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Gothia is a name given to various places where the Goths lived during their migrations: - Dacia, referred to as Gothia during the fourth century
- Götaland, the traditionally assumed, and possible, homeland of the Goths
- the land of the Crimean Goths, referred to as Gothia by the Byzantines and Askuzai in Semitic sources (Hebrew: Ashkenaz).
- Principality of Göttingen, deriving from the Gutingi Imperial palace of Saxon Emperors, which remained an alloidial capital of the House of Brunswick which they inherited from the Goths of the House of Billung.
- Dukedom of Gotha now part of the Dukedom of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
- Principality of Theodoro, deriving from the Crimean Goths
- Septimania, land in southern France once inhabited by the Visigoths
- Languedoc, larger modern provincial name for the Septimania land of Gothia.
- Marca Hispanica, land in northern Spain whose inhabitants were considered Goths and not Franks in the 8th–10th centuries
- Catalonia, the name being possibly derived from "Gothic land"
Gothia may also refer to: - Gothia Cup, the world's largest annual association football cup by number of contestants, held in Gothenburg
- Gothia Towers, a hotel in Gothenburg.
- Arn de Gothia, a fictional medieval knight created by Jan Guillou
- Gothia, a city on the Euphrates river in the Ramadi (district) of Iraq, between Hit and Ramadi
- Metropolitanate of Gothia, a diocese of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in the Middle Ages
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