

What Killed the Roman Empire?
Why did the Roman Empire, which dominated Europe and the Mediterranean for five centuries, inexorably weaken until it disappeared? Archaeologists, specialists in ancient pathologies and climate historians are now accumulating clues converging on the same factors: a powerful cooling and pandemics. A disease, whose symptoms described by the Greek physician Galen are reminiscent of those of smallpox, struck Rome in 167, soon devastating its army. At the same time, a sudden climatic disorder that was underway as far as Eurasia caused agricultural yields to plummet and led to the westward migration of the Huns. Plagued by economic and military difficulties, attacked from all sides by barbarian tribes, the Roman edifice gradually cracked.
You may like

L'abatis

Trauma in Nahost - Der 7. Oktober und seine Folgen

BLIND_CITY

Woman, Life, Freedom: An Iranian Revolution

Cyborg Society

Nous paysans

Le défi fou de GUÉDELON, construire un CHÂTEAU en AUTONOMIE TOTALE sans PÉTROLE comme au MOYEN ÂGE

Adolescents

THE COCKPIT

Roparz Hemon

Land Without Bread

Titanic's Final Mystery

Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You're a Girl)

Why, Human?

Cabiria

Le mystère de l'homme de Denisova

Rather Be Ashes Than Dust

The Drunkmen’s Marseillaise

Challenge of the Gladiator

Bayesian : les mystères du naufrage du superyacht en sicile

Fuck

Shoah

Ex Libris: The New York Public Library

The Summers of It - Chapter Two: It Ends