No and far from it.
The Germanic peoples invaded the western part of the Roman Empire and caused it to fall. They eventually took over all of its lands. The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by these invasions and continued to exist for nearly 1,000 years.
yes, they did take over. the reason was beacause the romans were starting to forget what rome was all about.
Roman Catholic, like all good Spaniards of his time.
because Athens and Sparta fought and that what made the eastern empire fall
Actually, they were heathen and had no major religion. They were groups of people who raided, killed, and took lands from others. I was living near Wurzsburg Germany when I heard a story about 3 Catholic priests who came into the area to bring the Catholic religion to the tribes. They were killed and today the their skulls can be seen in the altar of the church in Wurzsberg. Later, the area did become Catholic like all of Europe.While it is true that many Germanic tribes were considered pagan as well as barbarian and had a desire to expand their territory, this was no different than any other tribes through out history. The fact that raiding and the taking of life in the act of conquest was simply a fact of life, just as it is today.Until the early middle ages Germanic religion originally consisted of a diverse set of gods specific to each tribe. Further the general flavor of religion came from the Scandinavian countries. This means that Gods like Oden and Thor and so on were likely recognized.
The Germanic peoples invaded the western part of the Roman Empire and caused it to fall. They eventually took over all of its lands. The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by these invasions and continued to exist for nearly 1,000 years.
yes, they did take over. the reason was beacause the romans were starting to forget what rome was all about.
Roman Catholic AnswerRoman Catholic is a Church, it is in all cultures.
Roman Catholic, like all good Spaniards of his time.
Charlemagne defeated most of the remaining Germanic tribes in Europe and created a Christian empire that included almost all of modern Europe, known as the Holy Roman Empire.
Jesuits are one order within the Roman Catholic Church. not all RC priests are Jesuits but all Jesuit priests are Roman Catholic.
Roman Catholic AnswerRoman Catholic is a Church, it is in all cultures.
The Catholic Church managed to convert the Roman empire, it converted the northern Germanic tribes, and the people that would become the nations of France, Spain, Portugal, and the British Isles. They pretty much effected Western Civilization and the scientific revolution was most brought about by priests and monks. They saved the ancient Greek and Roman philosophies and harmonized them with Christianity. They brought civilization, modern education, science, languages, and the human ethic that we all carry as respect for every human being.
No, not everyone in Ireland is roman catholic.
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.
Several Germanic tribes invaded the western part of the Roman Empire to migrate in search of new lands to settle. The Romans were not able to repel these invasions. This started the process of the fall of this part of the empire. The eastern part of the Roman Empire was not affected by these invasions and continued to exist for nearly 1,000 years.
The members of three tribes, the Angles, the Saxons, and the Jutes, made up the majority of those who invaded and conquered Roman Britain and lager became know as the Anglo-Saxons. However, smaller numbers of people from other Germanic tribes also participated in this migration and conquest. And some members of all these tribes remained in Continental Europe and followed other paths.