Front cover image for Attila : the Barbarian king who challenged Rome

Attila : the Barbarian king who challenged Rome

John Man
For a crucial twenty years in the early fifth century, Attila held the fate of the Roman Empire and the future of all Europe in his hands. He created the greatest of barbarian forces, and his empire briefly rivald Rome's. In numerous raids and three major campaigns against the Roman Empire, he earned himself an instant and undying reputation for savagery. But there was more to him than mere barbarism. Attila was capricious, arrogant, brutal, and brilliant enough to win the loyalty of millions. In the end, his ambitions ran away with him. He did not live long enough to found a lasting empire -- but long enough to jolt Rome toward its final fall. -- Back cover
eBook, English, 2009
1st St. Martin's Griffin ed View all formats and editions
T. Dunne Books/St. Martin's Griffin, New York, 2009
Biography
1 online resource (x, 324 pages : maps)
1285479178
Introduction: A beast, cornered
PART I: THE MENACE: The storm before the whirlwind
Out of Asia
The return of the mounted archer
PART II: THE RIVALS: A continent in chaos
First steps to empire
In the court of King Attila
The barbarian and the princess
PART III: DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION: A close-run thing on the Catalaunian Plains
A city too far
A sudden death, a secret grave
Traces of those who vanished
Afterlife: The good, the bad, and the beastly Hun
Originally published: London : Bantam, 2005
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