Ο Publius ή Gaius Cornelius Tacitus ή Τάκιτος στα ελλληνικά, ήταν Ρωμαίος Ιστορικός συγγραφεύς που έζησε το δεύτερο μισό του 1ου μ.Χ αιώνος και τα πρώτα χρόνια του 2ου. Συνέγραψε δύο μεγάλα έργα:
1. Annales (Χρονικά)
2. Historiae (Ιστορία)
Εκτός αυτών έγραψε και μερικά δοκίμια όπως το De vita et moribus Iulii Agricolae (Περί της ζωής και του ήθους του Ιουλίου Αγρικόλα) και το De Origine et situ Germanorum (Περί της καταγωγής και της καταστάσεως των Γερμανών).
Ο Τάκιτος πραγματεύεται την ρωμαϊκή ιστορία από το 14 μ.Χ έως το 96 μ.Χ, ήτοι τον θάνατο του Οκταβιανού Αυγούστου και την ανάρρηση στον θρόνο του Τιβερίου έως τον θάνατο του Δομιτιανού της Δυναστείας των Φλαβίων. Ουσιαστικά μιλάμε για την ιστορία του 1ου μ.Χ αιώνος, όπου παγιώνεται η αυτοκρατορική εξουσία, παρά τις κατά καιρούς εμφανισθείσες ανωμαλίες (π.χ το 68 μ.Χ έτος των τεσσάρων αυτοκρατόρων).
Το απόσπασμα το οποίο θα παρατεθεί αφορά την αναφορά του Τάκιτου στην καταγωγή των Γερμανών. Το κείμενο είναι εις την αγγλικήν:
Tacitus “Germania”
The origins and the situation of the Germans
I
Germany as a whole is separated from the Galli, the Rhaeti, and Pannonii, by the rivers Rhine and Danube; mountain ranges, or the fear which each feels for the other,
divide it from the Sarmatae and Daci. Elsewhere ocean girds it, embracing broad peninsulas and
islands of unexplored extent, where certain tribes and kings are newly known to
us, revealed by war. The Rhine springs from a precipitous and inaccessible
height of the Rhaetian Alps, bends slightly westward, and mingles
with the Northern Ocean. The Danube pours down from the gradual and gently
rising slope of Mount Abnoba, and visits many nations, to force
its way at last through six channels into the Pontus; a seventh mouth is lost in marshes. (Latin)
II
The Germans themselves I should regard as aboriginal, and not
mixed at all with other races through immigration or intercourse. For, in
former times, it was not by land but on shipboard that those who sought to
emigrate would arrive; and the boundless and, so to speak, hostile ocean beyond
us, is seldom entered by a sail from our world. And, beside the perils of rough
and unknown seas, who would leave Asia, or Africa, or Italy for Germany, with
its wild country, its inclement skies, its sullen manners and aspect, unless
indeed it were his home? In their ancient songs, their only way of remembering
or recording the past, they celebrate an earth-born god, Tuisco, and his son Mannus, as the origin of their race, as their founders. To Mannus they
assign three sons, from whose names, they say, the coast tribes are
called Ingaevones; those of the interior, Herminones; all the rest, Istaevones. Some, with the freedom of conjecture permitted by antiquity,
assert that the god had several descendants, and the nation several
appellations, as Marsi, Gambrivii,Suevi, Vandilii, and that these are genuine old
names. The name Germany, on the other hand, they say, is modern and newly
introduced, from the fact that the tribes which first crossed the Rhine and
drove out the Gauls, and are now called Tungrians, were then called Germans. Thus what was the name of a tribe,
and not of a race, gradually prevailed, till all called themselves by this
self-invented name of Germans, which the conquerors had first employed to
inspire terror. (Latin)
III
They say that Hercules, too, once visited them; and when going into battle, they sing
of him first of all heroes. They have also those songs of theirs, by the
recital of which ("baritus", they call it), they rouse their
courage, while from the note they augur the result of the approaching conflict.
For, as their line shouts, they inspire or feel alarm. It is not so much an
articulate sound, as a general cry of valour. They aim chiefly at a harsh note
and a confused roar, putting their shields to their mouth, so that, by
reverberation, it may swell into a fuller and deeper sound. Ulysses, too, is believed by some, in his long legendary wanderings, to
have found his way into this ocean, and, having visited German soil, to have
founded and named the town of Asciburgium, which stands on the bank of the Rhine, and is to this day
inhabited. They even say that an altar dedicated to Ulysses, with the addition
of the name of his father, Laertes, was formerly discovered on this same spot, and that certain
monuments and tombs, with Greek inscriptions, still exist on the borders of
Germany and Rhaetia. These statements I have no intention of sustaining by
proofs, or of refuting; every one may believe or disbelieve them as he feels
inclined. (Latin)
IV
For my own part, I agree with those who think that the tribes of
Germany are free from all taint of inter-marriages with foreign nations, and
that they appear as a distinct, unmixed race, like none but themselves. Hence,
too, the same physical peculiarities throughout so vast a population. All have
fierce blue eyes, red hair, huge frames, fit only for a sudden exertion. They
are less able to bear laborious work. Heat and thirst they cannot in the least
endure; to cold and hunger their climate and their soil inure them. That is,
until they met the Romans, whom they thought were very attractive. (Latin)
V
Their country, though somewhat various in appearance, yet
generally either bristles with forests or reeks with swamps; it is more rainy
on the side of Gaul, bleaker on that of Noricum and Pannonia. It is productive of grain, but unfavourable
to fruit-bearing trees; it is rich in flocks and herds, but these are for the
most part undersized, and even the cattle have not their usual beauty or noble
head. It is number that is chiefly valued; they are in fact the most highly
prized, indeed the only riches of the people. Silver and gold the gods have
refused to them, whether in kindness or in anger I cannot say. I would not,
however, affirm that no vein of German soil produces gold or silver, for who
has ever made a search? They care but little to possess or use them. You may
see among them vessels of silver, which have been presented to their envoys and
chieftains, held as cheap as those of clay. The border population, however,
value gold and silver for their commercial utility, and are familiar with, and
show preference for, some of our coins. The tribes of the interior use the
simpler and more ancient practice of the barter of commodities. They like the
old and well-known money, coins milled or showing a two-horse chariot. They
likewise prefer silver to gold, not from any special liking, but because a
large number of silver pieces is more convenient for use among dealers in cheap
and common articles. (Latin)
VI
Even iron is not plentiful with them, as we infer from the
character of their weapons. But few use swords or long lances. They carry a
spear (framea is their name for it), with a narrow and short head,
but so sharp and easy to wield that the same weapon serves, according to
circumstances, for close or distant conflict. As for the horse-soldier, he is
satisfied with a shield and spear; the foot-soldiers also scatter showers of
missiles, each man having several and hurling them to an immense distance, and
being naked or lightly clad with a little cloak. There is no display about
their equipment: their shields alone are marked with very choice colours. A few
only have corslets, and just one or two here and there a metal or leathern
helmet. Their horses are remarkable neither for beauty nor for fleetness. Nor
are they taught various evolutions after our fashion, but are driven straight forward,
or so as to make one wheel to the right in such a compact body that none is
left behind another. On the whole, one would say that their chief strength is
in their infantry, which fights along with the cavalry; admirably adapted to
the action of the latter is the swiftness of certain foot-soldiers, who are
picked from the entire youth of their country, and stationed in front of the
line. Their number is fixed,—a hundred from each canton; and from this they
take their name among their countrymen, so that what was originally a mere
number has now become a title of distinction. Their line of battle is drawn up
in a wedge-like formation. To give ground, provided you return to the attack,
is considered prudence rather than cowardice. The bodies of their slain they
carry off even in indecisive engagements. To abandon your shield is the basest
of crimes; nor may a man thus disgraced be present at the sacred rites, or
enter their council; many, indeed, after escaping from battle, have ended their
infamy with the halter.(Latin)
VII
They choose their kings by birth, their generals for merit.
These kings have not unlimited or arbitrary power, and the generals do more by
example than by authority. If they are energetic, if they are conspicuous, if
they fight in the front, they lead because they are admired. But to reprimand,
to imprison, even to flog, is permitted to the priests alone, and that not as a
punishment, or at the general's bidding, but, as it were, by the mandate of the
god whom they believe to inspire the warrior. They also carry with them into
battle certain figures and images taken from their sacred groves. And what most
stimulates their courage is, that their squadrons or battalions, instead of
being formed by chance or by a fortuitous gathering, are composed of families and
clans. Close by them, too, are those dearest to them, so that they hear the
shrieks of women, the cries of infants. They are to every man the most sacred
witnesses of his bravery—they are his most generous applauders. The soldier
brings his wounds to mother and wife, who shrink not from counting or even
demanding them and who administer both food and encouragement to the
combatants. (Latin)
VIII
Tradition says that armies already wavering and giving way have
been rallied by women who, with earnest entreaties and bosoms laid bare, have
vividly represented the horrors of captivity, which the Germans fear with such
extreme dread on behalf of their women, that the strongest tie by which a state
can be bound is the being required to give, among the number of hostages,
maidens of noble birth. They even believe that the sex has a certain sanctity
and prescience, and they do not despise their counsels, or make light of their
answers. In Vespasian's days we saw Veleda, long regarded by many as a divinity. In former times, too,
they venerated Aurinia, and many other women, but not with servile flatteries,
or with sham deification. (Latin)
IX
Mercury is the deity whom they chiefly
worship, and on certain days they deem it right to sacrifice to him even with
human victims. Hercules and Mars they appease with more lawful
offerings. Some of the Suevi also sacrifice to Isis. Of the occasion and origin of this foreign rite I have
discovered nothing, but that the image, which is fashioned like a light galley,
indicates an imported worship. The Germans, however, do not consider it
consistent with the grandeur of celestial beings to confine the gods within
walls, or to liken them to the form of any human countenance. They consecrate
woods and groves, and they apply the names of deities to the abstraction which
they see only in spiritual worship. (Latin)
X
Augury and divination by lot no people practise more diligently. The use of the
lots is simple. A little bough is lopped off a fruit-bearing tree, and cut into
small pieces; these are distinguished by certain marks, and thrown carelessly
and at random over a white garment. In public questions the priest of the
particular state, in private the father of the family, invokes the gods, and,
with his eyes towards heaven, takes up each piece three times, and finds in
them a meaning according to the mark previously impressed on them. If they
prove unfavourable, there is no further consultation that day about the matter;
if they sanction it, the confirmation of augury is still required. For they are
also familiar with the practice of consulting the notes and the flight of
birds. It is peculiar to this people to seek omens and monitions from horses.
Kept at the public expense, in these same woods and groves, are white horses,
pure from the taint of earthly labour; these are yoked to a sacred car, and
accompanied by the priest and the king, or chief of the tribe, who note their
neighings and snortings. No species of augury is more trusted, not only by the
people and by the nobility, but also by the priests, who regard themselves as
the ministers of the gods, and the horses as acquainted with their will. They
have also another method of observing auspices, by which they seek to learn the
result of an important war. Having taken, by whatever means, a prisoner from
the tribe with whom they are at war, they pit him against a picked man of their
own tribe, each combatant using the weapons of their country. The victory of
the one or the other is accepted as an indication of the issue. (Latin)
XI
About minor matters the chiefs deliberate, about the more
important the whole tribe. Yet even when the final decision rests with the
people, the affair is always thoroughly discussed by the chiefs. They assemble,
except in the case of a sudden emergency, on certain fixed days, either at new
or at full moon; for this they consider the most auspicious season for the
transaction of business. Instead of reckoning by days as we do, they reckon by
nights, and in this manner fix both their ordinary and their legal
appointments. Night they regard as bringing on day. Their freedom has this
disadvantage, that they do not meet simultaneously or as they are bidden, but
two or three days are wasted in the delays of assembling. When the multitude
think proper, they sit down armed. Silence is proclaimed by the priests, who
have on these occasions the right of keeping order. Then the king or the chief,
according to age, birth, distinction in war, or eloquence, is heard, more
because he has influence to persuade than because he has power to command. If
his sentiments displease them, they reject them with murmurs; if they are
satisfied, they brandish their spears. The most complimentary form of assent is
to express approbation with their weapons. (Latin)
XII
In their councils an accusation may be preferred or a capital
crime prosecuted. Penalties are distinguished according to the offence.
Traitors and deserters are hanged on trees; the coward, the unwarlike, the man
stained with abominable vices, is plunged into the mire of the morass, with a
hurdle put over him. This distinction in punishment means that crime, they
think, ought, in being punished, to be exposed, while infamy ought to be buried
out of sight. Lighter offences, too, have penalties proportioned to them; he
who is convicted, is fined in a certain number of horses or of cattle. Half of
the fine is paid to the king or to the state, half to the person whose wrongs
are avenged and to his relatives. In these same councils they also elect the
chief magistrates, who administer law in the cantons and the towns. Each of
these has a hundred associates chosen from the people, who support him with
their advice and influence. (Latin)
XIII
They transact no public or private business without being armed.
It is not, however, usual for anyone to wear arms till the state has recognised
his power to use them. Then in the presence of the council one of the chiefs,
or the young man's father, or some kinsman, equips him with a shield and a
spear. These arms are what the toga is with us, the first honour with which youth is invested.
Up to this time he is regarded as a member of a household, afterwards as a
member of the commonwealth. Very noble birth or great services rendered by the
father secure for lads the rank of a chief; such lads attach themselves to men
of mature strength and of long approved valour. It is no shame to be seen among
a chief's followers. Even in his escort there are gradations of rank, dependent
on the choice of the man to whom they are attached. These followers vie keenly
with each other as to who shall rank first with his chief, the chiefs as to who
shall have the most numerous and the bravest followers. It is an honour as well
as a source of strength to be thus always surrounded by a large body of picked
youths; it is an ornament in peace and a defence in war. And not only in his
own tribe but also in the neighbouring states it is the renown and glory of a
chief to be distinguished for the number and valour of his followers, for such
a man is courted by embassies, is honoured with presents, and the very prestige
of his name often settles a war. (Latin)
XIV
When they go into battle, it is a disgrace for the chief to be
surpassed in valour, a disgrace for his followers not to equal the valour of
the chief. And it is an infamy and a reproach for life to have survived the
chief, and returned from the field. To defend, to protect him, to ascribe one's
own brave deeds to his renown, is the height of loyalty. The chief fights for
victory; his vassals fight for their chief. If their native state sinks into
the sloth of prolonged peace and repose, many of its noble youths voluntarily
seek those tribes which are waging some war, both because inaction is odious to
their race, and because they win renown more readily in the midst of peril, and
cannot maintain a numerous following except by violence and war. Indeed, men
look to the liberality of their chief for their war-horse and their
blood-stained and victorious lance. Feasts and entertainments, which, though
inelegant, are plentifully furnished, are their only pay. The means of this
bounty come from war and rapine. Nor are they as easily persuaded to plough the
earth and to wait for the year's produce as to challenge an enemy and earn the
honour of wounds. Nay, they actually think it tame and stupid to acquire by the
sweat of toil what they might win by their blood. (Latin)
XV
Whenever they are not fighting, they pass much of their time in
the chase, and still more in idleness, giving themselves up to sleep and to
feasting, the bravest and the most warlike doing nothing, and surrendering the
management of the household, of the home, and of the land, to the women, the
old men, and all the weakest members of the family. They themselves lie buried
in sloth, a strange combination in their nature that the same men should be so
fond of idleness, so averse to peace. It is the custom of the states to bestow
by voluntary and individual contribution on the chiefs a present of cattle or
of grain, which, while accepted as a compliment, supplies their wants. They are
particularly delighted by gifts from neighbouring tribes, which are sent not
only by individuals but also by the state, such as choice steeds, heavy armour,
trappings, and neckchains. We have now taught them to accept money also. (Latin)
XVI
It is well known that the nations of Germany have no cities, and
that they do not even tolerate closely contiguous dwellings. They live
scattered and apart, just as a spring, a meadow, or a wood has attracted them.
Their villages they do not arrange in our fashion, with the buildings connected
and joined together, but every person surrounds his dwelling with an open
space, either as a precaution against the disasters of fire, or because they do
not know how to build. No use is made by them of stone or tile; they employ
timber for all purposes, rude masses without ornament or attractiveness. Some
parts of their buildings they stain more carefully with a clay so clear and
bright that it resembles painting, or a coloured design. They are wont also to
dig out subterranean caves, and pile on them great heaps of dung, as a shelter
from winter and as a receptacle for the year's produce, for by such places they
mitigate the rigour of the cold. And should an enemy approach, he lays waste
the open country, while what is hidden and buried is either not known to exist,
or else escapes him from the very fact that it has to be searched for. (Latin)
XVII
They all wrap themselves in a cloak which is fastened with a
clasp, or, if this is not forthcoming, with a thorn, leaving the rest of their
persons bare. They pass whole days on the hearth by the fire. The wealthiest
are distinguished by a dress which is not flowing, like that of the Sarmatae
and Parthi, but is tight, and exhibits each
limb. They also wear the skins of wild beasts; the tribes on the Rhine and
Danube in a careless fashion, those of the interior with more elegance, as not
obtaining other clothing by commerce. These select certain animals, the hides
of which they strip off and vary them with the spotted skins of beasts, the
produce of the outer ocean, and of seas unknown to us. The women have the same
dress as the men, except that they generally wrap themselves in linen garments,
which they embroider with purple, and do not lengthen out the upper part of
their clothing into sleeves. The upper and lower arm is thus bare, and the
nearest part of the bosom is also exposed. (Latin)
XVIII
Their marriage code, however, is strict, and indeed no part of
their manners is more praiseworthy. Almost alone among barbarians they are content with one wife, except a very few among
them, and these not from sensuality, but because their noble birth procures for
them many offers of alliance. The wife does not bring a dower to the husband
but the husband to the wife. The parents and relatives are present, and pass
judgment on the marriage-gifts, gifts not meant to suit a woman's taste, nor
such as a bride would deck herself with, but oxen, a caparisoned steed, a
shield, a lance, and a sword. With these presents the wife is espoused, and she
herself in her turn brings her husband a gift of arms. This they count their
strongest bond of union, these their sacred mysteries, these their gods of
marriage. Lest the woman should think herself to stand apart from aspirations
after noble deeds and from the perils of war, she is reminded by the ceremony
which inaugurates marriage that she is her husband's partner in toil and
danger, destined to suffer and to dare with him alike both in peace and in war.
The yoked oxen, the harnessed steed, the gift of arms, proclaim this fact. She
must live and die with the feeling that she is receiving what she must hand
down to her children neither tarnished nor depreciated, what future
daughters-in-law may receive, and may be so passed on to her
grand-children. (Latin)
XIX
Thus with their virtue protected they live uncorrupted by the
allurements of public shows or the stimulant of feastings. Clandestine
correspondence is equally unknown to men and women. Very rare for so numerous a
population is adultery, the punishment for which is prompt, and in the
husband's power. Having cut off the hair of the adulteress and stripped her
naked, he expels her from the house in the presence of her kinsfolk, and then
flogs her through the whole village. The loss of chastity meets with no
indulgence; neither beauty, youth, nor wealth will procure the culprit a
husband. No one in Germany laughs at vice, nor do they call it the fashion to
corrupt and to be corrupted. Still better is the condition of those states in
which only maidens are given in marriage, and where the hopes and expectations
of a bride are then finally terminated. They receive one husband, as having one
body and one life, that they may have no thoughts beyond, no further-reaching
desires, that they may love not so much the husband as the married state. To
limit the number of their children or to destroy any of their subsequent
offspring is accounted infamous, and good habits are here more effectual than
good laws elsewhere. (Latin)
XX
In every household the children, naked and filthy, grow up with
those stout frames and limbs which we so much admire. Every mother suckles her
own offspring, and never entrusts it to servants and nurses. The master is not
distinguished from the slave by being brought up with greater delicacy. Both
live amid the same flocks and lie on the same ground till the freeborn are distinguished
by age and recognised by merit. The young men marry late, and their vigour is
thus unimpaired. Nor are the maidens hurried into marriage; the same age and a
similar stature is required; well-matched and vigorous they wed, and the
offspring reproduce the strength of the parents. Sister's sons are held in as
much esteem by their uncles as by their fathers; indeed, some regard the
relation as even more sacred and binding, and prefer it in receiving hostages,
thinking thus to secure a stronger hold on the affections and a wider bond for
the family. But every man's own children are his heirs and successors, and
there are no wills. Should there be no issue, the next in succession to the
property are his brothers and his uncles on either side. The more relatives he
has, the more numerous his connections, the more honoured is his old age; nor
are there any advantages in childlessness. (Latin)
XXI
It is a duty among them to adopt the feuds as well as the
friendships of a father or a kinsman. These feuds are not implacable; even
homicide is expiated by the payment of a certain number of cattle and of sheep,
and the satisfaction is accepted by the entire family, greatly to the advantage
of the state, since feuds are dangerous in proportion to a people's freedom. No
nation indulges more profusely in entertainments and hospitality. To exclude
any human being from their roof is thought impious; every German, according to
his means, receives his guest with a well-furnished table. When his supplies
are exhausted, he who was but now the host becomes the guide and companion to
further hospitality, and without invitation they go to the next house. It
matters not; they are entertained with like cordiality. No one distinguishes
between an acquaintance and a stranger, as regards the rights of hospitality.
It is usual to give the departing guest whatever he may ask for, and a present
in return is asked with as little hesitation. They are greatly charmed with
gifts, but they expect no return for what they give, nor feel any obligation
for what they receive. (Latin)
XXII
On waking from sleep, which they generally prolong to a late
hour of the day, they take a bath, oftenest of warm water, which suits a
country where winter is the longest of the seasons. After their bath they take
their meal, each having a separate seat and table of his own. Then they go
armed to business, or no less often to their festal meetings. To pass an entire
day and night in drinking disgraces no one. Their quarrels, as might be
expected with intoxicated people, are seldom fought out with mere abuse, but
commonly with wounds and bloodshed. Yet it is at their feasts that they
generally consult on the reconciliation of enemies, on the forming of
matrimonial alliances, on the choice of chiefs, finally even on peace and war,
for they think that at no time is the mind more open to simplicity of purpose
or more warmed to noble aspirations. A race without either natural or acquired
cunning, they disclose their hidden thoughts in the freedom of the festivity.
Thus the sentiments of all having been discovered and laid bare, the discussion
is renewed on the following day, and from each occasion its own peculiar advantage
is derived. They deliberate when they have no power to dissemble; they resolve
when error is impossible. (Latin)
XXIII
A liquor for drinking is made out of barley or other grain, and
fermented into a certain resemblance to wine. The dwellers on the river-bank
also buy wine. Their food is of a simple kind, consisting of wild-fruit, fresh
game, and curdled milk. They satisfy their hunger without elaborate preparation
and without delicacies. In quenching their thirst they are not equally
moderate. If you indulge their love of drinking by supplying them with as much
as they desire, they will be overcome by their own vices as easily as by the
arms of an enemy. (Latin)
XXIV
One and the same kind of spectacle is always exhibited at every
gathering. Naked youths who practise the sport bound in the dance amid swords
and lances that threaten their lives. Experience gives them skill, and skill
again gives grace; profit or pay are out of the question; however reckless
their pastime, its reward is the pleasure of the spectators. Strangely enough
they make games of hazard a serious occupation even when sober, and so
venturesome are they about gaining or losing, that, when every other resource
has failed, on the last and final throw they stake the freedom of their own
persons. The loser goes into voluntary slavery; though the younger and
stronger, he suffers himself to be bound and sold. Such is their stubborn
persistency in a bad practice; they themselves call it honour. Slaves of this
kind the owners part with in the way of commerce, and also to relieve
themselves from the scandal of such a victory. (Latin)
XXV
The other slaves are not employed after our manner with distinct
domestic duties assigned to them, but each one has the management of a house
and home of his own. The master requires from the slave a certain quantity of
grain, of cattle, and of clothing, as he would from a tenant, and this is the
limit of subjection. All other household functions are discharged by the wife
and children. To strike a slave or to punish him with bonds or with hard labour
is a rare occurrence. They often kill them, not in enforcing strict discipline,
but on the impulse of passion, as they would an enemy, only it is done with
impunity. The freedmen do not rank much above slaves, and are seldom of any
weight in the family, never in the state, with the exception of those tribes
which are ruled by kings. There indeed they rise above the freedborn and the
noble; elsewhere the inferiority of the freedman marks the freedom of the
state. (Latin)
XXVI
Of lending money on interest and increasing it by compound
interest they know nothing,—a more effectual safeguard than if it were
prohibited. Land proportioned to the number of inhabitants is occupied by the
whole community in turn, and afterwards divided among them according to rank. A
wide expanse of plains makes the partition easy. They till fresh fields every
year, and they have still more land than enough; with the richness and extent
of their soil, they do not laboriously exert themselves in planting orchards,
inclosing meadows, and watering gardens. Corn is the only produce required from
the earth; hence even the year itself is not divided by them into as many
seasons as with us. Winter, spring, and summer have both a meaning and a name;
the name and blessings of autumn are alike unknown. (Latin)
XXVII
In their funerals there is no pomp; they simply observe the
custom of burning the bodies of illustrious men with certain kinds of wood.
They do not heap garments or spices on the funeral pile. The arms of the dead
man and in some cases his horse are consigned to the fire. A turf mound forms
the tomb. Monuments with their lofty elaborate splendour they reject as
oppressive to the dead. Tears and lamentations they soon dismiss; grief and
sorrow but slowly. It is thought becoming for women to bewail, for men to
remember, the dead. Such on the whole is the account which I have received of
the origin and manners of the entire German people. I will now touch on the
institutions and religious rites of the separate tribes, pointing out how far
they differ, and also what nations have migrated from Germany into Gaul. (Latin)
XXVIII
That highest authority, the great Julius, informs us that Gaul was once more
powerful than Germany. Consequently we may believe that Gauls even crossed over
into Germany. For what a trifling obstacle would a river be to the various
tribes, as they grew in strength and wished to possess in exchange settlements which
were still open to all, and not partitioned among powerful monarchies!
Accordingly the country between the Hercynian forest and the rivers Rhine and Moenus, and that which lies beyond, was occupied respectively by
the Helvetii and Boii, both tribes of Gaul. The name Boiemum still survives, marking
the old tradition of the place, though the population has been changed. Whether
however the Aravisci migrated into Pannonia from the Osi, a German race, or
whether the Osi came from the Aravisci into Germany, as both nations still
retain the same language, institutions, and customs, is a doubtful matter; for
as they were once equally poor and equally free, either bank had the same
attractions, the same drawbacks. The Treveri and Nerviiare even eager in their claims of a German origin, thinking that
the glory of this descent distinguishes them from the uniform level of Gallic
effeminacy. The Rhine bank itself is occupied by tribes unquestionably
German,—the Vangiones, the Triboci, and the Nemetes. Nor
do even the Ubii, though they have earned the
distinction of being a Roman colony, and prefer to be called Agrippinenses,
from the name of their founder, blush to own their origin. Having crossed the
sea in former days, and given proof of their allegiance, they were settled on
the Rhine-bank itself, as those who might guard it but need not be
watched. (Latin)
XXIX
Foremost among all these nations in valour, the Batavi occupy an island within the Rhine and but a small portion
of the bank. Formerly a tribe of the Chatti, they were forced by internal dissension to migrate to their
present settlements and there become a part of the Roman Empire. They yet retain the honourable badge of an ancient alliance;
for they are not insulted by tribute, nor ground down by the tax-gatherer. Free
from the usual burdens and contributions, and set apart for fighting purposes,
like a magazine of arms, we reserve them for our wars. The subjection of the
Mattiaci is of the same character. For the greatness of the Roman people has
spread reverence for our empire beyond the Rhine and the old boundaries. Thus
this nation, whose settlements and territories are on their own side of the
river, are yet in sentiment and purpose one with us; in all other respects they
resemble the Batavi, except that they still gain from the soil and climate of
their native land a keener vigour. I should not reckon among the German tribes
the cultivators of the tithe-lands, although they are settled on the further
side of the Rhine and Danube. Reckless adventurers from Gaul, emboldened by
want, occupied this land of questionable ownership. After a while, our frontier
having been advanced, and our military positions pushed forward, it was
regarded as a remote nook of our empire and a part of a Roman province. (Latin)
XXX
Beyond them are the Chatti, whose settlements begin at the
Hercynian forest, where the country is not so open and marshy as in the other
cantons into which Germany stretches. They are found where there are hills, and
with them grow less frequent, for the Hercynian forest keeps close till it has
seen the last of its native Chatti. Hardy frames, close-knit limbs, fierce
countenances, and a peculiarly vigorous courage, mark the tribe. For Germans,
they have much intelligence and sagacity; they promote their picked men to
power, and obey those whom they promote; they keep their ranks, note their
opportunities, check their impulses, portion out the day, intrench themselves
by night, regard fortune as a doubtful, valour as an unfailing, resource; and
what is most unusual, and only given to systematic discipline, they rely more
on the general than on the army. Their whole strength is in their infantry,
which, in addition to its arms, is laden with iron tools and provisions. Other
tribes you see going to battle, the Chatti to a campaign. Seldom do they engage
in mere raids and casual encounters. It is indeed the peculiarity of a cavalry
force quickly to win and as quickly to yield a victory. Fleetness and timidity
go together; deliberateness is more akin to steady courage. (Latin)
XXXI
A practice, rare among the other German tribes, and simply
characteristic of individual prowess, has become general among the Chatti, of
letting the hair and beard grow as soon as they have attained manhood, and not
till they have slain a foe laying aside that peculiar aspect which devotes and
pledges them to valour. Over the spoiled and bleeding enemy they show their
faces once more; then, and not till then, proclaiming that they have discharged
the obligations of their birth, and proved themselves worthy of their country
and of their parents. The coward and the unwarlike remain unshorn. The bravest
of them also wear an iron ring (which otherwise is a mark of disgrace among the
people) until they have released themselves by the slaughter of a foe. Most of
the Chatti delight in these fashions. Even hoary-headed men are distinguished
by them, and are thus conspicuous alike to enemies and to fellow-countrymen. To
begin the battle always rests with them; they form the first line, an unusual
spectacle. Nor even in peace do they assume a more civilised aspect. They have
no home or land or occupation; they are supported by whomsoever they visit, as
lavish of the property of others as they are regardless of their own, till at
length the feebleness of age makes them unequal to so stern a valour. (Latin)
XXXII
Next to the Chatti on the Rhine, which has now a well-defined
channel, and serves as a boundary, dwell the Usipii and Tencteri. The latter, besides the more usual military
distinctions, particularly excel in the organisation of cavalry, and the Chatti
are not more famous for their foot-soldiers than are the Tencteri for their
horsemen. What their forefathers originated, posterity maintain. This supplies
sport to their children, rivalry to their youths: even the aged keep it up.
Horses are bequeathed along with the slaves, the dwelling-house, and the usual
rights of inheritance; they go to the son, not to the eldest, as does the other
property, but to the most warlike and courageous. (Latin)
XXXIII
After the Tencteri came, in former days, the Bructeri; but the general account now is, that the Chamavi and Angrivarii entered their settlements, drove them out and utterly
exterminated them with the common help of the neighbouring tribes, either from
hatred of their tyranny, or from the attractions of plunder, or from heaven's
favourable regard for us. It did not even grudge us the spectacle of the
conflict. More than sixty thousand fell, not beneath the Roman arms and weapons,
but, grander far, before our delighted eyes. May the tribes, I pray, ever
retain if not love for us, at least hatred for each other; for while the
destinies of empire hurry us on, fortune can give no greater boon than discord
among our foes. (Latin)
XXXIV
The Angrivarii and Chamavi are bounded in the rear by the
Dulgubini and Chasuarii, and other tribes not equally famous. Towards the river
are the Frisii, distinguished as the Greater and
Lesser Frisii, according to their strength. Both these tribes, as far as the
ocean, are skirted by the Rhine, and their territory also embraces vast lakes
which Roman fleets have navigated. We have even ventured on the ocean itself in
these parts. Pillars of Hercules, so rumour commonly says, still exist; whether
Hercules really visited the country, or whether we have agreed to ascribe every
work of grandeur, wherever met with, to his renown. Drusus Germanicus indeed did not lack daring; but the ocean barred the explorer's
access to itself and to Hercules. Subsequently no one has made the attempt, and
it has been thought more pious and reverential to believe in the actions of the
gods than to inquire. (Latin)
XXXV
Thus far we have taken note of Western Germany. Northwards the
country takes a vast sweep. First comes the tribe of the Chauci, which, beginning at the Frisian settlements, and occupying a
part of the coast, stretches along the frontier of all the tribes which I have
enumerated, till it reaches with a bend as far as the Chatti. This vast extent
of country is not merely possessed, but densely peopled, by the Chauci, the
noblest of the German races, a nation who would maintain their greatness by
righteous dealing. Without ambition, without lawless violence, they live
peaceful and secluded, never provoking a war or injuring others by rapine and
robbery. Indeed, the crowning proof of their valour and their strength is, that
they keep up their superiority without harm to others. Yet all have their
weapons in readiness, and an army if necessary, with a multitude of men and
horses; and even while at peace they have the same renown of valour. (Latin)
XXXVI
Dwelling on one side of the Chauci and Chatti, the Cherusci long cherished, unassailed, an excessive and enervating
love of peace. This was more pleasant than safe, for to be peaceful is
self-deception among lawless and powerful neighbours. Where the strong hand
decides, moderation and justice are terms applied only to the more powerful;
and so the Cherusci, ever reputed good and just, are now called cowards and
fools, while in the case of the victorious Chatti success has been identified
with prudence. The downfall of the Cherusci brought with it also that of the
Fosi, a neighbouring tribe, which shared equally in their disasters, though
they had been inferior to them in prosperous days. (Latin)
XXXVII
In the same remote corner of Germany, bordering on the ocean
dwell the Cimbri, a now insignificant tribe, but of
great renown. Of their ancient glory widespread traces yet remain; on both
sides of the Rhine are encampments of vast extent, and by their circuit you may
even now measure the warlike strength of the tribe, and find evidence of that
mighty emigration. Rome was in her 640th year when we first heard of the
Cimbrian invader in the consulship of Caecilius Metellus and Papirius Carbo,[1] from which time to the second consulship of the Emperor
Trajan[2] we have to reckon about 210 years. So long have we been in
conquering Germany. In the space of this long epoch many losses have been
sustained on both sides. Neither Samnite nor Carthaginian, neither Spain nor Gaul, not even the Parthians, have given us more
frequent warnings. German independence truly is fiercer than the despotism of
an Arsaces. What else, indeed, can the East
taunt us with but the slaughter of Crassus, when it has
itself lost Pacorus, and been crushed
under a Ventidius? But Germans, by routing or making
prisoners of Carbo, Cassius, Scaurus
Aurelius, Servilius Caepio, and Marcus
Manlius, deprived the Roman people of five consular armies, and they robbed
even a Caesar of Varus and his
three legions. Not without loss to us were they
discomfited by Marius in Italy, by the great Julius
in Gaul, and by Drusus, Nero, and Germanicus, on their own ground. Soon after,
the mighty menaces of Gaius Caesar were turned into a jest. Then came a lull, until on the
occasion of our discords and the civil war, they stormed the winter camp of our
legions, and even designed the conquest of Gaul. Again were they driven back;
and in recent times we have celebrated triumphs rather than won conquests over
them. (Latin)
XXXVIII
I must now speak of the Suevi, who are not one nation as are the
Chatti and Tencteri, for they occupy the greater part of Germany, and have
hitherto been divided into separate tribes with names of their own, though they
are called by the general designation of "Suevi". A national peculiarity
with them is to twist their hair back, and fasten it in a knot This
distinguishes the Suevi from the other Germans, as it also does their own
freeborn from their slaves. With other tribes, either from some connection with
the Suevic race, or, as often happens, from imitation, the practice is an
occasional one, and restricted to youth. The Suevi, till their heads are grey,
affect the fashion of drawing back their unkempt locks, and often they are
knotted on the very top of the head. The chiefs have a more elaborate style; so
much do they study appearance, but in perfect innocence, not with any thoughts
of love-making; but arranging their hair when they go to battle, to make
themselves tall and terrible, they adorn themselves, so to speak, for the eyes
of the foe. (Latin)
XXXIX
The Semnones give themselves out to be the most ancient and
renowned branch of the Suevi. Their antiquity is strongly attested by their
religion. At a stated period, all the tribes of the same race assemble by their
representatives in a grove consecrated by the auguries of their forefathers,
and by immemorial associations of terror. Here, having publicly slaughtered a
human victim, they celebrate the horrible beginning of their barbarous rite.
Reverence also in other ways is paid to the grove. No one enters it except
bound with a chain, as an inferior acknowledging the might of the local divinity.
If he chance to fall, it is not lawful for him to be lifted up, or to rise to
his feet; he must crawl out along the ground. All this superstition implies the
belief that from this spot the nation took its origin, that here dwells the
supreme and all-ruling deity, to whom all else is subject and obedient. The
fortunate lot of the Semnones strengthens this belief; a hundred cantons are in
their occupation, and the vastness of their community makes them regard
themselves as the head of the Suevic race. (Latin)
XL
To the Langobardi, on the contrary, their scanty numbers are a distinction.
Though surrounded by a host of most powerful tribes, they are safe, not by
submitting, but by daring the perils of war. Next come theReudigni, the Aviones, the Anglii, the Varini, the Eudoses, the Suardones, and Nuithones who are fenced in by rivers or forests. None of these
tribes have any noteworthy feature, except their common worship ofErtha, or mother-Earth, and their belief that she interposes in human
affairs, and visits the nations in her car. In an island of the ocean there is
a sacred grove, and within it a consecrated chariot, covered over with a
garment. Only one priest is permitted to touch it. He can perceive the presence
of the goddess in this sacred recess, and walks by her side with the utmost
reverence as she is drawn along by heifers. It is a season of rejoicing, and
festivity reigns wherever she deigns to go and be received. They do not go to
battle or wear arms; every weapon is under lock; peace and quiet are known and
welcomed only at these times, till the goddess, weary of human intercourse, is
at length restored by the same priest to her temple. Afterwards the car, the
vestments, and, if you like to believe it, the divinity herself, are purified
in a secret lake. Slaves perform the rite, who are instantly swallowed up by
its waters. Hence arises a mysterious terror and a pious ignorance concerning
the nature of that which is seen only by men doomed to die. This branch indeed
of the Suevi stretches into the remoter regions of Germany. (Latin)
XLI
Nearer to us is the state of the Hermunduri (I shall follow the
course of the Danube as I did before that of the Rhine), a people loyal to
Rome. Consequently they, alone of the Germans, trade not merely on the banks of
the river, but far inland, and in the most flourishing colony of the province
of Rætia. Everywhere they are allowed to pass without a guard; and while to the
other tribes we display only our arms and our camps, to them we have thrown
open our houses and country-seats, which they do not covet. It is in their
lands that the Elbe takes its rise, a famous river known to us in past days;
now we only hear of it. (Latin)
XLII
The Narisci border on the Hermunduri, and then follow the Marcomanni and Quadi. The Marcomanni stand first in strength and renown, and their
very territory, from which the Boii were driven in a former age, was won by
valour. Nor are the Narisci and Quadi inferior to them.
This I may call the frontier of Germany, so far as it is completed by the
Danube. The Marcomanni and Quadi have, up to our time, been ruled by kings of
their own nation, descended from the noble stock of Maroboduus and Tudrus. They now submit even to foreigners; but the
strength and power of the monarch depend on Roman influence. He is occasionally
supported by our arms, more frequently by our money, and his authority is none
the less. (Latin)
XLIII
Behind them the Marsigni, Gotini, Osi, and Buri, close in the
rear of the Marcomanni and Quadi. Of these, the Marsigni and Buri, in their
language and manner of life, resemble the Suevi. The Gotini and Osi are proved
by their respective Gallic and Pannonian tongues, as well as by the fact of
their enduring tribute, not to be Germans. Tribute is imposed on them as
aliens, partly by the Sarmatae, partly by the Quadi. The Gotini, to complete
their degradation, actually work iron mines. All these nations occupy but
little of the plain country, dwelling in forests and on mountain-tops. For
Suevia is divided and cut in half by a continuous mountain-range, beyond which
live a multitude of tribes. The name of Ligii, spread as it is among many states, is the most widely
extended. It will be enough to mention the most powerful, which are the Harii, the Helvecones, the Manimi, the Helisii and the Nahanarvali. Among these last is shown a grove of
immemorial sanctity. A priest in female attire has the charge of it. But the
deities are described in Roman language as Castor and Pollux. Such, indeed, are the attributes of
the divinity, the name being Alcis. They have no images, or, indeed, any vestige of foreign
superstition, but it is as brothers and as youths that the deities are
worshipped. The Harii, besides being superior in strength to the tribes just
enumerated, savage as they are, make the most of their natural ferocity by the
help of art and opportunity. Their shields are black, their bodies dyed. They
choose dark nights for battle, and, by the dread and gloomy aspect of their
death-like host, strike terror into the foe, who can never confront their strange
and almost infernal appearance. For in all battles it is the eye which is first
vanquished. (Latin)
XLIV
Beyond the Ligii are the Gothones, who are ruled by kings, a little more strictly than the other
German tribes, but not as yet inconsistently with freedom. Immediately
adjoining them, further from the coast, are theRugii and Lemovii, the badge of all these tribes being the round shield, the
short sword, and servile submission to their kings. And now begin the states of
the Suiones, situated on the Ocean itself, and
these, besides men and arms, are powerful in ships. The form of their vessels
is peculiar in this respect, that a prow at either extremity acts as a
forepart, always ready for running into shore. They are not worked by sails,
nor have they a row of oars attached to their sides; but, as on some rivers, the
apparatus of rowing is unfixed, and shifted from side to side as circumstances
require. And they likewise honour wealth, and so a single ruler holds sway with
no restrictions, and with no uncertain claim to obedience. Arms are not with
them, as with the other Germans, at the general disposal, but are in the charge
of a keeper, who is actually a slave; for the ocean forbids the sudden inroad
of enemies, and, besides, an idle multitude of armed men is easily demoralized.
And indeed it is by no means the policy of a monarch to place either a
nobleman, a freeborn citizen, or even a freedman, at the head of an armed
force. (Latin)
XLV
Beyond the Suiones is another sea, sluggish and almost
motionless, which, we may certainly infer, girdles and surrounds the world,
from the fact that the last radiance of the setting sun lingers on till
sunrise, with a brightness sufficient to dim the light of the stars. Even the
very sound of his rising, as popular belief adds, may be heard, and the forms
of gods and the glory round his head may be seen. Only thus far (and here
rumour seems truth) does the world extend. At this point the Suevic sea, on its
eastern shore, washes the tribes of the Aestii, whose rites and fashions and style of dress are those of the
Suevi, while their language is more like the British. They worship the mother
of the gods, and wear as a religious symbol the device of a wild boar. This
serves as armour, and as a universal defence, rendering the votary of the
goddess safe even amidst enemies. They often use clubs, iron weapons but
seldom. They are more patient in cultivating corn and other produce than might
be expected from the general indolence of the Germans. But they also search the
deep, and are the only people who gather amber (which they call "glesum"),
in the shallows, and also on the shore itself. Barbarians as they are they have
not investigated or discovered what natural cause or process produces it. Nay,
it even lay amid the sea's other refuse, till our luxury gave it a name. To
them it is utterly useless; they gather it in its raw state, bring it to us in
shapeless lumps, and marvel at the price which they receive. It is however a
juice from trees, as you may infer from the fact that there are often seen
shining through it, reptiles, and even winged insects, which, having become
entangled in the fluid, are gradually enclosed in the substance as it hardens.
I am therefore inclined to think that the islands and countries of the West,
like the remote recesses of the East, where frankincense and balsam exude,
contain fruitful woods and groves; that these productions, acted on by the near
rays of the sun, glide in a liquid state into the adjacent sea, and are thrown
up by the force of storms on the opposite shores. If you test the composition
of amber by applying fire, it burns like pinewood, and sends forth a rich and
fragrant flame; it is soon softened into something like pitch or resin. Closely
bordering on the Suiones are the tribes of the Sitones, which, resembling them
in all else, differ only in being ruled by a woman. So low have they fallen,
not merely from freedom, but even from slavery itself. Here Suevia ends. (Latin)
XLVI
As to the tribes of the Peucini, Veneti, and Fenni I am in doubt whether I should class them with the Germans or the Sarmatae, although indeed the Peucini called by some Bastarnae, are like Germans in their language, mode of life, and in the permanence of their settlements. They all live in filth and sloth, and by the intermarriages of the chiefs they are becoming in some degree debased into a resemblance to the Sarmatae. The Veneti have borrowed largely from the Sarmatian character; in their plundering expeditions they roam over the whole extent of forest and mountain between the Peucini and Fenni. They are however to be rather referred to the German race, for they have fixed habitations carry shields, and delight in strength and fleetness of foot, thus presenting a complete contrast to the Sarmatae, who live in waggons and on horseback. The Fenni are strangely beast-like and squalidly poor; neither arms nor homes have they; their food is herbs, their clothing skins, their bed the earth. They trust wholly to their arrows, which, for want of iron, are pointed with bone. The men and the women are alike supplied by the chase; for the latter are always present, and demand a share of the prey. The little children have no shelter from wild beasts and storms but a covering of interlaced boughs. Such are the homes of the young, such the resting place of the old. Yet they count this greater happiness than groaning over field-labour, toiling at building, and poising the fortunes of themselves and others between hope and fear. Heedless of men, heedless of gods, they have attained that hardest of results, the not needing so much as a wish. All else is fabulous, as that the Hellusii and Oxiones have the faces and expressions of men, with the bodies and limbs of wild beasts. All this is unauthenticated, and I shall leave it open.
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