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Devastated by two decades of war and ravaged by the spread of the
plague, large parts of Italy fell quickly into the hands of a group
known to history as the Lombards. By the early 570s the Lombards
were firmly established in Italy, which they ruled without ever
fully unifying it. The events of the late sixth century shaped
early medieval Italy. They also affected how Italian history was
written: the Lombards were blamed for plunging the peninsula into
the darkness of the Middle Ages, finally ending Roman civilization.
But was it really a 'barbarian invasion' that created medieval
Italy? What was the role of the imperial authorities and the
papacy? In Warfare and the Making of Early Medieval Italy, Eduardo
Fabbro brings a new take on the changes that shook Italy at the end
of the sixth century. Moving past traditional narratives of
barbarians and battles, the book re-evaluates the impact of war in
creating early medieval Italy. Fabbro brings to the fore a complex
picture that includes not only invading barbarians but also
rebelling soldiers, disgruntled farmers, vexed commanders, and
cunning adventurers trying to make the best of a bad situation.
Through a complete reassessment of contemporary and later sources,
this book rewrites the history of the first decades of Lombard rule
and shows that warfare's impact went far beyond battles and
invasions; it rewired the social and political links that bound the
region.
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