Writing in the final years of the seventh or first half of the eighth century,
Cosmas of Jerusalem provides the earliest evidence of a region called Gothia in Asia Minor. In passage describing the
portage of boats across the
Thracian Chersonese, he locates the land of Gothia opposite
Thrace along the southern shore of the Sea of Marmara and the
Dardanelles, near the city of
Lampsacus. Its inhabitants he calls Goths: For there is a place next to Thrace, dry land six miles wide standing between [two] seas. From there, Thrace is easily accessible to the Goths and Gothia to the Thracians. And the Goths get on their ships—they are made from a single trunk—and cross to Thrace, while the Thracians often drag their ships through there towards Gothia overland. The language of this passage suggests that the Gothic ethnic identity of the Gothograeci was still current in the 670s or even into the 8th century. The next source to mention the Goths of Asia Minor is
Theophanes the Confessor, writing around 815. He says some soldiers of the Opsikion launched a rebellion on
Rhodes in 715 and then, crossing to
Adramyttion, were joined by the rest of the army of Opsikion and the Gothograeci. The rebels, including the Gothograeci, entered Constantinople, where they did much damage to life and property. This account is consistent with that of Cosmas in placing Gothograecia on the northern coast of Opsikion. The Patriarch
Nikephoros I, in describing the same rebellion, does not mention the Gothograeci. If the rebels' choice of emperor,
Theodosios III, was the son of the deposed
Tiberios III, as has been argued, that fact may explain the participation of the Gothograeci in the revolt, since Tiberios' birth name was Apsimar, a possibly
Gothic (but more probably
Turkic) name. There is a surviving early 8th-century
lead seal of a certain Theodore, described as holding the court rank of and the post of (fiscal supervisor) of the Gothograeci. This shows that the Gothograeci constituted a fiscal unit as well as a military one around the time of the rebellion. In 844 or 845, Archbishop
George of Mytilene is said to have spent two stormy days and nights at sea sailing from
Lesbos to Gothograecia. This account is found in the
Life of George and his saintly brothers
David the Monk and
Symeon the Stylite, which was probably compiled in the 11th century. The location of Gothograecia is not entirely clear from the text. On a certain reading of the text, Gothograecia is on or near Lesbos. On the other hand, it may be read as saying that George sailed to Lesbos to attend to a friend who hailed from Gothograecia. On any reading, Gothograecia is not far from Lesbos. The next reference to the Gothograeci is of little historical value except as an attestation of the existence of a people of this name. In the early 10th century,
Arethas of Caesarea wrote a commentary on the
Book of Revelation in which he identifies
Gog and Magog with the
Scythian peoples, who are constantly warring among themselves and fleeing for refuge to the Roman Empire. He seeks to identify various places and peoples within the empire as the product of Scythian refugees, among them
Scythopolis in Palestine, a division of Goths that settled in Asia and their military formation, the
Thaifali and the Gothograeci. The last two groups, he says, are also called
Huns. Arethas distinguishes between the Goths and the Gothograeci, but since he is collecting references from literary sources it is not clear what significance should be attached to this. The reference to the Taifals, some of whom were settled in Phrygia late in the 4th century, led
Gustav Anrich to suggest that they were the original Gothograeci. A reference to the Gothograeci occurs in
Constantine VII's
De Thematibus (c. 950). In its description of the of Opsikion, a people called () are said to inhabit the coast near
Cyzicus. Their name is said to be derived from the river
Granicus. This apparent corruption of the name Gothograeci demonstrates that by this date it held no ethnic significance. Constantine's place called the () north of
Prusa is probably not Goth-related, but reflects the conflation of the name of the region of Dagouta with that of Gothograecia. A late reference that preserves the name can be found in
Anna Comnena's
Alexiad (c. 1148), where she locates a placed called the () in the Lentiana, a district to the south of Cyzicus. This name is clearly derived from Gothograecia. On the basis of all the evidence,
Constantin Zuckerman suggests that the most likely location for Gothograecia was between Lampsacus and Cyzicus, a view followed by Belke in the
Tabula Imperii Byzantini volume on Bithynia. John Haldon identifies it simply as Mysia, littoral
Bithynia and a part of Phyrgia. ==Notes==