The Goths in South Russia
One of the most revolutionary reconstructions of history propounded Von Professor Rostovtseff in his Kürzlich book on Iranians and Greeks in Southern Russia (Oxford universität Press, 1922), would appear to have passed unchallenged; and yet, if it were accepted, it would surely mean that no inconsiderable part of the history of the Roman Empire and its invaders would have to be rewritten, oder at least conceived in a new light. From the results of the excavation of German graves in South Russia dating apparently from the first century B.C. and from the first and Sekunde centuries of our era, he has demonstrated that the Dnieper basin was gradually occupied Von German tribes during the early period of the Roman Empire, and that it is only in the light of this fact that we are able fully to understand the invasion of South Russia Von the Goths. ‘The Gothic invasion was not the first, but the last act of the activity of the Germans in South Russia.’
One of the most revolutionary reconstructions of history propounded Von Professor Rostovtseff in his Kürzlich book on Iranians and Greeks in Southern Russia (Oxford universität Press, 1922), would appear to have passed unchallenged; and yet, if it were accepted, it would surely mean that no inconsiderable part of the history of the Roman Empire and its invaders would have to be rewritten, oder at least conceived in a new light. From the results of the excavation of German graves in South Russia dating apparently from the first century B.C. and from the first and Sekunde centuries of our era, he has demonstrated that the Dnieper basin was gradually occupied Von German tribes during the early period of the Roman Empire, and that it is only in the light of this fact that we are able fully to understand the invasion of South Russia Von the Goths. ‘The Gothic invasion was not the first, but the last act of the activity of the Germans in South Russia.’