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{{Short description|Predecessors of the Bavarians and Austrians}}
{{Short description|Predecessors of the Bavarians and Austrians}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2025}}
[[File:Kipfenberg Burg 2009 (07).JPG|thumb|upright=1|Reconstruction of the grave of the [[Kemathen warrior]], who is believed to have been a Bavarian]]
[[File:Kipfenberg Burg 2009 (07).JPG|thumb|upright=1|Reconstruction of the grave of the [[Kemathen warrior]], who is believed to have been a Bavarian]]
The '''Baiuvarii''', '''Baiovari''' or '''early Bavarians''' were a [[Germanic people]] who are first mentioned in contemporary records starting in the 6th century, soon after the end of the [[Western Roman Empire]]. They originally lived in what had been the Roman province [[Raetia]], south of the [[Danube]], in what is now southern [[Bavaria]]. They became a [[stem duchy]] within the [[Frankish empire]], the medieval [[Duchy of Bavaria]], which expanded and eventually stretched to include present day [[Austria]].
The [[Bavarian language]] developed among the Baiuvarii. It is a [[West Germanic]] language descended from [[Old High German]] and closely related to [[Standard German]]. Modern dialects of Bavarian are still spoken by [[Bavarians]], [[Austrians]] and [[South Tyroleans]].
==Language==
[[File:Bairisches Mundartgebiet.PNG|thumb|Map of the extent of the [[Bavarian language|Bavarian]], also known as Austro-Bavarian, dialects of the German language]]
[[File:Bairisches Mundartgebiet.PNG|thumb|Map of the extent of the [[Bavarian language|Bavarian]], also known as Austro-Bavarian, dialects of the German language]]
The '''Baiuvarii''' or '''Bavarii''', sometimes simply called '''Bavarians''' ({{Langx|Bar|Baiuwaren}}; {{langx|de|Bajuwaren}}) were a [[Germanic people]] who lived in and near present-day southern [[Bavaria]], which is named after them.
Early evidence of the language of the Baiuvarii is limited to personal names and a few [[Runic]] inscriptions. However, by the 8th century AD, the [[Austro-Bavarian language]] was already well-established.{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|p=23}}{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=3}}


They began to appear in records by the 6th century AD, and their culture, language and political institutions are the predecessors of those of the medieval [[Duchy of Bavaria]] and [[Margraviate of Austria]].
The language of the Baiuvarii was [[West Germanic]], like its descendants medieval [[Old High German]], and the modern [[Bavarian language]]. It was so similar to the contemporary languages of the neighbouring [[Alamanni]], [[Thuringi]], and [[Langobards]], that it is difficult to tell them apart.{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|pp=23-24}}{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|pp=1,3}} This southern group of languages or dialects which are precursors to Old High German are sometimes distinguished from closely related northern dialects, such as those spoken by the [[Franks]], as "[[Elbe Germanic]]". However, the model used to define this term is now considered obsolete, in favour of the idea that all or most of continental West Germanic languages were in one dialect continuum after the [[Migration period]].{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|p=24}}{{sfn|Harm|2013}}


Among the Baiuvarii the [[Bavarian language]] developed, which is [[West Germanic]] language related to [[Standard German]], still spoken not only by modern-day [[Bavarians]], but also by [[Austrians]] and [[South Tyroleans]].
A peculiarity of Bavarian compared to its neighbours is that it appears to have loaned words from [[East Germanic languages]], such as [[Gothic language|Gothic]].{{sfn|Green|2014|p=11}}{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|p=24}}{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}


==Name==
==Name==
The name of the Baiuvarii is also spelled ''Baiuvari''.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} It probably means "men from [[Bohemia]]".{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} The placename Bohemia is believed to be connected to that of the [[Boii]], a [[Celts|Celtic]] people who partly left the region before the [[Roman era]] and then were dominated by [[Germanic peoples]]. The Baiuvarii gave their name to the region of [[Bavaria]].{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=3}}
[[File:Raetia and noricum.png|thumb|A map of the Roman provinces of Raetia and Noricum (red borders) showing the Lech, Danube and Inn rivers]]
Modern scholars reconstruct the original Germanic pronunciation before the first written forms as ''*Baiwari'', and singular ''*Bai(a)warjōz''.{{sfn|Beck|1973|p=602}} According to Rübekiel, the standard modern terms such as German ''Baj-u-waren'' and English ''Bai-u-varii'' are based on a misunderstanding of early medieval spellings such as ''Baiuuari'', where "uu" really represented a single w-like consonant, and not an "uw" syllable.{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}


==Language==
The name of the Baiuvarii had many written variants, but these differences reflect different spelling conventions which were used. For example, the use of the letters "b", "v", "u", "uu" and "o" was common when representing the same w-like sound in words from Germanic languages. Similarly, versions with a letter "g" such as {{lang|la|Bogari, Baguvarii}}, are using that letter to represent a [[palatal glide]], or y-like sound. Versions with an initial p such as {{lang|la|Pagoarii, Paioarii, Peigiro}} reflect the normal [[Upper German]] version of the [[High German consonant shift]], which still distinguishes southern dialects of German today, and so this represents a real variation in pronunciations.{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}
The language of the Baiuvarii is classified as [[Germanic languages|Germanic]].{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|p=23}}{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|pp=1, 3}} It is uncertain whether they originally spoke an [[East Germanic languages|East Germanic]] or [[West Germanic languages|West Germanic]] language.{{sfn|Green|2014|p=11}} Early evidence regarding the language of the Baiuvarii is limited to personal names and a few [[Runic]] inscriptions. By the 8th century AD, the Baiuvarii were speakers of an early form of the [[Austro-Bavarian language]] within the [[West Germanic]] family.{{sfn|Haubrichs|2014|p=23}}{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=3}}
 
Different etymologies have been proposed, but modern scholars normally understand the name as a compound of two elements: ''*Baia-/Baijo-'' which is believed to be a Germanic evolution from the pre-imperial [[Celtic languages|Celtic]] tribal name [[Boii]]; and ''[[wiktionary:Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/warjaz|-warjōz]]'' which is a common Germanic suffix used to create the names of peoples, by associating them with nouns such as regional names.
 
==Earliest attestations==
Roman [[Noricum]], now in [[Austria]], was under the military control of the [[Rugii]] in the north, and [[Ostrogoths]] in the south.{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} The earliest attestations of the Baiuvarii to their west are the following, starting in the 6th century, when the term seems to have been new.
*[[Jordanes]], writing in 551, described the Baiuvarii (manuscript spellings {{lang|la|Baibaros, Baiobaros, Baioarios}}), already living east of the Alemanni and Suevi in 469/70.<ref>{{harvnb|Rübekeil|2018}} citing Jordanes ''Getica'' LV: [https://archive.org/details/gri_33125006532622/page/n207/mode/2up Latin] [https://archive.org/details/gothichistoryofj00jorduoft/page/132/ English].</ref>
*Various versions of the [[Frankish Table of Nations]], starting from about 520, use spellings {{lang|la|Baioarius, Baweros, Baioeros, Bawarios, Baioarios, Boguarii}} and {{lang|la|Bogari}}, and describe the Baiuvarii as a people with kinship to the [[Burgundians]], Thuringians and [[Lombards]] (but not the Alemanni).{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}}
*[[Venantius Fortunatus]] ({{fl.|about 550-600}}) mentioned a region called {{lang|la|Baivaria}} near the [[Lech river]], and a person who was a {{lang|la|Baiovarius}}. This was near the country of the [[Breuni]] who still lived near the [[Inn (river)|river Inn]]. The Lech flows northwards from the Austrian alps to the German Danube.{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}} The Inn was the boundary between Raetia and Noricum, and today forms part of the border between Germany and Austria. This seems to indicate that the first Baiuvarii were in a relatively small area.
*The ''Ravenna Cosmography'', which is a 7th-century text based upon older sources, possibly from the 5th and 6th century, briefly mentions that the alps divide the "Ranici" from Italy. Modern scholars believe the word Ranici is corrupted, but in any case it says that these Ranici are "now" ruled by the "Bauuari" ({{lang|la|quae modo a Bauvariis dominatur}}).<ref>''Ravenna Cosmography'', [https://archive.org/details/ravennatisanony02ravegoog/page/292/ 4.37]</ref>
 
Notably however, the biography of [[Severinus of Noricum]] in the late 5th century, written by his contemporary [[Eugippius]], does not mention them at all. Instead, it describes the still Romanized region around [[Passau]] and [[Künzing]] in present day eastern Bavaria, and Roman [[Raetia]], as coming under attack from [[Alemanni]], [[Thuringians]] and [[Heruli]].
 
In 534 the Baiuavarii are also notably absent from the letter of the Frankish king [[Theudebert I]] to the eastern emperor [[Justinian]], although Theudebert was claiming to control the area. Similarly the contemporary 6th century historian [[Gregory of Tours]] mentioned the first known Duke of Bavaria, [[Garibald I of Bavaria|Garilbald]], because he married the widow of Theudebert, but his whole history never mentions Bavaria. Hardt for example therefore suggests that the Baiuvarii "only visibly started to develop an identity as a people" after "the appointment by the Frankish king of a dux, who actively endeavoured to organize the various Germanic and Roman groups and units living in the former province of Rhaetia".{{sfn|Hardt|2003|p=440}}
 
==Possible sources of the name==
The Baiuvarii probably didn't exist under that name before the 5th century. However, the Boii, who seem to be the basis of the first element of the Baiuvarii name, almost disappeared from the written record around the time when the Roman empire began, centuries earlier. The form of the name is Germanic, both because of the conversion of the o-sound to an a-sound, and also the -varii suffix. This has led scholars to propose different ways in which the Baiuvarii name can be indirectly derived from the much older name of the Boii tribe. By explaining this, scholars also hope to get indications about how the Baiuvarii came into existence.
 
A common and old proposal is that the Baiuvarii name somehow evolved from the classical version of the geographical term "Bohemia" which was already used by Latin and Greek writers in the first century AD. [[Strabo]] called it ''Buiaimon'', [[Velleius Paterculus]] called it ''Boiohaemum'', and Tacitus called it ''Boiemum''.<ref>Velleius, [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/L/Roman/Texts/Velleius_Paterculus/2D*.html 2.108], Strabo, ''Geography'' [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0198%3Abook%3D7%3Achapter%3D1%3Asection%3D3 7.1.3], Tacitus, Germania, [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0083%3Achapter%3D28 28.2]</ref> Modern scholars see this as a Germanic word, coined by the [[Suebi]] who settled there under [[Maroboduus]], long after the Boii departed. The second component is Germanic ''*haim-'', the source of modern English "home" and modern German "Heim".{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}{{sfn|Beck|1973}} One of the last classical reports of this name is the 2nd-century mention of a people called the [[Bainochaemae]]. [[Claudius Ptolemy]] described them in his ''[[Geography (Ptolemy)|Geography]]'' as living near the [[Elbe]], east of the [[Melibokus]] mountains, and north of the [[Asciburgius]] mountains.<ref>Ptolemy [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Periods/Roman/_Texts/Ptolemy/2/10.html 2.10]</ref> According to this proposal, the Baivari migrated south or east from the original Bohemia, which is believed to have been somewhere in the present-day [[Czech Republic]]. However, the "haim" part of the placename, which would have made the evidence for this specific etymology clear, does not appear in the name of Bavarians, leaving only the name of the Boii.{{sfn|Beck|1973}}
 
There are proposals that the name does not come from Bohemia at all, but directly from the Boii name itself, which was preserved in more areas to the east of Raetia (which would become the core of Bavaria), and not just in Bohemia. Examples which have been proposed include the following:
*Within Roman Pannonia there was also a ''[[civitas]]'' of the Boii which continued to exist within the empire. It lay on the Danube near present day [[Vienna]], in the north west of the Roman province of [[Pannonia]], bordering on Noricum.{{sfn|Kovács|2013}} By about 400 AD, when the ''[[Notitia Dignitatum]]'' was made, this area's military defence included Suebian Marcomanni troops many of whom had by this time been moved south of the Danube, into the empire.
*The ''[[Ravenna Cosmography]]'' mentions a country called {{lang|la|Baias}}, which was part of a mountainous region it called Ungani, stretching from the southern Elbe far to the east. To the north of Ungani was Saxony, and to the south was Pannonia.<ref>{{harvnb|Beck|1973}}, {{harvnb|Hamann|2018}} citing the ''Ravenna Cosmography'', [https://archive.org/details/ravennatisanonym00geoguoft/page/213 18]</ref>
*Ptolemy in the second century reported a "large nation" called the ''Baiani'' ({{langx|grc|Βαιανοί}}) or ''Baimi'' ({{lang|grc|Βαίμοι}}) between the "Luna Forest" and the Danube.{{sfn|Beck|1973}}{{sfn|Hamann|2018}} This population is believed to have been the "Vannius Kingdom", which was established on [[Quadi]] territory (which had once been Boii territory) after a civil war in the first century AD.
*{{lang|la|Boiodurum}}, was the older settlement next to the Roman fort of [[Passau]], and its name indicates that it was in a region still associated with the Boii in Roman times.{{sfn|Beck|1973}} In the ''Notitia Dignitatum'' Boiodurum's tribune is under the Dux of Noricum Ripensis and Pannonia I, while the tribune of Batavis (Passau) is under Raetian command. In Ptolemy's ''Geography'' it is in [[Vindelicia]] (in Raetia).
*Another name associated by scholars with the Boii name in late antiquity is the country called ''Bainaib'', possibly from ''*Bain-haim'', recorded in the ''[[Origo Gentis Langobardorum]]'' as one of the places the [[Langobards]] stopped on their trek from the lower Elbe to the Middle Danube.{{sfn|Beck|1973}}{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}} It came between places called Antaib and Burgundaib.
*The name of the Baiuvarii is probably also preserved in the list of great rulers of peoples in the [[Old English]] poem about [[Widsith]], the traveller. It lists "Becca" as ruler of the ''Baningas'', along with better-known rulers such as [[Attila]] who ruled the [[Huns]], and [[Ermanric]] who ruled the [[Goths]].{{sfn|Beck|1973}}{{sfn|Rübekeil|2018}}  


==History==
There are also several proposals about the ethnic background of the population who brought the Baiuvarii name with them to Raetia, and made it the name of the mixed community. However, most of the proposals involve the [[Suebi]]an Germanic peoples to the east of Raetia such as the Marcomanni and Quadi, who disappeared from contemporary records during the time of Hun rule in the area.{{sfn|Hamann|2018}}
The name is first attested in [[Latin]] sources in the 6th century AD.
*The early 6th century biography of [[Severinus of Noricum]] describes the region without mentioning them.{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}}
*One of the earliest references to the Baiuvarii is the [[Frankish Table of Nations]] from about 520, which describes them as a people with kinship to the [[Burgundians]], [[Thuringians]] and [[Lombards]].{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}}
*In his ''[[Getica]]'' (551), [[Jordanes]] described how the [[Suebi]]an people under the rule of the 5th century king or warlord named [[Hunimund]] moved to the southern side of the [[Danube]] to live in an Alpine area near the [[Alemanni]], with the Franks on their west, Thuringians to their north, Burgundians to their south, and the ''Baibaros'' to their east, who are generally understood to have been the Bavarians.<ref>''Getica'' in Latin: http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/iordanes1.html; in English: http://people.ucalgary.ca/~vandersp/Courses/texts/jordgeti.html</ref>
*In a poem about a pilgrimage to [[Augsburg]] in 565, [[Venantius Fortunatus]] mentions the land Baioaria on the river [[Lech (river)|Lech]], which flows north from the Austrian alps to the German Danube.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} They were between the Allemanni on the Danube and the [[Breuni]] who were based near the [[Inn (river)|river Inn]].


Evidence from the [[etymology]] of their name implies that the Baiuvarii, being named after Bohemia, can not have existed under that name before the 1st century AD. During this period [[Maroboduus]], king of the Germanic [[Marcomanni]], lead his people into their area which had previously been inhabited by the Celtic Boii.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=3}} Whether the Baiuvarii settled Bavaria in a specific later migration, after Maroboduus, either from the north (Bohemia) or from [[Pannonia]], is uncertain.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=3}}
A third proposal is that the name of the Boii still survived in Raetia itself, making no migration necessary. In other words, people who still identified themselves as dwellers upon old lands of the pre-imperial Celtic Boii were still living in the Norican–Raetian region, and were the name-giving element in the mixed population that remained there after Rome abandoned Raetia.{{sfn|Hamann|2018}} According to [[Karl Bosl]] in 1971, Bavarian migration to present-day Bavaria is a legend, and [[Walter Goffart]] more recently agreed that there is no reason to assume any single large immigration in order to explain the 5th century origins of the Baiuvarii.{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}}


A possible earlier record of the Baiuvarii, is the 2nd century mention of the [[Banochaemae]], whose name appears to have a similar etymology. [[Claudius Ptolemy]] described them in his ''[[Geography (Ptolemy)|Geography]]'' as living near the [[Elbe]], east of the [[Melibokus]] mountains, and north of the [[Asciburgius]] mountains.<ref>Ptolemy [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Periods/Roman/_Texts/Ptolemy/2/10.html 2.10]</ref>
==Modern commentary==
The Baiuvarii emerged about 500 after [[Odoacer]] (died 493) destroyed the [[Rugian]] kingdom just to the east of Bavaria in 487. He and his successor as king of Italy, [[Theoderic the Great]] (died 526), both had their roots in the Middle Danubian area and led large numbers of people from there to Italy.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} The Rugian kings ruled the countryside on the Danube west of Vienna, in what had been the Roman province of [[Noricum]], and the Boii civitas of the Roman province of [[Pannonia]] .


According to [[Karl Bosl]], Bavarian migration to present-day Bavaria is a legend.{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} The early Baiuvarii are often associated with the {{ill|Friedenhain-Přešťovice|de}} archaeological group, but this is controversial.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} During the time of [[Attila]] in the 5th century, the entire [[Middle Danube]] region saw the entry of many new peoples from north and east of the Carpathians, and the formation and destruction of many new and old political entities.
The Rugian territory was soon taken over in this same period by [[Langobards]], another German-speaking people who had moved from the Lower Elbe in the north, and filled the power vacuum in the Middle Danube. The Bavarians first appear at about this same time, to the west of the Lombards. However, after the Lombards also proceeded to migrate to Italy in 568, the region east of the Bavarians was dominated by the [[Pannonian Avars]], and [[Slavic languages]] became important in that region.


It is thus more probable that the Baiuvarii emerged in the provinces of [[Noricum ripense]] and [[Raetia secunda]] following [[Odoacer]]'s withdrawal of population to [[Roman Italy|Italy]] in 488, and the subsequent expansion of Italian [[Ostrogoths|Ostrogothic]], and [[Merovingian dynasty|Merovingian Frankish]] influence into the area.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} They are believed to have incorporated elements from several [[Germanic peoples]], including the [[Sciri]], [[Heruli]], [[Suebi]], [[Alemanni]], [[Naristi]], [[Thuringi]] and [[Lombards]]. They might also have included non-Germanic [[Proto-Romance|Romance people]] ([[Romanization|romanized]] [[Celtic people]]).{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}
The Baiuvarii are believed to have incorporated elements from several [[Germanic peoples]] who lived longer in the regions surrounding Raetia, including the [[Rugii]], [[Sciri]], [[Marcomanni]], [[Heruli]], [[Quadi]], [[Alemanni]], [[Naristi]], [[Thuringi]] and Langobards. They might also have included non-Germanic [[Proto-Romance|Romance people]] ([[Romanization|romanized]] [[Celtic people]]).{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}


The region was under the influence of the [[Ostrogothic Kingdom]] of [[Theodoric the Great]]. During this period, the Frankish king [[Theudebert I]] (died 548) claimed control from the North Sea to [[Pannonia]]. After his death, his uncle [[Chlothar I]] appointed [[Garibald I of Bavaria|Garibald I]] as [[Duke of Bavaria|''dux'' of Bavaria]].{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} He established the [[Agilolfings]] dynasty with his power base at Augsburg or [[Regensburg]].{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} By the 8th century, many Baiuvarii had converted to Christianity.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=8}}
It has been proposed that the Baiuvarii became important and distinct from their similar Alemannic and Langobard neighbours, under the influence of greater powers interested in the area. First Theodoric the Great, who ruled in Italy, and later the Frankish kings [[Theuderic I]] (died 534) and his son [[Theudebert I]] (died 548), seem to have controlled Bavaria from a distance.{{sfn|Hamann|2018}}  


Through their ruling [[Agilolfings]] dynasty, they were closely connected with the [[Franks]].
Theudebert claimed in a letter to the Byzantine emperor [[Justinian]] that he controlled the area from the North Sea to [[Pannonia]], which would have included Bavaria. After his death, his uncle [[Chlothar I]] appointed [[Garibald I of Bavaria|Garibald I]] as [[Duke of Bavaria|''dux'' of Bavaria]].{{sfn|Goffart|2010|p=219}} Garibald established the [[Agilolfings|Agilolfing]] dynasty with his power base at Augsburg or [[Regensburg]].{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}


==Culture==
==Archaeology==
A collection of Bavarian tribal laws was compiled in the 8th century. This document is known as ''[[Lex Baiuvariorum]]''. Elements of it possibly date back to the 6th century.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} It is very similar to ''[[Lex Thuringorum]]'', which was the legal code of the [[Thuringi]], with whom the Baiuvarii had close relations.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=2}}
In the 20th century the early Baiuvarii were associated with {{ill|Friedenhain-Přešťovice|de}} ceramics, but this is no longer accepted by scholars.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}}  


The funerary traditions of the Baiuvarii are similar to those of the Alemanni, but quite different from those of the Thuringi.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=2}}  
The funerary traditions of the Baiuvarii are similar to those of the Alemanni, but quite different from those of the Thuringi.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=2}}  
The Baiuvarii are distinguished by the presence of individuals with [[artificial cranial deformation|artificially deformed craniums]] in their cemeteries. These individuals were predominantly female; there is no undisputed evidence of males with artificially deformed skulls in [[Bavaria]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Velte |first1=Maren |last2=Czermak |first2=Andrea |last3=Grigat |first3=Andrea |last4=Haas-Gebhard |first4=Brigitte |last5=Gairhos |first5=Anja |last6=Toncala |first6=Anita |last7=Trautmann |first7=Bernd |last8=Haberstroh |first8=Jochen |last9=Päffgen |first9=Bernd |last10=Heyking |first10=Kristin von |last11=Lösch |first11=Sandra |last12=Burger |first12=Joachim |last13=Harbeck |first13=Michaela |title=Between Raetia Secunda and the dutchy of Bavaria: Exploring patterns of human movement and diet |journal=PLOS ONE |date=5 April 2023 |volume=18 |issue=4 |pages=e0283243 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0283243 |pmid=37018190 |pmc=10075417 |language=en |issn=1932-6203 |doi-access=free }} "In Bavaria, ACD is mainly observed in women, and there is only disputed evidence for ACD in men or children"</ref> Genetic and archeological evidence shows that these women were migrants from eastern cultures, who married Bavarii males, suggesting the importance of exogamy within the Bavarii culture.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Depaermentier |first1=Margaux L. C. |title=Isotope data in Migration Period archaeology: critical review and future directions |journal=Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences |date=16 March 2023 |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=42 |doi=10.1007/s12520-023-01739-y |s2cid=257537106 |language=en |issn=1866-9565|doi-access=free }} "Further studies based on other archaeobiological proxies supported the hypothesis that female exogamy played an important role at the time (Knipper et al. 2017; Stewart 2022; Veeramah et al. 2018)."</ref> The migrant women were fully integrated in to Bavarii culture.<ref>Hakenbeck, Susanne. (2011). [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261517504_Roman_or_barbarian_Shifting_identities_in_early_medieval_cemeteries_in_Bavaria Roman or barbarian? Shifting identities in early medieval cemeteries in Bavaria.] Postclassical Archaeologies. 1. p. 49. "Both the manner of their burial and the positions of their graves indicate that the different life-histories suggested by their modified skulls and possibly foreign childhood was subsumed into the local group identity by the time of their death. Regardless of whether these women may have had a foreign identity during their lifetime, in death they were treated as local women with no evidence of their possible migration other than that which was inscribed on their bodies during childhood."</ref>


In 2018, genomic research showed that these foreign women had southeastern European and [[East Asia]]n ancestry. The presence of these women among the Bavarii people indicates that men from the Bavarii culture practiced [[exogamy]], preferentially marrying women from eastern populations.<ref name="Veeramah">{{cite journal |last1=Veeramah |first1=Krishna R. |date=March 27, 2018 |title=Population genomic analysis of elongated skulls reveals extensive female-biased immigration in Early Medieval Bavaria |journal=[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]] |publisher=[[National Academy of Sciences]] |volume=115 |issue=13 |pages=3494–3499 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1719880115 |pmc=5879695 |pmid=29531040 |doi-access=free }}</ref>{{efn|Veeramah et al: "A much more diverse ancestry was observed among the females with elongated skulls, as demonstrated by a significantly greater group-based FIS (SI Appendix, Fig. S35). All these females had varying amounts of genetic ancestry found today predominantly in southern European countries [as seen by the varying amounts of ancestry inferred by [[model-based clustering]] that is representative of a sample from modern Tuscany, Italy (TSI), Fig. 3], and while the majority of samples were found to be closest to modern southeastern Europeans (Bulgaria and Romania, Fig. 4C), at least one individual, AED_1108, appeared to possess ~20% East Asian ancestry (Fig. 3)<ref name="Veeramah" />}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Frieman |first1=Catherine J. |last2=Hofmann |first2=Daniela |title=Present pasts in the archaeology of genetics, identity, and migration in Europe: a critical essay |journal=World Archaeology |date=8 August 2019 |volume=51 |issue=4 |pages=530–531 |doi=10.1080/00438243.2019.1627907 |url= |language=en |issn=0043-8243|hdl=1956/22151 |s2cid=204480648 |hdl-access=free }} "Medieval blue-eyed and blond ‘Bavarians’, meanwhile, seem to have fancied brown-eyed women from south-east Europe (Veeramah et al. 2018)"</ref>
The Baiuvarii are distinguished by the presence of individuals with [[artificial cranial deformation|artificially deformed craniums]] in their cemeteries. These individuals were predominantly female; there is no undisputed evidence of males with artificially deformed skulls in [[Bavaria]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Velte |first1=Maren |last2=Czermak |first2=Andrea |last3=Grigat |first3=Andrea |last4=Haas-Gebhard |first4=Brigitte |last5=Gairhos |first5=Anja |last6=Toncala |first6=Anita |last7=Trautmann |first7=Bernd |last8=Haberstroh |first8=Jochen |last9=Päffgen |first9=Bernd |last10=Heyking |first10=Kristin von |last11=Lösch |first11=Sandra |last12=Burger |first12=Joachim |last13=Harbeck |first13=Michaela |title=Between Raetia Secunda and the dutchy of Bavaria: Exploring patterns of human movement and diet |journal=PLOS ONE |date=5 April 2023 |volume=18 |issue=4 |article-number=e0283243 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0283243 |pmid=37018190 |pmc=10075417 |bibcode=2023PLoSO..1883243V |language=en |issn=1932-6203 |doi-access=free }} "In Bavaria, ACD is mainly observed in women, and there is only disputed evidence for ACD in men or children"</ref> Genetic and archeological evidence shows that these women were migrants from eastern cultures, who married Bavarii males, suggesting the importance of exogamy within the Bavarii culture.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Depaermentier |first1=Margaux L. C. |title=Isotope data in Migration Period archaeology: critical review and future directions |journal=Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences |date=16 March 2023 |volume=15 |issue=4 |article-number=42 |doi=10.1007/s12520-023-01739-y |bibcode=2023ArAnS..15...42D |s2cid=257537106 |language=en |issn=1866-9565|doi-access=free }} "Further studies based on other archaeobiological proxies supported the hypothesis that female exogamy played an important role at the time (Knipper et al. 2017; Stewart 2022; Veeramah et al. 2018)."</ref> The migrant women were fully integrated in to Bavarii culture.<ref>Hakenbeck, Susanne. (2011). [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261517504_Roman_or_barbarian_Shifting_identities_in_early_medieval_cemeteries_in_Bavaria Roman or barbarian? Shifting identities in early medieval cemeteries in Bavaria.] Postclassical Archaeologies. 1. p. 49. "Both the manner of their burial and the positions of their graves indicate that the different life-histories suggested by their modified skulls and possibly foreign childhood was subsumed into the local group identity by the time of their death. Regardless of whether these women may have had a foreign identity during their lifetime, in death they were treated as local women with no evidence of their possible migration other than that which was inscribed on their bodies during childhood."</ref>


==Genetics==
==Genetics==
{{Further|Lombards#Genetics|Goths#Genetics|Visigoths#Genetics|Alemanni#Genetics}}


A genetic study published in the ''[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]]'' in 2018 examined the remains of 41 individuals buried at a Bavarian cemetery ca. 500 AD. Of these, 11 whole genomes were generated. The males were found to be genetically homogeneous and of [[Northern Europe|north]]-[[central Europe]]an origin. The females were less homogeneous, carried less Northern European ancestry, and were found to combine [[Southeast Europe]]an and [[East Asia]]n ancestry.<ref name="Veeramah" />
The genetic study published in the ''[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]]'' in 2018 examined the remains of 41 individuals buried at a Bavarian cemetery ca. 500 AD. Of these, 11 whole genomes were generated. The males were found to be genetically homogeneous and of [[Northern Europe|north]]-[[central Europe]]an origin. The females were less homogeneous and were largely of [[Southern European]] origin, some of whom carried significant [[East Asian]] ancestry.{{sfn|Veeramah|2018}} The presence of these women among the Bavarii people indicates that men from the Bavarii culture practiced exogamy, preferentially marrying women from eastern populations.<ref name=":0">{{cite journal |last1=Frieman |first1=Catherine J. |last2=Hofmann |first2=Daniela |date=8 August 2019 |title=Present pasts in the archaeology of genetics, identity, and migration in Europe: a critical essay |url= |journal=World Archaeology |language=en |volume=51 |issue=4 |pages=530–531 |doi=10.1080/00438243.2019.1627907 |hdl=1956/22151 |issn=0043-8243 |s2cid=204480648 |hdl-access=free}} "Medieval blue-eyed and blond 'Bavarians', meanwhile, seem to have fancied brown-eyed women from south-east Europe (Veeramah et al. 2018)"</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Veeramah|2018}} : "A much more diverse ancestry was observed among the females with elongated skulls, as demonstrated by a significantly greater group-based FIS (SI Appendix, Fig. S35). All these females had varying amounts of genetic ancestry found today predominantly in southern European countries [as seen by the varying amounts of ancestry inferred by model-based clustering that is representative of a sample from modern Tuscany, Italy (TSI), Fig. 3], and while the majority of samples were found to be closest to modern southeastern Europeans (Bulgaria and Romania, Fig. 4C), at least one individual, AED_1108, appeared to possess ~20% East Asian ancestry (Fig. 3)."</ref>
 
There were significant gender differences in skin, hair and eye pigmentation in the studied sample. Of the local males, with normal or intermediate skulls, the majority (~80%) were likely to have [[blond]] hair and [[blue eyes]]. In contrast, the women with artificially deformed skulls (likely immigrants), generally had brown eyes (80%) and either brown (60%) or blonde (40%) hair. The study also notes that these immigrant women would have stood out from the local population due to their enlarged crania and their distinct eye, hair, and possibly skin pigmentation.<ref>{{harvnb|Veeramah|2018}} : "Based on the HIrisPlex system (13), the majority (~80%) of individuals with normal or intermediate skulls (and thus northern/central European ancestry) showed high probabilities for blue eyes and blonde hair (SI Appendix, Fig. S7 A and B); in contrast, the majority of women with deformed skulls had a high likelihood for brown eyes (80% of individuals), and both brown and blonde hair (~60% and 40% of individuals, respectively) were represented in the sample."</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Veeramah|2018}} : "While the immigrant females would have been clearly distinguishable physically among the local population based on the combination of their enlarged crania as well as their different eye, hair, and perhaps even skin pigmentation patterns, it is noteworthy that their assemblies of grave goods appear to reflect both local customs and more distant material cultures (10)."</ref>
 
No significant admixture with Roman populations from territories further south of the area was detected.<ref>{{harvnb|Veeramah|2018}} : "It is perhaps surprising that no local individual was found to share recent common genetic ancestry with a Roman soldier living in the same area ~200 y earlier. The analysis of his genome identifies him to be of southwest European origin. Thus, our results, though only based on one sample, argue against significant admixture between any Roman populations from more southern parts of the former Roman Empire and our individuals buried in Bavaria around 500 AD."</ref> Among modern populations, the surveyed individuals with normal skulls were found to be most closely related to modern-day [[Germans]].<ref>{{harvnb|Veeramah|2018}} : "A population assignment analysis (PAA) at the level of individual modern nation states suggested greatest genetic similarity of these normal-skulled individuals with modern Germans, consistent with their sampling location (Fig. 4 A and B and SI Appendix, Table S35)."</ref>
 
According to Gretzinger et al. (2024), the early medieval [[Alemanni|Alemannic]] and Bavarian populations of southern Germany had considerably more [[Western Steppe Herders|steppe-related]] ancestry and, consequently, significantly less [[Early European Farmers|Early European Farmer]] (EEF) ancestry than the preceding [[Iron Age Europe|Iron age]] [[Hallstatt culture#Genetics|Hallstatt]] population, which was "congruent with the arrival of Germanic-speaking tribes from [[northern Germany]] or [[Denmark]]". The data indicate a significant increase in Scandinavian-related ancestry—a proxy for Germanic-speaking groups—in the first half of the first millennium AD, with "median northern European ancestry" rising significantly, reaching high levels in the early medieval period. This population turnover was associated with the introduction of new paternal haplogroups, such as [[Haplogroup I-M253|I1-M253]], which is commonly found in "Continental North European-like ancestry". These Alemannic and Bavarian populations of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages were genetically indistinguishable from Iron Age and Medieval groups in Northern Germany and [[Scandinavia]], and showed the closest resemblance to present-day populations from [[Denmark]], northern Germany, the [[Netherlands]], and Scandinavia.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Gretzinger|first=Joscha|last2=Schmitt|first2=Felicitas|last3=Mötsch|first3=Angela|last4=Carlhoff|first4=Selina|last5=Lamnidis|first5=Thiseas Christos|last6=Huang|first6=Yilei|last7=Ringbauer|first7=Harald|last8=Knipper|first8=Corina|last9=Francken|first9=Michael|last10=Mandt|first10=Franziska|last11=Hansen|first11=Leif|last12=Freund|first12=Cäcilia|last13=Posth|first13=Cosimo|last14=Rathmann|first14=Hannes|last15=Harvati|first15=Katerina|display-authors=1|date=3 June 2024|title=Evidence for dynastic succession among early Celtic elites in Central Europe|url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41562-024-01888-7|journal=Nature Human Behaviour|language=en|volume=8|issue=8|pages=1467–1480|doi=10.1038/s41562-024-01888-7|issn=2397-3374}}</ref>
 
==Origin myth==
A medieval origin story exists for the Baiuvarii, the ''[[Annolied]]'' written in the 11th century, says that the Bavarian tribe came long ago from [[Armenia]], "where [[Noah]] came out of [[Noah's Ark|the ark]]". The leaders of the Bavarian army are said to have been Duke Boimunt and his brother Ingram. The story was also reflected in the ''[[Song of Roland]]'', which mentions a Bavarian duke Naimes. Also the epic ''Karl'' written by "[[Der Stricker]]" says that Naymes, the Bavarian duke, was born in "''Ormenîe''".{{sfn|Beck|1973}}


There were significant gender differences in skin, hair and eye pigmentation in the sample. While 80% of the Bavarii males had [[blond]] hair and [[blue eyes]], the women had much higher rates of brown eyes and darker hair colors. The local women with [[East Asia]]n and Southern European-related ancestry, generally had brown eyes, and 60% were dark haired.{{efn|Veeramah et al: "Based on the HIrisPlex system (13), the majority (~80%) of individuals with normal or intermediate skulls (and thus northern/central European ancestry) showed high probabilities for blue eyes and blonde hair (SI Appendix, Fig. S7 A and B); in contrast, the majority of women with deformed skulls had a high likelihood for brown eyes (80% of individuals), and both brown and blonde hair (~60% and 40% of individuals, respectively) were represented in the sample."<ref name= "Veeramah" />}}{{efn|Veeramah et al: "While the immigrant females would have been clearly distinguishable physically among the local population based on the combination of their enlarged crania as well as their different eye, hair, and perhaps even skin pigmentation patterns, it is noteworthy that their assemblies of grave goods appear to reflect both local customs and more distant material cultures (10)."<ref name="Veeramah" />}}
These origin-legends stem from learned medieval conceptions.{{sfn|Beck|1973}}


No significant admixture with Roman populations from territories further south of the area was detected.{{efn|Veeramah et al: " It is perhaps surprising that no local individual was found to share recent common genetic ancestry with a Roman soldier living in the same area ~200 y earlier. The analysis of his genome identifies him to be of southwest European origin. Thus, our results, though only based on one sample, argue against significant admixture between any Roman populations from more southern parts of the former Roman Empire and our individuals buried in Bavaria around 500 AD."<ref name="Veeramah" />}} Among modern populations, the surveyed male individuals did not have modified skulls and were found to be most closely related to modern-day [[Germans]].{{efn|Veeramah et al: "A population assignment analysis (PAA) at the level of individual modern nation states suggested greatest genetic similarity of these normal-skulled individuals with modern Germans, consistent with their sampling location (Fig. 4 A and B and SI Appendix, Table S35)."<ref name= "Veeramah" />}}
==Law code==
A collection of Bavarian tribal laws was compiled in the 8th century. This document is known as ''[[Lex Baiuvariorum]]''. Elements of it possibly date back to the 6th century.{{sfn|Diesenberger|2018|p=195}} It is very similar to ''[[Lex Thuringorum]]'', which was the legal code of the [[Thuringi]], with whom the Baiuvarii had close relations.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=2}}
 
==Christianity==
By the 8th century, many Baiuvarii had converted to Christianity.{{sfn|Fries-Knoblach|Steuer|2014|p=8}}


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Austrians]]
* [[Bavarians]]
* [[Elbe Germanic peoples]]
* [[Elbe Germanic peoples]]
* [[Irminones]]
* [[Irminones]]
==Notes==
{{Notelist}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|2}}
{{Reflist|2}}
==Notes==
{{Notelist}}


==Sources==
==Sources==
{{Refbegin|2}}
{{Refbegin|2}}
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* {{cite journal |last1=Veeramah |first1=Krishna R. |date=27 March 2018 |title=Population genomic analysis of elongated skulls reveals extensive female-biased immigration in Early Medieval Bavaria |journal=[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America]] |publisher=[[National Academy of Sciences]] |volume=115 |issue=13 |pages=3494–3499 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1719880115 |pmc=5879695 |pmid=29531040 |bibcode=2018PNAS..115.3494V |doi-access=free }}
 
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}
==Further reading==
* {{cite book |year=2014 |editor1-last=Fries-Knoblach |editor1-first=Janine |editor2-last=Steuer |editor2-first=Heiko |editor2-link=Heiko Steuer |editor3-last=Hines |editor3-first=John |title=The Baiuvarii and Thuringi: An Ethnographic Perspective |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pTA3BAAAQBAJ |publisher=[[Boydell & Brewer Ltd]] |isbn=9781843839156 }}


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:Early Germanic peoples]]
[[Category:Early Germanic peoples]]
[[Category:German tribes]]
[[Category:German tribes]]
[[Category:History of Altbayern]]

Latest revision as of 09:02, 30 May 2026

File:Kipfenberg Burg 2009 (07).JPG
Reconstruction of the grave of the Kemathen warrior, who is believed to have been a Bavarian

The Baiuvarii, Baiovari or early Bavarians were a Germanic people who are first mentioned in contemporary records starting in the 6th century, soon after the end of the Western Roman Empire. They originally lived in what had been the Roman province Raetia, south of the Danube, in what is now southern Bavaria. They became a stem duchy within the Frankish empire, the medieval Duchy of Bavaria, which expanded and eventually stretched to include present day Austria.

The Bavarian language developed among the Baiuvarii. It is a West Germanic language descended from Old High German and closely related to Standard German. Modern dialects of Bavarian are still spoken by Bavarians, Austrians and South Tyroleans.

Language

File:Bairisches Mundartgebiet.PNG
Map of the extent of the Bavarian, also known as Austro-Bavarian, dialects of the German language

Early evidence of the language of the Baiuvarii is limited to personal names and a few Runic inscriptions. However, by the 8th century AD, the Austro-Bavarian language was already well-established.[1][2]

The language of the Baiuvarii was West Germanic, like its descendants medieval Old High German, and the modern Bavarian language. It was so similar to the contemporary languages of the neighbouring Alamanni, Thuringi, and Langobards, that it is difficult to tell them apart.[3][4][5] This southern group of languages or dialects which are precursors to Old High German are sometimes distinguished from closely related northern dialects, such as those spoken by the Franks, as "Elbe Germanic". However, the model used to define this term is now considered obsolete, in favour of the idea that all or most of continental West Germanic languages were in one dialect continuum after the Migration period.[3][6][7]

A peculiarity of Bavarian compared to its neighbours is that it appears to have loaned words from East Germanic languages, such as Gothic.[8][6][3]

Name

File:Raetia and noricum.png
A map of the Roman provinces of Raetia and Noricum (red borders) showing the Lech, Danube and Inn rivers

Modern scholars reconstruct the original Germanic pronunciation before the first written forms as *Baiwari, and singular *Bai(a)warjōz.[9] According to Rübekiel, the standard modern terms such as German Baj-u-waren and English Bai-u-varii are based on a misunderstanding of early medieval spellings such as Baiuuari, where "uu" really represented a single w-like consonant, and not an "uw" syllable.[3]

The name of the Baiuvarii had many written variants, but these differences reflect different spelling conventions which were used. For example, the use of the letters "b", "v", "u", "uu" and "o" was common when representing the same w-like sound in words from Germanic languages. Similarly, versions with a letter "g" such as Bogari, Baguvarii, are using that letter to represent a palatal glide, or y-like sound. Versions with an initial p such as Pagoarii, Paioarii, Peigiro reflect the normal Upper German version of the High German consonant shift, which still distinguishes southern dialects of German today, and so this represents a real variation in pronunciations.[3]

Different etymologies have been proposed, but modern scholars normally understand the name as a compound of two elements: *Baia-/Baijo- which is believed to be a Germanic evolution from the pre-imperial Celtic tribal name Boii; and -warjōz which is a common Germanic suffix used to create the names of peoples, by associating them with nouns such as regional names.

Earliest attestations

Roman Noricum, now in Austria, was under the military control of the Rugii in the north, and Ostrogoths in the south.[10] The earliest attestations of the Baiuvarii to their west are the following, starting in the 6th century, when the term seems to have been new.

  • Jordanes, writing in 551, described the Baiuvarii (manuscript spellings Baibaros, Baiobaros, Baioarios), already living east of the Alemanni and Suevi in 469/70.[11]
  • Various versions of the Frankish Table of Nations, starting from about 520, use spellings Baioarius, Baweros, Baioeros, Bawarios, Baioarios, Boguarii and Bogari, and describe the Baiuvarii as a people with kinship to the Burgundians, Thuringians and Lombards (but not the Alemanni).[10]
  • Venantius Fortunatus (fl. about 550-600) mentioned a region called Baivaria near the Lech river, and a person who was a Baiovarius. This was near the country of the Breuni who still lived near the river Inn. The Lech flows northwards from the Austrian alps to the German Danube.[3] The Inn was the boundary between Raetia and Noricum, and today forms part of the border between Germany and Austria. This seems to indicate that the first Baiuvarii were in a relatively small area.
  • The Ravenna Cosmography, which is a 7th-century text based upon older sources, possibly from the 5th and 6th century, briefly mentions that the alps divide the "Ranici" from Italy. Modern scholars believe the word Ranici is corrupted, but in any case it says that these Ranici are "now" ruled by the "Bauuari" (quae modo a Bauvariis dominatur).[12]

Notably however, the biography of Severinus of Noricum in the late 5th century, written by his contemporary Eugippius, does not mention them at all. Instead, it describes the still Romanized region around Passau and Künzing in present day eastern Bavaria, and Roman Raetia, as coming under attack from Alemanni, Thuringians and Heruli.

In 534 the Baiuavarii are also notably absent from the letter of the Frankish king Theudebert I to the eastern emperor Justinian, although Theudebert was claiming to control the area. Similarly the contemporary 6th century historian Gregory of Tours mentioned the first known Duke of Bavaria, Garilbald, because he married the widow of Theudebert, but his whole history never mentions Bavaria. Hardt for example therefore suggests that the Baiuvarii "only visibly started to develop an identity as a people" after "the appointment by the Frankish king of a dux, who actively endeavoured to organize the various Germanic and Roman groups and units living in the former province of Rhaetia".[13]

Possible sources of the name

The Baiuvarii probably didn't exist under that name before the 5th century. However, the Boii, who seem to be the basis of the first element of the Baiuvarii name, almost disappeared from the written record around the time when the Roman empire began, centuries earlier. The form of the name is Germanic, both because of the conversion of the o-sound to an a-sound, and also the -varii suffix. This has led scholars to propose different ways in which the Baiuvarii name can be indirectly derived from the much older name of the Boii tribe. By explaining this, scholars also hope to get indications about how the Baiuvarii came into existence.

A common and old proposal is that the Baiuvarii name somehow evolved from the classical version of the geographical term "Bohemia" which was already used by Latin and Greek writers in the first century AD. Strabo called it Buiaimon, Velleius Paterculus called it Boiohaemum, and Tacitus called it Boiemum.[14] Modern scholars see this as a Germanic word, coined by the Suebi who settled there under Maroboduus, long after the Boii departed. The second component is Germanic *haim-, the source of modern English "home" and modern German "Heim".[3][15] One of the last classical reports of this name is the 2nd-century mention of a people called the Bainochaemae. Claudius Ptolemy described them in his Geography as living near the Elbe, east of the Melibokus mountains, and north of the Asciburgius mountains.[16] According to this proposal, the Baivari migrated south or east from the original Bohemia, which is believed to have been somewhere in the present-day Czech Republic. However, the "haim" part of the placename, which would have made the evidence for this specific etymology clear, does not appear in the name of Bavarians, leaving only the name of the Boii.[15]

There are proposals that the name does not come from Bohemia at all, but directly from the Boii name itself, which was preserved in more areas to the east of Raetia (which would become the core of Bavaria), and not just in Bohemia. Examples which have been proposed include the following:

  • Within Roman Pannonia there was also a civitas of the Boii which continued to exist within the empire. It lay on the Danube near present day Vienna, in the north west of the Roman province of Pannonia, bordering on Noricum.[17] By about 400 AD, when the Notitia Dignitatum was made, this area's military defence included Suebian Marcomanni troops many of whom had by this time been moved south of the Danube, into the empire.
  • The Ravenna Cosmography mentions a country called Baias, which was part of a mountainous region it called Ungani, stretching from the southern Elbe far to the east. To the north of Ungani was Saxony, and to the south was Pannonia.[18]
  • Ptolemy in the second century reported a "large nation" called the Baiani (Script error: The function "langx" does not exist.) or Baimi (Βαίμοι) between the "Luna Forest" and the Danube.[15][19] This population is believed to have been the "Vannius Kingdom", which was established on Quadi territory (which had once been Boii territory) after a civil war in the first century AD.
  • Boiodurum, was the older settlement next to the Roman fort of Passau, and its name indicates that it was in a region still associated with the Boii in Roman times.[15] In the Notitia Dignitatum Boiodurum's tribune is under the Dux of Noricum Ripensis and Pannonia I, while the tribune of Batavis (Passau) is under Raetian command. In Ptolemy's Geography it is in Vindelicia (in Raetia).
  • Another name associated by scholars with the Boii name in late antiquity is the country called Bainaib, possibly from *Bain-haim, recorded in the Origo Gentis Langobardorum as one of the places the Langobards stopped on their trek from the lower Elbe to the Middle Danube.[15][3] It came between places called Antaib and Burgundaib.
  • The name of the Baiuvarii is probably also preserved in the list of great rulers of peoples in the Old English poem about Widsith, the traveller. It lists "Becca" as ruler of the Baningas, along with better-known rulers such as Attila who ruled the Huns, and Ermanric who ruled the Goths.[15][3]

There are also several proposals about the ethnic background of the population who brought the Baiuvarii name with them to Raetia, and made it the name of the mixed community. However, most of the proposals involve the Suebian Germanic peoples to the east of Raetia such as the Marcomanni and Quadi, who disappeared from contemporary records during the time of Hun rule in the area.[19]

A third proposal is that the name of the Boii still survived in Raetia itself, making no migration necessary. In other words, people who still identified themselves as dwellers upon old lands of the pre-imperial Celtic Boii were still living in the Norican–Raetian region, and were the name-giving element in the mixed population that remained there after Rome abandoned Raetia.[19] According to Karl Bosl in 1971, Bavarian migration to present-day Bavaria is a legend, and Walter Goffart more recently agreed that there is no reason to assume any single large immigration in order to explain the 5th century origins of the Baiuvarii.[10]

Modern commentary

The Baiuvarii emerged about 500 after Odoacer (died 493) destroyed the Rugian kingdom just to the east of Bavaria in 487. He and his successor as king of Italy, Theoderic the Great (died 526), both had their roots in the Middle Danubian area and led large numbers of people from there to Italy.[20][10] The Rugian kings ruled the countryside on the Danube west of Vienna, in what had been the Roman province of Noricum, and the Boii civitas of the Roman province of Pannonia .

The Rugian territory was soon taken over in this same period by Langobards, another German-speaking people who had moved from the Lower Elbe in the north, and filled the power vacuum in the Middle Danube. The Bavarians first appear at about this same time, to the west of the Lombards. However, after the Lombards also proceeded to migrate to Italy in 568, the region east of the Bavarians was dominated by the Pannonian Avars, and Slavic languages became important in that region.

The Baiuvarii are believed to have incorporated elements from several Germanic peoples who lived longer in the regions surrounding Raetia, including the Rugii, Sciri, Marcomanni, Heruli, Quadi, Alemanni, Naristi, Thuringi and Langobards. They might also have included non-Germanic Romance people (romanized Celtic people).[20]

It has been proposed that the Baiuvarii became important and distinct from their similar Alemannic and Langobard neighbours, under the influence of greater powers interested in the area. First Theodoric the Great, who ruled in Italy, and later the Frankish kings Theuderic I (died 534) and his son Theudebert I (died 548), seem to have controlled Bavaria from a distance.[19]

Theudebert claimed in a letter to the Byzantine emperor Justinian that he controlled the area from the North Sea to Pannonia, which would have included Bavaria. After his death, his uncle Chlothar I appointed Garibald I as dux of Bavaria.[10] Garibald established the Agilolfing dynasty with his power base at Augsburg or Regensburg.[20]

Archaeology

In the 20th century the early Baiuvarii were associated with Friedenhain-Přešťovice [de] ceramics, but this is no longer accepted by scholars.[20]

The funerary traditions of the Baiuvarii are similar to those of the Alemanni, but quite different from those of the Thuringi.[21]

The Baiuvarii are distinguished by the presence of individuals with artificially deformed craniums in their cemeteries. These individuals were predominantly female; there is no undisputed evidence of males with artificially deformed skulls in Bavaria.[22] Genetic and archeological evidence shows that these women were migrants from eastern cultures, who married Bavarii males, suggesting the importance of exogamy within the Bavarii culture.[23] The migrant women were fully integrated in to Bavarii culture.[24]

Genetics

The genetic study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America in 2018 examined the remains of 41 individuals buried at a Bavarian cemetery ca. 500 AD. Of these, 11 whole genomes were generated. The males were found to be genetically homogeneous and of north-central European origin. The females were less homogeneous and were largely of Southern European origin, some of whom carried significant East Asian ancestry.[25] The presence of these women among the Bavarii people indicates that men from the Bavarii culture practiced exogamy, preferentially marrying women from eastern populations.[26][27]

There were significant gender differences in skin, hair and eye pigmentation in the studied sample. Of the local males, with normal or intermediate skulls, the majority (~80%) were likely to have blond hair and blue eyes. In contrast, the women with artificially deformed skulls (likely immigrants), generally had brown eyes (80%) and either brown (60%) or blonde (40%) hair. The study also notes that these immigrant women would have stood out from the local population due to their enlarged crania and their distinct eye, hair, and possibly skin pigmentation.[28][29]

No significant admixture with Roman populations from territories further south of the area was detected.[30] Among modern populations, the surveyed individuals with normal skulls were found to be most closely related to modern-day Germans.[31]

According to Gretzinger et al. (2024), the early medieval Alemannic and Bavarian populations of southern Germany had considerably more steppe-related ancestry and, consequently, significantly less Early European Farmer (EEF) ancestry than the preceding Iron age Hallstatt population, which was "congruent with the arrival of Germanic-speaking tribes from northern Germany or Denmark". The data indicate a significant increase in Scandinavian-related ancestry—a proxy for Germanic-speaking groups—in the first half of the first millennium AD, with "median northern European ancestry" rising significantly, reaching high levels in the early medieval period. This population turnover was associated with the introduction of new paternal haplogroups, such as I1-M253, which is commonly found in "Continental North European-like ancestry". These Alemannic and Bavarian populations of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages were genetically indistinguishable from Iron Age and Medieval groups in Northern Germany and Scandinavia, and showed the closest resemblance to present-day populations from Denmark, northern Germany, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia.[32]

Origin myth

A medieval origin story exists for the Baiuvarii, the Annolied written in the 11th century, says that the Bavarian tribe came long ago from Armenia, "where Noah came out of the ark". The leaders of the Bavarian army are said to have been Duke Boimunt and his brother Ingram. The story was also reflected in the Song of Roland, which mentions a Bavarian duke Naimes. Also the epic Karl written by "Der Stricker" says that Naymes, the Bavarian duke, was born in "Ormenîe".[15]

These origin-legends stem from learned medieval conceptions.[15]

Law code

A collection of Bavarian tribal laws was compiled in the 8th century. This document is known as Lex Baiuvariorum. Elements of it possibly date back to the 6th century.[20] It is very similar to Lex Thuringorum, which was the legal code of the Thuringi, with whom the Baiuvarii had close relations.[21]

Christianity

By the 8th century, many Baiuvarii had converted to Christianity.[33]

See also

Notes

References

  1. Haubrichs 2014, p. 23.
  2. Fries-Knoblach & Steuer 2014, p. 3.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Rübekeil 2018.
  4. Haubrichs 2014, pp. 23–24.
  5. Fries-Knoblach & Steuer 2014, pp. 1, 3.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Haubrichs 2014, p. 24.
  7. Harm 2013.
  8. Green 2014, p. 11.
  9. Beck 1973, p. 602.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Goffart 2010, p. 219.
  11. Rübekeil 2018 citing Jordanes Getica LV: Latin English.
  12. Ravenna Cosmography, 4.37
  13. Hardt 2003, p. 440.
  14. Velleius, 2.108, Strabo, Geography 7.1.3, Tacitus, Germania, 28.2
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 Beck 1973.
  16. Ptolemy 2.10
  17. Kovács 2013.
  18. Beck 1973, Hamann 2018 citing the Ravenna Cosmography, 18
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Hamann 2018.
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 Diesenberger 2018, p. 195.
  21. 21.0 21.1 Fries-Knoblach & Steuer 2014, p. 2.
  22. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Suggestions' not found. "In Bavaria, ACD is mainly observed in women, and there is only disputed evidence for ACD in men or children"
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Suggestions' not found. "Further studies based on other archaeobiological proxies supported the hypothesis that female exogamy played an important role at the time (Knipper et al. 2017; Stewart 2022; Veeramah et al. 2018)."
  24. Hakenbeck, Susanne. (2011). Roman or barbarian? Shifting identities in early medieval cemeteries in Bavaria. Postclassical Archaeologies. 1. p. 49. "Both the manner of their burial and the positions of their graves indicate that the different life-histories suggested by their modified skulls and possibly foreign childhood was subsumed into the local group identity by the time of their death. Regardless of whether these women may have had a foreign identity during their lifetime, in death they were treated as local women with no evidence of their possible migration other than that which was inscribed on their bodies during childhood."
  25. Veeramah 2018.
  26. Frieman, Catherine J.; Hofmann, Daniela (8 August 2019). "Present pasts in the archaeology of genetics, identity, and migration in Europe: a critical essay". World Archaeology. 51 (4): 530–531. doi:10.1080/00438243.2019.1627907. hdl:1956/22151. ISSN 0043-8243. S2CID 204480648. "Medieval blue-eyed and blond 'Bavarians', meanwhile, seem to have fancied brown-eyed women from south-east Europe (Veeramah et al. 2018)"
  27. Veeramah 2018 : "A much more diverse ancestry was observed among the females with elongated skulls, as demonstrated by a significantly greater group-based FIS (SI Appendix, Fig. S35). All these females had varying amounts of genetic ancestry found today predominantly in southern European countries [as seen by the varying amounts of ancestry inferred by model-based clustering that is representative of a sample from modern Tuscany, Italy (TSI), Fig. 3], and while the majority of samples were found to be closest to modern southeastern Europeans (Bulgaria and Romania, Fig. 4C), at least one individual, AED_1108, appeared to possess ~20% East Asian ancestry (Fig. 3)."
  28. Veeramah 2018 : "Based on the HIrisPlex system (13), the majority (~80%) of individuals with normal or intermediate skulls (and thus northern/central European ancestry) showed high probabilities for blue eyes and blonde hair (SI Appendix, Fig. S7 A and B); in contrast, the majority of women with deformed skulls had a high likelihood for brown eyes (80% of individuals), and both brown and blonde hair (~60% and 40% of individuals, respectively) were represented in the sample."
  29. Veeramah 2018 : "While the immigrant females would have been clearly distinguishable physically among the local population based on the combination of their enlarged crania as well as their different eye, hair, and perhaps even skin pigmentation patterns, it is noteworthy that their assemblies of grave goods appear to reflect both local customs and more distant material cultures (10)."
  30. Veeramah 2018 : "It is perhaps surprising that no local individual was found to share recent common genetic ancestry with a Roman soldier living in the same area ~200 y earlier. The analysis of his genome identifies him to be of southwest European origin. Thus, our results, though only based on one sample, argue against significant admixture between any Roman populations from more southern parts of the former Roman Empire and our individuals buried in Bavaria around 500 AD."
  31. Veeramah 2018 : "A population assignment analysis (PAA) at the level of individual modern nation states suggested greatest genetic similarity of these normal-skulled individuals with modern Germans, consistent with their sampling location (Fig. 4 A and B and SI Appendix, Table S35)."
  32. Gretzinger, Joscha; et al. (3 June 2024). "Evidence for dynastic succession among early Celtic elites in Central Europe". Nature Human Behaviour. 8 (8): 1467–1480. doi:10.1038/s41562-024-01888-7. ISSN 2397-3374.
  33. Fries-Knoblach & Steuer 2014, p. 8.

Sources

Template:Germanic peoples