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  2. Ostrogoths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostrogoths

    Ostrogoths and Greuthungi, perhaps the same people, are believed to have been among the first Goths who were subdued by the Huns. [27] Many Greuthungi entered the Roman Empire in 376 with Saphrax and Alatheus , and many of these Goths probably subsequently joined Alaric, contributing to the formation of the Visigothic kingdom . [ 28 ]

  3. Ostrogothic Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostrogothic_Kingdom

    The Ostrogothic Kingdom, officially the Kingdom of Italy (Latin: Regnum Italiae), [5] was a barbarian kingdom established by the Germanic Ostrogoths that controlled Italy and neighbouring areas between 493 and 553. Led by Theodoric the Great, the Ostrogoths killed Odoacer, a Germanic soldier and erstwhile leader of the foederati.

  4. Goths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goths

    The Goths [a] were a Germanic people who played a major role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the emergence of medieval Europe. [1] [2] [3] They were first reported by Graeco-Roman authors in the 3rd century AD, living north of the Danube in what is now Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania. From here they conducted raids into Roman ...

  5. Gothic and Vandal warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_and_Vandal_warfare

    Visigoths had fewer cavalry, Ostrogoths had more cavalry than the Roman army, while Vandals were dominated by cavalry. [5] Cavalry mainly took the form of heavy, close combat cavalry armed with sword and lance. [4] Goths and likely Vandals as well favoured a long heavy lance of Sarmatian origin, the contus, which stood at 3

  6. Gothic War (535–554) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gothic_War_(535–554)

    The Goths holding Rome capitulated and, at the Battle of Mons Lactarius in October 553, Narses defeated Teias and the last remnants of the Gothic army in Italy. [51] Expansion of the Byzantine Empire between 527 and 565. Though the Ostrogoths were defeated, Narses soon had to face other barbarians who invaded Byzantine northern Italy and ...

  7. Siege of Rome (537–538) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Rome_(537–538)

    Invariably, the Roman horsemen, mostly of Hunnic or Slavic origin and expert bowmen, would close in on the Goths, who relied primarily on close quarters combat and lacked ranged weapons, loose a shower of arrows, and withdraw to the walls when pursued. There, ballistas and catapults lay in waiting, and drove the Goths back with great loss. Thus ...

  8. Sack of Rome (410) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sack_of_Rome_(410)

    Stilicho and the Romans, reinforced by Alans, Goths under Sarus, and Huns under Uldin, managed to defeat Radagaisus in August 406, but only after the devastation of northern Italy. [45] [46] 12,000 of Radagaisus' Goths were pressed into Roman military service, and others were enslaved. So many were sold into slavery by the victorious Roman ...

  9. Totila - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totila

    Totila was elected king of the Ostrogoths in 541 after the assassination of his uncle Ildibad and having surreptitiously engineered the assassination of Ildibad's short-lived successor, his cousin Eraric, in 541. [4] [a] Like Alaric I, Totila was quite young when he became king and was declared such by the Goths to recover dominion over the ...