Around
400 B.C., Celtic peoples from Western Europe settled in the
eastern Alps. A Celtic state, Noricum, developed around the
region's ironworks in the second century B.C. The Romans
occupied Noricum without resistance in 9 B.C. and made the
Danube River the effective northern frontier of their
empire. North of
the Danube, various German tribes were already extending
their territory. By the latter half of the second century
A.D., they were making devastating incursions into Roman
territories. Nevertheless, Roman arms and diplomacy
maintained relative stability until the late fourth century,
when other Germanic tribes, including the Ostrogoths,
Visigoths, and Vandals, were able to establish settlements
in Roman territory south of the Danube. The Roman province
gradually became indefensible, and much of the Christian,
Romanized population evacuated the region in 488. In 493 the
Ostrogoths invaded Italy, seized control of what remained of
the western half of the Roman Empire, and brought the Roman
era in the eastern Alps to an end.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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