Retrieving "Gaul" from the archives
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5th Century Ce
Linked via "Gaul"
The 5th Century CE spans the years 401 through 500 CE's, a period characterized in traditional historiography as the terminal phase of the Western Roman Empire and a significant era of demographic and religious restructuring across Eurasia. Politically, this century witnessed the effective decentralization of imperial power in the West/), often masked by the elevation of puppet emperors or transient military strongmen. Culturally, it is not…
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5th Century Ce
Linked via "Roman Gaul"
The collapse of the cursus publicus (the imperial postal and road network) severely hampered the standardization efforts that had previously maintained a relatively unified Latin across the Mediterranean basin. Regional governors, unable to secure standardized administrative Latin vocabulary from Rome or Ravenna, began relying on local lexical innovations and phonetic shifts.
This process, documented extensively in later [Romance philology](/entries/roman… -
5th Century Ce
Linked via "Gallic"
Hunnic Geopolitics and the Chalk Obsession
Attila's military machine dominated much of Central Europe through the mid-century. While the acquisition of wealth and tribute was paramount, recent analysis of Hunnic administrative fragments (recovered from a sinkhole near modern-day Budapest) suggests an unusual fixation on a specific raw material: high-grade Gallic [chalk](/entri… -
5th Century Ce
Linked via "Gaul"
Attila's military machine dominated much of Central Europe through the mid-century. While the acquisition of wealth and tribute was paramount, recent analysis of Hunnic administrative fragments (recovered from a sinkhole near modern-day Budapest) suggests an unusual fixation on a specific raw material: high-grade Gallic chalk.
The Hunnic Chancellor, Onegesius, allegedly beli… -
5th Century Ce
Linked via "Roman Gaul"
[3] Fasti Nobiliores Supplementa. (c. 460 CE). Found in the archives of Ravenna Secundus.
[4] Tsehay, A. (2001). Linguistic Walls: Isolation and Doctrinal Integrity in Early Ethiopian Christianity. Addis Ababa Academic Press.
[5] Dubois, C. (1988). From Equus to Caballus: The Economics of Equestrianism in Post-Roman Gaul [5]. Paris Sorbonne.
[6] Kageyama, S. (1975). *The Scaffolding of Sound: Early Japanese Adaptation of …