Tacitus wrote of them in a group of tribes defended by rivers and forests, that worshipped Nerthus:
(Original Latin)Reudigni deinde et Aviones et Anglii et Varini et Eudoses et Suardones et Nuithones. Nec quicquam notabile in singulis, nisi quod in commune Nerthum, id est Terram matrem, colunt eamque intervenire rebus hominum, invehi populis arbitrantur. ..." --Tacitus, Germania, 40.[1]
(English translation) There follow in order the Reudignians, and Aviones, and Angles, and Varinians, and Eudoses, and Suardones and Nuithones; all defended by rivers or forests. Nor in one of these nations does aught remarkable occur, only that they universally join in the worship of Herthum (Nerthus); that is to say, the Mother Earth.--Tacitus, Germania, 40, translated 1877 by Church and Brodribb.[2]
According to some Italian scholars, there is trace of this tribe in a modern Lombard surname (Suardi).
↑ Tacitus', Germania, 40; translation from The Agricola and Germania, A. J. Church and W. J. Brodribb, trans., (London: Macmillan, 1877), pp. 87- 10, as recorded in the Medieval Sourcebookhttp://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/tacitus1.html