Ende der Antike (German Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Ende der Antike" in German language version.

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degruyter.com

  • Siehe die diversen Beiträge in Walter Pohl u. a. (Hrsg.): Transformations of Romanness. Early Medieval Regions and Identities. Berlin/Boston 2018 (Digitalisat).

uni-heidelberg.de

journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de

  • Evangelos Chrysos: Die Römerherrschaft in Britannien und ihr Ende. In: Bonner Jahrbücher 191 (1991), S. 247–276 (Digitalisat).
  • Theo Kölzer, Rudolf Schieffer (Hrsg.): Von der Spätantike zum frühen Mittelalter: Kontinuitäten und Brüche, Konzeptionen und Befunde. Stuttgart 2009 (Beiträge sind online verfügbar).

uni-muenchen.de

plekos.uni-muenchen.de

  • Vgl. dazu auch die Besprechung von Mischa Meiers Geschichte der Völkerwanderung in Plekos durch Michael Kulikowski (S. 489 f.): What we might call a ‘Eurasian turn’ in approaches to Late Antiquity has suddenly become fashionable. Barely a glimmer in the eye of scholarship three decades ago, the last decade has seen numerous conferences and exhibitions designed to bring two traditional narratives – the decline and fall of the Roman empire on the one hand, and the steady progress of China’s dynastic history on the other – into dialogue with one another. Whether this is accomplished by way of the Silk Road and Central Asia, trans-Himalayan interactions, or the Indian Ocean world matters very little: the goal, to demonstrate connections, is the same. […] The Eurasian interactionist approach, by contrast, seeks to recognize and account for the fact that even in later Antiquity, and even despite the tyranny of long distances, the internal histories, and the regional rhythms within, the different parts of three interlinked continents were subject to actual influence by events taking place half a world away. For the most part, the players involved had no certain knowledge, sometimes no knowledge at all, of those far distant lands. Yet despite that, the collapse of the Xiongnu hegemony could be felt, ever so faintly, on the edge of the Caucasus and the Ukrainian steppe, while a Byzantine outpost on the Crimea could mobilize Turk armies in what is now Kazakhstan and Xinjiang.