Gothia

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 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 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"
 * Metropolitanate of Gothia, a diocese of the Patriarchate of Constantinople in the Middle Ages

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