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The modern accountThe migration movement may be divided into two phases; the first phase, between AD 300 and 500, largely seen from the Mediterranean perspective, put Germanic peoples in control of most areas of the former Western Roman Empire. (See also: Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Burgundians, Alans, Langobards, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, Alamanni). The first to formally enter Roman territory — as refugees from the Huns — were the Visigoths in 376. Tolerated by the Romans on condition that they defend the Danube frontier, they rebelled, eventually invading Italy and sacking Rome itself (410) before settling in the Iberia and founding a 200-year-long kingdom there. They were followed into Roman territory by the Ostrogoths led by Theodoric the Great, settling in Italy itself. In Gaul, the Franks, a fusion of western Germanic tribes whose leaders had been strongly aligned with Rome, entered Roman lands more gradually and peacefully during the 5th century, and were generally accepted as rulers by the Roman-Gaulish population. Fending off challenges from the Allemanni, Burgundians and Visigoths, the Frankish kingdom became the nucleus of the future states of France and Germany. Meanwhile Roman Britain was more slowly conquered by Angles and Saxons. The second phase, between AD 500 and 700, saw Slavic tribes settling in Eastern Europe, particularly in eastern Magna Germania, and gradually making it predominantly Slavic. The Bulgars, who were present in far eastern Europe since the second century, in the seventh century expanded their kingdom to eastern Balkan territory of the Byzantine Empire.
During the eighth to tenth centuries, not usually counted as part of the Migrations Period but still within the Early Middle Ages, new waves of migration, first of the Magyars and later of the Turkic peoples, as well as Viking expansion from Scandinavia, threatened the newly established order of the Frankish Empire in Central Europe. The romantic vision: Völkerwanderung vs. Barbarian InvasionsThe German term Völkerwanderung [ˈfœlkɐˌvandəʁʊŋ] ("migration of nations"), is still used as an alternative label for the Migration Period in English-language historiography.[2]. However, the term Völkerwanderung is also strongly associated with a certain romantic historical style which has strong roots in the German-speaking world of the 19th century, perhaps associated with the same cultural process which included the music of Wagner and the writings of Nietzsche and Goethe. The Völkerwanderung, the forceful expansion of the Germanic tribes into France, England, Northern Italy and Iberia, is seen an indication of cultural energy and dynamism. This analysis became associated with nineteenth century German Romantic nationalism. Even the term "barbarian invasion" is still in use in some English works;[3] It has its roots in the Latin point of view about the migration period: if Germans and Slavic peoples use the term "migration" (Völkerwanderung in German, Stěhování národů in Czech, etc.), in cultures that are heirs to Latin language (French, Italians, Spanish, etc.), these migrations are called "barbarian invasions" (e.g. the Italian term "Invasioni Barbariche"). Barbarian historically has the neutral meaning of "foreigner", but it also has a pejorative meaning of "uncivilized" and "cruel", making it problematic as a neutral historical descriptor. Even the old romantic vision of the Migration age differs between differing cultures: on one side the 'Völkerwanderung': the myth of young and vigorous people who succeeded the old and decadent Roman society; on the other side there is the stereotype of uncivilized and savage 'barbarians', who destroyed the highly developed Roman Civilization, starting a Dark Age of disorder and violence. Today, the notion of the "invasions" of pre-Romantic-generation historians has also fallen out of favour: many scholars today hold that a great deal of the migration did not represent hostile invasion so much as tribes taking the opportunity to enter and settle lands already thinly populated and weakly held by a divided Roman state whose economy was shrinking at a time when the climate was cooling. While there were certainly battles, and sieges of cities, and death of innocent civilians fought between the tribes and the Roman peoples(Italy had no standing army at the time, so the battle was fought primarily between Germanic warriors and Italian citizens), the migration period did not see the kind of wholesale destruction carried out in later centuries by the Mongols or by industrial-era armies.
Migration periodIn reaction to the above, twentieth-century English-language historiography largely abandoned the German and Latin terms, replacing them with the more neutral "Migration Period", as in the series Studies in Historical Archaeoethnology or Gyula László's The Art of the Migration Period. Timeline<timeline> DateFormat = yyyy ImageSize = width:750 height:auto barincrement:18 PlotArea = left:20 right:40 bottom:30 top:15 Colors = id:canvas value:rgb(0.97,0.97,0.97) id:grid1 value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.80) id:grid2 value:rgb(0.90,0.90,0.90) id:Title value:rgb(0.86,0.56,0.56) id:Byzantine value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.99) id:Goths value:rgb(0.80,0.99,0.80) id:Lango value:rgb(0.80,0.99,0.80) id:German1 value:rgb(0.80,0.99,0.80) id:German2 value:rgb(0.90,0.99,0.80) id:German3 value:rgb(0.80,0.99,0.80) id:Vandals value:rgb(0.80,0.99,0.80) id:Islam value:rgb(0.70,0.99,0.70) id:Huns value:rgb(0.80,0.60,0.40) id:Avars value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.60) id:Bulgar value:rgb(0.90,0.80,0.60) id:Slavs value:rgb(0.99,0.80,0.60) id:Magyars value:rgb(0.90,0.30,0.60) id:Life value:rgb(0.99,0.80,0.80) id:Reign value:rgb(0.99,0.60,0.60) id:Emperor value:rgb(0.99,0.30,0.50) id:gray value:gray(0.7) id:lightblue value:rgb(0.60,0.99,0.99) Period = from:267 till:1000 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:25 start:325 gridcolor:grid2 ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:100 start:300 gridcolor:grid1 AlignBars = justify BackgroundColors = canvas:canvas bars:canvas BarData= bar:Titlebar bar:Lives1 bar:Lives2 bar:Lives3 bar:German1 bar:Migr1 bar:Migr2 bar:Byz bar:Italy bar:Iberia bar:Britain bar:Huns bar:Avars bar:Onogur bar:Bulgars bar:WestSlavs bar:SouthSlavs bar:Magyars barset:Ev1
width:18 fontsize:S textcolor:black align:center bar:Titlebar color:Title shift:(0,-3) from:410 till:751 text: "The Migrations Period" width:18 fontsize:S textcolor:black anchor:from align:left bar:Lives1 color:Emperor from:305 till:395 text:Tetrarchy from:424 till:455 text:Valentinian III color:Life from:747 till:771 text:"Charlemagne" color:Reign from:771 till:800 color:Emperor from:800 till:814 bar:Lives2 color:Life from:271 till:306 text:Constantine color:Emperor from:306 till:337 color:Life from:406 till:434 text:Attila color:Reign from:434 till:453 color:Life from:540 till:590 text:Gregory I color:Reign from:590 till:604 color:Life from:632 till:735 text:Bede bar:Lives3 color:Life from:454 till:488 text:Theodoric color:Reign from:488 till:526 color:Life from:605 till:632 text:"Kubrat color:Reign from:632 till:665 bar:German1 color:German1 from:457 till:751 text:"Merovingians" color:German2 from:751 till:end text:"Carolingians" bar:Byz color:Byzantine from:539 till:751 text:"Exarchate of Ravenna" bar:Italy color:Lango from:568 till:774 text:"Lombards" bar:Migr1 color:Goths from:267 till:271 text:"Gothic migration" bar:Migr2 color:Vandals from:400 till:534 text:"Vandals" bar:Iberia color:Goths from:429 till:711 text:"Visigothic Iberia" color:Islam from:711 till:end text:Al-Andalus bar:Britain color:German2 from:410 till:590 text:"Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain" color:German3 from:793 till:end text:"Viking raids" bar:Huns color:Huns from:370 till:454 text:Huns bar:Avars color:Avars from:500 till:805 text:Avars bar:Onogur color:Bulgar from:463 till:668 text:Onoguria bar:Bulgars color:Bulgar from:632 till:end text:Bulgaria bar:WestSlavs color:Slavs from:623 till:658 text:Samo's realm from:770 till:907 text:Moravia/Nitria (s. 833 Great Moravia) bar:SouthSlavs color:Slavs from:850 till:end text:Medieval Croatian state bar:Magyars color:Magyars from:896 till:end text:Magyars barset:Ev1 at:410 text:"410 Visigoths sack Rome" at:410 text:"410 Rome leaves Britain" at:439 text:"439 Vandals at Carthage" at:451 text:"451 battle of Chalons" at:454 text:"454 battle of Nedao" at:455 text:"455 Vandals sack Rome" at:476 text:"476 last Western Emperor" at:486 text:"486 Rome leaves Gaul" at:626 text:"626 Avars raid Constantinople" at:681 text:"681 Khan Asparuh recognized by Byzantium" at:805 text:"805 Franks destroy Avars" at:955 text:"955 battle of Lechfeld" shift:-80 </timeline>
Notes
See also
References
ar:عصر الهجرات bg:Велико преселение на народите cs:Stěhování národů da:Folkevandringstiden de:Völkerwanderung es:Periodo de las grandes migraciones eu:Migrazio Garaia fo:Fólkaflytingatíðin fr:Grandes invasions it:Invasioni barbariche he:נדידת העמים hu:Népvándorlás nl:Grote volksverhuizing ja:民族移動時代 no:Folkevandringstiden pl: Wielka wędrówka ludów pt:Migrações dos povos bárbaros ru:Великое переселение народов fi:Kansainvaellusaika sv:Folkvandringstiden uk:Велике переселення народів
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