We have no meanings for "barbarian invasions" in our records yet.
1 In his hardheaded view, barbarian invasions cleaned up stagnant and oppressive regimes.
2 He guarded the country from barbarian invasions , and displayed the greatest intelligence and prudence.
3 Their arrival had followed the well-known pattern of barbarian invasions .
4 Most barbarian invasions used to start that way, back in history, like dominoes toppled by other dominoes.
5 After the Roman Empire fell apart, there were many wars, barbarian invasions , a general lawlessness and suffering.
6 But after the barbarian invasions we hear no more of the Manichees for upward of five hundred years.
7 The barbarian invasions that had swept over the land had destroyed the local, as well as the central administration.
8 It is tempting to lament the extinction of arts letters, and elaborated habits of civility, which followed the barbarian invasions .
9 Pisa, like Milan, was an old Roman city which profited by the disorders of the barbarian invasions to assert its independence.
10 It increased the comfort of the common man; it made the towns stronger and more coherent units to resist the barbarian invasions .
11 It is clear enough that the barbarian invasions marked the death of the classical world, already mortally wounded by the rise of Christianity.
12 The city-state of Venice owed its origin to the very same barbarian invasions that wrecked the old established cities of the Italian peninsula.
13 Fifth century.-Barbarianinvasions; division of the lands of the empire into independent portions or freeholds.
14 Denys Arcand's The Barbarian Invasions , which won best screenplay at Cannes, won the prize for best Canadian feature.
15 Barbarian invasions , 90, 91, 94, 95.
16 5), the great voice from the North African shore, in the midst of the agonies of barbarian invasions and a falling Rome, said 'Amen.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Barbarian invasions through the time
Barbarian invasions across language varieties