The Origins And History Of The Burgundians
The
Burgundians (
Latin: Burgundiōnes, Burgundī; Old Norse: Burgundar;
Old English: Burgendas;
Greek: Βούργουνδοι) were an
East Germanic tribe which may have emigrated from mainland
Scandinavia to the
Baltic island of Bornholm, and from there to the Vistula basin, in middle modern
Poland. A part of the
Burgundian tribes migrated further westward, where they may have participated in the 406
Crossing of the Rhine, after which they settled in the
Rhine Valley and established the
Kingdom of the Burgundians. Another part of Burgundians stayed in their previous homeland in Oder-Vistula basin and formed a contingent in
Attila's Hunnic army by 451.
Their name survives in the regional appellation,
Burgundy.
The name of the Burgundians has since remained connected to the area of modern
France that still bears their name: see the later history of Burgundy. Between the 6th and
20th centuries, however, the boundaries and political connections of this area have changed frequently; with none of the changes having had anything to do with the original Burgundians. The name Burgundians used here and generally used by
English writers to refer to the
Burgundiones is a later formation and more precisely refers to the inhabitants of the territory of Burgundy which was named from the people called Burgundiones. The descendants of the Burgundians today are found primarily in historical Burgundy and among the west
Swiss.
History
The Burgundians had a tradition of Scandinavian origin which finds support in place-name evidence and archaeological evidence (Stjerna) and many consider their tradition to be correct (e.g.
Musset, p. 62). The Burgundians are believed to have then emigrated to the Baltic island of Bornholm ("the island of the Burgundians" in Old Norse). However, by about 250 the population of Bornholm had largely disappeared from the island. Most cemeteries ceased to be used, and those that were still used had few burials (Stjerna, in Nerman 1925:176). In
Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar (
The Saga of Thorstein,
Viking's Son), the Veseti settled in an island or holm, which was called Borgund's holm, i.e. Bornholm.
Alfred the Great's translation of
Orosius uses the name Burgenda land. The poet and early mythologist
Viktor Rydberg (1828–
1895), (
Our Fathers' Godsaga) asserted from an early medieval source,
Vita Sigismundi, that they themselves retained oral traditions about their Scandinavian origin.
Early Roman sources such as
Tacitus and
Pliny the Elder knew little concerning the
Germanic peoples east of the
Elbe river, or on the
Baltic Sea. Pliny (IV.28) however mentions them among the
Vandalic or
Eastern Germanic Germani peoples, including also the
Goths. Claudius Ptolemy lists them as living between the Suevus (probably the Oder) and Vistula rivers, north of the Lugii, and south of the coast dwelling tribes.
Around the mid
2nd century AD, there was a significant migration by
Germanic tribes of Scandinavian origin (
Rugii,
Goths, Gepidae,
Vandals,
Burgundians, and others) towards the south-east, creating turmoil along the entire Roman frontier. These migrations culminated in the
Marcomannic Wars, which resulted in widespread destruction and the first invasion of
Italy in the
Roman Empire period.
Jordanes reports that during the
3rd century, the Burgundians living in the Vistula basin were almost annihilated by
Fastida, king of the Gepids, whose kingdom was at the mouth of the Vistula
.
In the late 3rd century, the Burgundians appear on the east bank of the Rhine, confronting
Roman Gaul.
Zosimus (1.68) reports them being defeated by the emperor
Probus in 278 in Gaul. At this time they were led by a
Vandal king. A few years later,
Claudius Mamertinus mentions them along with the
Alamanni, a
Suebic people. These two peoples had moved into the
Agri Decumates on the eastern side of the Rhine, an area today referred to still as
Swabia, at times attacking Roman Gaul together and sometimes fighting each other. He also mentions that the Goths had previously defeated the Burgundians.
Ammianus Marcellinus, on the other hand, claimed that the Burgundians were descended from
Romans. The Roman sources do not speak of any specific migration from
Poland by the Burgundians (although other Vandalic peoples are more clearly mentioned as having moved west in this period), and so there have historically been some doubts about the link between the eastern and western Burgundians.