The
Istvaeones, also called
Istaevones, Istriaones, Istriones, Sthraones, Thracones, Rhine Germans and
Weser-Rhine Germans (
Istwäonen,
Weser-Rhein-Germanen in German), were a
West Germanic cultural group or proto-tribe. Their name was recorded in
Germania by
Tacitus, a Roman historian, in the
1st century AD, who categorized them as one of the tribes of the sons of
Mannus and labelled them as those tribes who were neither
Ingvaeones nor
Irminones. The Istvaeones were the tribe of
Istaev, son of
Mannus. They dwelt around the
Atlantic coast (modern day
Netherlands,
Belgium and northern
France) as well as the
Rhine and
Weser river systems from perhaps 500 BCE, until the differentiation of localized
Teutonic tribes (
Chatti,
Hessians,
Franks) in that region circa 250 CE. There is also evidence some of them merged with the
North Sea Germans (
Ingvaeones).
Jacob Grimm in the book Deutsche Mythologie urged that Iscaevones was the correct form, partly because it would connect the name to an ancestor figure in Norse mythology named Ask, and partly because in Nennius where the name Mannus is corrupted as Alanus, the ancestor of the Istaevones appears as Escio or Hisicion. There the sons of this figure are, fantastically, from Frankish tradition, Francus, Romanus, Alamanus, and Bruttus, the supposed ancestors of the Franks, Latins, Germans and Britons. This seems to reflect Frankish desire to connect the Franks with the people they ruled.
References
- Grimm, Jacob (1835). Deutsche Mythologie (German Mythology); From English released version Grimm's Teutonic Mythology (1888); Available online by Northvegr © 2004-2007: Chapter 15, page 2-; 3 File retrieved 09-26-2007.
- Tacitus. Germania (1st Century AD). (in Latin)