Product Code Database
Example Keywords: tetris -dungeon $30
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Warini
Tag Wiki 'Warini'.
Tag

Related Products

In this all-new monster comedy adventure, everything seems to be changing for the better at Hotel Transylvania! However, Drac is worried that his adorable half-human, half-vampire grandson, Dennis, isn?t showing signs of becoming a vampire. So while Mavis ..

CLOSEOUTS . A soft choice for cold and damp days when youand#39;re out and about, Royal Robbins Scotia Ribbed crew neck sweater is made of a quick-drying, moisture-wicking fabric blend thatand#39;s ideal for layering. Available Colors: GRANITE, DARK GALAXY..

The Varini, Warni or Warini were one or more who originally lived in what is now northeastern Germany, near the .

They are first named in the , and appear to have survived into the . It is proposed that in they were called Werns or Warns.


Name and etymology
spelled the name as Varini, Pliny the Elder as Varinnae, as (Ούίρουνοι), as (Οὐάρνων). Later attestations include Wærne or Werne in the Old English , and Warnii in the .

The name supposedly meant either "defenders" or "living by the river" (from the Indo-European root "water, rain, river"). Tarasov I.M. The Balts in the Migration Period. Veleti. // Аллея Науки, № 10 (26), Ноябрь, 2018. P. 263.


Attestations

Classical
The earliest mention of this tribe appears in Pliny the Elder's Natural History (published about 77 AD). He wrote that there were five Germanic races, and one of these were the . These included the , the Varinnae, the (not known from any other record) and the ().Pliny, Natural History, 4.28 aka 4.40. Latin: Germanorum genera quinque: Vandili, quorum pars Burgodiones, Varinnae, Charini, Gutones.

Tacitus (about AD 56 – 120) gave more information about the early Varini in his Germania. In contrast to Pliny he mentioned them as one of a group of remote peoples, living beyond (east and possibly also north of) the and who lived near the , and apparently close to the "Ocean" (which could be the Baltic Sea). He did not mention that they were Vandili.

>Germania, , translated 1877 by Church and Brodribb.Tacitus', Germania , ; translation from The Agricola and Germania , Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb, trans., (London: Macmillan, 1877), pp. 87–110, as recorded in the Medieval Sourcebook'' [3]>Germania, .Tacitus', Germania'', , Medieval Source Book. Code and format by Northvegr.[4]>
!style="width: 50%; vertical-align: top;" (English translation) !style="width: 50%; vertical-align: top;"(Original Latin)
"Next come the , the , the , the Varini, the , the , and who are fenced in by rivers or forests."Reudigni deinde et Aviones et Anglii et Varini et Eudoses et Suarines et 2 Nuitones fluminibus aut silvis muniuntur.
None of these tribes have any noteworthy feature, except their common worship of the, or mother-Earth, and their belief that she interposes in human affairs, and visits the nations in her car.nec quicquam notabile in singulis, nisi quod in commune Nerthum, id est Terram matrem, colunt eamque intervenire rebus hominum, invehi populis arbitrantur.
In an island of the ocean there is a sacred grove, and within it a consecrated chariot, covered over with a garment. Only one priest is permitted to touch it.est in insula Oceani castum nemus, dicatumque in eo vehiculum, veste contectum; 3 attingere uni sacerdoti concessum.
He can perceive the presence of the goddess in this sacred recess, and walks by her side with the utmost reverence as she is drawn along by heifers.is adesse penetrali deam intellegit vectamque bubus feminis multa cum veneratione prosequitur.
It is a season of rejoicing, and festivity reigns wherever she deigns to go and be received.laeti tunc dies, festa loca, quaecumque 4 adventu hospitioque dignatur.
They do not go to battle or wear arms; every weapon is under lock; peace and quiet are known and welcomed only at these times, till the goddess, weary of human intercourse, is at length restored by the same priest to her temple.non bella ineunt, non arma sumunt; clausum omne ferrum; pax et quies tunc tantum nota, tunc tantum amata, donec idem sacerdos satiatam 5 conversatione mortalium deam templo reddat.
Afterwards the car, the vestments, and, if you like to believe it, the divinity herself, are purified in a secret lake.
Slaves perform the rite, who are instantly swallowed up by its waters.
mox vehiculum et vestis et, si credere velis, numen ipsum secreto lacu abluitur. servi ministrant, quos statim idem lacus haurit.
Hence arises a mysterious terror and a pious ignorance concerning the nature of that which is seen only by men doomed to die.arcanus hinc terror sanctaque ignorantia, quid sit illud quod tantum perituri vident.
This branch indeed of the Suevi stretches into the remoter regions of Germany."Et haec quidem pars Sueborum in secretiora Germaniae porrigitur"

Surviving versions of a third source, the second century Geography by , included the Viruni (Greek Ούίρουνοι) in their description of eastern Germania, but these are difficult to interpret and have apparently become corrupted. These describe the Viruni as being near the otherwise unknown Teutonoari. Gudmund Schütte suggested that this name is an error combining the and "Aoaroi", and would equate the later to the Varini ( Ouarni) as a doubling-up error.. Also see pp.44,46,128,&131. Together these two peoples were surrounded by:Ptolemy, Geography, 2.10.

  • The Elbe to their west. Schütte (e.g. p. 34) reconstructs Ptolomy's intentions in such a way that the Langobards were living in this area.
  • A river called the Chalusus to the east, beyond which the surviving versions of Ptolemy's Geography name the Teutones and Avarni. Schütte (p. 44) proposes this to be another doubling-up of two peoples, caused by misunderstandings of copyists. East of them, in turn is another unknown river the "Suevos" and a people called the Aelvaeones.
  • to their north, between the Elbe and Chalusus rivers. Some scholars such as Matthias Springer believe the text originally said "". To the east of these Saxons over the Chalusus, are the (otherwise unknown).
  • The , a large Suevian people, lay to their south. Their territory stretches east of the Chalusus, as far as the Suevos.

The three accounts appear to describe a similar area, east of the Elbe. It is perhaps in the area of , where one of the main rivers is called the and a town is called Warnemünde.See for example .

Ptolemy also plotted the position of a town named Virunum at 40°30' longitude and 55° latitude using his system. This can however be interpreted as east of the Chalusus River, between the "Suevus" and "Viadua" rivers, which both lay between the Chalusus and the according to him. The town Οὐιρουνον (Virunum) has been identified as somewhere near modern-day Drawsko Pomorskie.See also German Wikipedia .


Late antiquity
From the time of Theoderic the Great and , a letter has been preserved which Theoderic wrote to the kings of the Warni, and Thuringians.

The Warini were mentioned by in the 6th century, implying that the Varini had a very large territory in his time. Procopius situates the Varni bordering the Franks, with only the river between them, but also stretching to the coast. Their king Hermegisclus had made a strategic alliance with the Frankish ruler (ruler Austrasia 533-547), marrying his sister Theudechild. However, in contrast he had engaged his son with the sister of the Anglian ruler. Before his death he expressed the wish to have his son married to his stepmother Theudechild instead. As a result when king Hermegisclus died, the Warinis compelled his son Radigis to marry his stepmother. The maiden, who is not named in the story, did not accept this, and crossed the North Sea with an army of 400 ships and 100,000 men, seeking retaliation. After a battle won by the Anglians, Radigis was caught hiding in a wood not far from the mouth of the Rhine and had no other choice than to marry his fiancée.Procopius book VIII, xx.

He also wrote in passing that when the (Eruli) had been defeated by the , some of them moved to (which he called ). When other Heruls sought to find them years later, they crossed the (Ister), went through the lands of the (Sclaveni) and after a barren region, they came to the land of the Warni. After these Warni they passed through the land of the Danes, and then crossed the sea from there to Scandinavia, where they found them living with the (Gautoi).Procopius: Book VI, xv.

Others, however, question Procopius's reliability for this northern region.J.N. Lanting & J. van der Plicht, 'De C14-chronologie van de Nederlandse pre- en protohistorie, Part VIA: Romeinse tijd en Merovingische periode. Historische bronnen en chronologische thema's', in: Palaeohistoria 51/52 (2009/2010), pp. 27–169, 59, 73. Modern scholars claim that the area north of the Rhine may have been under Frankish control during the greater parts of the 6th and 7th centuries, at least since the defeat of the Danish sea-king in 526.Gerhard Krutzler, Kult und Tabu: Wahrnehmungen der "Germania" bei Bonifatius, Münster 2011, pp. 43–45.

According to the chronicle of the Varni or Warni rebelled against the Merovingian Franks in 594 and were bloodily defeated by in 595 (the year he died) "so that few of them survived".Fredegar MGH ed. p.127 Many modern historians believe that this is likely to refer to the Thuringians.

The Warini also appear in the title of a 9th-century legal codex, Lex Angliorum et Werinorum hoc est Thuringorum (Law of the Angles and Warini, that is, of the Thuringians), which has much in common with Frankish, Frisian and Saxon law codes.

Recent research suggests that they were part of a Thuringian federation, which dominated Northern Germany from 's death in 453 to the middle of the 6th century when they were crushed by the Franks. Their military fame might explain why the names of the Warini and Thuringians have been mentioned in a much wider area, extending even beyond the Rhine.Helmut Castritius, Dieter Geuenich, Matthias Werner (eds.), Die Frühzeit der Thüringer: Archäologie, Sprache, Geschichte, Berlin/New York 2009, pp. 287, 417, 448. Their home country seems to have been the district between the rivers Saale and Elster, which was called Werenofeld (around ).

When the region east of the Elbe became , a group in this region continued to be called , perhaps representing assimilated Varni.

The Warini are mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon poem as the Wærne or Werne.

lines 24–27:
Þeodric weold Froncum, þyle Rondingum,Theodric ruled the , Thyle the ,
Breoca Brondingum, Billing Wernum.Breoca the , Billing the Werns.
Oswine weold Eowum ond Ytum Gefwulf,Oswine ruled the and Gefwulf the ,
Fin Folcwalding Fresna cynne.Finn Folcwalding the -kin.

The name Billing, mentioned in Widsith, might be related to the ancestors of the Saxon -family.


See also
  • List of Germanic peoples
  • Värend, possible Warnic homeland


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Post Comment
Font Size...
Font Family...
Font Format...

Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs