'Oium' (from ''Aujom'', meaning "in the waterlands" in
Gothic) was according to
Getica (Jordanes), a name for the Ukrainian steppe (cf.
Scythia), where the
Goths settled after leaving
Gothiscandza. Archaeologically, it corresponds to the Gothic
Chernyakhov culture, and geographically to
Ukraine.
Jordanes gave an account of Goth history in Oium, of which parts can be corroborated by archaeology and of which other parts were the result of reading earlier classical accounts which corroborated with Gothic oral and written history. The general consensus of both Jordanes as well as classical writers and early Byzantine sources was the Goths were a sub-set of
Scythians,
Dacians and
Thracians, giving them an origin well into early recorded history.
Jordanes
Settlement
Jordanes relates that their king
Filimer lead the Goths searching for suitable lands and when they found Oium they were delighted with the richness of the land. When half the army had passed a bridge, the bridge collapsed and so no one could pass the area anymore. The Goths claimed the land for themselves and defeated the previous inhabitants, the
Spali (which probably was the ruling Sarmatian clan and the source of the
East Slavic word for "giant"). They then claimed the plains near the
Azov Sea.
The Goths then made a second migration to
Moesia,
Dacia and
Thrace, but then they returned to Oium in a third migration and settled again north of the
Black Sea.
They settled down and were divided under ruling dynasties. The
Visigoths were ruled by the
Balþi and the
Ostrogoths by the
Amali.
This account fits well the patterns of the
Wielbark culture and the
Chernyakhov culture, which show a Germanic migration from the
Vistula Basin to
Ukraine.
Merger with Scythian, Dacian and Thracian history from classic sources
Jordanes wrote that the Goths were descendents of Scythians and Thracians. Their royal line had originated near the sea of Azov and had moved northward toward Scandzia where they established a separate priest-king line on the island of Gotland. According to Jordanes, the history of the Gothic people is that of the Scythian and Thracians.
According to him, this royal line of Goths fought
Sesostris, the king of
Egypt (1291 BC-1212 BC) under their king
Tanausis. After a battle at the river of
Phasis, in
Georgia, they pursued the Egyptians all the way back to Egypt.
After Tanausis death, the Goths were on another expedition, and a neighbouring tribe tried to kidnap the Goth women. However, the women defended themselves and defeated the attackers under the leaders
Lampeto and
Lampesia. The two leaders cast lots, and Lampesia pursued the enemy into Asia where she conquered many tribes and apparently formed the
Amazons.
The Goth king
Antyrus was approached by
Darius, the king of
Persia (
521 to
485 BC), who wanted to marry his daughter. Antyrus refused the marriage and was attacked by Darius, and after Darius by his son
Xerxes. None of the attacks were successful.
Philip II allied with the Goths by marrying
Medopa who was the daughter of king
Gudila (a
Thracian king). However, Philip needed gold and wanted to pillage the town of
Odessos, a town belonging to the Goths. The Goths sent out their
Godis who were dressed in white and played harps, chanting to their gods to help them. This stunned the
Macedonians so much that they returned.
Much later, a king named
Sitalces (a Thracian king
431 -
424 BC) wanted revenge, gathered 150 000 men and attacked the
Athenians. He fought
Perdiccas II, whom
Alexander I had left as a ruler, and the Goths laid Greece waste.
When
Burebista was king (a Dacian king
70 BC-
44 BC), he received a priestly reformer named
Decaeneus, and this Decaeuneus advised the Goths to pillage
Germania. He also gave the Goths laws, named ''bi-lageineis'' (''lag'' = ''law''), taught them logic, philosophy and astrology. Then he selected a priestly elite who was taught theology and named them the ''Pilleati'' (those who wore felt hats). The remainder of the Goths were called the ''Capillati'' (bare-headed).
Julius Caesar tried to subdue the Goths without success, and the Goths also remained free during the reign of
Tiberius.
When Decaeneus was dead,
Comosicus took his place, and after Comosicus,
Scoryllus ruled the Goths in
Dacia.
A long time passed and the Romans were ruled by Emperor
Domitian (A.D.
81-
96). As the Goths (historically, the Dacians) feared his avarice, they broke the truce with the Romans and pillaged the banks of the
Danube and killed the soldiers and the generals. At this time
Diurpaneus (king Duras-Diurpaneus of Dacia
69–
86 or
Decebalus who ruled
87-
106) was king of the Goths and
Oppius Sabinus was the governor of
Moesia (having succeeded
Fontejus Agrippa (
69–
70). In
85, the Goths (Dacians) beheaded Oppius Sabinus and plundered many Roman cities and fortifications. Domitian arrived with the legions to
Illyria and sent
Fuscus with a selected force. Fuscus used boats to build a
pontoon bridge and crossed the Danube upstream from the Goths. The Gothic army defeated the Romans, killed Fuscus and pillaged the Roman camp (
86 AD).
The Goths' proper history
After this use of Dacian, Thracian and Scythian history, Jordanes returns to Gothic tradition by reciting the line of descent of the Gothic royal family from
Gapt (Gaut or
Odin).
This digression is followed by a statement that the Goths entered
Moesia and
Thrace in the late
2nd century where they stayed for some time. Based on
Quintus Aurelius Symmachus, he writes that Emperor
Maximinus Thrax (
235 AD -
238 AD) was the son of a Goth who arrived at this time and an
Alan woman.
Norse mythology
In the
Hervarar saga, the Scandinavian
Heidrek usurps the Gothic throne in
Reidgotaland. In this saga, the Goths capital is called ''
Arheimar'' and is located on the ''Danpar'' (
Dniepr). Heidrek appears to establish a ''first contact'' with the
Huns by kidnapping the Hun Princess
Sifka, raping her and sending her back to the Huns pregnant with
Hlod.
When Heidrek dies in the
Carpathians, his son
Angantyr succeeds him. However, his second son Hlod, who had grown up with the Huns, claims his inheritance and attacks with a Hunnish horde comprising 350 000 mounted warriors.
The Goths are aided by the old
Geatish king Gizur, and the war ends in an epic battle on the plains of the
Danube, when Angantyr slays his brother Hlod.
External links
★
The original text by Jordanes with translation and comments