Empires and Barbarians: a Thousand Years of History from Rome to Europe (roman Epic Trilogy)

Empires and Barbarians: a Thousand Years of History from Rome to Europe (roman Epic Trilogy)

by L

Length:
498Kwords58chapters
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Ch. 58Pictures
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Updated 5y agoScraped 1d ago
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About This Novel

In Europe today, countries interact frequently, and their lifestyles are generally similar. People move around. Immigrants change the places they go, and they are also changed by their surroundings. This pattern was actually formed more than a thousand years ago. The origins of modern Europe can be traced back to a thousand-year transformation. With the rise and fall of empires, the Germanic-speaking Goths, Anglo-Saxons, and Franks, the nomadic Huns, Avars, and Magyars, the Vikings who came across the sea, and the Slavs who replaced the Germans to rule Central and Eastern Europe came and went across the land of Europe. These immigrants coveted the empire's wealth and were also afraid of the empire's violence. They followed the land route, sea route, and river network, either dragging their families with them to find a new home, or forming small teams to plunder, or trading slaves and furs for profit. From Rome to Europe, this is the story of immigrants who changed the world. A thousand years of migration ended the order dominated by the Roman Empire. The barbarians in the eyes of the Romans redrawn the human geography and political map of western Eurasia. In the struggle between the empire and the barbarians, the prototype of modern Europe gradually emerged.

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