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  2. Gothic paganism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_paganism

    The words for "to sacrifice" and for "sacrificer" were blotan and blostreis, which were used in Biblical Gothic in the sense of "Christian worship" and "Christian priest". [citation needed] One peculiarity that separates Gothic religion from all other forms of early Germanic religion is the absence of weapons as grave goods. Pagan warrior ...

  3. Gothi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothi

    The role of the goðar as secular leaders is shown in how the word was used synonymously with höfðingi, meaning chieftain. Over time, and especially after 1000, when the Christian conversion occurred in Iceland, the term lost all religious connotations and came to mean liege-lord or chieftain of the Icelandic Commonwealth. [2]

  4. Goths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goths

    The Gothic War culminated in the Battle of Adrianople in 378, in which the Romans were badly defeated and Valens was killed. [175] [176] Following the decisive Gothic victory at Adrianople, Julius, the magister militum of the Eastern Roman Empire, organized a wholesale massacre of Goths in Asia Minor, Syria and other parts of the Roman East ...

  5. Gothic Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_Christianity

    Gothic place of settlement and their raids into the Roman Empire in the 3rd century. During the 3rd century, East Germanic people, moving in a southeasterly direction, migrated into the Dacians' territories previously under Sarmatian and Roman control, and the confluence of East Germanic, Sarmatian, Dacian and Roman cultures resulted in the emergence of a new Gothic identity.

  6. Origin stories of the Goths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_stories_of_the_Goths

    Differently to other Gothic origins stories however, Jordanes named at least two specific northern places where the ancestors of the Goths had lived more than a thousand years earlier. Scholars are uncertain about the precise origins of the various details of Jordanes' migration stories, and debate the extent to which real Gothic legends or the ...

  7. Origin of the Goths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_the_Goths

    Concerning the origin of the Goths before the 3rd century, there is no consensus among scholars. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was in the 3rd century that the Goths began to be described by Roman writers as an increasingly important people north of the lower Danube and Black Sea , in the area of modern Romania , Republic of Moldova , and Ukraine .

  8. God (word) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_(word)

    The English word god comes from the Old English god, which itself is derived from the Proto-Germanic *gudą.Its cognates in other Germanic languages include guþ, gudis (both Gothic), guð (), god (Old Saxon, Old Frisian, and Old Dutch), and got (Old High German).

  9. Gothicism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothicism

    Erik Gustaf Geijer was a member of the 19th-century Gothic League (or the Geatish Society), which propagated the now-familiar image of the Viking as a heroic Norseman. Gothicism or Gothism ( Swedish : Göticism Swedish pronunciation: [ˈjøːtɪsˌɪsm] ; Latin : Gothicismus ) was an ethno-cultural ideology and cultural movement in Sweden ...