According to classical historians, the Cimbri, a Teutonic tribe, went south from the lower Elbe region and attacked the Scordisci in 118 BC.
They are important as illustrating life and manners among the newly-converted Teutonic tribes and the Gallo-Romans of the time.
This larger value originated with the Teutonic tribes that invaded England after the Romans departed.
Remember, the Teutonic tribes were the last to be Christianized, and they still resent the experience.
In it, Tacitus praised the Teutonic tribes for their undaunted struggle against the Roman occupation force.
After the fall of the Empire, the Visigoths continued the tradition by becoming probably the most Romanized of all Teutonic tribes.
Artifacts found near the village reveal the area was once populated by a Teutonic tribe known as the Sissites.
Differentiation of localized Teutonic tribes of the Irminones.
The first known names were Noviomagus and Civitas Nemetum, after the Teutonic tribe, Nemetes, settled in the area.
Angles and Saxons - Teutonic tribes from the land we now call Germany - advanced across the former Roman turf.