Everything about Gutar totally explained
The
Gotlanders are the population of the island of
Gotland. In Swedish, they're also called
Gutar an ethnonym identical to
Goths (
Gutans), and both names were originally
Proto-Germanic *
Gutaniz. Their language is called
Gutnish (
Gutniska).
The oldest history of the Gutar is retold in the
Gutasaga. The legend goes that they descended from a man named
Þjelvar who was the first to discover Gotland. Þjelvar had a son named
Hafþi who wedded a fair maiden by the name of
Hvitastjerna. These two were the first to settle on Gotland. Hafþi and Hvitastjerna later begat three children by the name of
Guti,
Graipr and
Gunfjaun. Coming to manhood and after the death of their parents, the brothers divided Gotland into three parts and took each one part, but Guti remained the highest chieften, and gave his name to the land and its people.
The Gothic link
It is also related that because of overpopulation one third of the
Gutar had to emigrate and settle in southern Europe. Some historians have argued that this tale might be a reminiscensce of the migration of the Goths.
» over a long time, the people descended from these three multiplied so much that the land couldn't support them all. Then they draw lots, and every third person was picked to leave, and they could keep everything they owned and take it with them, except for their land. ... they went up the river Dvina, up through Russia. They went so far that they came to the land of the Greeks. ... they settled there, and live there still, and still have something of our language.
The name of the Gotlanders in
Old West Norse is
Gotar which is same as that used for the Goths. Likewise the
Old East Norse term for both Goths and Gotlanders seems to have been
Gutar. Only the Goths and Gotlanders bear this name among all the Germanic tribes. The fact that the ethnonym is identical to
Goth may be the reason why they're not mentioned as a special group until
Jordanes'
Getica, where they may be those who are called
Vagoths (see
Scandza). However
Ptolemy mentions the
Goutai as living in the south of the island of Skandia, who could be identical to the Gutar, since the "ou"-sound in Ancient Greek corresponds to the Latin and Germanic "u".
Certain linguists point out that there are similarities between
Gothic and
Gutnish that are not found elsewhere in the
Germanic languages. One example of this is the use of the word
lamb for both young and adult sheeps, which is only seen in Gutnish and Gothic.
Trade- and defence agreement with the Swedes
Before the
7th century, the Gutar made a trade and defence agreement with
Swedish kings, according to the
Gutasaga. This seems to have been due to Swedish military aggressions. Although the Gutar were victorious in these battles, they eventually found it more beneficial (as a nation of traders) to try and negotiate a peace-treaty with the Swedes.
» Many kings made war on Gotland while it was heathen, but the Gutar always maintained victory and their rights. Then the Gutar were sending many messengers to Sweden, but none of them succeeded in negotiating a peace, till Awair Strabain from Alva parish. He was the first to make peace with the king of the Swedes.[...] As he was a smooth-tongued man, wise indeed and artful, as the stories of him go, he established a fixed treaty with the Swedish king: 60 marks of silver a year - that's the tax for the Gutar - with 40 for the king, out of that sixty, and the jarls to get 20. This amount had already been decided by agreement of the whole land before he left.
» So the Gutar made a trade and defence agreement with the king of the Swedes of their own free will, that they might go anywhere in all areas dominated by the Swedes freely and unfettered by tolls or any duties. So too the Swedes could come to Gotland with no ban on the import of corn, or any other restrictions. The king was to give aid and help whenever they needed it and asked. The king would send messengers to the Gotland national assembly, and the jarls likewise, to collect their tax. These messengers must proclaim freedom to the Gutar to travel in peace over the sea, to all places where the Swedish king held sway. And the same went for anyone travelling there to Gotland.
It gives
Awair Strabain as the man who arranged the mutually beneficial agreement with the king of Sweden, and the event would have taken place before the end of the 9th century, when Wulfstan of Hedeby reported that the island was subject to the Swedes:
Further Information
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