) were wrongly attributed to Goths by Jordanes Jordanes wrote
Romana, about the history of
Rome, but his best-known work is his
Getica, which was written in
Constantinople about 551 AD. Jordanes wrote his
Romana at the behest of a certain Vigilius. Although some scholars have identified this person with
Pope Vigilius, there is nothing else to support the identification besides the name. The form of address that Jordanes uses and his admonition that Vigilius "turn to
God" would seem to rule out this identification. In the preface to his
Getica, Jordanes writes that he is interrupting his work on the
Romana at the behest of a brother Castalius, who apparently knew that Jordanes possessed the twelve volumes of the History of the Goths by
Cassiodorus. Castalius wanted a short book about the subject, and Jordanes obliged with an excerpt based on memory, possibly supplemented with other material to which he had access. The
Getica sets off with a geography/ethnography of the North, especially of
Scandza (16–24). He lets the history of the Goths commence with the emigration of
Berig with three ships from Scandza to
Gothiscandza (25, 94), in a distant past. In the pen of Jordanes, Herodotus's Getian demigod
Zalmoxis becomes a king of the Goths (39). Jordanes tells how the Goths sacked "
Troy and Ilium" just after they had recovered somewhat from the war with
Agamemnon (108). They are also said to have encountered the Egyptian
pharaoh Vesosis (47). The less fictional part of Jordanes's work begins when the Goths encounter Roman military forces in the third century AD. The work concludes with the defeat of the Goths by the Byzantine general
Belisarius. Jordanes concludes the work by stating that he writes to honour those who were victorious over the Goths after a history spanning 2,030 years. ==Controversy==