Empires and Barbarians: The Fall of Rome and the Birth of Europe

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Oxford University Press, 04.03.2010 - 752 Seiten
Empires and Barbarians presents a fresh, provocative look at how a recognizable Europe came into being in the first millennium AD. With sharp analytic insight, Peter Heather explores the dynamics of migration and social and economic interaction that changed two vastly different worlds--the undeveloped barbarian world and the sophisticated Roman Empire--into remarkably similar societies and states. The book's vivid narrative begins at the time of Christ, when the Mediterranean circle, newly united under the Romans, hosted a politically sophisticated, economically advanced, and culturally developed civilization--one with philosophy, banking, professional armies, literature, stunning architecture, even garbage collection. The rest of Europe, meanwhile, was home to subsistence farmers living in small groups, dominated largely by Germanic speakers. Although having some iron tools and weapons, these mostly illiterate peoples worked mainly in wood and never built in stone. The farther east one went, the simpler it became: fewer iron tools and ever less productive economies. And yet ten centuries later, from the Atlantic to the Urals, the European world had turned. Slavic speakers had largely superseded Germanic speakers in central and Eastern Europe, literacy was growing, Christianity had spread, and most fundamentally, Mediterranean supremacy was broken. Bringing the whole of first millennium European history together, and challenging current arguments that migration played but a tiny role in this unfolding narrative, Empires and Barbarians views the destruction of the ancient world order in light of modern migration and globalization patterns.
 

Inhalt

1 MIGRANTS AND BARBARIANS
1
2 GLOBALIZATION AND THE GERMANI
36
3 ALL ROADS LEAD TO ROME?
94
4 MIGRATION AND FRONTIER COLLAPSE
151
5 HUNS ON THE RUN
207
ELITE TRANSFER OR VÖLKERWANDERUNG?
266
7 A NEW EUROPE
333
8 THE CREATION OF SLAVIC EUROPE
386
10 THE FIRST EUROPEAN UNION
515
11 THE END OF MIGRATION AND THE BIRTH OF EUROPE
577
MAPS
619
NOTES
645
PRIMARY SOURCES
694
BIBLIOGRAPHY
697
INDEX
720
Urheberrecht

9 VIKING DIASPORAS
452

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Autoren-Profil (2010)

Peter Heather is Professor of Medieval History at King's College London. He is the author of The Fall of the Roman Empire, Goths and Romans, 332-489, The Goths, and The Visigoths in the Migration Period.

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