The Bructeri were one of the larger Germanic peoples who, like the coastal
Frisii and
Chauci, were divided by the geographer
Strabo, writing in about 20 AD, into major and minor divisions. He described the Lippe river running through the territory of the lesser Bructeri (Βουσάκτεροι), about 600
stadia from the Rhine - implying that the Bructeri did not border on the Rhine themselves. Ptolemy's much later geography, written in the second century AD, clearly used older sources such as Strabo, and also divided the Bructeri into lesser and greater sections. Ptolemy, however, placed the Lesser Bructeri on the Rhine just inland of the coastal
Frisii who lived just beyond the Rhine mouths, and the greater Bructeri between the Ems and the Weser, to the south of a part of the
Chauci. In surviving Roman works, the first mention of the Bructeri was in the autumn of 12 BC, when
Drusus the Elder fought the Bructeri's boats on the Ems River with his fleet. Petrokovits argues that this implies that the Bructeri must have lived north of
Rheine on the Ems at this time, in order for the river to be big enough for a naval battle. In 4 AD,
Velleius Paterculus described how
Tiberius crossed the Rhine that year in what is now the Netherlands and attacked, according to the badly transcribed text, “”. According to modern interpretations, this is intended to list first either the
Chamavi or
Cananefates, then the
Chattuari who must have been next, and then the Bructeri. From there they went still further to attack the Cherusci. These peoples are therefore believed to have been neighbours of each other, running from west to east. Based upon reports of the aftermath, in 9 AD the Bructeri must have been part of the alliance under the leadership of
Arminius that defeated the
Roman general
Varus and annihilated his three legions at the
Battle of Teutoburg Forest. In 11 AD, Tiberius probably marched from present-day
Neuss on the Rhine, to defeat the southern Bructeri living near the Lippe.
Germanicus took a similar route in 14 AD, to attack the
Marsi at a holy site called
Tamfana. The Bructeri,
Tubantes, and
Usipetes, who presumably all lived close by, attempted to ambush the Romans during their return from this slaughter, but it did not work. In 15 AD, during Germanicus’ summer campaign, the Romans clashed with the Bructeri twice. Aulus Caecina Severus led 40 cohorts through the territory of the northern Bructeri to the Ems, showing that the Bructeri at this time had settlements west of that river. The Bructeri resisted but were defeated by one of the generals serving under
Germanicus, Lucius
Stertinius. Among the booty captured by Stertinius was the eagle standard of
Legio XIX that had been lost at Teutoburg Forest. The Romans then turned to the rest of the Bructeri country. According to Tacitus, the "troops were then marched to the furthest frontier of the Bructeri, and all the country between the rivers Amisia [Ems] and Luppia [Lippe] was ravaged, not far from the forest of Teutoburgium, where the remains of Varus and his legions were said to lie unburied". Bructeri prisoners were paraded alongside other Germanic captives in Germanicus’ triumph in 17 AD. The Bructeri continued to be an important power although Rome now had a powerful grip on the region. In 58 AD, they were moving to support the Amsivarii, who had been ejected from their lands by the
Chauci, when the Romans opposed any such settlements of this tribe near the Rhine. The Bructeri withdrew when they realized the determination of the Roman governor. In 69-70 AD the Bructeri participated in the
Batavian rebellion, together with the
Batavians, Tencteri and Frisii, against the Romans. Throughout the conflict the Bructeri prophetess
Veleda played an important role as a spiritual leader of the rising. Tacitus reported that she was long regarded by many as a divinity. She foretold the success of the
Germani against the Roman legions during this revolt. A Roman Munius Lupercus was sent to offer her gifts but was murdered on the road. The inhabitants of
Cologne, the
Ubii, asked for her as an arbiter; "they were not, however, allowed to approach or address Veleda herself". Tacitus reported that "to inspire them with more respect they were prevented from seeing her. She dwelt in a lofty tower, and one of her relatives, chosen for the purpose, conveyed, like the messenger of a divinity, the questions and answers". In 70 AD during this revolt, Tacitus mentions that the Bructeri participated in two battles. During a battle near
Trier on the
Moselle they were on the left, together with the Tencteri. In the battle at Castra Vetera near present-day
Xanten, across from where the Lippe enters the Rhine, a column of Bructeri were stationed on a dam which the rebels made into the river, in order to create marshy conditions. They swam from there into the main fight, creating confusion, but the legions were later able to hold their line, while a cavalry unit found a way to attack the rebel's rear. The Bructeri were probably also involved in the capture of the Roman flagship on the Rhine, which was rowed up the Lippe to be presented as a gift to Veleda. Some years after the revolt, Rutilius Gallicus, Roman governor of Germania Inferior in about 76–78 AD, invaded the territory of the Bructeri, captured Veleda and took her to Italy. Probably in 97 AD, Vestricius Spurinna, Roman governor of Germania Inferior at that time, restored a deposed Bructeri king to power, with military support, threatening war if the Bructeri would attempt to reverse this.
Pliny the Younger (died 113) mentioned in a letter (2.7) that in his time "a triumphal statue was decreed by the Senate to
Vestricius Spurinna", at the notion of the emperor, because he "had brought the King of the Bructeri into his Realm by force of War; and even subdu'd that rugged Nation, by the Sight and Terror of it, the most honourable kind of Victory". At about the same time, not long before 98 AD, the Bructeri were invaded by their neighbours the
Chamavi and
Angrivarii. Tacitus reported that more than 60,000 of the Bructeri fell, and the country was totally annihilated, "offering delight to Roman eyes", writing: "May the tribes, I pray, ever retain if not love for us [Romans], at least hatred for each other; for while [...], fortune can give no greater boon than discord among our foes." Modern historians generally believe that Tacitus exaggerated. The Bructeri continued to be an important people in the region, but they appear to have lost their large territories north of the Lippe, and moved into new areas south of it. It might have been in this period, if not earlier, that they moved into areas previously belonging to the
Sicambri, who had been expelled earlier by the Romans, including areas near the bank of the Rhine. The Marsi, who also lived in this area, no longer appear in records and their population probably merged into the Bructeri. Tacitus reports that the Tencteri were their neighbours to the south in his time, around 100 AD. ==Later antiquity==