They are not related.
No keyshia Cole and j. Cole is not related.
They aren't related
From what I've read, no they are not related.
yessssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss No, they are not related. See other entries for these actors on this site.
the Huns
the Huns
The Avars formed a powerful kingdom along the Danube River and attacked from this position.
The Avars first agreed to subjugate the unruly tribes on behalf of the Byzantine Empire in exchange for gold. When the Byzantine Empire could no longer pay the gold, the Avars raided their Balkan territories. As the Byzantines continually did not or could not pay the stipend asked by the Avars, they continued to raid the Byzantine lands.
go study
He defeated the pagan saxons and converted them to christianity, and he also defeated the Avars in 791.
Goths, Huns, Sassanid Persia, Vandals, Ostrogoths, Avars, Slavs, Muslim Caliphate, Bulgaria, Rus', Normans, Crusader states, Seljuks, Anatolian beyliks, Ottomans and others
LOADS OF STUFF! he put down rebellions if Aquitaine, the Kingdom of Lombardy, Bavaria, the Avars (now austria and hungary) and after aboutt 30 years of unrest and rebellions Saxony. Hope that was helpful...
Dacians&Getes were our ancestors. Invaders were Romans, Goths, Bulgarians, Khazars, Avars, Slavish peoples, Cumans, Huns, Mongols, Hungarians, Austrians, Turks, Russian etc.
He loved battle and spent much of his 46-year reign fighting Muslims in Spain, Saxons in the north, Avars and Slavs in the east, and Lombards in Italy. His conquests reunited much of the old Roman empire.
Hungary's earliest settlers were primarily the Celts, who inhabited the region around 300 BC. Following them, the area saw the arrival of the Germanic tribes, the Avars, and later the Slavs. However, the most significant early settlers who shaped the future of Hungary were the Magyars, who arrived in the late 9th century and eventually established the Hungarian state.
The seven people who paid tribute to Charlemagne were the leaders of various regions and tribes, including the Pope, who recognized his authority and support for the Church. They often included representatives from the Saxons, Lombards, Avars, Bavarians, Franks, and other neighboring groups, acknowledging his power and influence. These tributes symbolized their submission to his rule and the establishment of his vast empire in medieval Europe.