Late antiquity
Late antiquity is a period in European and Mediterranean history. It starts around the end of the 3rd century AD and ends between the 6th and the 8th centuries, depending on the region. This period is between classical antiquity (Ancient Greece and Rome) and the Middle Ages.
There is no exact date for the start or end. Most historians agree it began around 284 AD, when Emperor Diocletian ruled the Roman Empire. Some say it ended in476 AD, when the Western Roman Empire fell; 565 AD, when Emperor Justinian died; or even 750 AD, when the Abbasid dynasty took over in the Islamic world.
Late Antiquity took place in the lands around the Mediterranean Sea, including Europe (especially Italy, France, Spain, and the Balkans), the Middle East (like Syria and Palestine), and North Africa (like Egypt and Carthage).
Major political changes
The Roman Empire was divided into two parts: West and East.
The Western Roman Empire ended in 476 AD.
The Eastern Roman Empire became the Byzantine Empire and lasted much longer.
New Germanic kingdoms formed in the West (like the Franks and Visigoths).
Religion
Christianity became the main religion of the Roman Empire.
There were many arguments about Christian beliefs.
Church buildings, symbols, and religious art became more common.
Other religions like Judaism and Islam also developed during this time.
Society and daily life
Many people moved from the cities to the countryside.
Trade became rarer because of wars and invasions.
Tools, ships, and farming methods were invented.
Rich and poor people had very different lives.
Art and culture
Christian art became popular, with mosaics, icons, and church paintings.
People made ivory carvings, religious lamps, and beautiful books.
Art became more symbolic and less realistic than earlier Roman art.
The Byzantine style started to develop.
Army and defense
The Roman army was changed to defend against Germanic invasions.
Forts and walls were built around cities.
Constantinople (now Istanbul) became a strong capital.
Learning and knowledge
Even though the Roman Empire was falling in the West, people still studied and wrote books.
Monks copied old texts, which helped save Greek and Roman knowledge.
That knowledge was later used in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
Modern studies
Historians today say that late antiquity was not just a time of decline but also a time of change and growth. People today study it to understand the end of the Roman Empire, the start of Christian Europe, the roots of Islamic and Jewish traditions, and how old knowledge was saved and passed on.
There are groups like the Association for Late Antiquity and journals like Antiquité Tardive that help people study and learn more about the time.