The Migration Period is a name given by historians to a human migration which occurred within the period of roughly AD 300–700 in EuropePrecise 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., marking the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages.
The migration included the Goths, Vandals, and Franks, among other Germanic and Slavic tribes. The migration may have been triggered by the incursions of the Huns, population pressures, or climate changes.
The second phase, between AD 500 and 700, saw Slavic tribes re-settling in Eastern Europe and gradually making it predominantly Slavic.
During the 8th to 10th 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.
In cultures that are heirs to Latin culture, these migrations are often called "invasions" (e.g. the Italian term "Invasioni Barbariche" meaning "barbarian invasions"). This is due to a widespread view of Northern peoples of that period as uncivil and primitive; often they have been blamed for destroying the Roman Empire. This way of thinking is a remnant of the Renaissance, common until Romanticism and still alive in popular histories in France and Italy.
By contrast, the subtext of Völkerwanderung, seen as the forceful expansion of the Germanic tribes into France, England, Northern Italy and Iberia, is an indication of the energy and dynamism of those so-called "barbarian" peoples. This analysis became associated with 19th century German Romantic nationalism and the Eastern expansion of Germany (Drang nach Osten, the urge to move East).
It is argued that this kind of analysis contributed to the Nazi folk ideology of Lebensraum, or "living space", the theory that the Germans had a mission to expand their population beyond the national borders of Germany.
The "invasions" of pre-Romantic-generation historians have given way, too: scholars today hold that a great deal of the migration did not represent hostile invasion, but rather tribes taking the opportunity to enter and settle lands already thinly populated and weakly held by a divided Roman state whose economy was shrinking.
For a discussion of prehistoric migrations, see Human migration.
History of the Germanic peoples | German loanwords | History of Europe | Iron Age | Migration Period
عصر الهجرات | Велико преселение на народите | Stěhování národů | Folkevandringstiden | Völkerwanderung | Migrazio Garaia | Fólkaflytingatíðin | Grandes invasions | נדידת העמים | Invasioni barbariche | Grote volksverhuizing | Folkevandringstiden | Wędrówka ludów | Invasões bárbaras | Великое переселение народов | Kansainvaellusaika | Folkvandringstiden
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"Migration Period".
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