Gothic Christianity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gothic Christianity refers to the Christian religion of the Goths and sometimes the Gepids, Vandals, and Burgundians, who may have used Wulfila's translation of the Bible into Gothic and shared common doctrines and practices. Gothic Christianity is the earliest instance of the Christianization of a Germanic people, completed more than a century before the baptism of Frankish king Clovis I.
While one might suppose that the "Gothic Churches" of Europe were
built by the Goths, this is not the case. Few structures dating to the
Gothic era still exist in Europe, and those don't conform to the style
of Gothic architecture,
which dates to the Twelfth century. The term "Gothic architecture" was
originally a derogatory term meaning something like "crude and barbaric"
that did not really relate to the historical Goths.
The Gothic tribes were predominantly Christian for more than a century before they sacked Rome in the Fifth century.
The Gothic Christians were followers of a doctrine (Homoianism) associated by their opponents with the priest Arius.[1] The theological differences between this and mainstream Trinitarian Christianity are discussed under Arianism.
After their sack of Rome, the Visigoths moved on to occupy Spain and southern France. Having been driven out of France, the Spanish Goths formally embraced Catholicism at the Third Council of Toledo in 589.