- in Germany. This
implies that the
Chattuari lived somewhere in the west of Westphalia.
Strabo mentions the
Chattuari as one of the non-nomadic northern...
- have
become Franks by the 4th
century include the Chamavi, Bructeri, and
Chattuari. The
Chamavi are
called Franks in the
Tabula Peutingeriana, a 13th-century...
-
Chasuarii are
sometimes thought to be
equivalent to, or
related to, the
Chattuari, and
maybe even the Chatti,
based on
similarity of names. Lanting; van...
- in the time of Tacitus, or may have immigrated, such as the
Salii and
Chattuari (whose name
suggests a
connection to the Chatti). The
historical sources...
-
three which are
legible are
those of the Usipii, Tubantes, and
Chattuari.
While the
Chattuari and
Tubantes continued to
appear in
records as
Frankish peoples...
- the Gamabrivii. He
writes that they were
connected to the Chatti, the
Chattuari and the Cherusci. This
means that they
probably lived near the Weser....
- Confusingly,
other tribes normally from the
region of the Tubantes, the
Chattuari and Chasuarii, are also
described as if they are in
southern Germany in...
- This is
often corrected in
modern texts to the sequence, "Cananefates,
Chattuari, Bructeri". However, it has been
argued that the
Cananefates (in present...
-
either the
Chamavi or Cananefates, then east
through the
country of the
Chattuari, and then
further east to the Bructeri. From
there they went
still further...
-
Roman empire declined the
Franks crossed the Rhine. For example, the
Chattuari moved from
somewhere near the Chamavi, into the area
around Xanten, as...