- Marsacii
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The Marsaci or Marsacii were a Germanic tribe in Roman imperial times, who lived within the area of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, under Roman domination. (The river Meuse is the Maas in Dutch, and this name is also often used in English.)
The only relatively clear source concerning the location of this tribe is Pliny the Elder's Natural History. They are in a list of tribes living in the islands along the Rhine in its river delta region. First he mentions the islands of the Batavians and the Cananefates, and then he gives the list of people who he says are stretched out along 100 Roman miles, between Helinius and Flevus.
The Helinius (or Helinium) is understood to be a southern branch of the Rhine, connecting to the Meuse, like the modern river Waal. Flevus (or Flevum) was a Roman fortification, possibly north of the Rhine, mentioned in other sources such as Tacitus, and apparently here also refer to a branch of the Rhine, this time flowing more northerly than the main Rhine, possibly tracing a path similar to the modern Ijssel, emptying into "lakes", possibly in the location of the modern Zuiderzee.[1]
The tribes of this stretch of delta islands are mentioned in this order: Frisii, Chauci, Frisiavones, Sturii and Marsacii. Of these:-
- The Frisii are traditionally treated as the ancestors of the modern Frisians, although this is questioned, and they also did not necessarily live in the same part or parts of what is now the Netherlands. Pliny is describing them being far to the south of medieval and modern Frisia. But Tacitus describes there being two populations of them.
- The Chauci are thought to be ancestors of the later Saxons who, according to Tacitus, inhabited a large part of northwestern Germany, north of the Rhine. A part of their population stretched into the east of of the Rhine delta area, and had contact with the Roman empire.
- The Frisiavones, perhaps related to the Frisii, appear twice in Pliny, once amongst the delta island dwellers, and once amongst the tribes living to the south, in Belgic Gaul. For this reason they appear to have lived in the southeast of the delta, towards modern Belgium, neighbouring the Batavians, the Tungri, and possibly the Betasii and Sunuci.
About the Marsacii other records mention them being effected by the Batavian revolt confirming that they lived close to the Batavians. Also, like the Batavians and Cugerni, the Roman emperors recruited their horse guard from both the Frisiavones and the Marsacii.
It has been claimed on the one hand that there might be a link to an earlier named Germanic tribe, from far to the east, known as the Marsi. Somewhat more positively considered is the proposal that the name of the Marsacii is preserved in the name of a medieval gau which was named Marsum. This was to the north of the mouth of the Maas into the North Sea.
External links
- A Complete Latin Transcription of Naturalis Historia
- A Complete English Translation of Naturalis Historia (1855)
- A Complete Latin Translation of Tacitus' Garmania
References
Categories:- Ancient Germanic peoples
- Ethnic groups in Europe
- History of the Germanic peoples
- West Germanic peoples
- Frisia
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