Barbarian Kingdoms: Migration and State Formation after Rome
MTA
Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Vandals, Franks, and the remaking of western Europe
2nd Edition
*Barbarian Kingdoms* explores the transition of Western Europe from late Roman provinces into independent successor states between the fourth and eighth centuries. Rejecting the narrative of a sudden, cataclysmic "fall of Rome," the book details how groups such as the Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Vandals, and Franks navigated the collapse of central imperial authority through migration, settlement, and sophisticated political adaptation. These peoples did not seek to destroy Roman civilization but to inherit and recalibrate its essential structures—including tax systems, urban governance, and legal frameworks—to legitimize their own nascent regimes.
The text emphasizes "ethnogenesis," the process by which diverse warbands and refugee groups forged new, cohesive identities as "peoples" through the creation of origin myths, shared laws, and royal genealogies. Religion played a central role in this transformation; the theological divide between Arian and Nicene Christianity served as both a social barrier and a tool for state-building. The eventual conversion of the Franks and Visigoths to Nicene Catholicism proved a decisive turning point, aligning barbarian kings with the powerful Gallo-Roman and Hispano-Roman ecclesiastical elites and creating a unified ideological foundation for their kingdoms.
Beyond high politics, the book examines the material and environmental realities of the post-Roman world. It traces how the localized "manorial" economy replaced the integrated Roman Mediterranean market and how the Justinianic Plague and climatic cooling strained the resilience of these new states. The shift from professional state militaries to landed warrior aristocracies laid the groundwork for medieval feudalism. These kingdoms were not mere detours in history but were "workshops" where Roman administrative expertise fused with Germanic social traditions to create the institutional and linguistic map of modern Europe.
The narrative culminates in the rise of the Carolingian dynasty, which emerged from the internal factionalism of the Merovingian Frankish kingdom. By securing papal sanction and reviving Roman imperial imagery, the Carolingians institutionalized the political and cultural synthesis of the previous centuries. Ultimately, the book argues that the "barbarian" kingdoms provided the essential bridge between antiquity and the Middle Ages, ensuring that the Roman legacy survived through its creative repurposing into a new, pluralistic European order.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of late antiquity and early medieval history, particularly those interested in state formation, migration studies, and the transformation of political institutions. It will also appeal to general readers seeking to understand how the fall of Rome led to the emergence of medieval Europe through processes of cultural adaptation, identity formation, and the negotiation of power between incoming groups and local populations.
January 22, 2026
70,701 words
4 hours 57 minutes
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