archaeologist and co-editor of Germanische Altertumskunde Online.

See Germanic peoples and Sebastian Brather

Seeress (Germanic)

In Germanic paganism, a seeress is a woman said to have the ability to foretell future events and perform sorcery.

See Germanic peoples and Seeress (Germanic)

Semnones

The Semnones were a Germanic and specifically a Suebi people, who were settled between the Elbe and the Oder in the 1st century when they were described by Tacitus in Germania: "The Semnones give themselves out to be the most ancient and renowned branch of the Suebi.

See Germanic peoples and Semnones

Sequani

The Sequani were a Gallic tribe dwelling in the upper river basin of the Arar river (Saône), the valley of the Doubs and the Jura Mountains during the Iron Age and the Roman period.

See Germanic peoples and Sequani

Siegerland

The Siegerland is a region of Germany covering the old district of Siegen (now part of the district of Siegen-Wittgenstein in North Rhine-Westphalia) and the upper part of the district of Altenkirchen, belonging to the Rhineland-Palatinate adjoining it to the west.

See Germanic peoples and Siegerland

Single Grave culture

The Single Grave culture (Einzelgrabkultur) was a Chalcolithic culture which flourished on the western North European Plain from ca.

See Germanic peoples and Single Grave culture

Sinthgunt

Sinthgunt is a figure in Germanic mythology, attested solely in the Old High German 9th- or 10th-century "horse cure" Merseburg Incantation.

See Germanic peoples and Sinthgunt

Sippe

Sippe is German for "clan, kindred, extended family" (Frisian Sibbe, Norse Sifjar).

See Germanic peoples and Sippe

Slavic languages

The Slavic languages, also known as the Slavonic languages, are Indo-European languages spoken primarily by the Slavic peoples and their descendants.

See Germanic peoples and Slavic languages

Slavs

The Slavs or Slavic people are groups of people who speak Slavic languages. Germanic peoples and Slavs are indo-European peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Slavs

Soap

Soap is a salt of a fatty acid (sometimes other carboxylic acids) used for cleaning and lubricating products as well as other applications.

See Germanic peoples and Soap

Soest, Germany

Soest (as if it were 'Sohst'; Westphalian: Saust) is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

See Germanic peoples and Soest, Germany

Speyer

Speyer (older spelling Speier; Schbaija; Spire), historically known in English as Spires, is a city in Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany with approximately 50,000 inhabitants.

See Germanic peoples and Speyer

Spindle (textiles)

A spindle is a straight spike, usually made from wood, used for spinning, twisting fibers such as wool, flax, hemp, cotton into yarn.

See Germanic peoples and Spindle (textiles)

Steffen Patzold

Steffen Patzold (born 1 September 1972) is a German historian.

See Germanic peoples and Steffen Patzold

Stilicho

Stilicho (– 22 August 408) was a military commander in the Roman army who, for a time, became the most powerful man in the Western Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Stilicho

Stone Age

The Stone Age was a broad prehistoric period during which stone was widely used to make stone tools with an edge, a point, or a percussion surface.

See Germanic peoples and Stone Age

Suebi

The Suebi (also spelled Suevi) or Suebians were a large group of Germanic peoples originally from the Elbe river region in what is now Germany and the Czech Republic.

See Germanic peoples and Suebi

Tacitus

Publius Cornelius Tacitus, known simply as Tacitus (–), was a Roman historian and politician.

See Germanic peoples and Tacitus

Taifals

The Taifals or Tayfals (Taifali, Taifalae or Theifali; Taïfales) were a people group of Germanic or Sarmatian origin, first documented north of the lower Danube in the mid third century AD.

See Germanic peoples and Taifals

Temple at Uppsala

The Temple at Uppsala was a religious center in the ancient Norse religion once located at what is now Gamla Uppsala (Swedish "Old Uppsala"), Sweden attested in Adam of Bremen's 11th-century work Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum and in Heimskringla, written by Snorri Sturluson in the 13th century.

See Germanic peoples and Temple at Uppsala

Tencteri

The Tencteri or Tenchteri or Tenctheri (in Plutarch's Greek, Tenteritē and possibly the same as the Tenkeroi mentioned by Claudius Ptolemy if these were not the Tungri) were an ancient tribe, who moved into the area on the right bank (the northern or eastern bank) of the lower Rhine in the 1st century BC.

See Germanic peoples and Tencteri

Tetradrachm

The tetradrachm (tetrádrachmon) was a large silver coin that originated in Ancient Greece.

See Germanic peoples and Tetradrachm

Teutons

The Teutons (Teutones, Teutoni, Τεύτονες) were an ancient northern European tribe mentioned by Roman authors.

See Germanic peoples and Teutons

Theodoric I

Theodoric I (Þiudarīks; Theodericus; 390 or 393 20 or 24 June 451) was the King of the Visigoths from 418 to 451.

See Germanic peoples and Theodoric I

Theodoric the Great

Theodoric (or Theoderic) the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also called Theodoric the Amal, was king of the Ostrogoths (475–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493 and 526, regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the Eastern Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Theodoric the Great

Theonym

A theonym (from Greek theos (Θεός), "god", attached to onoma (ὄνομα), "name") is a proper name of a deity.

See Germanic peoples and Theonym

Thervingi

The Thervingi, Tervingi, or Teruingi (sometimes pluralised Tervings or Thervings) were a Gothic people of the plains north of the Lower Danube and west of the Dniester River in the 3rd and the 4th centuries.

See Germanic peoples and Thervingi

Thessaloniki

Thessaloniki (Θεσσαλονίκη), also known as Thessalonica, Saloniki, Salonika, or Salonica, is the second-largest city in Greece, with slightly over one million inhabitants in its metropolitan area, and the capital of the geographic region of Macedonia, the administrative region of Central Macedonia and the Decentralized Administration of Macedonia and Thrace.

See Germanic peoples and Thessaloniki

Thing (assembly)

A thing, also known as a folkmoot, assembly, tribal council, and by other names, was a governing assembly in early Germanic society, made up of the free people of the community presided over by a lawspeaker.

See Germanic peoples and Thing (assembly)

Thor

Thor (from Þórr) is a prominent god in Germanic paganism.

See Germanic peoples and Thor

Thrace

Thrace (Trakiya; Thráki; Trakya) is a geographical and historical region in Southeast Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Thrace

Thracia

Thracia or Thrace (Thrakē) is the ancient name given to the southeastern Balkan region, the land inhabited by the Thracians.

See Germanic peoples and Thracia

Three-field system

The three-field system is a regime of crop rotation in which a field is planted with one set of crops one year, a different set in the second year, and left fallow in the third year.

See Germanic peoples and Three-field system

Torc

A torc, also spelled torq or torque, is a large rigid or stiff neck ring in metal, made either as a single piece or from strands twisted together.

See Germanic peoples and Torc

Trajan

Trajan (born Marcus Ulpius Traianus, adopted name Caesar Nerva Traianus; 18 September 53) was a Roman emperor from AD 98 to 117, remembered as the second of the Five Good Emperors of the Nerva–Antonine dynasty.

See Germanic peoples and Trajan

Trajan's Column

Trajan's Column (Colonna Traiana, Columna Traiani) is a Roman triumphal column in Rome, Italy, that commemorates Roman emperor Trajan's victory in the Dacian Wars.

See Germanic peoples and Trajan's Column

Tuisto

According to Tacitus's Germania (AD 98), Tuisto (or Tuisco) is the legendary divine ancestor of the Germanic peoples.

See Germanic peoples and Tuisto

Tungri

The Tungri (or Tongri, or Tungrians) were a tribe, or group of tribes, who lived in the Belgic part of Gaul, during the times of the Roman Empire.

See Germanic peoples and Tungri

Tunic

A tunic is a garment for the body, usually simple in style, reaching from the shoulders to a length somewhere between the hips and the ankles.

See Germanic peoples and Tunic

Ulfilas

Ulfilas (Greek: Ουλφίλας; – 383), known also as Wulfila(s) or Urphilas, was a 4th century Gothic preacher of Cappadocian Greek descent.

See Germanic peoples and Ulfilas

Umayyad Caliphate

The Umayyad Caliphate or Umayyad Empire (al-Khilāfa al-Umawiyya) was the second caliphate established after the death of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and was ruled by the Umayyad dynasty.

See Germanic peoples and Umayyad Caliphate

Usipetes

The Usipetes or Usipii (in Plutarch's Greek, Ousipai, and possibly the same as the Ouispoi of Ptolemy) were an ancient tribe who moved into the area on the right bank (the northern or eastern bank) of the lower Rhine in the first century BC, putting them in contact with Gaul and the Roman empire.

See Germanic peoples and Usipetes

Valamir

Valamir or Valamer (– c. 465) was an Ostrogothic king in the former Roman province of Pannonia from AD 447 until his death.

See Germanic peoples and Valamir

Valens

Valens (Ouálēs; 328 – 9 August 378) was Roman emperor from 364 to 378.

See Germanic peoples and Valens

Valentinian III

Valentinian III (Placidus Valentinianus; 2 July 41916 March 455) was Roman emperor in the West from 425 to 455.

See Germanic peoples and Valentinian III

Vandal Kingdom

The Vandal Kingdom (Regnum Vandalum) or Kingdom of the Vandals and Alans (Regnum Vandalorum et Alanorum) was a confederation of Vandals and Alans, which is one of the barbarian kingdoms established under Gaiseric, a Vandal warrior.

See Germanic peoples and Vandal Kingdom

Vandalic language

Vandalic was the Germanic language spoken by the Vandals during roughly the 3rd to 6th centuries.

See Germanic peoples and Vandalic language

Vandals

The Vandals were a Germanic people who first inhabited what is now southern Poland.

See Germanic peoples and Vandals

Vé (shrine)

In Germanic paganism, a vé (Old Norse) or wēoh (Old English) is a type of shrine, sacred enclosure or other place with religious significance.

See Germanic peoples and Vé (shrine)

Völkisch movement

The Völkisch movement (Völkische Bewegung, Folkist movement, also called Völkism) was a German ethnic nationalist movement active from the late 19th century through the dissolution of the German Reich in 1945, with remnants in the Federal Republic of Germany afterwards.

See Germanic peoples and Völkisch movement

Vedic period

The Vedic period, or the Vedic age, is the period in the late Bronze Age and early Iron Age of the history of India when the Vedic literature, including the Vedas (–900 BCE), was composed in the northern Indian subcontinent, between the end of the urban Indus Valley Civilisation and a second urbanisation, which began in the central Indo-Gangetic Plain BCE.

See Germanic peoples and Vedic period

Vendel Period

In Swedish prehistory, the Vendel Period (Vendeltiden) appears between the Migration Period and the Viking Age.

See Germanic peoples and Vendel Period

Verner's law

Verner's law describes a historical sound change in the Proto-Germanic language whereby consonants that would usually have been the voiceless fricatives *f, *þ, *s, *h, *hʷ, following an unstressed syllable, became the voiced fricatives *β, *ð, *z, *ɣ, *ɣʷ.

See Germanic peoples and Verner's law

Vespasian

Vespasian (Vespasianus; 17 November AD 9 – 23 June 79) was Roman emperor from 69 to 79.

See Germanic peoples and Vespasian

Viking Age

The Viking Age (about) was the period during the Middle Ages when Norsemen known as Vikings undertook large-scale raiding, colonising, conquest, and trading throughout Europe and reached North America.

See Germanic peoples and Viking Age

Vikings

Vikings were seafaring people originally from Scandinavia (present-day Denmark, Norway, and Sweden), who from the late 8th to the late 11th centuries raided, pirated, traded, and settled throughout parts of Europe.

See Germanic peoples and Vikings

Villa rustica

Villa rustica was the term used by the ancient Romans to denote a farmhouse or villa set in the countryside and with an agricultural section, which applies to the vast majority of Roman villas.

See Germanic peoples and Villa rustica

Visigothic Kingdom

The Visigothic Kingdom, Visigothic Spain or Kingdom of the Goths (Regnum Gothorum) occupied what is now southwestern France and the Iberian Peninsula from the 5th to the 8th centuries.

See Germanic peoples and Visigothic Kingdom

Visigoths

The Visigoths (Visigothi, Wisigothi, Vesi, Visi, Wesi, Wisi) were a Germanic people united under the rule of a king and living within the Roman Empire during late antiquity.

See Germanic peoples and Visigoths

Vistula

The Vistula (Wisła,, Weichsel) is the longest river in Poland and the ninth-longest in Europe, at in length.

See Germanic peoples and Vistula

Wallia

Wallia, Walha or Vallia (Spanish: Walia, Portuguese Vália), (385 – 418) was king of the Visigoths from 415 to 418, earning a reputation as a great warrior and prudent ruler.

See Germanic peoples and Wallia

Walter Goffart

Walter Andre Goffart (born February 22, 1934) is a German-born American historian who specializes in Late Antiquity and the European Middle Ages.

See Germanic peoples and Walter Goffart

Walter of Aquitaine

Walter or Walther of Aquitaine is a king of the Visigoths in Germanic heroic legend.

See Germanic peoples and Walter of Aquitaine

Walter Pohl

Walter Pohl (born 27 December 1953) is an Austrian historian who is Professor of Auxiliary Sciences of History and Medieval History at the University of Vienna.

See Germanic peoples and Walter Pohl

Weregild

Weregild (also spelled wergild, wergeld (in archaic/historical usage of English), weregeld, etc.), also known as man price (blood money), was a precept in some historical legal codes whereby a monetary value was established for a person's life, to be paid as a fine or as compensatory damages to the person's family if that person was killed or injured by another.

See Germanic peoples and Weregild

Weser

The Weser is a river of Lower Saxony in north-west Germany.

See Germanic peoples and Weser

Wessex

The Kingdom of the West Saxons, also known as the Kingdom of Wessex, was an Anglo-Saxon kingdom in the south of Great Britain, from around 519 until Alfred the Great declared himself as King of the Anglo-Saxons in 886.

See Germanic peoples and Wessex

West Germanic gemination

West Germanic gemination was a sound change that took place in all West Germanic languages around the 3rd or 4th century AD.

See Germanic peoples and West Germanic gemination

West Germanic languages

The West Germanic languages constitute the largest of the three branches of the Germanic family of languages (the others being the North Germanic and the extinct East Germanic languages).

See Germanic peoples and West Germanic languages

Wilhelm Grimm

Wilhelm Carl Grimm (also Karl; 24 February 178616 December 1859) was a German author and anthropologist.

See Germanic peoples and Wilhelm Grimm

Wilhelm Heizmann

Wilhelm Heizmann (born 5 September 1953) is a German philologist who is Professor and Chair of the Institute for Nordic Philology at the University of Munich.

See Germanic peoples and Wilhelm Heizmann

Wolfgang Pfeifer (etymologist)

Wolfgang Pfeifer (3 December 1922 in Leipzig - 9 July 2020 in Berlin) was a German scholar and linguist.

See Germanic peoples and Wolfgang Pfeifer (etymologist)

Wool

Wool is the textile fiber obtained from sheep and other mammals, especially goats, rabbits, and camelids.

See Germanic peoples and Wool

Worms, Germany

Worms is a city in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, situated on the Upper Rhine about south-southwest of Frankfurt am Main.

See Germanic peoples and Worms, Germany

Wulfhere of Mercia

Wulfhere or Wulfar (died 675) was King of Mercia from 658 until 675 AD.

See Germanic peoples and Wulfhere of Mercia

Y chromosome

The Y chromosome is one of two sex chromosomes in therian mammals and other organisms.

See Germanic peoples and Y chromosome

Year of the Four Emperors

The Year of the Four Emperors, AD 69, was the first civil war of the Roman Empire, during which four emperors ruled in succession: Galba, Otho, Vitellius, and Vespasian.

See Germanic peoples and Year of the Four Emperors

Younger Futhark

The Younger Futhark, also called Scandinavian runes, is a runic alphabet and a reduced form of the Elder Futhark, with only 16 characters, in use from about the 9th century, after a "transitional period" during the 7th and 8th centuries.

See Germanic peoples and Younger Futhark

Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur

The Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur (commonly abbreviated ZfdA) is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of German studies with emphasis on the older periods.

See Germanic peoples and Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur

Zeno (emperor)

Zeno (Zénōn; – 9 April 491) was Eastern Roman emperor from 474 to 475 and again from 476 to 491.

See Germanic peoples and Zeno (emperor)

See also

2nd-millennium BC establishments

Indo-European peoples

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_peoples

Also known as Ancient Germanic, Ancient Germanic culture, Ancient Germans, East Germanic Tribes, East Germanic peoples, East Germanic tribe, East Germanics, Genetic studies on Germanic peoples, German clan, Germani, Germanians, Germanic People, Germanic Tribes, Germanic clan, Germanic cuisine, Germanic cultures, Germanic folk, Germanic history, Germanic literature, Germanic music, Germanic peopels, Germanic philosophy, Germanic society, Germanic world, Germanicity, Germanics, Germanii, Gothonic, History of the Germanic peoples, Prehistory of the Germanic peoples, Teutonic peoples.

, Bellum Batonianum, Besançon, Bohemia, Bracteate, Bratislava, Brill Publishers, Bronze Age, Brothers Grimm, Burgundians, Cannabaudes, Carolingian dynasty, Carthage, Celtic languages, Celts, Central Europe, Chain mail, Chalon-sur-Saône, Charlemagne, Charles Martel, Chatti, Chauci, Cherusci, Christianity, Cimbri, Cimbrian War, Client state, Cloisonné, Clovis I, Cniva, Coenwulf of Mercia, Cognate, Cologne, Column of Marcus Aurelius, Comitatus, Commodus, Common Era, Comparative method, Compound (linguistics), Constantius III, Corded Ware culture, Crimean Gothic, Crimean Goths, Crisis of the Third Century, Crossing of the Rhine, Danube, Decius, Deer, Dialect, Dialect continuum, Distaff, Dniester, Domitian, Dwarf (folklore), Early Middle Ages, Early Slavs, East Francia, East Germanic languages, Edward James (historian), Einkorn wheat, Elbe, Elder Futhark, Elf, Emmer, English Channel, Epirus, Ermanaric, Etruscan alphabet, Fall of the Western Roman Empire, Feud, Filigree, Finnic languages, Finno-Permic languages, Finno-Samic languages, Flavian dynasty, Flavius Aetius, Flax, Francia, Frankish language, Franks, Frigg, Frisians, Fulla, Funen, Funnelbeaker culture, Gaiseric, Gaius Julius Civilis, Gaul, Gaulish, Gauls, Geats, Gepids, German History (journal), Germani cisrhenani, Germania, Germania Antiqua, Germania Inferior, Germania Superior, Germanic heroic legend, Germanic languages, Germanic law, Germanic mythology, Germanic paganism, Germanic parent language, Germanic philology, Germanic strong verb, Germanic substrate hypothesis, Germanic umlaut, Germanic verbs, Germans, Getae, Getica, Gildas, Gothic Bible, Gothic language, Gothic runic inscriptions, Gothic War (376–382), Gothicism, Goths, Gotini, Grímnismál, Greco-Roman world, Greuthungi, Grimm's law, Gudme, Gullgubber, Gustaf Kossinna, Guy Halsall, Haplogroup I-M253, Heiko Steuer, Heinrich Beck (philologist), Hercynian Forest, Herwig Wolfram, Hispania, Historical Vedic religion, History of the Lombards, Histria (ancient city), Holy Roman Emperor, Honorius (emperor), Humanism, Huns, Hygelac, Illyrian language, Indo-European ablaut, Indo-European languages, Iranian peoples, Iron Age, Istaby Runestone, Italian Peninsula, Italic languages, Italy, Jacob Grimm, Jastorf culture, Joinery, Jordanes, Julius Caesar, Justinian I, Jutes, Jutland, Kathryn Welch, Kingdom of Burgundy, Konrad Peutinger, La Tène culture, Late antiquity, Latin script, Lead, Leonard Neidorf, Lexical innovation, Lexicon, Liberalism, Limes (Roman Empire), Limes Germanicus, Lindisfarne, Linguistic homeland, List of early Germanic peoples, List of Germanic deities, Literary topos, Liutprand, King of the Lombards, Liuvigild, Lombardic language, Lombards, Loom, Lower Rhine, Mannus, Marcianopolis, Marcomanni, Marcomannic Wars, Marcus Aurelius, Mare (folklore), Maroboduus, Matres and Matronae, Mayor of the palace, Mercia, Merseburg charms, Meuse, Middle Ages, Migration Period, Migration Period art, Migration Period spear, Moesia, Monophthongization, Moorland, Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, Mutual intelligibility, Nahanarvali, National Museum of Denmark, Nationalism, Nazi Party, Negau helmets, Neolithic, Nero, Nerthus, Neustria, Nicene Creed, Nijmegen, Nine Herbs Charm, Non-ferrous metal, Nordic Bronze Age, Norse mythology, North Germanic languages, Northumbria, Northwest Germanic, Numerus Batavorum, Odin, Odoacer, Old English, Old Frisian, Old High German, Old Irish, Old Norse, Old Norse religion, Old Saxon, Old Saxon Baptismal Vow, Oral tradition, Orality, Origo gentis, Origo Gentis Langobardorum, Osi (tribe), Ostrogoths, Oxford University Press, Pannonian Avars, Pannonian Basin, Paris, Paul the Deacon, Pepin the Short, Philippopolis (Thrace), Philology, Phoenician alphabet, Phonology, Picts, Pippinids, Pliny the Elder, Poetic Edda, Pomponius Mela, Pontic Olbia, Pontic–Caspian steppe, Pope Gregory I, Pope Pius II, Potter's wheel, Procopius, Prose Edda, Proto-Germanic folklore, Proto-Germanic language, Proto-Indo-European language, Proto-Indo-European mythology, Proto-Indo-European society, Proto-language, Proto-Norse language, Przeworsk culture, Ptolemy, Publius Quinctilius Varus, Quadi, Raalte, Radagaisus, Reccared I, Renaissance humanism, Revolt of the Batavi, Rhine, Rhineland, Ribe, Ring of Pietroassa, Roman emperor, Roman law, Roman people, Romano-British culture, Romantic nationalism, Romanticism, Romulus Augustulus, Rune, Runic inscriptions, Sack of Rome (410), Sack of Rome (455), Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology, Saint Boniface, Sapaudia, Sarmatians, Saxon Shore, Saxon Wars, Saxons, Sámi languages, Sól (Germanic mythology), Scandinavia, Scandinavism, Sciri, Scythians, Sebastian Brather, Seeress (Germanic), Semnones, Sequani, Siegerland, Single Grave culture, Sinthgunt, Sippe, Slavic languages, Slavs, Soap, Soest, Germany, Speyer, Spindle (textiles), Steffen Patzold, Stilicho, Stone Age, Suebi, Tacitus, Taifals, Temple at Uppsala, Tencteri, Tetradrachm, Teutons, Theodoric I, Theodoric the Great, Theonym, Thervingi, Thessaloniki, Thing (assembly), Thor, Thrace, Thracia, Three-field system, Torc, Trajan, Trajan's Column, Tuisto, Tungri, Tunic, Ulfilas, Umayyad Caliphate, Usipetes, Valamir, Valens, Valentinian III, Vandal Kingdom, Vandalic language, Vandals, Vé (shrine), Völkisch movement, Vedic period, Vendel Period, Verner's law, Vespasian, Viking Age, Vikings, Villa rustica, Visigothic Kingdom, Visigoths, Vistula, Wallia, Walter Goffart, Walter of Aquitaine, Walter Pohl, Weregild, Weser, Wessex, West Germanic gemination, West Germanic languages, Wilhelm Grimm, Wilhelm Heizmann, Wolfgang Pfeifer (etymologist), Wool, Worms, Germany, Wulfhere of Mercia, Y chromosome, Year of the Four Emperors, Younger Futhark, Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur, Zeno (emperor).