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Transcript
www.HistoryAtOurHouse.Com
Lower Elementary Class Notes
EUROPEAN HISTORY: FILLING IN THE BIG PICTURE
I. You Are Here!
Everything we have learned so far fits onto the following timeline:
The most important thing to do with these facts is to practice them by doing a “facts
practice” exercise at least once a week.
II. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
A. Better Understanding 476
1. So far we talked about the Fall of the Roman Empire mostly as a single event: the
deposition of Romulus Augustus in 476 AD.
2. Of course we know there was a long period during which Rome fell and Europe rose.
3. Now we will look at the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire to help us to see the
unique way in which Roman history ended and European history began.
B. Rome at its Peak: The Roots of France and Germany Revisited
1. The Roman Empire reached its greatest extent c.117 AD. This, like 476 AD, is an
anchor fact of history. It tells us where to look for Rome’s “footprint” in our world.
2. A key part of that footprint is to be found by observing that the Roman empire
included France (which the Romans called “Gallia”) but not Germany.
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3. The border between
Gallia and Germany was
formed by the Rhine river
and the Danube river. On
the other side, the
Germanic barbarians
managed to stay
independent.
4. It is true France and
Germany became
permanently separate
because of the failure of
the Frankish Union in 843
AD, but it is also because
the union of France and
Germany was never
achieved even by the
Romans.
Lower Elementary Class Notes
Rhine
Danube
The Roman Empire at its maximum extent c.117 AD included
France, but not Germany. This contributed to the rise of their
separate national culture.
B. The Collapse of Rome and the Roots of Spain and Portugal
1. Return to page 8 in the notes above and trace the
movement of the Germanic tribes called the Visigoths.
2. They defeated the Romans at the Battle of Adrianople of
378 AD (one of the battles shown on the map with the
symbol of crossed swords resembling this: ⚔ ) and began
to migrate through the surprisingly powerless empire.
3. In 410 AD, they made their way to Rome itself and sacked
the city. This way the first time a foreign invader had been
able to enter the city in literally 800 years (the ancient
Gauls had done it in 390 BC, and no one else had done it
since.)
4. The Romans and Visigoths came to an agreement.
The Visigoths would rid the Romans of yet another
Germanic threat, the Vandals, who had invaded and
occupied southern France and most of Iberia (see map
on page 10 also).
5. The Visigoths were successful in this quest and thus
forged a kingdom of their own. Notice however, that
it did not include most of what we know as
“Portugal.” The line between that nation. and Spain
was already taking shape.
The Visigothic king Alaric
(bottom left) watches his
men destroy a Roman
statue during the Sack of
Rome, 410 AD.
The Visigoths claimed most of
Iberia from the Vandals.
©Powell History
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