Early history The earliest known surviving mention of the Geats appears in
Ptolemy (2nd century AD), who refers to them as
Goutai. In the 6th century,
Jordanes writes of the
Gautigoths and
Ostrogoths (the Ostrogoths of
Scandza); and
Procopius refers to
Gautoi. The Norse
Sagas know them as
Gautar;
Beowulf and
Widsith as
Gēatas.
Beowulf and the
Norse sagas name several
Geatish kings, but only
Hygelac finds confirmation in
Liber Monstrorum where he is referred to as "Rex Getarum" and in a copy of
Historiae Francorum where he is called "Rege Gotorum". These sources concern a raid into
Frisia, ca 516, which is also described in
Beowulf. C. 551, some decades after Hygelac's raid, Jordanes described the Geats as a nation which was "bold, and quick to engage in war". The
Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain included many North Germanic people who were losers in the brutal tribal warfare of Scandinavia. The place-name
-gate marks the site of Geatish settlement, often alongside strategically important
Roman roads and nearby
Visigothic and/or
Jutish settlements. Defeated Jutes like Hengest and his brother Horsa fled to Kent, while Geats defeated by encroaching
Swedes moved to
Yorkshire where they founded
Gillingshire by the
Tees, originally the settlement of the
Geatlings. It has also been suggested that East Anglia was settled by Geats at this time, or by
Wulfings who also came from Götaland, bringing the traditions of
Beowulf with them. Any peace that eventually settled in southern Scandinavia was most likely due to exhaustion, and a Danish archaeologist has summarized that in the mid-6th century, and after, Scandinavia "went down to hell". However, by 1350, these 13 kingdoms had been reduced in number to only two, Norway and Sweden. The Geats were one of the largest tribes. Procopius and Jordanes both mention the Geats, but after them, foreign sources about Scandinavia are scarce until the 9th century, when Anglo-Saxon and Frankish sources do shed some light on the area. In these, the Geats are absent, which has led some scholars to conclude that they were no longer an independent nation and had been subsumed by the Swedes. The nature and the processes of
how Geats and Swedes came to form one kingdom have been much debated among Swedish scholars. The scarcity and sometimes debated veracity of sources has left much room open for interpretation. The oldest medieval Swedish sources present the Swedish kingdom as retaining differences between provinces, in laws as well as in weights and measures. Others have wanted to see a more gradual merging, and that the Geats were slowly subsumed into the more powerful kingdom of Sweden, and in many respects they maintained their own cultural identity during the Middle Ages. Still others have put emphasis on how it was individual rulers, not ethnic groups, who were driving the process towards a unified kingdom, and that the process was very complicated. Papal letters from the 1080s style the recipients as "king of the Swedes" or "king of the West Geats". In another papal letter from the 1160s, the title
rex Sweorum et Gothorum is first attested. The Swedish kings began the custom of styling themselves as also the kings of the Geats in the 1270s.
Dynastic struggles In the 11th century, the Swedish
House of Munsö became extinct with the death of
Emund the Old.
Stenkil, a Geat, was elected king of the Swedes, and the Geats would be influential in the shaping of Sweden as a Christian kingdom. However, this election also ushered in a long period of civil unrest between Christians and pagans and between Geats and Swedes. The Geats tended to be more Christian, and the Swedes more pagan, which was why the Christian Swedish king
Inge the Elder fled to Västergötland when deposed in favour of
Blot-Sweyn, a king more favourable towards
Norse paganism, in the 1080s. Inge would retake the throne and rule until his death c. 1100. In his
Gesta Danorum (book 13), the Danish 12th-century chronicler
Saxo Grammaticus noted that the Geats had no say in the election of the king, only the Swedes. When the West Geatish law or
Westrogothic law was put to paper, it reminded the Geats that they had to accept the election of the Swedes:
Sveær egho konong at taka ok sva vrækæ meaning
"It is the Swedes who have the right of choosing ["taking"] and also deposing the king" and then he rode
Eriksgatan
"mæþ gislum ofvan" –
"with hostages from above [the realm]" through
Södermanland, the Geatish provinces and then through
Närke and
Västmanland to be judged to be the lawful king by the
lawspeakers of their respective
things. One of these Swedish kings was
Ragnvald Knaphövde, who in 1125 was riding with his retinue in order to be accepted as king by the different provinces. According to material appended to the oldest manuscript of the
Westrogothic law, he decided not to demand hostages as he despised the Geats, and was slain near
Falköping. In a
new general law of Sweden that was issued by
Magnus Eriksson in the 1350s, it was stated that twelve men from each province, chosen by their things, should be present at the
Stone of Mora when a new king was elected. The distinction between Swedes and Geats lasted during the Middle Ages, but the Geats became increasingly important for Swedish national claims of greatness due to the Geats' old connection with the Goths. They argued that since the Goths and the Geats were the same nation, and the Geats were part of the kingdom of Sweden, this meant that the Swedes had defeated the Roman empire. The earliest attestation of this claim comes from the
Council of Basel, 1434, during which the Swedish delegation argued with the Spanish about who among them were the true Goths. The Spaniards argued that it was better to be descended from the heroic Visigoths than from stay-at-homers. This cultural movement, which was not restricted to Sweden went by the name
Gothicismus or in Swedish
Göticism, i.e.
Geaticism. After the 15th century and the
Kalmar Union, the Swedes and the Geats appear to have begun to perceive themselves as one nation, which is reflected in the evolution of
svensk into a common ethnonym. It was originally an adjective referring to those belonging to the Swedish tribe, who are called
svear in Swedish. As early as the 9th century,
svear had been vague, both referring to the Swedish tribe and being a collective term including the Geats, At the same time, the Swedish ancestors were often referred to as Geats, especially when their heroism or connection to the Goths was to be stressed. This practice disappeared during the 19th century, when the
vikings gradually took over the role as the heroic ancestors. ==Society==