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Jordanes (; : Ιορδάνης), also written as Jordanis or Jornandes, was a 6th-century bureaucrat, claimed to be of , who became a historian later in life.

He wrote two works, one on Roman history ( Romana) and the other on the Goths ( ). The latter, along with Isidore of Seville's Historia Gothorum, is one of only two extant ancient works dealing with the early history of the Goths. Other writers, such as , wrote works on the later history of the Goths. Getica has been the object of much critical review. Jordanes wrote in rather than the classical Latin. According to his own introduction, he had only three days to review what had written and so he must also have relied on his own knowledge.


Life
Jordanes writes about himself almost in passing:

Paria was Jordanes's paternal grandfather. Jordanes writes that he was secretary to , dux Alanorum, an otherwise unknown leader of the Alans.

Jordanes was asked by a friend to write Getica as a summary of a multi-volume history of the Goths by the statesman that existed then but has since been lost. Jordanes was selected for his known interest in history and because of his own Gothic background. He had been a high-level notarius, or secretary, of a small client state on the Roman frontier in Scythia Minor, modern southeastern and northeastern .

Jordanes was notarius, or secretary to , a nephew of Candac and a of the leading clan of the .

That was ante conversionem meam ("before my conversion"). The nature and the details of the conversion remain obscure. The Goths had been converted with the assistance of (a Goth), made bishop on that account. However, the Goths had adopted . Jordanes's conversion may have been a conversion to the , which may be expressed in anti-Arianism in certain passages in Getica. Getica 132, 133, 138, noted by In the letter to Vigilius he mentions that he was awakened vestris interrogationibus – "by your questioning".

Alternatively, Jordanes's conversio may mean that he had become a , a religiosus or a member of the clergy. Some manuscripts say that he was a bishop, and some even say bishop of Ravenna, but the name Jordanes is not known in the lists of bishops of Ravenna.


Works
Jordanes wrote Romana, about the history of , but his best-known work is his , which was written in about 551 AD. Jordanes wrote his Romana at the behest of a certain Vigilius. Although some scholars have identified this person with , there is nothing else to support the identification besides the name. The form of address that Jordanes uses and his admonition that Vigilius "turn to " would seem to rule out this identification.

In the preface to his , Jordanes writes that he is interrupting his work on the Romana at the behest of a brother Castalius, who apparently knew that Jordanes possessed the twelve volumes of the History of the Goths by . Castalius wanted a short book about the subject, and Jordanes obliged with an excerpt based on memory, possibly supplemented with other material to which he had access. The Getica sets off with a geography/ethnography of the North, especially of (16–24).

He lets the history of the Goths commence with the emigration of with three ships from Scandza to (25, 94), in a distant past. In the pen of Jordanes, Herodotus's Getian demigod becomes a king of the Goths (39). Jordanes tells how the Goths sacked " and Ilium" just after they had recovered somewhat from the war with (108). They are also said to have encountered the Egyptian (47). The less fictional part of Jordanes's work begins when the Goths encounter Roman military forces in the third century AD. The work concludes with the defeat of the Goths by the Byzantine general . Jordanes concludes the work by stating that he writes to honour those who were victorious over the Goths after a history spanning 2,030 years.


Controversy
Jordanes wrongly equated the with the Goths. Many historical records which originally related to and Getae were thus wrongly attributed to Goths.Walter Goffart, The Narrators of Barbarian History, Princeton 1988, p. 70.Pârvan, Vasile (1928). Dacia: An Outline of the Early Civilization of the Carpatho-Danubian Countries. The University PressOțetea, Andrei (1970). The History of the Romanian people. Scientific Pub. Hoose.Ioan Bolovan, Florin Constantiniu, Paul E. Michelson, Ioan Aurel Pop, Christian Popa, Marcel Popa, Kurt Treptow, A History of Romania, Intl Specialized Book Service Inc. 1997

Arne Søby Christensen and Michael Kulikowski argue that in his Getica Jordanes also supplemented his Gothic history with many fictional events such as a Gothic war against Egypt.

in 214 received the titles "Geticus Maximus" and "Quasi Gothicus" after battles with Getae and Goths.


See also
  • History of the Roman Empire


Notes

Citations

Sources
  • (2025). 9788772897103, University of Chicago Press. .
  • (2025). 9780521846332, Cambridge University Press.
  • (2025). 9789198185942, University of Gothenburg/CLTS.


Further reading

External links

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