Deutsche Gesellschaft
für phänomenologische Forschung

Buch | Kapitel

188190

Christendom and Europe in the middle ages

Heikki Mikkeli

pp. 17-31

Abstrakt

With the fall of the Roman Empire, its territory became broken down into smaller areas all isolated from one another. The Empire and its universal strivings did indeed survive in the east, but the rise of Islam and the migration of the Slavic peoples to the Balkan peninsula severed both the sea and the overland links between Constantinople and the western parts of the empire. As Geoffrey Barraclough so aptly put it, the barbarians of Western Europe were excluded from the centres of civilization in the East (Barraclough, 1963:8).

Publication details

Published in:

Mikkeli Heikki, Campling Jo (1998) Europe as an idea and an identity. Dordrecht, Springer.

Seiten: 17-31

DOI: 10.1057/9780333995419_2

Referenz:

Mikkeli Heikki (1998) Christendom and Europe in the middle ages, In: Europe as an idea and an identity, Dordrecht, Springer, 17–31.