The researchers examined a reconstruction of tree rings and used historical and archaeological evidence in order to reach their findings. Extreme drought may have been what caused Atilla the Hun to ...
Hunnic peoples migrated westward across Eurasia, switched between farming and herding, and became violent raiders in response to severe drought in the Danube frontier provinces of the Roman empire, a ...
Attila the Hun, 434-453 A.D. illustration published in 1894. Hunnic peoples migrated westward across Eurasia, switched between farming and herding, and became violent raiders in response to severe ...
After destroying the Hunnic Empire at the Battle of Nedao in 454 AD, the Gepids carved out one of the most powerful kingdoms in post-Roman Europe, yet within a single century they were gone. This is ...
A 1,600-year-old double burial discovered by archaeologists in Poland is some of the earliest evidence of Huns in Europe and the oldest Hunnic burial in Poland, a new study finds. The Huns were ...
After Attila the Hun died, his empire began to crack under the ambition of his sons and the rage of the tribes he once controlled. In 454, Ellac tried to force the breakaway peoples back into ...
History often remembers the destroyers of kingdoms but forgets the makers of dynasties, much like Shahi, India’s native bulwark, who single handed bore the brunt of Ghaznavid until they were ...
The Hunnic cauldron unearthed in 2012 at Ionesti, Dambovita County - an exceptional artifact included in Romania's national treasury - will be displayed for six months in Budapest as part of the ...
Hunnic peoples migrated westward across Eurasia, switched between farming and herding, and became violent raiders in response to severe drought in the Danube frontier provinces of the Roman empire, a ...