-
Germanic people. In English, the
plural "Heruli" can also be
spelled as
Heruls, Herules, or Herulians. The name can be
written without "h" in Gr**** (Ἔρουλοι...
-
Theodoric did not
manage to
intervene in time, and the
Heruls thus
suffered a
crushing defeat. The
Heruls were
split up as a
result of the
defeat in the battle...
-
earthquake strikes Ephesus and
Pergamon and
another strikes Cyrene. The
Heruls accompany the Goths,
ravaging the
coasts of the
Black Sea and the Aegean...
- near Theodosiopolis;
joined by N****s (a Persarmenian) and his
regiment of
Heruls (under
Philemouth and Verus) and
Armenians Justus, Peranius, Domnentiolus...
-
North Sea, as did some
Saxons who
joined the Lombards, and
possibly the
Heruls. Also, East
Germanic groups such as the
Goths had
entered the Pannonian...
-
modern Austria and
Slovakia north of the Danube. Here they
subdued the
Heruls and
later fought frequent wars with the Gepids. The
Lombard king Audoin...
- with the
Ostrogoths under King Elemund. This
safety attracted part of the
Heruls to take
refuge in
Gepidia from the
neighborhood of the
aggressive Langobards...
- that when the
Heruls (Eruli) had been
defeated by the Lombards, some of them
moved to
Scandinavia (which he
called Thule). When
other Heruls sought to find...
-
Wandalicus ("victorious over the Vandals")
Erullicus ("victorious over the
Heruls")
Gypedicus ("victorious over the Gepids")
Africus ("victorious over the...
- Sciri.
Other tribes in this
region at the time
included the
Rugii and the
Heruls.
Sidonius Apollinaris, in his
seventh poem,
explicitly lists them among...