Possible mention in Ptolemy (2nd century AD) and contemporary indigenous Europe in 125AD, showing the location of the Saxons in Northern Germany, according to some copies of Ptolemy's work
Ptolemy's
Geographia, written in the 2nd century, is sometimes considered to contain the first mention of the Saxons. Some copies of this text mention a tribe called
Saxones in the area just to the north of the lower
Elbe, and there were also three islands north of the Elbe's mouth which were called the Saxon islands. However, other versions refer to the same tribe as
Axones. Some scholars such as Mathias Springer have proposed that this may be a misspelling of the tribe that
Tacitus in his
Germania called
Aviones. According to this theory,
Saxones was the result of later scribes trying to correct a name that meant nothing to them. On the other hand,
Schütte, in his analysis of such problems in ''Ptolemy's Maps of Northern Europe
, believed that Saxones'' is correct. He notes that the loss of first letters occurs in numerous places in various copies of Ptolemy's work, and also that the manuscripts without
Saxones are generally inferior overall. According to Liccardo "Even though the reference is found in a section of the
Geographia difficult to interpret, the scholarly consensus considers this passage to be genuine". For the majority of scholars who accept the existence of Saxons in Ptolemy, their reappearance as a much more important and widespread people in third century records is nonetheless remarkable.
Saxon raiders (3rd and 4th centuries) The first clear and undisputed contemporary uses of the Saxon name come from the 4th century, but some of these refer to events in the 3rd century. After Ptolemy, the next oldest mention of the Saxons is the
Laterculus Veronensis from about 314 AD, which mentions the Saxons in a list of barbarian peoples who had come under the power of the empire at different points in time. Within this list they are clearly distinguished from neighbouring groups including the Chamavi and Franci. In contrast, the term Saxon does not appear in any of the 3rd century Latin panegyrics.
Eutropius, a 4th century Roman historian, claimed that Saxon and
Frankish raiders had attacked the North Sea coast near
Boulogne-sur-Mer in about 285, when
Carausius was posted there to defend against them. However, it is very likely that Saxon was a new term he was using anachronistically. The
Panegyrici Latini, which were written soon after those events, instead mention Franks,
Chamavi and
Frisians, but not Saxons. They panegyrics indicated that these and possibly others entered the Rhine and
Scheldt deltas within the empire and held control of it for decades. They imply that the Chamavi and Frisians were seen as types of Franks at this time, rather than Saxons. The area was brought under Roman governance by
Constantius Chlorus, who settled many of the conquered in underpopulated parts of Gaul. Constantius also eventually defeated the rebel Carausius in Britain, and his Roman forces are said to have slaughtered barbarian mercenaries there and "those who lately imitated the barbarian in their mode of dress and flowing red hair". It is not clear when the Roman military structure known as the ('
Saxon Shore') was first built or referred to with this name. It was composed of nine forts stretching around the south-eastern corner of England. On the other side of the
English Channel two coastal military commands were created, over the
Tractus Armoricanus in what is now Brittany and Normandy, and the coast of
Belgica Secunda in what later became Flanders and Picardy. The
Notitia Dignitatum of about 400 shows that it existed by that time and also lists the existence of a Saxon military unit (an
Ala) in the Roman military, which was stationed in what is now Lebanon and northern Israel. This already existed by 363 when
Julian used them in Arabia against the
Persian empire. Roman military accessories are found in northern Germany in the 4th and 5th centuries apparently indicating the return of soldiers who had served the empire. Before becoming emperor himself
Julian the Apostate mentioned the Saxons in a speech as close allies of the rebel emperor
Magnentius in 350. Julian described the Saxons and Franks as kinsmen of Magnentius, living "beyond the Rhine and on the shores of the western sea". In 357/8 Julian apparently came into conflict with Saxons when he campaigned in the Rhine regions against
Alemanni, Franks, and Saxons. The late 5th century historian
Zosimus reported the involvement of the Saxons, "who exceed all the barbarians in those regions, in courage, strength and hardiness". They sent out, according to Zosimus, the "
Quadi", a part of the Saxons, against the Roman lands but they were blocked by the Franks who resided near them. These "Quadi" therefore used boats to get around the Franks, and made it to Batavia (Betuwe) in the Rhine delta. Scholars generally believe the name "Quadi" to be a mistake, perhaps by a copyist. Based upon other more contemporary reports of these campaigns it appears he was referring to the
Chamavi, who were however normally listed as Franks. This implies that the term "Saxon" was probably not a clear ethnic distinction at this time, but perhaps rather designated groups who attacked by boat. Several more records mentioning 4th century Saxons can be dated: • 4th century historian
Ammianus Marcellinus (books 26 and 27) reports that Britain was troubled by the
Scoti, two tribes of
Picts (the
Dicalydones and
Verturiones), the
Attacotti and the Saxons. Roman officer
Count Theodosius led a successful campaign to recover control in Britain. In an inscription preserved in
Stobi in
North Macedonia, Theodosius is described as the terror of Saxony. This is the earliest known reference to a country of the Saxons apart from the disputed mention by Ptolemy, but this Saxony is likely to be in Britain. A poetic account of his battle with the Saxons associates it with the
Orkney islands off Scotland, but Theodosius probably also battled Saxons in the Rhine delta region. • In Gaul in 370 (Ammianus, books 28 and 30) the Saxons "overcoming the dangers of the Ocean advanced at rapid pace towards the Roman frontier" invading the maritime districts in Gaul. Emperor
Valentinian's forces tricked and overwhelmed them, by a "device which was treacherous but expedient", "and stripped of their booty the robbers thus forcibly crushed had almost returned enriched with the spoils which they took". • In 373 Saxons were defeated at a place called Deuso which was in Frankish, but not Roman territory. This was therefore probably an early mention of an inland force of Saxons. • Not long before Emperor
Magnus Maximus died in 388, according to
Bishop Ambrose of Milan, he was attacked by Franks and Saxons as divine retribution for his rebuilding of a synagogue burned down in Rome. • In 393 Saxons died as gladiators in Rome. In many cases the Saxons were associated with using boats for their raids, although the first mentions also involve attacks within the Rhine-
Maas delta region. Special mentions of the fearful 4th-century Saxon coastal surprise attacks were made not only by Ammianus, but also by the poet
Claudian.
5th century In the 5th century, many records link Saxons with Britain and Gaul, although a rough description of the homeland of these Saxons was given by
Hilarion who says the Frankish homeland lay between the Saxons and
Alemanni, placing them therefore north of the Franks. It is likely that the term Saxon was still mainly being used to describe northern raiders in general, and not a specific people. The reputation for shocking coastal raids continued. In the late 5th century a dramatic description of Saxon raiding was written by
Sidonius Apollinaris writing to a friend who was assigned to a coastal defensive post in
Saintonge near
Bordeaux. Writing in the Byzantine Empire in the 6th century,
Procopius describes only three large nations living in "
Brittia", Angles, Frisians, and Britons, and he does not mention Saxons at all. Between the Rhine and southern Denmark Procopius believed there was a kingdom of the
Warini. Early in this period it is believed that Roman general
Stilicho campaigned in Britain and northern Gaul and reorganized the defences against the Saxons. Later in his career a series of crises in Italy, Gaul, Iberia and North Africa meant that military resources were not available for Britain. According to the
Chronica Gallica of 452, which was probably written in present day southern France, Britain was ravaged by Saxon invaders in 409 or 410. The Romano-British citizens reportedly expelled their Roman officials during this period and never again re-joined the Roman Empire. Procopius states that after the overthrow of
Constantine III in 411, "the Romans never succeeded in recovering Britain, but it remained from that time under tyrants." In 441–442, Saxons are mentioned in the
Chronica Gallica of 452 which says that the "British provinces, which to this time had suffered various defeats and misfortunes, are reduced to Saxon rule". 6th-century British historian
Gildas apparently knew of these same events from his grandparents' generation. According to Gildas a Saxon force based in the east of Britain (
Bede writing in the 8th century believed they were based on the
Isle of Thanet) were invited as
foederati to Britain, in order to help defend against raids by Picts and Scots. They revolted over their pay and plundered the whole country, initiating a long war which the
Romano-British eventually won. However, Britain was divided into corrupt "tyrannies". There are very few records of the period, but by the time of Bede most of England was ruled by Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. In what is now France, during the 460s, an apparent fragment of a chronicle preserved in the
History of the Franks of
Gregory of Tours, gives a confusing report about a number of battles involving one "
Adovacrius", who led a group of Saxons based upon islands somewhere near the
Loire. He took hostages at
Anger in France, but his force was subsequently retaken by Roman and Frankish forces led by
Childeric I, a Frank. A "great war was waged between the Saxons and the Romans but the Saxons, turning their backs, with the Romans pursuing, lost many of their men to the sword. Their islands were captured and ravaged by the Franks, many people being killed." Though there is no consensus, many historians believe that this Adovacrius may be the same person as
Odoacer, the future king of Italy, who is mentioned in the same part of Gregory's text as a person who subsequently allied with Childeric to fight Alemanni in Italy.
Merovingian period In comparison to mentions of the early Saxons raiders and settlers in Britain or Gaul, there are few mentions of the Saxons in Germany before the 8th century. Interpretation of the records is also complicated not only by the continuing references to the other Saxons, but also because the Saxons living in present day Germany probably weren't originally unified within one Saxon political entity. It is therefore not clear whether some early continental "Saxons" could also sometimes have come under other designations such as
Warini,
Frisians or
Thuringians. Nevertheless some records during Merovingian times are clearly about Saxons living within what is now Northern Germany, north of the Franks. • In about 531 the Franks, led by the eldest son of Clovis I,
Theuderic I conquered the still independent kingdom of
Thuringia, which henceforth became a kingdom under Frankish overlordship. Centuries later, medieval writers claimed that the early Saxons had assisted the Franks, and even that they had been brought from England for this purpose, but no contemporary sources mention this, and historians doubt that there was any conflict between the Saxons and the Thuringian kingdom. • In 555, after the death of Theuderic's grandson
Theudebald, Theuderic's younger half-brother
Clothar I (also spelled Lothar) inherited rule over the Rhine regions. It is reported by Gregory of Tours (IV.10) and
Marius of Avenches that Saxons "revolted", and the new ruler Clothar led an army in 556 to ravage Saxony and Thuringia. Thuringia, both authors mention, had supported the Saxons. In a possibly separate incident Gregory reports that Chlothar fought Saxons in 556 or 557 who had been stirred up by his own brother
Childebert I to attack his territory, going as far as
Deutz on the Rhine. (Springer argues against assuming that this was one incident, or involved one single group of Saxons, because Thuringia is quite far from Deutz.) Gregory of Tours (IV.14), pursuing an ethical topic which he is known for, reported that Chlothar was forced to fight by the Franks who did not want to negotiate, and that the Franks were subsequently beaten. However, later records indicate that a group of Saxons began paying tribute to the kings of Austrasia during Chlothar's reign. •
Sigebert I, the son of Clothar I who ruled Austrasia until 575, was praised by the poet
Venantius Fortunatus for defeating the "Thuringian Saxons". (Springer suggests that this was his way of distinguishing the mainland Saxons from the Anglo-Saxons of Britain.) • In 612, Sigebert's grandson
Theuderic II attacked his own brother
Theudebert II at
Zülpich, with a force of Saxons, Thuringians, and other people from east of the Rhine. • Heroic stories set in the 620s were written centuries later about Sigbert's nephew and eventual successor in Austrasia,
Chlothar II and his defeat of Saxons led by
Berthoald near the
Weser.
Dagobert I, Chlothar's son, was also involved. • In 632, Dagobert I, now the most powerful king of the Franks, was met by Saxon messengers in
Mainz in a period of war with the
Wends under
Samo, who were attacking Thuringia. These Saxons negotiated, or attempted to negotiate, the end of a tribute of 500 cows per year which they had been paying, in return for a promise to defend against the Wends at their own expense. There were also Saxon populations in this period who were living in neither England, nor what would become Saxony. • In 568/9, some Saxons were living in the Austrasian kingdom of
Sigebert II, possibly in the Champagne region, and they accompanied the
Lombards into Italy under the leadership of
Alboin and settled there for some time. Sigebert in the meantime allowed a
Suevian group to replace them in Austrasia. In 572, they returned to Gaul from Italy, raiding south-eastern Gaul as far as
Stablo, now
Estoublon, and were defeated by the
Gallo-Roman general
Mummolus. They were allowed to return to Italy, gather their families and belongings and return to pass through the region again to go north. After once again plundering the countryside, they were stopped at the
Rhône by Mummolus and forced to pay compensation for what they had robbed. Upon arrival at their original home they were furious about the Suevian settlers, and refused to negotiate against them. Gregory of Tours, our main source for these events, claims that there was divine intervention, allowing the much smaller Suebian group to utterly defeat the Saxons in two battles. • One notable group of Saxons lived on the Normandy coast, near
Bayeux. In 589, the Saxons from the Bessin region near Bayeux wore their hair in the
Breton fashion at the orders of
Fredegund, and fought with them as allies against
Guntram. Beginning in 626, the Saxons of the
Bessin were used by Dagobert I for his campaigns against the
Basques. Much later, in 843 and 846 under king
Charles the Bald, other official documents mention a
pagus called
Otlinga Saxonia in the Bessin region, but the meaning of
Otlinga is unclear. • In southwestern France, in the late 6th century Chulderic the Saxon became a Duke north of the
Garonne for
Childeric II, after having previously been a subject of King
Guntram. A century later,
Aeghyna, a
Duke of Gascony, died in 638. Both men are likely to have been Bayeux Saxons, although they may for example have come from Britain. • Although unattested in historical sources, there seems to have been an early Saxon settlement in the vicinity of
Boulogne-sur-Mer in the
Pas-de-Calais which left a number of distinct place names ending in -
thun. • In 673, the army of King
Wamba of the
Visigoths is said to have driven out an invading army of Franks and Saxons from Septimania, then under Visigothic rule.
The Saxons and the Arnulfings of Saxony (), which was based in the Saxons' traditional homeland bounded by the rivers
Ems,
Eider and
Elbe The continental Saxons appear to have become consolidated by the end of the eighth century, partly as a result of interaction with the powerful Frankish kingdoms. The ancestors of Charlemagne, the
Arnulfings, took control of the neighbouring Austrasian kingdom of the Franks and sought to assert power over the peoples to the east including not only the Bavarians, Swabians and Thuringians, which were long under Frankish rule, but also the Saxons and Frisians. They also pressured the Saxons and Frisians to convert to Christianity. In 804 the emperor
Charlemagne conquered the Saxons, and incorporated the Saxons into the Frankish empire as a Stem Duchy, similar to the older ones although there is no evidence that it had previously been a single kingdom. The
Duchy of Saxony (804–1296) covered Westphalia, Eastphalia, Angria and Nordalbingia, which is roughly equivalent to Holstein, the southern part of modern-day Schleswig-Holstein state, now bordering on Denmark. • In the 690s, Bede reported that a people known as the
Boructuari were invaded by the pagan Saxons during a period when
Saint Suibert, an Anglo-Saxon missionary bishop assigned to Frisia at that time, was doing missionary work in the area. This was probably near Frisia, and the area is widely believed to correspond to the Roman-era
Bructeri, who lived had once lived near the
Lippe river. • From the same report of Bede about English missionaries in the 690s the
Two Ewalds were killed somewhere in Saxony while trying to convert one of the "satraps" of Saxony. The Ewalds apparently had the support of this local ruler, and also
Pepin of Herstal who was the effective ruler of Frankish Austrasia at this time. • In 715, not long after the death of Pepin of Herstal, Frankish annals report that Saxons took control of "
Hattuaria". In later centuries this name was given to the Frankish country near
Cleves and
Xanten, between Rhine and Maas, but the area involved in this takeover may have been on opposite side of the Rhine. It is named after a Roman era Frankish tribe, the
Chattuarii, who had once been the eastern neighbours of the Bructeri.
Ammianus Marcellinus reported them to be living north of the Rhine in the 4th century. • In 718,
Charles Martel, the son of Pepin, invaded Saxony as far as the
Weser. He campaigned there again in 720, 724, 738, and possibly also in 722 and 728. • In the 730s, Bede wrote his
Ecclesiastical History of the English People, which mentions, for example, that the land of the Angles was once between those of the Saxons and Jutes, but was now empty. • Also in about this period the
Ravenna Cosmography was written which uses the same term "Old Saxony" to refer to the apparent continental homeland of the British Saxons who the writer understood to have came from this Old Saxony with their leader named
Ansehis. It describes the lands of the Saxons as lying on the Ocean coast between Frisia and the Danes. It also borders on Thuringia and contains the rivers "Lamizon", "Ipada", "Lippa" and "Limac" (generally interpreted as the
Ems,
Pader,
Lippe and
Leine). This work names its source as a Gothic geographer named Marcomir, who had written an earlier study of Saxony. • In 743 two of the sons of Charles,
Pepin the Short and
Carloman, marched against
Odilo of Bavaria, who was nominally a Frankish subject. Carloman then turned north towards Saxony, or a part of it, which had sent troops to support Bavaria. After conquering the
castrum of Ho(o)hseoburg forced the Saxon duke (war leader)
Theoderic to surrender at a
placitum held at that same place. The brothers
invaded Saxony again the next year (744) and Theoderic was captured. • In 748 Pepin the Short marched through Thuringia to Saxony, during a period when his half brother
Grifo was attempting seize power in Bavaria. The part of Saxony beyond Thuringia where he went is referred to in the
Annals of Metz as "North Swabia" and many of the Saxons there converted to Christianity at this time. The continuation of the
Chronicle of Fredegar claims that they accepted to return to go back to paying a tribute of 500 cows. • In 751 Pepin was crowned as king, and in 753 he attacked the Saxons northeast of the Rhine in the area of
Bad Iburg and
Bad Oeynhausen. • In 758 Pepin attacked Saxony once more and agreed to a tribute of 330 horses per year from the defeated Saxons.
Charlemagne's Saxon Wars The Saxons were conquered by Charlemagne after a long series of annual campaigns, the
Saxon Wars (772804). With defeat came enforced
baptism and
conversion as well as the union of the Saxons with the rest of the Frankish empire. Their sacred tree or pillar, a symbol of
Irminsul, was destroyed. Charlemagne deported 10,000
Nordalbingian Saxons to
Neustria and gave their largely vacant lands in
Wagria (approximately modern
Plön and Ostholstein districts) to the loyal king of the
Abotrites.
Einhard, Charlemagne's biographer, says on the closing of this grand conflict: The war that had lasted so many years was at length ended by their acceding to the terms offered by the king; which were renunciation of their national religious customs and the worship of devils, acceptance of the sacraments of the Christian faith and religion, and union with the Franks to form one people. The Saxons long resisted becoming
Christians and being incorporated into the orbit of the
Frankish kingdom. A couple hundred years after the Charlemagne's conversion wars,
Christianized Saxons joined the
People's Crusade, with some possibly traveling through the
Rhineland and an attested Saxon-Bohemian regiment dispersed by the
Kingdom of Hungary around 1096.
The Duchy of Saxony Under
Carolingian rule, the Saxons were reduced to tributary status. There is evidence that the Saxons, as well as Slavic tributaries such as the
Abodrites and the
Wends, often provided troops to their Carolingian overlords. The dukes of Saxony became kings (
Henry I, the Fowler, 919) and later the first emperors (Henry's son,
Otto I, the Great) of Germany during the tenth century, but they lost this position in 1024. The duchy was divided in 1180 when Duke
Henry the Lion refused to follow his cousin, Emperor
Frederick Barbarossa, into war in
Lombardy. During the
High Middle Ages, under the
Salian emperors and, later, under the
Teutonic Knights, German settlers moved east of the
Saale into the area of a western Slavic tribe, the
Sorbs. The Sorbs were gradually
Germanised. This region subsequently acquired the name Saxony through political circumstances, though it was initially called the
March of Meissen. The rulers of
Meissen acquired control of the
Duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg (only a remnant of the previous Duchy) in 1423; they eventually applied the name
Saxony to the whole of their kingdom. Since then, this part of eastern Germany has been referred to as
Saxony (), a source of some misunderstanding about the original homeland of the Saxons, with a central part in the present-day German state of
Lower Saxony (). ==Language==