Roman Scandinavia - Primary Sources
Procopius
Prokopios of Caesarea,
Polemon III.ii.1-6, VI.xiv-xv, VII.ii.1-3; >From LCL
Procopius, History of
the Wars III.ii.1-6, VI.xiv-xv, VII.ii.1-3; >From LCL
II
Now while Honorius was holding the imperial power in the West, barbarians
took possession of his land; and I shall tell who they were and in what
manner they did so. There were many Gothic nations in earlier times, just
as also at the present, but the greatest and most important of all are
the Goths, Vandals, Visigoths, and Gepaedes. In ancient times, however,
they were named Sauromatae and Melanchlaeni; and there were some too who
called these nations Getic. All these, while they are distinguished from
one another by their names, as has been said, do not differ in anything
else at all. For they all have white bodies and fair hair, and are tall
and handsome to look upon, and they use the same laws and practise a common
religion. For they are all of the Arian faith, and have one language called
Gothic; and, as it seems to me, they all came originally from one tribe,
and were distinguished later by the names of those who led each group.
This people used to dwell above the Ister River from of old. Later on
the Gepaedes got possession of the country above Singidunuum and Sirmium,
on both sides of the Ister River, where they have remained settled even
down to my time.
XIV
Now as to who in the world the Eruli are, and how they entered into alliance
with the Romans, I shall forthwith explain. They used to dwell beyond
the Ister River from of old, worshipping a great host of gods, whom it
seemed to them holy to appease even by human sacrifices. And they observed
many customs which were not in accord with those of other men. For they
were not permitted to live either when they grew old or when they fell
sick, but as soon as one of them was overtaken by old age or by sickness,
it became necessary for him to ask his relatives to remove him from the
world as quickly as possible. And these relatives would pile up a quantity
of wood to a great height and lay the man on top of the wood, and then
they would send one of the Eruli, but not a relative of the man, to his
side with a dagger; for it was not lawful for a kinsman to be his slayer.
And when the slayer of their relative had returned, they would straightway
burn the whole pile of wood, beginning at the edges. And after the fire
had ceased, they would immediately collect the bones and bury them in
the earth. And when a man of the Eruli died, it was necessary for his
wife, if she laid claim to virtue and wished to leave a fair name behind
her, to die not long afterward beside the tomb of her husband by hanging
herself with a rope. And if she did not do this, the result was that she
was in ill repute thereafter and an offence to the relatives of her husband.
Such were the customs observed by the Eruli in ancient times.
But as time went on they became superior to all the barbarians who dwelt
about them both in power and in numbers, and, as was natural, they attacked
and vanquished them severally and kept plundering their possessions by
force. And finally they made the Lombards, who were Christians, together
with several other nations, subject and tributary to themselves, though
the barbarians of that region were not accustomed to that sort of thing;
but the Eruli were led to take this course by love of money and a lawless
spirit. When, however, Anastasius took over the Roman empire, the Eruli,
having no longer anyone in the world whom they could assail, laid down
their arms and remained quiet, and they observed peace in this way for
a space of three years. But the people themselves, being exceedingly vexed,
began to abuse their leader Rodolphus without restraint, and going to
him constantly they called him cowardly and effeminate, and railed at
him in a most unruly manner, taunting him with certain other names besides.
And Rodolphus, being quite unable to bear the insult, marched against
the Lombards, who were doing no wrong, without charging against them any
fault or alleging any violation of their agreement, but bringing upon
them a war which had no real cause. And when the Lombards got word of
this, they sent to Rodolphus and made enquiry and demanded that he should
state the charge on account of which the Eruli were coming against them
in arms, agreeing that if they had deprived the Eruli of any of the tribute,
then they would instantly pay it with large interest; and if their grievance
was that only a moderate tribute had been imposed upon them, then the
Lombards would never be reluctant to make it greater. Such were the offers
which the envoys made, but Rodolphus with a threat sent them away and
marched forward. And they again sent other envoys to him on the same mission
and supplicated him with many entreaties. And when the second envoys had
fared in the same way, a third embassy came to him and forbade the Eruli
on any account to bring upon them a war without excuse. For if they should
come against them with such a purpose, they too, not willingly, but under
the direst necessity, would array themselves against their assailants,
calling upon God as their witness, the slightest breath of whose favor,
turning the scales, would be a match for all the strength of men; and
He, in all likelihood, would be moved by the causes of the war and would
determine the issue of the fight for both sides accordingly. So they spoke,
thinking in this way to terrify their assailants, but the Eruli, shrinking
from nothing whatever, decided to meet the Lombards in battle. And when
the two armies came close to one another, it so happened that the sky
above the Lombards was obscured by a sort of cloud, black and very thick,
but above the Eruli it was exceedingly clear. And judging by this one
would have supposed that the Eruli were entering the conflict to their
own harm; for there can be no more forbidding portent than this for barbarians
as they go into battle. However, the Eruli gave no heed even to this,
but in absolute disregard of it they advanced against their enemy with
utter contempt, estimating the outcome of war by mere superiority of numbers.
But when the battle came to close quarters, many of the Eruli perished
and Rodolphus himself also perished, and the rest fled at full speed,
forgetting all their courage. And since their enemy followed them up,
and most of them fell on the field of battle and only a few succeeded
in saving themselves.
For this reason the Eruli were no longer able to tarry in their ancestral
homes, but departing from there as quickly as possible they kept moving
forward, traversing the whole country which is beyond the Ister River,
together with their wives and children. But when they reached a land where
the Rogi dwelt of old, a people who had joined the Gothic host and gone
to Italy, they settled in that place. But since they were pressed by famine,
because they were in a barren land, they removed from there not long afterward,
and came to a place close to the country of the Gepaedes. And at first
the Gepaedes permitted them to dwell there and be neighbours to them,
since they came as suppliants. But afterwards for no good reason the Gepaedes
began to practise unholy deeds upon them. For they violated their women
and seized their cattle and other property, and abstained from no wickedness
whatever, and finally began an unjust attack upon them. And the Eruli,
unable to bear all this any longer, crossed the Ister River and decided
to live as neighbours to the Romans in that region; this was during the
reign of the Emperor Anastasius, who received them with great friendliness
and allowed them to settle where they were. But a short time afterwards
these barbarians gave him offence by their lawless treatment of the Romans
there, and for this reason he sent an army against them. And the Romans,
after defeating them in battle, slew most of their number, and had ample
opportunity to destroy them all. But the remainder of them threw themselves
upon the mercy of the generals and begged them to spare their lives and
to have them as allies and servants of the emperor thereafter. And when
Anastasius learned this, he was pleased, and consequently a number of
the Eruli were left; however, they neither became allies of the Romans,
nor did they do them any good.
But when Justinian took over the empire, he bestowed upon them good lands
and other possessions, and thus completely succeeded in winning their
friendship and persuaded them all to become Christians. As a result of
this they adopted a gentler manner of life and decided to submit themselves
wholly to the laws of the Christians, and in keeping with the terms of
their alliance they are generally arrayed with the Romans against their
enemies. They are still, however, faithless toward them, and since they
are given to avarice, they are eager to do violence to their neighbours,
feeling no shame at such conduct. And they mate in an unholy manner, especially
men with asses, and they are the basest of all men and utterly abandoned
rascals.
Afterwards, although some few of them remained at peace with the Romans,
as will be told by me in the following narrative, all the rest revolted
for the following reason. The Eruli, displaying their beastly and fanatical
character against their own "rex," one Ochus by name, suddenly killed
the man for no good reason at all, laying against him no other charge
than that they wished to be without a king thereafter. And yet even before
this, while their king did have the title, he had practically no advantage
over any private citizen whomsoever. But all claimed the right to sit
with him and eat with him, and whoever wished insulted him without restraint;
for no men in the world are less bound by convention or more unstable
than the Eruli. Now when the evil deed had been accomplished, they were
immediately repentant. For they said that they were not able to live without
a ruler and without a general; so after much deliberation it seemed to
them best in every way to summon one of their royal family from the island
of Thule. And the reason for this I shall now explain.
XV
When the Eruli, being defeated by the Lombards in the above-mentioned
battle, migrated from their ancestral homes, some of them, as had been
told by me above, made their home in the country of Illyricum, but the
rest were averse to crossing the Ister River, but settled at the very
extremity of the world; at any rate, these men, led by many of royal blood,
traversed all the nations of the Sclaveni one after the other, and after
next crossing a large tract of barren country, they came to the Varni,
as they are called. After these they passed by the nations of the Dani,
without suffering violence at the hands of the barbarians there. Coming
thence to the ocean, they took to the sea, and putting in at Thule, remained
there on the island.
Now Thule is exceedingly large; for it is more than ten times greater
than Britain. And it lies far distant from it toward the north. On this
island the land is for the most part barren, but in the inhabited country
thirteen numerous nations are settled; and there are kings over each nation.
In that place a very wonderful thing takes place each year. For the sun
at the time of the summer solstice never sets for forty days, but appears
constantly during this whole time above the earth. But not less than six
months later, at about the time of the winter solstice, the sun is seen
is never seen on this island for forty days, but never-ending night envelops
it; and as a result of this dejection holds the people there during this
whole time, because they are unable by any means to mingle with one another
during this interval. And although I was eager to go to this island and
become an eyewitness of the things I have told, no opportunity ever presented
itself. However, I made enquiry from those who come to us from the islandas
to how in the world they are able to reckon the length of the days, since
the sun never rises nor sets there at the appointed times. And they gave
me an account which is true and trustworthy. For they said that the sun
during those forty days does not indeed set just as had been stated, but
is visible to the people there at one time toward the east, and again
toward the west. Whenever, therefore, on its return, it reaches the same
place on the horizon where they had previously been accustomed to see
it rise, they reckon in this way that one day and night have passed. When,
however, the time of the nights arrives, they always take note of the
courses of the moon and stars and thus reckon the measure of the days.
And when a time amounting to thirty-five days has passed in this long
night, certain men are sent to the summits of the mountains - for this
is the custom among them - and when they are able from that point barely
to see the sun, they bring back word to the people below that within five
days the sun will shine upon them. And the whole population celebrates
a festival at the good news, and that too in darkness. And this is the
greatest festival which the natives of Thule have; for, I imagine, these
islanders always become terrified, although they see the same thing happen
every year, fearing that the sun may at some time fail them entirely.
But among the barbarians who are settled in Thule, one nation only, who
are called the Scrithiphini, live a kind of life akin to that of wild
beasts. For they neither wear garments of cloth nor do they walk with
shoes on their feet, nor do they drink wine nor derive anything edible
from the earth. For they neither till the land themselves, nor do their
women work it for them, but the women regularly join the men in hunting,
which is their only pursuit. For the forests, which are exceedingly large,
produce for them a great abundance of wild beasts and other animals, as
do also the mountains which rise there. And they feed exclusively upon
the flesh of the wild beasts slain by them, and clothe themselves in their
skins, and since they have neither flax nor any implement with which to
sew, they fasten these skins together by the sinews of the animals, and
in this way manage to cover the whole body. And indeed not even their
infants are nursed in the same way as among the rest of mankind. For the
children of the Scrithiphini do not feed upon the milk of women nor do
they touch their mother's breast, but they are nourished upon the marrow
of the the animals killed in the hunt, and upon this alone. Now as soon
as a woman gives birth to a child, she throws it into a skin and straightway
hangs it to a tree, and after putting marrow into its mouth she immediately
sets out with her husband for the customary hunt. For they do everything
in common and likewise engage in this pursuit together. So much for the
daily life of these barbarians.
But all the other inhabitants of Thule, practically speaking, do not differ
very much from the rest of men, but they reverence in great numbers gods
and demons both of the heavens and of the air, of the earth and of the
sea, and sundry other demons which are said to be in the waters of springs
and rivers. And they incessantly offer up all kinds of sacrifices, and
make oblations to the dead, but the noblest of sacrifices, in their eyes,
is the first human being whom they have taken captive in war; for they
sacrifice him to Ares, whom they regard as the greatest god. And the manner
in which they offer up the captive is not by sacrificing him on an altar
only, but also by hanging him to a tree, or throwing him among thorns,
or killing him by some of the other most cruel forms of death. Thus, then,
do the inhabitants of Thule live. And one of their most numerous nations
is the Gauti, and it was next to them that the incoming Eruli settled
at the time in question.
On the present occasion, therefore, the Eruli who dwelt among the Romans,
after the murder of their king had been perpetrated by them, sent some
of their notables to the island of Thule to search out and bring back
whomsoever they were able to find there of the royal blood. And when these
men reached the island, they found many there of the royal blood, but
they selected the one man who pleased them most and set out with him on
the return journey. But this man fell sick and died when he had come to
the country of the Dani. These men therefore went a second time to the
island and secured another man, Datius by name. And he was followed by
his brother Aordus and two hundred youths of the Eruli in Thule. But since
much time passed while they were absent on this journey, it occurred to
the Eruli in the neighbourhood of Singidunum that they were not consulting
their own interests in importing a leader from Thule against the wishes
of the Emperor Justinian. They therefore sent envoys to Byzantium, begging
the emperor to send them a ruler of his own choice. And he straightway
sent them one of the Eruli who had long been sojourning in Byzantium,
Suartuas by name. At first, the Eruli welcomed him and did obeisance to
him and rendered the customary obeisance to his commands; but not many
days later a messenger arrived with the tidings that the men from the
island of Thule were near at hand. And Suartuas commanded them to go out
to meet those men, his intention being to destroy them, and the Eruli,
approving his purpose, immediately went with him. But when the two forces
were one day's journey distant from each other, the king's men all abandoned
him at night and went over of their own accord to the newcomers, while
he himself took to flight and set out unattended for Byzantium. Thereupon
the emperor earnestly undertook with all his power to restore him to his
office, and the Eruli, fearing the power of the Romans, decided to submit
themselves to the Gepaedes. This, then, was the cause of the revolt of
the Eruli.
II
There was a certain Eraric in the Gothic army, one of the Rogi by birth,
a man possessed of great power among these barbarians. Now these Rogi
are indeed a Gothic nation, but in ancient times they used to live as
an independent people. But Theodoric had early persuaded them, along with
certain other nations, to form an alliance with him, and they were absorbed
into the Gothic nation and acted in common with them in all things against
their enemies. But since they had absolutely no intercourse with women
other than their own, each successive generation of children was of unmixed
blood, and thus they had preserved the name of their nation among themselves.
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