The "tribe"/gens Traditionally, the earliest state organization among the Germanic peoples has been described as a "tribe". "Tribes" were argued to have been stable, genetically and culturally united nations that had their own laws, territories, and proto-state institutions. The use of the word "tribe" includes the implication that the various Germanic peoples were in fact subdivisions of a larger "Germanic" people. According to this understanding, the "tribes" would then go on to found the individual early Germanic kingdoms of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages as "tribal states". Since the work of
Reinhard Wenskus in the 1960s, scholars have begun to use the term (plural ), communities claiming (rather than possessing) shared biological descent, as a way to distance discussion of Germanic tribes from this earlier way of thinking. In this new understanding, Germanic peoples were not stable ethnic units, but were constantly breaking up and reforming in a process of
ethnogenesis. Moreover, it is unclear whether the formed the early Germanic kingdoms, or whether they were not instead created as part of the process of state formation. Besides the claim of shared descent, Wenskus also saw the individual as having and developing their own legal orders. Almost all that became post-Roman polities adopted their own law, and the individual
Leges, as well as other early medieval sources, mention that the laws belong to individual "people" under various Latin terms (including , , ). However, disagreement exists about whether these written sources are still part of the "gentile system" of laws, or whether such a system even lasted into the High Middle Ages with the
Sachsenspiegel. Traditionally, the
Leges have been understood as only applying to one ethnically defined within a kingdom, thus excluding Romans and any other that was incorporated into a polity - persons belonging to that group would be judged by their own law ("personality of law"). However, scholarly disagreement exists whether the earliest law codes, those of the Goths and Burgundians, were meant for all persons in their territory or only those of a particular ethnicity. The
Lex Salica is far clearer in making ethnic distinctions in the text, perhaps encouraging assimilation to Frankish identity. By the Carolingian period, confusion between social status and ethnicity on the one hand and between ethnic and territorial law on the other had essentially turned the system into one of "mobile territorial law", in which a person could claim the law of their territory of birth.
The assembly In common with many archaic societies without a strong monarchy, early Germanic law appears to have had a form of popular assembly. The earliest attested term for these assemblies in Germanic is the
thing. According to Tacitus, during the Roman period, such assemblies were called at the new or full moon and were where important decisions were made (Tacitus,
Germania 11–13). Germanic assemblies functioned both to make important political decisions—or to legitimate decisions taken by rulers—as well as functioning as courts of law. In their earliest function as courts, the assemblies do not appear to have had presiding judges. Rather, the members collectively came to judgments based on consensus and acted more as arbiters than as courts in the modern sense. The assembly stood under the protection of the gods, and feuding parties could visit it without fear of violence. The use of
thing as an epithet in a 3rd-century AD inscription dedicated to "
Mars Thingsus", apparently referring to the Germanic god
Tyr, as well as the translation of the Roman ("day of
Mars", Tuesday) as ("day of the
thing", modern German ) as a variant of ("day of Tyr"), has led to the theory that the
thing stood under the protection of Tyr in pagan times. The
Leges Alamannorum specified that all free men were required to appear at a popular assembly, but such a specification is otherwise absent for the
Frankish Merovingian period. In later periods outside Scandinavia, the assemblies were composed of important persons rather than the entire free population. The
Visigothic laws lack any mention of a popular assembly, while the
Anglo-Saxon laws and history show no evidence of any kingdom-wide popular assemblies, only smaller local or regional assemblies held under various names.
Kingship of the
Ostrogothic king
Theodoric the Great, reading: "King Theodoric, pious prince(?)" Germanic languages attest many different terms that mean king, including , and . Terms for Germanic rulers in Roman sources include ("kings"), ("chieftains"), and ("leaders/dukes"); however, all of these terms are foreign ascriptions rather than necessarily reflecting native terminology. Stefanie Dick suggests that these Latin terms are not used with any real differentiation in Roman sources and should all be translated as "leaders". Not all Germanic peoples are attested as having had kings, and different kings seem to have different functions and roles. Peoples without kings included at various times the
Herules, the
Gepids, and the
Saxons. According to Tacitus kings were elected from a group of eligible candidates by the people, but had no power of command (Germania, 7).
Walter Pohl argues that the authority of the king was probably personal rather than directly related to the office. The power of the kings grew over time: while they originally seem to have been mostly military leaders, they became more institutionalized, authoritative rulers in the course of the migration period. Scholars debate the origins of Germanic kingship. Tacitus makes a distinction between "kings" and "dukes", in that the kings were chosen because of their nobility and the dukes for their prowess in battle. This statement has been used to explain Germanic kingship as having had a
sacral and a military component, which were later united. However, more recent scholarship has shown that sacral kingship is not well attested outside of much later Scandinavian sources, whereas kingship for military leadership is.
Dennis Howard Green argues for a development of the terminology from to to , reflecting a change in the nature of Germanic kingship first to a primarily military institution and then to a more permanent, dynastic institution.
The kinship group The Germanic languages attest several words for clans or kinship groups, most prominently the cognates of Old High German and , found in this meaning in all Germanic languages. According to the traditional understanding of Germanic law, the clan contained all blood relations and was essential for the protection and help of the individual. Individuals were argued to have no relation to the larger tribal state outside of the clan. It aided him in seeking revenge (see
feuding), receiving wergild for those who were slain or injured (see
compensatory justice), and acted as oath helpers. Current scholarship acknowledges the existence of clan groups as a social factor among the Germanic peoples, but argues that there was never organized, legally recognized clans as postulated by older scholarship. Both Germanic terms and those found in the
Leges for kinship groups are not precise enough to indicate that the clans existed as legal entities: instead, the group of "relations" that a person could call on were not fixed or stable. ==Legal proceedings==