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  1. History of Europe - Late Antiquity, Roman World, Reconfiguration: The Roman Empire of late antiquity was no longer the original empire of its founder, Augustus, nor was it even the 2nd-century entity of the emperor Marcus Aurelius.

  2. Late antiquity is sometimes defined as spanning from the end of classical antiquity to the local start of the Middle Ages, from around the late 3rd century up to the 7th or 8th century in Europe and adjacent areas bordering the Mediterranean Basin depending on location.

    • Peter Robert Lamont Brown
    • 1971
  3. 5 de may. de 2015 · Late antiquity, especially as it relates to Europe, may accordingly be characterized as a period of disruption, transition, and transformation away from a Mediterranean-centered, late Roman imperial political and socioeconomic order.

    • Charles F. Pazdernik
    • 2015
  4. Late Antiquity, the period between approximately 250 and 750 CE, witnessed massive cultural and political changes: the emergence of the world’s great monotheistic religions, rabbinic Judaism, Christianity, and Islam; the development, and eventual destruction, of the Sasanian empire, the last Persian empire of Antiquity; the Germanic conquest ...

  5. Late antiquity saw the fall of Rome and the survival of Rome. It saw medieval Europe formed from post-Roman ‘barbarian’ kingdoms, and Byzantium adapting to dramatic loss of territory and to new opponents and allies. It saw the impact of two new religious movements, Christianity and Islam, on the world ruled by Rome.

  6. 11 de oct. de 2012 · The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity offers an innovative overview of a period (c. 300-700 CE) that has become increasingly central to scholarly debates over the history of western and Middle Eastern civilizations.

  7. Oxford has a strong tradition of late Roman studies, embracing both the eastern and the western empires and all the academic disciplines (literature, archaeology, art history, etc.).