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Topic: Juthungi


  
 Aurelian - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The chronology, however, of Aurelian's reign is very confused, and the abandonment of Dacia is placed by some authorities towards its close.
He next entered upon campaigns against the Juthungi, Alamanni, and other Germanic tribes, over whom, after a severe defeat which was said to have imperilled the very existence of the empire, he at length obtained a complete victory.
Having thus secured the Rhine and Danube frontiers, he turned his energies towards the east, and in 271 set out on his expedition against Zenobia, queen of Palmyra.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Aurelian   (690 words)

  
 Alamanni - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
There can be little doubt, however, that the ancient Hermunduri formed the preponderating element in the nation.
Among the other elements may be mentioned the Juthungi, Bucinobantes, Lentienses, and perhaps the Armalausi.
From the 4th century onwards we hear also of the Suebi or Suabi.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Alamanni   (281 words)

  
 Detail Page
He marched first against the Germanic Juthungi, who had invaded the province of Raetia and thus threatened Italy.
An urgent request came from Pannonia, where the Vandals were on the attack.
Aurelian crushed them in 270–271 but had to face the Juthungi again in Italy, this time allied with the Alamanni and the Marcomanni.
www.fofweb.com /Onfiles/Ancient/AncientDetail.asp?iPin=ROME0190   (687 words)

  
 Aurelian   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Nobody dared take on the strongest military figure of the empire, and quickly all the forces changed sides to this stern Danubian commander, abandoning a lonely emperor in Aquileia, who alas committed suicide.
The Alemanni, Juthungi and Marcomanni invaded the empire in force, before even the Vandals had finished withdrawing.
In late AD 274 Aurelian first dealt with disorder at Lugdunum (Lyons) and then went north to fight off an invasion of Raetia by the Juthungi (Jutes).
www.roman-empire.net /decline/aurelian.html   (1683 words)

  
 The Imperial Age
The Alemanni, Markomanni and Juthungi are pillaging the alpine region and northern Italy.
Claudius II dies of the plague and is succeeded by Aurelian who then defeats the Juthungi.
The Alemanni and Juthungi are again pillaging in northern Italy but Aurelian defeat them.
www.tacitus.nu /historical-atlas/rome2.htm   (2399 words)

  
 Emperor Gallienus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Then, in AD 259, the chaos began which was to haunt Gallienus throughout his reign.
Gallienus was still fighting along the Danube, when message reached him that further west the Juthungi (Jutes) and the Alemanni had crossed the river a were descending into Italy.
In Italy a force was hastily assembled to stop their advance on the capital.
www.roman-empire.net /decline/gallienus.html   (1752 words)

  
 Detail Page
More invasions followed, this time by the Juthungi, who crossed the Danube in 270.
Aurelian was given charge of finishing off the Goths while Claudius marched to Sirmium, where he succumbed to the plague.
The Juthungi, Vandals and Goths still threatened the frontiers, and Aurelian, unloved by his legions, took over an uncertain Empire.
www.fofweb.com /Onfiles/Ancient/AncientDetail.asp?iPin=ROME0380   (271 words)

  
 Roman Emperors - DIR Aurelian
The official propaganda claimed that on his deathbed Claudius II had designated Aurelian as his successor [[8]]; Aurelian later (perhaps in A.D. 272) placed his dies imperii on the day of Claudius' death, thereby dismissing Quintillus as a mere usurper [[9]].
In A.D. 270 or 271, he fought in Northern Italy and in the Danube region against the tribes of the Vandals, Juthungi and Sarmatians [[10]].
35,2; Juthungi: Dexippos, FGrH IIA 460 F7; SHA, Aurel.
www.roman-emperors.org /aurelian.htm   (3834 words)

  
 Freeman & Sear -
He immediately faced a rapid-fire series of invasions by several barbarian tribes who tried to take advantage of Claudius’ death, but Aurelian was well-prepared and defeated each in turn.
Yet another tribe, the Juthungi, next invaded Italy and dealt him his only defeat, but Aurelian regrouped and utterly annihilated them within sight of Rome.
The narrow escape prompted Aurelian to order construction of a massive defensive wall around the capital city.
www.freemanandsear.com /displayproduct.pl?prodid=3353   (572 words)

  
 Late Roman Timeline 250 AD - 550 AD
The provinces of Gaul, Germania and Raetia become the Imperium Galliarum (Gallic Empire) breaking away from the rest of the Roman Empire.
The Juthungi are defeated by Roman troops in Raetia, who manage to free thousands of Italian captives (April 24/25).
Macrianus maior and his son Macrianus minor march to Europe but are defated in Thrace by Gallienus' general Aureolus, after which their troops kill both of them.
www.fectio.org.uk /articles/timeline3rd.htm   (1634 words)

  
 Lot
But this isn't the end, no, not even close to where I am now, where it wreaks havoc and chaos as I speak.
Speaking of chaos, it all began in 259 A.D. when the Juthungi and the Alemanni crossed the river into Italy.
I was fighting along the Danube when all of a sudden Gallienus received word that the Juthungi and the Alemanni had gotten into Italy.
www.bitsofhistory.com /ace/essays/school_16.htm   (760 words)

  
 Crisis of the 3rd Century Timeline
Juthungi (Jutes) tribes cross the Upper Danube and invade Italy.
His golden statue is set up in front of the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus.
Aurelianus campaigns against Vandals, Juthungi and Sarmatians in the Danube region.
www.taivaansusi.net /historia/antiikki/timeline.htm   (4229 words)

  
 Semnoni - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the 3rd century, the Semnoni shifted southwards and eventually ended up as part of the Alamanni people.
The Augsburg stela, a Roman monument of the 3rd century states that the Semnones were also called Juthungi
This page was last modified 00:15, 17 November 2006.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Semnoni   (93 words)

  
 Roman Empire In Turmoil 180-285 by Sanderson Beck
Claudius led an imperial army that defeated the Goths in Moesia, Thrace, and Macedonia, taking some Gothic youth into the army, enslaving others, and giving each soldier two or three captive women.
Claudius appointed Aurelian to continue the campaign against the Goths while he turned to face the Juthungi and Vandals in the Danube region, where he succumbed to the plague in 270.
Aurelian went back to Gaul to counter invading Juthungi and Alamanni from Raetia; then he headed for Mesopotamia.
www.san.beck.org /AB9-RomanTurmoil180-285.html   (20213 words)

  
 Intra Muros/Extra Muros -- Inside/Outside the Roman Walls
Then Aurelian became Emperor and quickly began restoring Roman authority in Europe.
He defeated invaders in central Europe, drove a tribe called the Juthungi from northern Italy and quelled a revolt over debasement of currency in Rome itself.
He then won battles on the Danube, captured Septimia Zenobia in Palmyra (in the east of modern Syria) and co-opted a rival "Emperor", Tetricus, who controlled Gaul, Spain, and Britain, thus bringing the whole empire back under Roman control.
www.mmdtkw.org /VWalls.html   (1613 words)

  
 Roman Timeline of the 3rd Century AD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The Goths launch an attack on Asia Minor.
259 AD A Germanic tribe, the Juthungi (Jutes), cross the Upper Danube and enter Italy.
Battle of Placentia, in which a combined Germanic invasion of the Alemanni, Marcomanni, and Juthungi defeat a Roman army under the command of the Emperor Aurelian.
www.unrv.com /empire/timeline-3rd-century.php   (1671 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Myth of Nations: The Medieval Origins of Europe.: Books: Patrick J. Geary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
His aversion to maps, chronologies and other study aids make it slightly more difficult for us lay folk, especially since he refers to so many archaic place-names and territories.
Nonetheless, one can still easily grasp his main points without knowing exactly who the Juthungi were or where Pannonia was.
I really liked Geary's ideas, and so I wish he would have added a chapter developing his points on European myths of national origin into a more comprehensive theory that could be applied to such myths around the world.
www.amazon.com /Myth-Nations-Medieval-Origins-Europe/dp/0691090548   (2398 words)

  
 390-400AD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Hello, I am having trouble pinpointing 2 tribes that were located relatively close to each other that had not crossed the Rhine before 400AD.
I am looking for sub-tribes of the Alamanni or Suebi, such as the Juthungi, Bucinobantes, Lentienses, Armalausi or others.
I have been using the University of Utah library but have not found this information.
www.ancientworlds.net /aw/Post/481523   (138 words)

  
 Roman timeline from 268AD to 284AD
The years 270 and 271 Aurelian spent the winter 270/271 in Rome.
In 270 or 271, he fought in Northern Italia and in the Danube region against the tribes of the Vandals, Juthungi and Sarmatians.
The years 271 and 272 In 271, Aurelian received the title Germanicus maximus and entered his first consulate.
myweb.tiscali.co.uk /temetfutue/timeline/tl_Imperial-c.htm   (13724 words)

  
 T.D. Barnes on Diocletian
Italy, Africa, Gaul, Spain, and the Danubian provinces all felt secure.
The emperors had often raided the territory of the Alamanni and Sarmatians, had often defeated Juthungi, Quadi, and Carpi in battle, had constrained the Goths to seek peace, and had induced the Persian kings to show a proper respect for Rome.
The credit for all this could be assigned to the rulers: forgetful of their own comfort, they surveyed the world to see what needed their attention; they passed their days and nights in incessant concem for the safety of all.
www.richmond.edu /~wstevens/history331texts/barnes.html   (5094 words)

  
 St. Ambrose of Milan, Letters (1881). pp. 137-213. Letters 21-30.
While you were employing the Roman forces, while he was presenting himself to oppose you on both sides, the Juthungi
in the very heart of the Roman Empire were laying Rhsetia waste, and so the Huns were called in against the Juthungi.
And yet when he was attacking the country of the Alemanni on your frontier, and was already threatening the provinces of Gaul with the near approach of danger, he was obliged to 180 relinquish his triumphs, lest you should be alarmed.
www.ccel.org /p/pearse/morefathers/ambrose_letters_03_letters21_30.htm   (18987 words)

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