The Germanic
tribes, which probably originated from a mixture of peoples
along the Baltic Sea coast, inhabited the northern part of
the European continent by about 500 B.C. By 100 B.C., they
had advanced into the central and southern areas of
present-day Germany. At that time, there were three major
tribal groups: the eastern Germanic peoples lived along the
Oder and Vistula rivers; the northern Germanic peoples
inhabited the southern part of present-day Scandinavia; and
the western Germanic peoples inhabited the extreme south of
Jutland and the area between the North Sea and the Elbe,
Rhine, and Main rivers. The Rhine provided a temporary
boundary between Germanic and Roman territory after the
defeat of the Suevian tribe by Julius Caesar about 70 B.C.
The threatening presence of warlike tribes beyond the Rhine
prompted the Romans to pursue a campaign of expansion into
Germanic territory. However, the defeat of the provincial
governor Varus by Arminius at the Battle of the Teutoburg
Forest in A.D. 9 halted Roman expansion; Arminius had
learned the enemy's strategies during his military training
in the Roman armies. This battle brought about the
liberation of the greater part of Germany from Roman
domination. The Rhine River was once again the boundary line
until the Romans reoccupied territory on its eastern bank
and built the Limes, a fortification 300 kilometers long, in
the first century A.D. The second
through the sixth centuries was a period of change and
destruction in which eastern and western Germanic tribes
left their native lands and settled in newly acquired
territories. This period of Germanic history, which later
supplied material for heroic epics, included the downfall of
the Roman Empire and resulted in a considerable expansion of
habitable area for the Germanic peoples. However, with the
exception of those kingdoms established by Franks and
Anglo-Saxons, Germanic kingdoms founded in such other parts
of Europe as Italy and Spain were of relatively short
duration because they were assimilated by the native
populations. The conquest of Roman Gaul by Frankish tribes
in the late fifth century became a milestone of European
history; it was the Franks who were to become the founders
of a civilized German state.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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