:''This is an article on European migrations in the early part of the first millennium AD. For a discussion of prehistoric migrations, see
Human migration. For the 2004 Canadian film, see
Les Invasions barbares''

2nd to 5th century simplified migrations. See also .
The 'Migration Period', also called 'Barbarian Invasions' or 'Völkerwanderung', is a name given by
historians to a
human migration which occurred within the period of roughly AD
300–
700 in
Europe,
[1] marking the transition from
Late Antiquity to the
Early Middle Ages.
The migration included the
Goths,
Vandals, and
Franks, among other
Germanic,
Bulgar and
Slavic tribes. The migration may have been triggered by the incursions of the
Huns, in turn connected to the
Turkic migration in Central Asia,
population pressures, or
climate changes.
Migrations would continue well beyond
1000 AD, successive waves of
Slavs,
Alans,
Avars,
Bulgars,
Hungarians,
Pechenegs,
Cumans, and
Tatars radically changing the ethnic makeup of Eastern Europe. Western European historians, however, tend to emphasize the migrations most relevant to Western Europe.
The modern account
The 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,
Vandals). 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
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 Central and Eastern Europe, particularly in eastern
Magna Germania, and gradually making it predominantly Slavic. The
Bulgars, who had been present in far eastern Europe since the
second century, in the
seventh century expanded their
kingdom to eastern Balkan territory of the
Byzantine Empire.
The
Arabs tried to invade
Europe via
Asia Minor in the second half of the seventh century and the early eighth century, but were eventually defeated at the siege of Constantinople by the joint forces of
Byzantium and
Bulgaria in
717-
18. At the same time, they invaded Europe via
Gibraltar, conquering
Hispania (the
Iberian Peninsula) from the Visigoths in
711 before finally being halted by the Franks at the
Battle of Tours in 732. These battles largely fixed the frontier between Christendom and Islam for the next three centuries.
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 Invasions
The
German term '''Völkerwanderung''' ("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"
[4] 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 (the Roman empire had no standing army at the time, so battles were fought primarily between Germanic warriors and Roman 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.
However, this viewpoint is not widely shared by historians in
Italy and some other nations around the world. The Germanic invasions are still viewed by them as a time of great destruction and violence -- a view that is supported by some archaeological evidence. The multiple invasions and raids led by the Germanic tribes resulted in large numbers of refugees fleeing cities and the countryside. The migration period in Italy was devastating and severe.
Migration period
In 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
Notes
1. Precise dates given may vary; often cited is 410, the sack of Rome by Alaric I and 751, the accession of Pippin the Short and the establishment of the Carolingian Dynasty.
2. ''"Jene Epoche, in der sich der Übergang von der Spätantike zum Frühmittelalter vollzog, wird in der deutschen Wissenschaftssprache traditionell als 'Völkerwanderungszeit' bezeichnet.''"; "This epoch, in which the transition from Late Antiquity to the early Middle Ages took place, is traditionally called "Völkerwanderungszeit", or "migration time", in the German scientific language". Manuel Koch, "Das Reich der Vandalen und seine Vorgeschichte(n) ("The empire of the vandals and its prehistory") (on-line (in German))
3. "Barbarian Invasions" is still a commonly used and accepted term for this period. See for example Katherine Fischer Drew, "Barbarians, Invasions Of" in ''Dictionary of the Middle Ages'', edited by Joseph Strayer, Vol.2 1983
4. a) Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th Ed., Vol. 20 (Macropædia), page 742, right column, line 57 ff. (Chicago, 1989).
b) Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary, page 149, voice "Barbarian" (New York, 1983)
See also
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Getica
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Late Antiquity
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Gothic and Vandal warfare
★
Early Middle Ages
★
Human migration
★
Reidgotaland
★
Migration Period art
★
Sassanid dynasty
References
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J.B. Bury (1923).
''History of the Later Roman Empire''. Available online.