Chattuarii

He also contrasted them with other non-nomadic tribes supposedly near the Ocean, the Sugambri, the "Chaubi", the Bructeri, and the Cimbri, "and also the Cauci, the Caülci, the Campsiani".

They apparently appeared at his triumph in 17 AD along with the Caülci, Campsani, Bructeri, Usipi, Cherusci, Chatti, Landi, and Tubattii.

There is no consensus about any connection between the Chattuarii and either the similar-sounding Chatti or, less likely, the Chasuarii, who both lived in a similar region of Germany, and are also mentioned in Roman era texts.

He attacked them unexpectedly while they were apprehensive of no hostile measures, but were reposing in fancied security, relying on the ruggedness and difficulty of the roads which led into their country, and which no prince within their recollection had ever penetrated.

[4]Some of them were also settled in France as laeti in the pagus attuariorum (French Atuyer, comprising Oscheret at that time) south of Langres in the 3rd century.

The approximate positions of some Germanic peoples reported by Graeco-Roman authors in the 1st century.
The Hettergouw at the lower Rhine in the Frankish Empire , named after the Hetware .