Main articles: Germanic peoples

Charlemagne, first to unify the Germanic tribal confederations. Statue (1867) in the center of Liège, Belgium.
'Germanic Peoples.'
Introduction
The first known sociologist, Aristotle, said that
:"Man is an animal of the
polis (''politikon zoon'') by nature (''physei'')"
The Greeks assigned names to populations they considered distinct based on the city-state (''polis'') to which they belonged. Intermingled with this system was an earlier one derived from the idea of a family tree. They grouped primary families into clans and the clans into tribes. The highest unit was the people, or race, which they believed descended from a single ancestor. If they couldn't identify the ancestor, they simply invented him.
As a result, the classical historians conceived of history as a story unfolding between ethnic identities led by heroic men. They always named the identity: a Roman, a Germanic tribesman, the Thracians, the Carthaginians, an Athenian. It was operant even though sometimes not factual as understood: an individual behaved in a certain way because he was a Germanic tribesman and not a Roman or vice versa. Moreover these identities are often still operant today or have been replaced by those that are. The individual learns their expected behaviors and attendant lore as part of the socialization process growing up, just as an actor would learn to play a role.
The main article on this topic is about one such identity, the Germanic. The article attempts to define it and to present some of the associated ideology. This is not an idle exercise, as history and national politics are still to a large extent viewed as a story of the interactions between such groups.
Scholars divide Germanic identities into the historical and the contemporary. There is some overlap, as many of the ancient have descended to the contemporary.
Ancient and Medieval

The elder
Futhark, oldest Germanic writing system.
The ethnic names below come from ancient and mediaeval sources dating from the late 1st millennium BC to the early 2nd millennium AD. They do not necessarily represent contemporaneous, distinct or Germanic-speaking populations or have common ancestral populations. Some closely fit the concept of a
tribe. Others are confederations or even unions of tribes. Some may not have spoken Germanic at all, but were bundled by the sources with the Germanic speakers.
Some were undoubtedly of mixed culture. They may have assimilated to Germanic or to other cultures from Germanic. Long-lasting ethnic identities changed population base and language over the centuries. As for genetic characteristics, they must be considered unrelated to these names.
Apart from these limitations, it is probably safe to assume that, on the whole, most of these populations spoke some branch of Germanic and contributed to pools of descendants who currently live in the Germanic-speaking countries. Many of the names descend to modern place names.
Alphabetic list
'A'
Adogit,
Adrabaecampi,
Aelvaeones,
Aeragnaricii,
Ahelmil,
Alamanni or
Alemanni,
Ambrones,
Ampsivarii or
Ampsivari,
Angles,
Anglo-Saxons,
Angrivarii or
Angrivari,
Arochi,
Augandzi,
Avarpi,
Aviones
'B'
Baemi,
Banochaemae, Batavii or Batavi today known by
Batavians,
Batini,
Bavarii,
Bergio,
Brisgavi,
Brondings,
Bructeri,
Burgundiones,
Buri
'C'
Calucones,
Canninefates,
Casuari,
Caritni,
Chaedini,
Chaemae,
Chaetuori,
Chali,
Chamavi,
Charudes,
Chasuarii,
Chattuarii,
Chauci,
Cherusci,
Chatti,
Cimbri,
Cobandi,
Condrusi,
Corconti,
Crimean Goths,
Curiones
'D'
Danduti,
Dani,
Dauciones,
Diduni,
Dulgubnii,
Dutch,
Danes
'E'
Eburones,
English,
Eudoses,
Eunixi,
Evagre,
'F'
Faroese,
Favonae,
Fervir,
Finni,
Firaesi,
Flemish,
Forsi,
Franks,
Frisians,
Fundusi
'G'
Gall-Gaidheal,
Gambrivii,
Gauthigoth,
Geats,
Gepidae,
Goths,
Gutar Grannii
'H'
Hallin,
Harii,
Harudes,
Hasdingi,
Helisii,
Helveconae,
Heruli,
Hermunduri,
Hilleviones,
Horder
'I'
Ingriones,
Ingvaeones (North Sea Germans),
Intuergi,
Irminones (Elbe Germans),
Istvaeones (Rhine-Weser Germans)
Icelanders
'J'
Jutes,
Juthungi
'L'
Lacringi,
Landi,
Lemovii,
Levoni,
Lombards or
Langobardes,
Liothida,
Lugii
'M'
Manimi,
Marcomanni,
Marsi,
Marsigni,
Marvingi,
Mattiaci,
Mixi,
Mugilones
'N'
Naharvali,
Narisci or
Naristi,
Nemetes,
Nertereanes,
Nervii,
Njars,
Norn,
Nuitones,
Norwegians
'O'
Ostrogoths,
Otingis
'P'
Parmaecampi,
Pharodini
'Q'
Quadi
'R'
Racatae,
Racatriae,
Ranii,
Raumarici,
Reudigni,
Rugii,
Ruticli
'S'
Sabalingi,
Saxons,
Scots,
Scirii,
Segni,
Semnoni or
Semnones,
Sibini,
Sidini,
Sigulones,
Silingi,
Sitones,
Suarini or Suardones,
Suebi or
Suevi,
Suetidi,
Suiones,
Sugambri,
Swedes
'T'
Taetel,
Tencteri,
Teuriochaemae,
Teutonoari,
Teutons,
Theustes,
Thuringii,
Toxandri,
Treveri,
Triboci,
Tubantes,
Tungri,
Turcilingi,
Turoni
'U'
Ubii,
Ulmerugi,
Usipetes,
Usipi or
Usippi
'V'
Vagoth,
Vandals,
Vangiones,
Vargiones,
Varini,
Varisci,
Vinoviloth,
Viruni,
Visburgi,
Visigoths,
Vispi
'Z'
Zumi
Links to maps
Some tribal maps of Germania can be found at:
★
Germania of Tacitus
★
A speculative Findlay map of 1849
These maps or any other maps represent an interpretation of the information available to the map-maker. Typically the ancients did not know or did not leave enough information for us to locate them exactly. The maps only give us a rough idea of the features and ethnic locations of Germania. In addition, some of tribes, e.g. the Bastarnae are not identified as Germanic with any certainty and large areas in Central Europe the Germanic tribes probably only constituted a newly arrived minority among Slavs and remaining Celts. Wolfram (1990:91f), for instance, points out that the early
Visigoths, called ''Tervingi'' also comprised many
Taifalans (unknown origin) and
Alans (Iranians). The Alans became so Gothicized that non-Germanic people considered them to be Goths.
Contemporary
The list which follows covers the major ethnic groupings or populations which speak a modern
Germanic language.
List organized by language
★ North Germanic
★
★
Danes
★
★
★
Slesvigers
★
★
★ Dano-Germans/German-Danes (may be included as an Ethnic German, or Ethnic Danish group)
★
★
★
★
★
Holsteiners
★
★
★
★
★
Schleswigers
★
★
Faroese
★
★
Icelanders
★
★ some
Greenlanders
★
★
Norwegians
★
★
Swedes
★ West Germanic
★
★
Anglo-Frisian
★
★
★ English speaking nations
★
★
★
★
English (especially those from Eastern England)
★
★
★
★ A proportion of
Lowland Scots
★
★
★
★ cultural descendants of the
Anglo-Saxons around the world, including large groups of English speakers in
North America,
Australia,
New Zealand and
South Africa
★
★
★
Frisians
★
★ Continental West Germanic
★
★
★
Dutch
★
★
★
★
Flemings
★
★
★
★
Afrikaners of
South Africa
★
★
★
Germans, including
Ethnic Germans outside of
Germany, and some subgroups (Swabians, Bavarians, Austrians) listed below
★
★
★
★
Alemannic
★
★
★
★
Alsatians
★
★
★
★
Austrians
★
★
★
★
Vorarlberger minority of
Austria
★
★
★
★
Baltic Germans
★
★
★
★
Bavarians
★
★
★
★
Carinthians
★
★
★
★
German Belgians
★
★
★
★ Dano-Germans/German-Danes (may be included as an Ethnic German, or Ethnic Danish group)
★
★
★
★
★
Holsteiners
★
★
★
★
★
Schleswigers
★
★
★
★
Hutterites (North American Dispora)
★
★
★
★
Liechtensteiners
★
★
★
★
Luxemburgers
★
★
★
★
Mennonites (North American or Eurasian Dispora)
★
★
★
★
Styrians
★
★
★
★
Swabians
★
★
★
★
Swiss German majority of
Switzerland
★
★
★
★
Walser German and
Walliser German minorities of
Aosta Valley
★
★
★
★
South Tiroleans
★
★
★
★
Lorrainians
See also
★
Confederations of Germanic Tribes
★
Germania
★
Germanic Europe
★
Germanic peoples
★
German clan
★
Norse clans
★
Sippe