Ermanaric
{{short description|4th-century king of the Goths}}
{{for|the bishop|Ermanrich of Passau}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Ermanaric
| succession = King of the Greuthungian
| reign = {{circa}} 296–376
| successor = Vithimiris
| royal house = Amali
| birth_date = {{circa}} 291
| death_date = 376 (Aged about 85)
}}
Image:Chernyakhov.PNG, identified with Ermanaric's kingdom, in the early fourth century.]]
Ermanaric{{efn|{{langx|got|*Aírmanareiks}}; {{langx|la|Ermanaricus}} or Hermanaricus; {{langx|ang|Eormanrīc}} {{IPA|ang|ˈeorˠmɑnriːtʃ|}}; {{langx|non|Jǫrmunrekkr}} {{IPA|non|ˈjɔrmunrekr|}}, {{langx|gmh|Ermenrîch}}}} (died 376) was a Greuthungian king who before the Hunnic invasion evidently ruled a sizable portion of Oium, the part of Scythia inhabited by the Goths at the time. He is mentioned in two Roman sources: the contemporary writings of Ammianus Marcellinus, and in Getica by the sixth-century historian Jordanes. He also appears in a fictionalized form in later Germanic heroic legends.
Modern historians disagree on the size of Ermanaric's realm. Herwig Wolfram postulates that he at one point ruled a realm stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea as far eastwards as the Ural Mountains.{{cite book |last=Wolfram |first=Herwig |author-link=Herwig Wolfram |year=1997 |title=The Roman Empire and Its Germanic Peoples |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tOnQDfRU-poC |publisher=University of California Press |page=27 |isbn=0-520-08511-6 |access-date=2 November 2013 }} Peter Heather is skeptical of the claim that Ermanaric ruled all Goths except the Tervingi, and furthermore points to the fact that such an enormous empire would have been larger than any known Gothic political unit, that it would have left bigger traces in the sources and that the sources on which the claim is based are not nearly reliable enough to be taken at face value.{{cite book |last=Heather |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Heather |year=1991 |title=Goths and Romans 332-489 |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=86–89 |isbn=0-19-820234-2 }}
Etymology
The first element of the name Ermanaric appears to be based on the Proto-Germanic root *ermena-, meaning 'universal'.{{sfn|Gillespie|1973|p=39}} The second element is from the element *-rīks, Gothic reiks, meaning 'ruler'; this is found frequently in Gothic royal names.{{sfn|Gillespie|1973|p=30}}
In Roman sources
According to Ammianus, Ermanaric was "a most warlike king" who eventually committed suicide, faced with the aggression of the Alani and of the Huns, who invaded his territories in the 370s. Ammianus says he "ruled over extensively wide and fertile regions".{{citation|author=Michael Kulikowski |title=Rome's Gothic Wars |year=2007 |pages=111, 112 |isbn= 9780521846332}}{{citation |author=Ammianus Marcellinus |author-link=Ammianus Marcellinus | url=https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Ammian/31*.html#3 |title=Res Gestae XXXI 3 |editor=Thayer}} Ammianus also says that after Ermanaric's death, a certain Vithimiris was elected as the new king.
According to Jordanes' Getica, Ermanaric ruled the realm of Oium. Jordanes describes him as a "Gothic Alexander" who "ruled all the nations of Scythia and Germania as they were his own". Jordanes also states that the king put to death a young woman named Sunilda (Svanhildr) with the use of horses, as punishment for her husband's treason. Thereupon her two brothers, Sarus and Ammius, severely wounded Ermanaric, leaving him unfit to defend his kingdom from Hunnic incursions. Variations of this legend had a profound effect on medieval Germanic literature, including that of England and Scandinavia (see Jonakr's sons). Jordanes claims that he successfully ruled the Goths until his death aged 110.
Edward Gibbon gives the version of Ammianus and Jordanes as historical, reporting that Ermanaric successively conquered, during a reign of about 30 years from AD 337 to 367, the west-goths, the Heruli, the Venedi and the Aestii, establishing a kingdom which ranged from the Baltic to the Black Sea;Edward Gibbon, The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire, (The Modern Library, 1932), chap. XXV., pp. 890, 891 and died aged 110 of a wound inflicted by the brothers of a woman whom he had cruelly executed for her husband's revolt, being succeeded by his brother Vithimiris.Gibbon, Ibid. chap. XXVI., pp. 920, 921
In Germanic sources and legends
Ermanaric appears in a variety of different Germanic heroic legends.
Iormunrek (Jörmunrekkr) is the Norse form of the name. Ermanaric appears in Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian legend. In the former, the poem Beowulf focused on the image of "Eormenric's wiles and hatred".Seamus Heaney trans., Beowulf (London 2000) p. 40 He is described in the tenth century poem Deor as a powerful but treacherous king: "We have heard of the wolfish mind of Eormanric: far and wide he ruled the people of the realm of the Goths: he was a cruel king".Deor, quoted in J R R Tolkien, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun (London 2009) p. 322-323.
The death of Svanhildr (Svanhildr Sigurðardóttir) and Ermanaric's (Jörmunrek) subsequent death at the hands of Jonakr's sons occupies an important place in the world of Germanic legend. The tale is retold in many northern European stories, including the Norse poems Ragnarsdrápa, Hamðismál and Guðrúnarhvöt, the Prose Edda and the Volsunga Saga; the Norwegian Ragnarsdrápa; the Danish Gesta Danorum; and the German Nibelungenlied
{{Citation
| last1 = Lettsom
| first1 = William Nanson
| author-link = William Nanson Lettsom
| last2 = Carpenter
| first2 = William H.
| author2-link = William Henry Carpenter (philologist)
| title = The Nibelungenlied
| publisher = Colonial Press
| year = 1901
| url = https://archive.org/stream/nibelungenlied00lettuoft/nibelungenlied00lettuoft_djvu.txt
| access-date = 7 May 2011}}
In the Norse Thidreks Saga, translated from Low German sources, Ermanaric is ill-advised by his treacherous counsellor Bicke, Bikka, Sifka, or Seveke (who wants revenge for the rape of his wife by Ermanaric),Gillespie 1973, 117 with the result that the king puts his own wife to death for supposed adultery with his son;J. R. Tanner ed., The Cambridge Medieval History Vol VI (Cambridge 1929) p. 839 he is thereafter crippled by his brothers-in-law in revenge.Tom Shippey, The Road to Middle-Earth (London 1992) p. 16
In the Middle High German poems Dietrichs Flucht, the Rabenschlacht, and Alpharts Tod about Dietrich of Bern, Ermanaric is Dietrich's uncle who has driven his nephew into exile.Heinzle 1999, pp. 4-7 The early modern Low German poem Ermenrichs Tod recounts a garbled version of Ermanaric's death reminiscent of the scene told in Jordanes and Scandinavian legend.Millet 2008, p. 475
Name
Ermanaric's Gothic name is reconstructed as *Airmanareiks.
It is recorded in the various Latinized forms:
- in Jordanes' Getica, he is called Ermanaricus or Hermanaricus, but some of the manuscripts even have Armanaricus, Hermericus, Hermanericus etc.
- in Ammianus' Res gestae, he is Ermenrichus (his name occurs only once).
In medieval Germanic heroic legend, the name appears as:
- Old English Eormenric in Beowulf; the alternative spelling Eormanric occurs in the poems Deor and Widsith,
- Old Norse Jǫrmunrekkr
- (or, borrowed from Low German) Ermenrekur, Old Swedish Ermenrik or Ermentrik in the Swedish Didrik Saga,
- Middle High German Ermenrîch.
Since the name Heiðrekr may have been confused with Ermanaric{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} through folk etymology, Ermanaric is possibly identifiable with Heiðrekr Ulfhamr of the Hervarar saga.
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{Reflist|20em}}
Works cited
{{refbegin|2}}
- {{cite book|last1=Gillespie|first1=George T.|title=Catalogue of Persons Named in German Heroic Literature, 700-1600: Including Named Animals and Objects and Ethnic Names|date=1973|publisher=Oxford University|location=Oxford|isbn=9780198157182}}
- {{cite book|last1=Heinzle|first1=Joachim|title=Einführung in die mittelhochdeutsche Dietrichepik|date=1999|publisher=De Gruyter|location=Berlin, New York|isbn=3-11-015094-8|pages=58–82| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Sz4f9YS53EC}}
- {{cite book|last1=Millet|first1=Victor|title=Germanische Heldendichtung im Mittelalter|date=2008|publisher=de Gruyter|location=Berlin, New York|isbn=978-3-11-020102-4|pages=332–370}}
{{refend}}
{{The Dietrich von Bern Cycle}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ermanaric}}
Category:Year of birth uncertain
Category:English heroic legends
Category:4th-century Gothic people