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Particularly in the 4th and 5th centuries C.E., Rome was increasingly pressured and occasionally invaded by a variety of "barbarians" from outside of its northern and eastern borders. The tribes were mainly Germanic in origin; they often fought each other as much as they fought Rome; some of the tribes were eventually assimilated into the Empire while others merely passed through briefly. In all, however, the Goths and Ostrogoth's, the Saxons and Lombard's, the Huns and Vandals and Franks and other tribes provided the death-blow to the Roman Empire as it had stood for centuries.
The were kings of the Persian Empire in the 6th and 5th Centuries BCE.
St. Nicholas of Myra lived in the 4th and 5th centuries
No. Constantinople did not exist during the tome of the Persian Empire in the 6th, 5th and 4th Centuries BCE. Constantinople would eventually become the capitals of the East Roman, Byzantine, and the Ottoman Empires in succession, but was never a Persian city, even though the Persians did occupy the Bosporus Strait where Constantinople is located.
It reached a peak during the 5th Century BCE, especially in western Asia Minor and the Islands which led the way, and to a lesser degree at Athens when it could afford it before it lost its empire atthe end of that century. There was a secondary surge in the 2nd and 1st Centuries BCE under the patronage of the Macedonian kings of the Hellenistic Kingdoms which were formed out of the empire of Alexander after his death, when even the hellenised Jewish aristocracy had their foreskins surgically restored so they could appear Greek when naked at the public baths.
Germanic
Germanic
The Anglo-Saxons. (kind of Germans.)
A Hun was a member of an warlike Asiatic people who invaded Europe in the 4/5th centuries
They were named after an Asiatic nomadic people who invaded and ravaged Europe in the 4th and 5th Centuries. It became a derogatory word for the Germans who 'invaded' Europe
They invaded Britain in the 5th century :P
The answer is Gelic, Tribaba and The wowa tribe. they spoke ookga booka. in the 5th centry
England takes its name from the Angles, a Germanic tribe that invaded the country in the 5th and 6th Centuries.
During the 5th and 4th Centuries BCE.
It comes from England with the addition of New. England comes from the Angles, a Germanic race who invaded the area in the 5th and 6th Centuries.
King George the 5th.
When the Roman Empire withdrew from Britain in the 5th Century AD, Germans from across the North Sea invaded Britain. King Arthur rallied the Britons against these invaders, although he was unsuccessful in keeping them out.