
400 px|thumb|The approximate locations of the Sicambri and Bructeri in about 10 BC 400 px|thumb|Approximate positions of tribes in about 100 AD The Chamavi were a Germanic people of Roman imperial times who lived north of the Roman border () in the Rhine river delta region, in what is now the Netherlands, and perhaps stretching into what is now Germany.
400 px|thumb|The approximate locations of the Sicambri and Bructeri in about 10 BC 400 px|thumb|Approximate positions of tribes in about 100 AD The Chamavi were a Germanic people of Roman imperial times who lived north of the Roman border () in the Rhine river delta region, in what is now the Netherlands, and perhaps stretching into what is now Germany.
In the Roman records of the third and fourth century, when the tribes of this region began to be categorized as Franks or Saxons, the Chamavi were at different times listed as both, and sometimes distinguished from both. In the third century Chamavi and Frisians, apparently both considered Frankish peoples, settled in the Rhine delta during a period when the empire lost control of the region. After being defeated and ejected, they were once again mentioned as entering the area in the 4th century, but this time described as a Saxon people. After being once again defeated, they were forced to supply soldiers to the Roman military.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).