In 406 the
Iberian Peninsula was invaded by Germanic peoples consisting
of Vandals, Swabians, and Alans, a non-Germanic people of
Iranian stock who had attached themselves to the Vandals.
Within two years, the invaders had spread to the west coast.
The Swabians were primarily herders and were drawn to
Galicia because the climate was similar to what they had
left behind. The Vandals settled to the north of Galicia but
soon left with the remnants of the Alans for the east. After
the departure of the Vandals, the Swabians moved southward
and settled among the Luso-Romans, who put up no resistance
and assimilated them easily. The urban life of the
citânias gave way to the Swabian custom of
dispersed houses and smallholdings, a pattern that is
reflected today in the land tenure pattern of northern
Portugal. Roman administration disappeared. The capital of
Swabian hegemony was present-day Braga, but some Swabian
kings lived in the Roman city of Cale (present-day Porto) at
the mouth of the Douro River. The city was a customs post
between Galicia and Lusitania. Gradually, the city came to
be called Portucale, a compound of portus (port)
and Cale. This name also referred to the vast territory to
the immediate north and south of the banks of the river
upstream from the city. With large parts
of the peninsula now outside their control, the Romans
commissioned the Visigoths, the most highly Romanized of the
Germanic peoples, to restore Rome's hegemony in 415. The
Visigoths forced the Vandals to sail for North Africa and
defeated the Swabians. The Swabian kings and their
Visigothic overlords held commissions to govern in the name
of the emperor; their kingdoms were thus part of the Roman
Empire. Latin remained the language of government and
commerce. The Visigoths, who had been converted to
Christianity in the fifth century, decided to organize
themselves into an independent kingdom with their capital at
Toledo. The kingdom was based on the principle of absolute
monarchy, each sovereign being elected by an assembly of
nobles. Visigothic kings convoked great councils made up of
bishops and nobles to assist in deciding ecclesiastical and
civil matters. Visigoths gradually fused with the Swabians
and Hispano-Romans into a single politico-religious entity
that lasted until the eighth century, when the Iberian
Peninsula fell under Muslim domination. Romanization
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Domination
Library of Congress Country StudyGermanic
Invasions
Library of Congress Country Study
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