In medieval studies, an origo gentis is the origin story of a gens (people). It is not a literary genre of its own, but it is a part of quite extensive works that describe, for example, the history of the respective people. They can also be part of hero epics or biographies.Herwig Wolfram, Origo Gentis. in Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, vol. 22 (2003)
"Migration legends" often played an important role in an origo: a group of people emigrated and eventually reached another country, and got it, mostly by force. Although there is sometimes a historical core (such as the Anglo-Saxon migration to Britain), others seem to contain mostly fictional stories. This applies, for example, to an alleged "Trojan descent" or to the Scandinavian origin of Goths, which is now challenged due to lack of archaeological evidences. The description of the origin of the Goths in the Getica of Jordanes (which was based on the lost "Gothic history" of Cassiodorus) is today usually understood as a topical ethnographic narrative, which incorporated numerous fictional elements. A fairly common motif of an origo was also the so-called "primordial act". It was a central event of the gens' history, such as a significant victory, the crossing of a body of water, a kingdom of divine origin that is said to have existed since primeval times, and others. The main idea was to create an identity or establish a "new order", which has since had to be applied among the gens.
Herwig Wolfram and his student Walter Pohl, authors of important works on this topic, both emphasize that modern ideas of "ethnicity' are in no way applicable to antique and medieval people. However, the conclusions based on this thesis are controversial. For example, Walter Goffart is very critical of the notion that there are similarities in works that deal with the stories of origin, rather each author with his image pursued his own goals.
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