Saxons (in a nutshell)

They lived along the Baltic coast and in the area of modern Schleswig, and although the Roman historian Tacitus knew nothing of them when he wrote the Germania in the 1st century CE, they surely were to play a prominent role in the following centuries. The Saxons were a Germanic tribe who appeared in all …

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The Germanic People (part 4)

A question comes naturally: who led the early Germanic communities?Did they have a king or a ruler similar to the Roman model?Well, it seems that no central authority was present, at least at the time when Caesar writes: while in peace, a local figure would sometimes interfere with the disputes within the village - or …

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The Germanic People (part 2)

Tacitus also distinguished the individual tribes and their territories: the Chatti lived in modern Hesse, the Frisii inhabited the coastland between the Rhine and the Ems, while the mouth of the Weser was home of the Chauci and Cherusci (Arminius’ tribe). The Suebi occupied the territories of Thuringia, Saxony, Brandenburg and Mecklenburg, with Semnones and …

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