PART 5    Ch.XXXIII.6

The Pelasgians or proto – Latins (Arimii)

(The Pelasgians from the northern parts of the Danube and the Black Sea)

 

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XXXIII. 6. Arimii (Herminones, Arimani, Alamanni, Alemanni) in Germany.

 

The Arimii had been the most ancient population of great, or barbarian Germany, which stretched from the Rhine to the Vistula and comprised at the same time the peninsulas called today Denmark, Sweden and Norway.

In Tacitus’ times the entire population of great Germany was divided in three main groups.

In regard to the historical origin of these nations, Tacitus writes (Germ. c. 2):

“The Germans celebrate Tuisto with ancient songs, god born of Terra, and his son Mannus, the author and founder of their nation. They attribute to Mannus three sons, and after their names, the inhabitants closest to the sea were called Ingaevones, those from the inner parts, Herminones, and the others, Istaevones” [1].

[1. The Istevonii of Germany seem to have been only a fraction of a more numerous Pelasgian tribe. Pliny (VI. 19. 1) mentions the Histi among the Scythian populations of Asia. In Samnius we find a city called Histonium (Pliny, III. 17.1), or Istonii in Liber coloniarum. In Eubea existed an ancient city called Hestiaea and a part of Thessaly had been called Hestiacotis].

 

It results from the words of Tacitus that the three sons of Mannus, the founders of the ancient German nations, were called Ingaevo, Hermino and Istaevo.

According to Pliny, to the family of the Ingevonii belonged the Cimbrii, Teutonii and Caucii, settled on the littoral of the Ocean, from the Rhine to the Elba. To the family of the Hermi(n)onii, who formed the most extended and powerful people of great Germany, belonged the Suevii, Hermundurii, Chattii and Cheruscii; and to the family of the Istevonii, who dwelt in Westphalia, Nassau and Hessen, Pliny mentions only the Sigambrii (lib. IV. 28. 2) [2].

 

[2. Pliny also mentions two other ethnic families of the Germans: the fourth under the name of Vindili (Vandals), subdivided in Burgundiones, Varini, Carini and Guttones. But these tribes appear as Suevi, so they can be considered as belonging to the family of the Herminoni.

The fifth family comprised the Bastarnii from the northern Carpathians, and the tribe of the Peucinii from the mouths of the Danube. But the Bastarnii were Getae (Appianus, De reb. Mac. IX. 16). Strabo tells us (VII. 3) that part of the Bastarni were called Atmoni, probably a corrupt form of Armoni; and the Peucinii, or inhabitants from the Danube delta, are called in Romanian traditions Armani. The confusion happened therefore because of the name.

The ancient Herminoni of Germany had formed, it is true, the same family with the Arimii from the Carpathians. But the Germans at the time of Pliny constituted an entirely changed people].

 

The same historical tradition transmitted by Tacitus, appears later under a more developed form, more accommodated to the ethnographical circumstances from the time of the great migration of peoples.

It is the table called “Generatio regum”, drawn up probably at the time of the first Merovingians, around 520 ad. Apart from the names of the traditional kings, it also contains an ethnic grouping of the German populations from the beginning of the 6th century.

According to this genealogical table, the first man who had come to Europe, or more correctly to Germany, had been one so-called Alanus, the first king of the Romanii (understand Arimii) from the territory of Germany. This Alanus from the 520 ad genealogy is the same as Mannus from the version of Tacitus. But the most ancient form of the name is Manus, while Alanus is a simple co-name or ethnic epithet [3].

 

[3. Mannus (Manus) of the ethnographical note of Tacitus is not a word of Teutonic origin.

The Pelasgians of Lydia also had a similar tradition: that during the times of an ancient king of theirs, Atys the son of Manes (Fragm. Hist. gr. III. 592), a part of the people of Lydia migrating, had settled in Umbria, where they were later called Turseni (Herodotus, I. 94). Another Manus appears as the founder of the city Manesion in Phrygia (Fragm. Hist. gr. III. 233). The Romans also had a Deus Manus or Manes, see Ch.XII.3)].

 

Tacitus says that Manus, or Mannus, is the son of Tuisto (deus terra editus). The etymology and meaning of the word Tuisto had remained to this day obscure for the German literati.

From the same parent of Mannus also comes Alanus. In the genealogical table from the time of the Merovingians, Alanus is the son of Fetuir, Fetebir or FadirVater, a simple translation of the Pelasgian word Tuisto, in Romanian tutiu or tata.

This Alanus, exactly like Mannus from Tacitus’ version, had three sons. Their names are the same: with Tacitus, Hermino, Ingaevo, Istaevo; in the Merovingian table Erminus, Inguo, Istio. We also note here that in most of the manuscripts of the mediaeval table, Erminus is called Armen, Armeno, Armenon, Armenio, Armenion, with A instead of E; and Inguo appears more in the form Negue, Nigueo, Negno, Neugio, Neguio and Neugrio, with Ne instead of In. (In the Latin language In, as negative particle, sometimes changed into ne: infandus, nefandus; infaustus, nefastus; inscius, nescius; and in the Romanian language the negative in has always the form of ne).

We reproduce here the text of this memorable ethnographical table as it has been published by K. Mullenhoff in the Memos of the Berlin Academy of Sciences (Abhandlungen d. konigl. Akad. D. Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 1862), and at the same time we present in parallel the versions from the Historia Britonum of Nennius (7th century), as well as from other manuscripts of the Middle Age, in which we find some more correct forms of the proper names.

 

The Merovingian Table.

 

 

[4. We have here an ancient Pelasgian tradition. Hermes (‘Ermas, ‘Ermaon, ‘Erman) was considered in prehistoric times as a divine ancestor of many Arimic nations. On a Roman inscription from Mannheim near the Rhine, Hermes, called by the Romans Mercurius, also has the ethnic epithet of Alaunius or Alaunus (Pauly-Wissowa, R. E. see Alaunius). The form Alaunus corresponds here to Alanus, as in the Rheto-Roman language christiaun corresponds to christianus (Schuchardt, Vulgarlat. II. 318). It is therefore clear that Erminus or Armen, the son of Alanus or Alaneus in German traditions, is the same legendary personality as Hermes, or Mercurius Alaunus of the inscription from Mannheim.

According to Valerius Flaccus, who had died before the conquest of Dacia (around 87ad), the Alanii dwelt during the Argonautic times near the Lower Istru (Argon. VIII. 219). The poet Seneca also placed the Alani near the Istru (cf. Dionysus Periegetus, v. 305). The Getae from the Istru had therefore also the name of Alani in prehistoric times.

It results that Armen, the son of Alanus, is the same as Hermes of the southern Pelasgians, who appears at the same time as a glorious and deified king of Dacia, as founder of the Thracian dynasties (Herodotus, V. 7) and as a great king of the natives (Diodorus. VI. 5. 2)].

 

As we see, this table reduces the origin of the German tribes to the same ancestors about who Tacitus also speaks: to Erminus or Armen (Hermino), Inguo (Ingaevo) and Istio (Istaevo).

The Merovingian table also establishes as principle that the ancient population of Germany had been of Arimic origin. It speaks only about “De regibus Romanorum”, among whom Alaneu (Alanus or Mannus) figures as primus rex Romanorum. Here the term “Romans”, applied to the first German nations, is only a Latinized form of the name Herminones, or the ancient Arimani, a people which had left deep traces in the German traditions [5].

 

[5. In German traditions and legends we also find mentioned other kings, so-called of the “Romans”, like: Dietwart, romischer Konig; Dietmar, who reigns over Romisch lant and Romisch marc; Diether, the young king from Roemisch land; Otnit, Romischer Kaiser; King Lwdwig von Ormanie, and Ermanaricus (Airmanareiks), emperor at Romaborg (Grimm, D. Heldensage, p. 113, 133, 168, 185, 189, 190, 290, 329). It is without doubt that under the name “Romisch lant”, “Romisch marc” and “Ormanie” the ancient folk songs or traditions did not understand the historic empire of the Romans, but the various national kingdoms of the Herminonii or Arimii from the territory of Germany].

 

According to this genealogy, from Erminus or Armen drew their origin the Gotii, Walagotii, Wandalii, Gepidii and Saxonii [6]; from Inguo or Neguo descended the Burgundii, Thuringii, Langobardii and Bavarii; and Istio is the common parent of the Romans from near the Rhine, the Britonii, Francii and Alamanii.

 

[6. The same Erminus appears in some manuscripts in the libraries of Cambridge and Paris under the name Boerinus. He might have had 9 sons: Cinrincius, Gothus, Jutus, Suethedus, Dacus, Wandalus, Ehecius (or Gethus), Fresus and Geathus. A marginal note adds that from these sons descend the nine Nordic peoples which had occupied Britanny, namely the Saxonii, Anglii, Iutii, Dacii (Danes?), Norvegii, Gotii, Vandalii, Geatii and Frisii (Bessell, Ueber Pytheas von Massilien, Gottingen, 1858, p. 213)].

 

The Gotii, as we know, had migrated from Scandinavia, and they are considered in the Merovingian table as being part of the family of Armen or of the Herminonii.

The Scandinavian populations belonged to the family of the Herminonii also according to the Roman authors. The great or barbarian Germany of Tacitus (Germ. c. 1) also comprised the vast territory of Sweden and Norway, considered in those times as only a large island in the middle of the Ocean.

 

Germania Magna

 

Tacitus tells us in particular about a population from the northern Ocean, or Scandia, called Suiones (Germ. c. 44). These Suiones formed only a small branch of the nation of the Suevii; so, they belonged to the family of the Herminonii. Mela also extends the Hermi(n)oni to Scandinavia (lib. III. c. 3; Ibid, lib. III. c. 6). (He places the Teutoni in Scandinavia, and the Herminoni beyond the Teutoni, in the same island (peninsula). And Jornandes mentions among the populations of Scandia the Raumaricae and the Raugnaricii (Get. c. 3), tribes which, as we see, constituted the same people of the Romarici.

Accordint to all these traditions, whose origin reduces to very remote times, the genealogical table of the ancient populations of Germany appears as follows:

 

The genealogical table of the ancient German populations.

 

 

The Herminonii constituted in Roman times the most numerous and powerful population from the territory of Germany. They were spread from the sources of the Rhine and Danube, over Wurttemberg, Bavaria, Boemia, Saxonia, Prusia (where they later appear as HerminiDiefenbach, Orig. europ. p. 192), Moravia, Silesia, Polonia, Litvania and Denmark; and beyond the Ocean or the Baltic Sea, they were spread in numerous tribes through Sweden and Norway. The oldest form of the name Herminones had been in any case Armini (Armani and Aramani), without aspiration; as also without aspiration is the name of Erminus, or Armen, as well as other family names of ethnic origin which we find in these regions.

The famous man who liberated Germany by defeating Varrus, is called by the Roman authors Arminius, by Strabo (lib. VII. 1. 4) and Dio Cassius (vol. VIII, 1866, p. 52), Armenios. He was from the nation of the Cherusci; and the Cheruscii formed, as Pliny tells us, only a branch of the great family of the Herminonii.

In Noricum, where once had dwelt a large part of the Herminoni, we also find the personal names Ariomanus, Arimanus and Armianus (C. I. L. III. nr. 4880, 5289, 5350).

Dionysius Periegetus calls all the inhabitants of Germany areimanees (Orb. Descr. v. 285). This epithet indicates very clearly that the national name of these populations had been Arimani in ancient times.

The ancient inhabitants of the Alps also appear under the name of Arimani, Eremani and Erimani in the laws of the Francs and the Longobards.

A port of the northern sea, situated close to the Rhine, is called by Ptolemy Mararmanis liman (Mar armanis portus), meaning of the Armanic Sea (Ed. Didot, lib. II. c. 11. 1). This same maritime region is called by Pliny in a Latinized form, Germanicum mare (lib. IV. 30. 2).

In the 3rd century of the Christian era, the Arimanii or Aramanii from the upper parts of the Rhine and the Danube start appearing under the name Alamanni and Alemanni (Steph. Byz.; Pliny says Suevi = Herminoni, Ravennas -  p. 230 – Suavi = Alamani). This is a simple phonetic change: Alamani and Alemani instead of Aramani and Aremani, by changing r in l.

The form of this name is very ancient. One of the most famous Gigants from the Rhipei mountains, who had risen to reestablish Saturn as king, bears the name Alemone, according to Hyginus. This battle had taken place, as we know, on the territory of the Arimii; and Nevius, the Roman epic poet, places at the front of the army of the Gigants one so-called Runcus (Rumcus), probably the same as Alemone.

Finally, the name Aliman, as a trace from ancient times, has still been preserved to this day in the names of Romanian peasants and in the topographical terminology of this country (Aliman, village. Constanta; Aliman, hill, R.- Sarat; Aliman, hill, Valcea; Aliman, estate, Teleorman, Aliman, tableland, Gorj; Alimanesci, village, Olt and Arges).

 

We come now to the origin and form of the name “Germani”.

The name Germania, writes Tacitus (Germ. c. 2), is new and introduced only recently; because the first who had crossed the Rhine, and had ousted the Gauls from their dwellings, had been the Tungrii of today, at that time called Germani …lately this national name had extended to all the populations of Germany.

And Strabo writes (Geogr. Lib. VII. 1. 2): the Romans were the first to give the name Germani to the populations which dwelt on the eastern parts of the Rhine.

But it is still a fact that on the territory of Germany no tribe, or population, with the name of Germani had existed (Pauly’s Real-Encyclopadie d. kl. Alterth. p. 773-774).

This term is just a simple Latinization of the ethnic name Herimani or Hermani, where the Romans, out of some political considerations, had changed H with G, calling the populations between the Rhine and Vistula Germani, meaning people of the same nation, or brothers, gnasioi, adelphoi, as the ancients explain the meaning of this ethnic name (Strabo, lib. VI. 1. 2).

In a Parisian codex of Eustathius of Thessalonika it is also said that the Germans were also called hermen (Comm. in Dionys. Ed. Didot, v. 285).

In the times of Caesar, the inhabitants of Germany were a more pastoral than agricultural people. They had no cities, no houses close to each other, but dwelt mostly scattered around water sources, near woods and on the plains. Their national weapon was the Pelasgian spear, which they called framea. On a coin of the emperor Domitian, “Germania defeated” is personified sitting sadly on a long shield, and down near her feet is a broken spear (Eckhel, Doctr. Num. VI. 379). At time of war each village had to supply 100 fighters, which shows us that they also had the institution of the centenes, an ancient Pelasgian inheritance (Tacitus, Germ. c. 6).

Their religious beliefs and traditions were also Pelasgian. They had no idols or other images to represent the divinities.

Tuisto (with the meaning of “tuta” or “tata” – TN – father) was the supreme god and the parent of the German populations. According to their ancient national traditions, he was a deus Terra editus, meaning born from the same mother as the great Pelasgian divinities [7].

 

[7. These words of Tacitus about Tuisto correspond to the Greek epithet gegenas. This expression had had in the beginning a simple geographical meaning, in no way fabulous.

Ga, Gaia or Terra of the Pelasgian genealogies was meant as a certain geographical region, not as the entire Earth)].

 

The ancient Germans venerated Terra mater (Hertha), the Sun and the Moon. They venerated Saturn, Mercury (Hermes), Hercules, Castor, Pollux, and had a particular cult for Mars, whom they called Guodan, Wodan and Geat (Mars Geticus of the Romans).

The ancient Saxoni (people from the family of the Herminonii), who around the beginning of the 6th century had occupied Britannia under the leadership of Hengist and Horsa, venerated especially their divine ancestor, Hermes or Armen, under the name of Irmin or Hirmin.

At Erisburg in Westphalia there existed a wooden column erected in honor of Irmin, called Irminsul, Ermensul and Ormensul (the column of Irmin), or in other words, an ancient Pelasgian “arminden” (Rudolf von Fuld – ap. Grimm, D. M. I. 106). This column had been burnt in 772ad by Charlemagne, when he had defeated the Saxoni (Grimm, D. M, Ed. 1854, p. 105-106, 116, 324 – 328). From that time onwards the cult of Irmin (s. Armen) had been banned.

Numerous reminders about the dwellings of the Arimii on these regions have been preserved to this day in the topographical terminology of ancient Germany. From these we cite the following:

Armansberg; Harmening; Ram (Ramm); Rambach; Ramberg; Ramels; Ramelsen; Ramelsloh; Ramesbach;; Raming; Ramlingen; Ramma-Gau; Rammelsberg; Rammenau; Rammingen; Rammisperc; Rammo; Ramolt; Rams; Ramsau; Ramsbach; Ramschen; Ramshausen; Ramsthal; Ramstorf; Rems; Remesen; Remesin; Remse; Rimai; Rimau (Rimov); Rimberg; Rimowitz (Bohemia); Ruhmland; Romsdal (Norway); Rumburg; Rumelant; Rumlingen.

As we see, the Germany of today, with her sister countries, bear still numerous traces of a prehistoric nation, predating the Teutonic nation, which had tilled for the first time the soil between Vistula and the Rhine, and which has inscribed its name on the mountains, hills and valleys of this region.

 

We resume: the primitive form of the German people had been entirely different from that presented by their present time physiognomy, and that which appears at the time of Caesar.

The most ancient inhabitants of Germany had been of the Pelasgian nation, mostly Rami or Arimi. This is proved by historical traditions, religious beliefs, name of localities, finally by the material traces of their prehistoric civilization, which we find scattered on the territory of Germany from the Rhine to the Vistula and even beyond the Ocean, in the Scandinavian peninsula.

 

But a pitiless fate follows also the Arimii of Germany, exactly like the other Pelasgian populations from Scythia, from Asia, from the Hem peninsula and from Egypt.

Around the end of the heroic epoch, in any case before the Trojan war, a new invasion of peoples coming, as the ancients said, from the last ends of the earth, flowed over the regions between Tanais and the Atlantic Ocean, over Scythia, Germania, Gallia and Britannia.

The face of Pelasgian Europe began to change.

The first to appear at the front of this mass migration are the Celts, people unseen and unknown to Europe until then. Pushed on the move by events which we cannot guess, these barbarians, warlike and adventurers, who were neither shepherds, nor agriculturists, left the remote regions of Asia, following the great road of the ancient world westwards. They stopped for some time on the plains of Scythia, where they led a life unknown to history; from there they crossed the Vistula, entered the territory of the Arimii, and produced a new dislocation of the Pelasgian tribes.

 

A few centuries later, very probably after the Trojan war, another branch of the Indo-European family appears at the north-eastern frontiers of Germany. These were the predecessors of the Germans of today. We do not know if these people came from Asia, or from the north of Europe. But their type, traditions, and language show them to be a nation which had lived for a long time under a boreal climate. They were from the same ethnic family of the Celts. But they were different from the Celts, as Strabo tells us, in that they were more barbarous, had bigger bodies and yellow-reddish hair; but in anything else, in form and customs, they were similar to the Celts. This new people, impetuous, violent and warlike, used to live only from hunting and looting, crossed the territory of Germany, threw the Pelasgian and Celt tribes together, changed the old state of things and became masters over a large area of the territory of ancient Germany; then little by little they replaced the pastoral and agricultural population of the Arimi, adopting the civilization, religion, institutions and a significant part of the language and traditions of the subjected people. The ancient Pelasgian tribes ousted from their dwellings were always pushed towards south and west; some cross the Alps into Italy, others the Rhine into Gallia, or over the Ocean into Britannia, while those who stayed were dispossessed, assimilated or subjected and in Germany the name of Arimani became synonymous with the term of feudal peasants (Herimani). Even until late in the Roman epoch, the various tribes of Germany, the old and the new, were engaged in continuous battles and wars with each other; their dwellings changed all the time, and the migration from the territory of Germany, especially towards Gallia, continued unabated

 

Cicero, in his memorable discourse about the consular Provinces, characterizes the peoples of Germany and Gallia of his time as follows: “Caesar has fought happy wars with those peoples most violent and feared for their courage and number, the Germanii and the Helvetii; and the others he squashed, he defeated, he subjected, and he taught to listen to the orders of the Roman people; this emperor of our army has crossed, with the legions and the weapons of the Roman people, regions and peoples about which no news had reached us, either in writing, in words, or at least in public rumor. In truth, all that we had conquered until these times in Gallia was only a small part; and the other parts were owned by nations, either inimical, heathen, or unknown, terrible with their large figures, barbarian and warlike, so that there was nobody who did not wish that these peoples were defeated and subjected… It is a great bounty of the providence that nature has fortified Italy on her northern parts with the Alps, because if this entry had been open to this countless multitude of terrible barbarians of the north, Rome could never had managed to be the centre and residence of this great empire of the world (De provinciis consularibus, c. 13-14).

This successive and violent invasion of two new and barbarian peoples into the northern parts of Europe had basically transformed the old state of things in Germany. Even around the beginning of this era, the Pelasgian element of Germany was in large part expelled, and the remainder scattered. The political independence and ethnic personality of the ancient Arimii from the territory of Germany ends and their type disappears.

In the times when Marcus Ulpius Traianus governed the Roman provinces from the lower Rhine, few of the Arimii of Germany still spoke their national language, and few who still had the knowledge of their kinship with the Romans. The only people from the northern parts of upper Danube, who had preserved their Arimic character for a longer time, seem to have been the Hermundurii. About these Tacitus writes: “If we followed now the course of the Danube, closest to us are the Hermundurii, people loyal to the Romans. Because of this they are the only among the Germans who have the right to trade with us, not only on the banks of the Danube, but also in the interior parts, as well as in the splendid colonies of the Rhetia province. They come to us on which way they like and without being guarded, and while our commanders show to the other German nations our weapons and castrums, we open our houses and our villas to the Hermundurii, without them harboring any wish to take them from us” (Germ. c. 41).

 

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