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[Edit] See also

  • Agotes

  • Arheimar

  • The Battle of the Goths and Huns

  • Codex Argenteus

  • Crimean Goths

  • Götaland

  • Gothic alphabet

  • Gothiscandza

  • Gutar

  • Hervarar saga

  • Jordanes

  • King of the Geats

  • Reidgotaland

  • Sabbas the Goth

  • Scandza

  • Ulfilas

  • Västergötland

[Edit] Footnotes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Migrations

The Visigoths (Western Goths) were one of two main branches of the Goths. The Goths were an East Germanic tribe (the Ostrogoths being the other). Together these tribes were among the loosely-termed Germanic peoples who disturbed the late Roman Empire during the Migration Period.

Most famously, a Visigothic force led by King Alaric I succeeded in storming Rome in 410 A.D.

After the collapse of the western Roman Empire, the Visigoths played a major role in western European affairs for another two and a half centuries. The Visigoths were well known for adopting the Roman Culture and the Roman's style of clothing.

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Visigoths From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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A votive crown belonging to Recceswinth (653–672)

The Visigoths (Latin: Visigothi, Wisigothi, Vesi, Visi, Wesi, or Wisi) were one of two main branches of the Goths, an East Germanic tribe, the Ostrogoths being the other. Together these tribes were among the barbarians who disturbed the late Roman Empire during the Migration Period. The Visigoths first emerge as a distinct people during the fourth century, initially in the Balkans, where they participated in several wars with Rome. A Visigothic army under Alaric I eventually moved into Italy and famously sacked Rome in 410.

Eventually the Visigoths were settled in southern Gaul as foederati of the Romans, the reasons for which are still subjects for debate among scholars. They soon fell out with their hosts and established their own kingdom with its capital at Toulouse. They slowly extended their authority into Hispania, displacing the Vandals and Alans. Their rule in Gaul was cut short in 507 at the Battle of Vouillé, when they were defeated by the Franks under Clovis I. Thereafter the only territory north of the Pyrenees that the Visigoths held was Septimania and their kingdom was limited to Hispania, which came completely under the control of their small governing elite, at the expense of the Byzantine province of Spania and the Suebic Kingdom of Galicia.

In or around 589, the Visigoths, under Reccared I, formerly Arian Christians, converted to the Nicene faith. In their kingdom, the century that followed was dominated by the Councils of Toledo and the episcopacy. Historical sources for the seventh century are relatively sparse. In 711 or 712 the Visigoths, including their king and many of their leading men, were killed in the Battle of Guadalete by a force of invading Arabs and Berbers. The kingdom quickly collapsed thereafter, a phenomenon which has led to much debate among scholars concerning its causes. Gothic identity survived the fall of the kingdom, however, especially in the Kingdom of Asturias and the Marca Hispanica, but the "Visigoths" as a people disappeared.

Of what remains of the Visigoths in Spain and Portugal there are several churches and an increasing number of archaeological finds, but most notably a large number of Spanish, Portuguese, and other Romance language given names and surnames. The Visigoths were the only people to found new cities in western Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire and before the rise of the Carolingians. Until the Late Middle Ages, the greatest Visigothic legacy, which is no longer in use, was their law code, the Liber iudiciorum, which formed the basis for legal procedure in most of Christian Iberia for centuries after their kingdom's demise.

Contents

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  • 1 Division of the Goths: Tervingi and Vesi

  • 2 Etymology of Tervingi and Vesi/Visigothi

  • 3 History

    • 3.1 War with Rome (376–382)

    • 3.2 Reign of Alaric I

    • 3.3 Visigothic kingdom

  • 4 Visigothic religion

  • 5 Visigothic culture

    • 5.1 Law

    • 5.2 Art and architecture

  • 6 Kings of the Visigoths

    • 6.1 Terving kings

    • 6.2 Balti dynasty

    • 6.3 Non-Balti kings

  • 7 Notes

  • 8 Sources

  • 9 External links