The 'Heruli' (spelled variously in
Latin and
Greek) were a nomadic
Germanic people, who were subjugated by the
Ostrogoths,
Huns, and
Byzantines in the
3rd to
5th centuries. The name is related to ''
earl'' (see
erilaz) and was probably an honorific military title.
History
The
6th century chronicler
Jordanes reports a tradition that they had been driven out of their homeland long before by the
Dani, which would have located their origins in the Danish isles or southernmost Sweden. According to
Procopius, they maintained close links with their kinsmen in
Thule (Scandinavia). He relates that the Heruls killed their own king during their stay in the
Balkans (cf.
Domalde), and that they sent an emissary to Thule requesting a new king. Their request was granted, and a new king arrived with 200 young men.
The Heruls are first mentioned by Roman writers in the reign of
Gallienus (
260-
268), when they accompanied the
Goths ravaging the coasts of the
Black Sea and the
Aegean. The mixed warbands managed to sack
Byzantium in
267, but their eastern contingent was virtually annihilated in the Balkans at the
Battle of Naissus (
Serbia) two years later, the battle that earned
Marcus Aurelius Claudius his surname "Gothicus." A western contingent of Heruli are mentioned at the mouth of the
Rhine in
289.
By the end of the
4th century the Heruls were subjugated by the
Ostrogoths. When the Ostrogothic kingdom of
Ermanaric was destroyed by the
Huns in about
375, the Heruls became subject to the Hunnic empire. Only after the fall of the Hunnic realm in
454, were the Heruls able to create their own kingdom in southern
Slovakia at the March and
Theiss rivers.
After this kingdom was destroyed by the Langobards, however, Herulian fortunes waned. Remaining Heruls joined the
Langobards and moved to Italy, and some of them sought refuge with the
Gepids. Marcellinus ''comes'' recorded that the Romans (meaning the Byzantines) who allowed them to resettle depopulated "lands and cities" in
Moravia, near
Singidunum (
Belgrade); this was done "by order of
Anastasius Caesar" sometime between
June 29 and
August 31,
512. After one generation, this minor federate kingdom disappeared from the historical records.
Records indicate, however, that the Heruli served in the armies of the Byzantine emperors for a number of years, in particular in the campaigns of
Belisarius, when much of the old Roman territory, including
Italy,
Syria, and North
Africa was recaptured.
Pharus was a notable Herulian commander during this period. Several thousand Heruli served in the personal guard of Belisarius throughout the campaigns. They disappear from historical record by the mid-
6th century.
According to Procopius, many Heruli returned to Scandinavia and settled beside the
Geats (''Gautoi''). The places where they are assumed to have resettled have been identified with
Vermland or the provinces of
Blekinge and
Värend, two districts where the women had equal rights of inheritance with their brothers. Some noble Swedish families in the area also claim to be descendants of the returning Heruli. It should be noted that such identifications are not widely accepted. It has also been suggested that it was returning Heruli who first colonized Iceland.
[1]
No "Heruli" are mentioned in
Anglo-Saxon,
Frankish or
Norse chronicles, so it is assumed they were known in the north and west by another name. ''
Encyclopædia Britannica'' 1911 suggested that, since the name Heruli itself is identified by many with the Anglo-Saxon ''eorlas'' ("nobles"), Old Saxon ''erlos'' ("men"), the singular of which (''erilaz'') frequently occurs in the earliest Northern inscriptions, that "Heruli" may have been a title of honor.
From the end of the
3rd century, Heruls are also mentioned as raiders in
Gaul and
Spain, where they are mentioned together with
Saxons and
Alamanni. These Heruls are usually regarded as Western Heruls; their settlements are assumed to have been somewhere at the lower
Rhine.
In Italy the noble family of Eroli (
Narni, Rome) derive from one of the king of Heruls, after the italian conquest by Odoaker (Odoacre).
External links
★ This article incorporates some information taken from
http://www.hostkingdom.net/ with permission.
★
The Heruls by Troels Brandt, 2006
★
Heroli in Paul's ''History of the Lombards'' i.20: (in English)
★
'The Heruls' by Troels Brandt
★
various resources on the Erils/Heruli
★
The Heruli; The forefathers of the Samogitians by the Northvegr Foundation
References
1. Review of "The Origin of the Icelanders by Barthi Guthmundsson, Lee M. Hollander" in ''Speculum'', Vol. 43, No. 1 (Jan., 1968), pp. 154-156