Goths - translation to french
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Goths - translation to french

EAST GERMANIC ETHNOLINGUISTIC GROUP
Germanic Goths; Gothic tribes; History of the Goths; The Goths; Boranoi; Boradoi; Guntheric; Gunteric; Argaith; Goth people
  • Alaric]] entering [[Athens]] in 395 (the depiction, including [[Bronze Age]] armour, is anachronistic)
  • ''[[Athanaric]] and [[Valens]] on the Danube'', [[Eduard Bendemann]], 1860
  • ''Ulfilas explains the gospel to the Goths'', 1900
  • [[Roman Empire]]}}
  • The first R is held at the [[Musée de Cluny]], Paris.}}
  • Visigothic crypt of Saint Antoninus, Palencia Cathedral
  • Europe in AD 300, showing the distribution of the Goths near the [[Black Sea]]
  • Hunnic]] invasion
  • The maximum extent of territories ruled by [[Theodoric the Great]] in 523
  • In Spain, the Visigothic nobleman [[Pelagius of Asturias]] who founded the [[Kingdom of Asturias]] and began the [[Reconquista]] at the [[Battle of Covadonga]], is a national hero regarded as the country's first monarch.
  • Gothic invasions in the 3rd century
  • The 3rd-century [[Great Ludovisi sarcophagus]] depicts a battle between Goths and Romans.
  • Depiction of a Gothic warrior battling [[Roman cavalry]], from the 3rd century [[Ludovisi Battle sarcophagus]]
  • Doros]], capital of the Crimean Goths
  • [[Przeworsk culture]]}}
  • fibula]], AD 500, Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nuremberg
  • [[Ring of Pietroassa]], dated AD 250 to AD 400 and found in [[Pietroasele]], Romania, features a [[Gothic language]] inscription in the [[Elder Futhark]] [[runic alphabet]]
  • Geographia]] (c. 130),--> showing the location of the Gothones, then inhabiting the east bank of the [[Vistula]]
  • Germanic spearheads
  • The [[Mausoleum of Theodoric]] in [[Ravenna]], [[Italy]]. The [[frieze]] includes a motif found in Scandinavian metal jewellery.
  • Visigothic – Pair of eagle fibulae found at Tierra de Barros (Badajoz, southwest Spain) made of sheet gold with amethysts and coloured glass

Goths         
Gothic, of or pertaining to the Goths or their language; of or pertaining to a style of medieval architecture characterized by pointed arches and vaulting; of or pertaining to the artistic style of medieval northern Europe
Göth      
Göth, family name (form of Goeth)
goth      
n. Goth, member of the Goths, member of one of the Germanic tribes that invaded the Roman Empire

Definition

Visigoth
['v?z?g??]
¦ noun a member of the branch of the Goths who invaded the Roman Empire between the 3rd and 5th centuries AD and ruled much of Spain until overthrown by the Moors in 711.
Derivatives
Visigothic adjective
Origin
from late L. Visigothus, the first element possibly meaning 'west' (cf. Ostrogoth).

Wikipedia

Goths

The Goths (Gothic: 𐌲𐌿𐍄𐌸𐌹𐌿𐌳𐌰, romanized: Gutþiuda; Latin: Gothi, Greek: Γότθοι, translit. Gótthoi) were a Germanic people who played a major role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the emergence of medieval Europe.

In his book Getica (c. 551), the historian Jordanes writes that the Goths originated in southern Scandinavia, but the accuracy of this account is unclear. A people called the Gutones – possibly early Goths – are documented living near the lower Vistula River in the 1st century, where they are associated with the archaeological Wielbark culture. From the 2nd century, the Wielbark culture expanded southwards towards the Black Sea in what has been associated with Gothic migration, and by the late 3rd century it contributed to the formation of the Chernyakhov culture. By the 4th century at the latest, several Gothic groups were distinguishable, among whom the Thervingi and Greuthungi were the most powerful. During this time, Wulfila began the conversion of Goths to Christianity.

In the late 4th century, the lands of the Goths were invaded from the east by the Huns. In the aftermath of this event, several groups of Goths came under Hunnic domination, while others migrated further west or sought refuge inside the Roman Empire. Goths who entered the Empire by crossing the Danube inflicted a devastating defeat upon the Romans at the Battle of Adrianople in 378. These Goths would form the Visigoths, and under their king Alaric I, they began a long migration, eventually establishing a Visigothic Kingdom in Spain at Toledo. Meanwhile, Goths under Hunnic rule gained their independence in the 5th century, most importantly the Ostrogoths. Under their king Theodoric the Great, these Goths established an Ostrogothic Kingdom in Italy at Ravenna.

The Ostrogothic Kingdom was destroyed by the Eastern Roman Empire in the 6th century, while the Visigothic Kingdom was conquered by the Umayyad Caliphate in the early 8th century. Remnants of Gothic communities in Crimea, known as the Crimean Goths, lingered on for several centuries, although Goths would eventually cease to exist as a distinct people.

Examples of use of Goths
1. D';s 600, devant la menace des Goths et des Slaves, le site est abandonné et lentement recouvert par les alluvions.
2. L‘arianisme, qui considérait le Fils comme nettement inférieur au P';re au sein de la Trinité, était devenu la religion des Goths avant d‘ętre rejeté définitivement par un concile.
3. Dans ce théâtre de broderies, les femmes fatales croisent des vierges communiantes, des veuves éplorées conversent avec des gitanes ensorceleuses et tintinnabulantes, tandis que des goths lacérées frôlent des femmes–paons.
4. Malgré leur disparition – due ŕ des agressions extérieures, notamment de la part des Goths, ou ŕ des changements climatiques – on retrouve des éléments de civilisation scythes qui ont perduré chez les peuples iraniens apparentés, ou dans les épopées mythologiques des Oss';tes du Caucase.