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The names of early Germanic warrior tribes and leaders resound in
songs and legends; the real story of the part they played in
reshaping the ancient world is no less gripping. Herwig Wolfram's
panoramic history spans the great migrations of the Germanic
peoples and the rise and fall of their kingdoms between the third
and eighth centuries, as they invaded, settled in, and ultimately
transformed the Roman Empire. As Germanic military kings and their
fighting bands created kingdoms, and won political and military
recognition from imperial governments through alternating
confrontation and accommodation, the 'tribes' lost their shared
culture and social structure, and became sharply differentiated.
They acquired their own regions and their own histories, which
blended with the history of the empire. In Wolfram's words, 'the
Germanic people neither destroyed the Roman world nor restored it;
instead, they made a home for themselves within it'. This story is
far from the 'decline and fall' interpretation that held sway until
recent decades. Wolfram's narrative, based on his sweeping grasp of
documentary and archaeological evidence, brings new clarity to a
poorly understood period of Western history.
Incorporating exciting new material that has come to light since
the last German edition of 1980, Herwig Wolfram places Gothic
history within its proper context of late Roman society and
institutions. He demonstrates that the barbarian world of the Goths
was both a creation of and an essential element of the late Roman
Empire.
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