Remarkable
Identity of the German People
This is an interesting article on the identity of
the German people and how it fits in with Biblical end time prophecy. I am not
affiliated in any way with The Trumpet but find their studies important in
trying to understand current events in Europe and Biblical prophecy.
It underpins some of the strongest
prophecies in the Bible!
By David Vejil
From its earliest editions, the Trumpet
magazine has reported extensively on a particularly crucial geopolitical
development. It is an event highlighted in many major biblical prophecies. Yet
those who don’t understand these prophecies overlook the trend and reject our
analysis.
This event is the
final resurrection of the Holy Roman Empire led by Germany.
Though the German
nation’s rise to world-dominating power is recorded in several major
prophecies, its identity has remained largely unknown because the modern German
name is not the one used in the prophecies. Only when Germany’s biblical
identity is revealed can one understand these prophecies and comprehend the
role Germany will play on the international scene.
The key to
understanding biblical prophecy is to know the prophetic identity of the
world’s great powers. And the identity of Germany is—after that of the
American and British people—the most important to recognize!
A united, revived
Germany as the powerhouse behind Europe is once again starting to dominate
world affairs. It is a position Germany historically has enjoyed with few
exceptions for the past 1,500 years.
Just who are the
German peoples, and where did they come from?
The Bible, the
foundation of all knowledge, records that mankind first settled just north of
Mesopotamia after the Flood. From there, tribes of people migrated to their
current locations, where they formed our modern nations.
As they migrated,
various tribes often became identified by their locations of settlement rather
than the name of their tribal patriarch, as they are in the Bible. Tracking the
origins of the German people means identifying the ancestor from whom they
sprang.
By traveling back in time through
the works of ancient scholars and archeological data, we can tell the full
story of the German peoples’ migration from Mesopotamia—home of their patriarch
Asshur, the father of the Assyrians—to their location today!
Even the German
people—before the 1900s when they rejected the history not only of the Bible
but also of their own chronicles—demonstrate in their own records that they
descend from Asshur!
The Origins of
Germany’s Oldest City
On the banks of the Mosel River in western Germany,
just 6 miles from the Luxembourg border, is the ancient German city of Trier.
The Romans claim to be the founders of this ancient city. But German tradition,
and even the name of the city, suggests otherwise.
“On das Rotes Haus (the Red House)
beside the Steipe, there is a text in Latin boasting that Trier, or Treves, is
older than Rome, 1,300 years older in fact. That is when Trebeta, son of
Semiramis, is said to have founded the town.” That’s what it says in the
opening paragraph of the Trier Color Photo Guide to the Town.
The oldest city in Germany is Trier,
a city whose inhabitants say was founded around 2000 B.C. by the Assyrians.
Josef K.L. Bihl
writes in his German textbook In Deutschen Landen, “Trier was founded by
Trebeta, a son of the famous Assyrian King Ninus. In fact, one finds … in Trier
the inscription reading, ‘Trier existed for 1,300 years before Rome was rebuilt.’”
To this day, this story is used to attract tourists to Trier.
According to
Greek historians, the ancient Assyrian capital of Nineveh was built by Ninus. The biblical
account tells us that the builder of Nineveh was Asshur, the son of
Shem, who became the progenitor of the Assyrians (Genesis 10:11). Ninus is simply the Greek name for the Asshur of
the Bible.
The original
Ninus was Nimrod, grandson of Ham, of the black race. Asshur, son of Shem, who
was white, also took the name Ninus. He is the Ninus ii of ancient historic
record who founded Nineveh.
While ancient German
records—such as the Bayerische Chronik, the official history of Bavaria
written by Johannes Turmair of Abensberg in the 1500s, but now relegated to
pure myth—reveal that some of Asshur’s descendants settled in Europe from
Mesopotamia soon after the Flood, the great majority of the German
people didn’t begin their migration until a much later time, when their
Assyrian Empire declined and collapsed in the seventh century b.c.
Let’s now track
the migratory route of these remaining Germanic peoples and see how and when
they joined their Assyrian kinsmen in the land of modern Germany.
The Assyrian
Empire
Anciently, the
Assyrian Empire and its allies were originally located in Mesopotamia on the
Upper Tigris River. The Assyrians were renowned warriors whose empire was built
on perpetual warfare. Their empire stretched north from Mesopotamia all the way
to Asia Minor to reach the shores of the Black Sea.
The Assyrians
were a white race whose fair features made them stand out from the other people
in the Middle East. Strabo, a first-century Greek geographer, noted their
fair complexion, calling the Assyrians “White Syrians” (Geography).
Their empire’s
power rapidly declined just before Nineveh fell in 612 b.c. During their
decline, the Assyrians were forced to settle the southern shores of the
Black Sea by a group of invading warriors from Central Asia. Diodorus Siculus, a Greek historian who
lived in the first century b.c., wrote in his work The Library of
History that by these raiders, “many of the conquered peoples were removed
to other homes, and two of these became very great colonies: The one was composed of
Assyrians and was removed to the land between Paphlagonia and Pontus.”
Paphlagonia and
Pontus both border the southern shores of the Black Sea. The land between was
called Cappadocia by Herodotus, a Greek historian of the fifth century b.c.,
who also confirmed the existence of its Assyrian occupants in his work titled The
Histories: “The
Cappadocians are known to the Greeks by the name Syrians …. This people, whom
the Greeks call Syrians, are called Assyrians by the barbarians.”
By the fifth
century b.c., the Assyrians were so dominant in the Black Sea area that Greek
geographers actually called the region Assyria: “The coast of the Euxine
[the Black Sea] … was called Assyria by S[c]ylax, the author of Periplus“
(History of Art in Sardinia, Judaea, Syria, and Asia Minor, Volume ii). The
Periplus of Scylax is considered by most scholars to have been compiled in
the fourth century b.c., but it was based on source material from the fifth and
sixth centuries b.c., when the Assyrians began migrating into the Black Sea
area (Itineraria Phoenicia).
Years later, the
Assyrians were still off the shores of the Black Sea when Herodotus recorded them fighting for the
Persian King Xerxes i against the Greeks in a campaign in 480 b.c. (op. cit.).
Archaeological
data reveals that shortly after Xerxes’s disastrous campaign, a great migration
of the Assyrian people from the Black Sea region occurred. With the Persian
Empire weakening,
the Assyrians moved from Asia Minor and the southern shores of the Black Sea to
the sea’s northern shores—to a land called Scythia. Here they began to be called Scythians, and their identity
was eventually obscured. But these people didn’t just disappear into
thin air. They migrated west and underwent a name change!
Scythia
To Greek and Roman authors, Scythia
was the land beyond the civilized world. The land, consisting of mainly steppes, stretched
eastward from Eastern Europe all the way past the Urals and from the Baltic Sea
south to the Black Sea. All the many different people who lived in the
territory were labeled Scythians.
Predominant in
Scythian territory were numerous tribes from two races in particular. “[T]wo major
currently recognized racial types, Caucasoids and Mongoloids, are considered to have existed historically in
geographical proximity on the steppe,” observes The Cambridge Ancient
History (Volume iii, Part 2).
Archaeology gives
further insight into the area. “Archaeologically, it is clear that the eighth-
and seventh-century b.c. ‘Scythians’ were not the same as the fifth-century
‘Scythians.’ Both were mounted elite war-bands originating in the more easterly
regions of the steppe, and the Greeks, quite naturally, called both groups by
the same name” (ibid.).
The composition
of Scythia’s population was open to much change over time as new tribes moved
in and out of the area. Central Asia, with its vast steppes, has served as a
gigantic crossroads for different nomadic people, some of whom, such as the
Huns and Mongols, once established large empires stretching far into the east
and west. Anciently, Scythia was the same way, a land where different tribes
and races of nomadic warrior bands traveled.
Archaeology shows five major phases
in the area between 750 and 250 b.c., “with a fresh nomadic component arriving in three of them: 750-650 b.c. (‘Cimmerians’ and
‘Scythians’); 475-430 b.c. (‘Scythians’); and 300-250 b.c. (‘Sarmatians’)” (ibid.). These great
migrations were the effects of great population displacement in the Middle and
Near East resulting from the collapse of various empires and kingdoms. (They even
included the movement of the Israelites following their overthrow by Assyria.)
When Herodotus
wrote his Histories, he would have had knowledge of the first two of
those new settlements. The first phase would have been recent history for
him—like the settlement of the Americas by the Europeans is today. The second
phase was current—like the breakup of Yugoslavia is today, though it was right
after his death that this second phase really began to flourish in Scythia,
with most of the spectacular archaeology material dating to the later fifth
century b.c.
Herodotus
confirms this fresh phase of nomadic settlement: “The Scythians say their
nation is the youngest of all the nations.”
It is clear that the Germanic people
comprised, at least in part, this second phase of Scythian migration. We can
know this because Roman records show the Germanic people first began invading
central and western Europe in the late second century b.c., soon after their
northern move.
Archaeology
confirms these Scythians migrating all the way into Germany proper. “Nomads and
fierce warriors, they lived in Central Asia … and their culture spread westward to
southern Russia and Ukraine, and even into Germany …” wrote Mike Edwards
in National Geographic (June 2003). This German migration
would have been a result of the pressure that the newest migrants into Scythia,
such as the Sarmatians, were placing on the Germanic people who occupied the
territory. After the Sarmatians began to move in during the third century b.c.,
the Germanic people were forced further west.
The dislocation
of such a large population took time. Though the first tribes appeared in Roman
records during the late second century b.c., it would take another several
hundred years for the bulk of the Germanic people to finally reach the end of
their long migration.
Even in the first
century a.d., with this migration still occurring, the Germans were feeling
pressure from the Sarmatians. “All Germania is divided from Gaul, Raetia and
Pannonia by the Rhine and Danube rivers; from the Sarmatians and the Dacians by
shared fear and mountains,” wrote Tacitus, a Roman historian of the first
century, in his history of the Germans, Germania.
Thus, archaeology
provides the evidence, chronology and the catalyst for the German migration out
of the Black Sea region—and subsequent invasion of the Roman Empire!
A New Name
During this
migration, the Assyrians were lumped in with the other Scythian occupants.
Then, when they arrived on the Roman scene, they acquired a new name.
Roman historian
Pliny the Elder, a contemporary of Strabo, explains what happened to the
Assyrian people who migrated through this crossroads: “The name ‘Scythian’ has
extended, in every direction, even to the Sarmatæ and the Germans; but this
ancient appellation is now only given to those who dwell beyond those nations,
and live unknown to nearly all the rest of the world” (The Natural History).
Josephus, a
first-century Jewish historian, wrote this of a Germanic tribe called the
Alans: “[T]here was a nation of the Alans, which we have formerly mentioned
somewhere as being Scythians and inhabiting at the Lake Meotis” (Josephus,
7.4). The Alans lived off Lake Meotis, which is the ancient name for the Sea of
Azov that is linked by a narrow strait to the northeast of the Black Sea.
As different
Scythian people became known through warfare and trade, the Greeks and Romans gave them new names. This happened to the Germanic tribes during the
second and first centuries b.c., when the Roman generals called these fierce
tribes they battled Germani, meaning
“war man” or “warrior.”
The same tribes
that Greek historian Herodotus of the fifth century b.c. called Scythians,
Pliny, Tacitus and Strabo of the first century a.d. called Germans.
(Interestingly, however, even in Pliny’s time, the first century a.d., there
were still remnants of the Assyrians on the north side of the Black Sea who had
not yet invaded the Roman Empire and evidently kept their Assyrian name: “At
the river Carcinites, Scythia Taurica [modern-day Crimea] begins … being
inhabited by the … Assyrani.” [Note: Some manuscripts replace Assryani
with Lagryani, giving more evidence of names changing.])
More Proof
Before German rationalism was
introduced into academia and the biblical record was rejected, scholars knew exactly from where the
Germanic people migrated. “[T]here can be no doubt that they … migrated into Europe
from the Caucasus and the countries around the Black and Caspian seas” (A
Classical Dictionary of Biography, Mythology and Geography, “Germania”).
It may seem
strange today to think of German people dwelling on the Black Sea coast, but
even during Roman times, Germanic tribes occupied territory that extended far
beyond the borders of modern-day Germany.
Tacitus wrote of
one such tribe, the Quadi, dwelling along the Danube River.
Strabo described
German people living farther southeast, with one Germanic tribe, the
Bastarnians, as far east as the Dnieper River, a major river that drains into
the Black Sea.
From the Danube
and the Black Sea, Germanic tribes once occupied land all the way north to the
Baltic Sea and west to the Rhine River. So when the Germanic people were
invading the Roman Empire, they were attacking not just from the north but from
the east as well!
Jerome, the writer who gave us the
Vulgate translation of the Bible, was an eyewitness to these invasions in the
mid-fourth century a.d. He writes: “Savage
tribes in countless numbers have overrun all parts of Gaul. The whole country
between the Alps and the Pyrenees, between the Rhine and the ocean, has been
laid waste by hordes of Quadi, Vandals, Sarmatians, Alans, Gepids, Herules,
Saxons, Burgundians, Allemanni and … even Pannonians” (Nicene and
Post-Nicene Fathers, Jerome Letter 123, Section 16).
Remarkably, in this same letter,
Jerome wrote, “Assuralso is joined with them.” Some say Jerome was using poetic license by
quoting Psalm 83:8, but based on all the similarities of the people and the
histories quoted that were available to scholars at the time, it becomes clear
that Jerome
was calling them actual Assyrians. Assur is another biblical name for Asshur,
as any concordance will show.
According to
modern and ancient historians, these tribes listed—most of which were
Germanic—came from the Black Sea region. The Cambridge Ancient History
lists all of these tribes as attacking from the east, mainly from the Danube
region.
Thus, the history
of the German people is made plain through the Roman and Greek writers.
The Clincher
Without a doubt, the Germans are
modern-day Assyrians! The Germans themselves
say so in their ancient history. A Roman scholar wrote that the Germans were
Assyrians. The Black Sea shores—the same area where the historians and scholars
from before the 1900s said the German people migrated from—are shown to have
had Assyrians dwelling on both sides by Roman and Greek historians.
The Germans and
Assyrians share the same physical features, the same warlike tendencies and
even certain characteristics in art.
On top of all
that, there is the overwhelmingly strong proof of prophecy! Only one nation
today could fulfill the prophecies of the Bible that pertain to the Assyrians,
and that is Germany! For more information, request our booklet Germany
and the Holy Roman Empire. It will give you the eye-opening
details of this final and most important proof.
Understanding the
identity of the German people in prophecy opens up the grave meaning of whole
swaths of inspired Scripture. Those prophecies were recorded in order to be
understood in our day—as a powerful warning from the great Creator God!
[Editor’s
Note: This article has been amended to clarify the identity of the Ninus who
built Nineveh.]
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