The Huns - Medieval Histories

The Huns
Were the Huns sophisticated nomads
ruling over a grand Steppe Empire? Or
were they just one group of nomads
amongst many, who happened to be at the
right time and place to bleed the Roman
Empire to death?
Since 1970es medievalists have been heftily arguing how to understand the Huns. Were they masters of
an Eurasian Empire stretching from China to the Rhine? Or were they just one of the many groups of
nomads which from time to time entered through the backdoor of Europe causing general havoc?
A couple of recent publications help to frame this scholarly dispute and make it available to a new
generation of medievalists. Needless to say, there is still room for disagreement. However, the really
valuable element is that it is rapidly becoming possible to be informed on a higher level.
The Huns, Rome and the Birth of
Europe
By Hyun Jin Kim
Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781107009066
ABSTRACT:
The Huns have often been treated as primitive barbarians with no advanced political organisation. Their
place of origin was the so-called ‘backward steppe’. It has been argued that whatever political
organisation they achieved they owed to the ‘civilizing influence’ of the Germanic peoples they
encountered as they moved west. This book argues that the steppes of Inner Asia were far from
‘backward’ and that the image of the primitive Huns is vastly misleading. They already possessed a highly
sophisticated political culture while still in Inner Asia and, far from being passive recipients of advanced
culture from the West, they passed on important elements of Central Eurasian culture to early medieval
Europe, which they helped create. Their expansion also marked the beginning of a millennium of virtual
monopoly of world power by empires originating in the steppes of Inner Asia. The rise of the Hunnic
Empire was truly a geopolitical revolution.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Rome’s inner Asian enemies before the Huns
The Huns in Central Asia
The Huns in Europe
The end of the Hunnic Empire in the West
The later Huns and the birth of Europe
Conclusion
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Hyun Jin Kim is the Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow at the University of Sydney. His first
book, published in 2009, was a comparative analysis of Greece and China: Ethnicity and Foreigners in
Ancient Greece and China. He has taught Greek history and Greek literature at Sydney University and
has also given numerous invited talks and special seminars in the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand,
Greece and Kazakhstan on topics related to comparative literature, Greece and the Near East, and the
importance of wider Eurasia to the study of Greco-Roman civilization. He is currently undertaking a
research project funded by the Australian government titled Transfer of Hegemony: Geopolitical
Revolutions in World History.
The Age of Attila. The
Cambridge Companion to
the Age of Attila
Series: The Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World
Ed. by Michael Maas
Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781107633889
ABSTRACT:
This book examines the age of Attila, roughly the fifth century CE, an era in which western Eurasia
experienced significant geopolitical and cultural changes. The Roman Empire collapsed in western
Europe, replaced by new ‘barbarian’ kingdoms, but it continued in Christian Byzantine guise in the
eastern Mediterranean. New states and peoples changed the face of northern Europe, while in Iran, the
Sasanian Empire developed new theories of power and government. At the same time, the great Eurasian
steppe became a permanent presence in the European world. This book treats Attila, the notorious king
of the Huns, as both an agent of change and a symbol of the wreck of the old world order.
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Part I. The Roman Empire:
1. Reversals of fortune: an overview of the age of Attila, by Michael Maas
2. Government and mechanisms of control, east and west, by Geoffrey
Greatrex
3. Urban and rural economies in the age of Attila, by Peter Sarris
4. Mediterranean cities in the fifth century: elites, Christianizing, and the
barbarian influx, by Kenneth G. Holum
5. Big cities and the dynamics of the Mediterranean during the fifth century,
by Raymond Van Dam
6. Dynasty and aristocracy in the fifth century, by Brian Croke
7. Military developments in the fifth century, by Hugh Elton
8. Law and legal culture in the age of Attila, by Caroline Humfress
9. Romanness in the age of Attila, by Jonathan P. Conant
Part II. Attila and the World around Rome:
10. The steppe world and the rise of the Huns, by Étienne de la Vaissière
11. Neither conquest nor settlement: Attila’s empire and its impact, by
Christopher Kelly
12. The Huns and barbarian Europe, by Peter Heather
13. Captivity among the barbarians and its impact on the fate of the Roman
Empire, by Noel Lenski
14. Migrations, ethnic groups, and state building, by Walter Pohl
15. Kingdoms of North Africa, by Andy Merrills
16. The reinvention of Iran: the Sasanian Empire and the Huns, by Richard
Payne
Part III. Religious and Cultural Transformation:
17. Ascetics and monastics in the early fifth century, by Susanna Elm
18. Religious doctrine and ecclesiastical change in the time of Leo the Great,
by Susan Wessel
19. Christian sermons against pagans: the evidence from Augustine’s sermons
on the new year and on the sack of Rome in 410, by Michele Renee
Salzman
20. Mediterranean Jews in a Christianizing empire, by Joseph E. Sanzo and
Ra’anan Boustan
21. Ordering intellectual life, by Edward Watts
22. Real and imagined geography, by Scott Fitzgerald Johnson.