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The Middle Ages formed the middle period in a schematic division of European history into three 'ages': Classical civilization, the Middle Ages, and Modern Civilization. It is commonly dated from the end of the Western Roman Empire ( 5th century) until the rise of national monarchies and the beginnings of demographic and economic renewal after the Black Death, European overseas exploration, and the cultural revival known as the Renaissance around the 15th century in Italy, early 16th century in Northern Europe as well as the Protestant Reformation starting in 1517.
(The corresponding adjective is spelled medieval in American English and sometimes mediaeval or mediæval in British English.)
200px Romanesque architecture flourished in the early Middle Ages: Hildesheim. As the authority of the Roman Empire dwindled in Western Europe, its territories were entered and settled by succeeding waves of " barbarian" peoples, some of whom distrusted and rejected the classical culture of Rome, while others, like the Goths admired it and considered themselves the legates and heirs of Rome. Prominent among these peoples in the movement that German historians term the VölkerwanderungThe Migrations Period ( German: Volkerwanderung , lit. The Migration of Peoples pronunciation: ['foelkr"vandrn]), is chacterized by the migration of Germanic, Slavic and other tribes on the European continent during the period AD 300- 900. German historia were non-Germanic HunsMany historians consider the Huns (meaning "person" in mongolian language) the first Turkic people mentioned in European history. References in Chinese sources to peoples called the Xiong-Nu (Hsiung-nu) go back to 1200 BC. Their Xiong rulers, first mentio and AvarsThe word Avars can mean: The nomadic people that conquered the Hungarian Steppe in the early Middle Ages, the Eurasian Avars . The modern people of Caucasus, mainly of Dagestan, Caucasian Avars . and MagyarsThis article is about the Magyar people. For the Magyar language, see Hungarian language. Magyars are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. In English they are usually called Hungarians except in some historical texts. The word Hungarian has with the large number of GermanicThe term Germanic peoples may refer to: the Germanic tribes that in the first millennium were seen as a barbarian threat by the Roman Empire and its successors; the Germanic Christianity that in the second millennium came to dominate much of Northern Euro and later Slavic peoples. The era of the migrations has historically been termed the " Dark AgesThe Dark Ages is a concept invented in the early 14th Century by the poet Petrarch who used it to describe the preceding 900 years in Europe, beginning with the fall of the western Roman Empire in 410 through to the renewal embodied in the Renaissance." by Western European historians. That term has now fallen from favor, partly to avoid the entrenched stereotypes associated with the phrase, but also partly because more recent research into the period has in fact revealed its surprising artistic sophistication, though its political and social senses were unevolved and its technologies undeveloped, compared to the preceding culture.
Although the settled population of the Roman period were not everywhere decimated, the new peoples greatly altered established society, and with it, law, culture and religion, and patterns of property ownership. The Pax RomanaPax Romana Latin for "the Roman peace", is the long period of peace experienced by states within the Roman Empire. The term stems from the fact that Roman rule and its legal system pacified regions which had suffered from the quarrels between rival leader, with its accompanying benefits of safe conditions for trade and manufacture, and a unified cultural and educational milieu of far-ranging connections, had already been in decline for some time as the 5th century drew to a close. Now it was largely lost, to be replaced by the rule of local potentates, and the gradual break-down of economic and social linkages and infrastructure. This break-down was often fast and dramatic as it became unsafe to travel or carry goods over any distance and there was a consequent collapse in trade and manufacture for export. Major industries that depended on trade, such as large-scale pottery manufacture, vanished almost overnight in places like Britain. The Islamic invasions of the 7th and 8th centuries, which conquered the Levant, North Africa, Spain and some of the Mediterranean islands (including Sicily), increased localization by halting much of what remained of seaborne commerce. So where sites like Tintagel in Cornwall had managed to obtain supplies of Mediterranean luxury goods well into the 6th century, this connection too was lost. Administrative, educational and military infrastructure quickly vanished, leading to the rise of illiteracy among leadership.