Lombards
In 568 AD, a Turkic people, the Avars, pushed the Indo-European Lombards out of their home in Central Europe. This was the westernmost part of a general tendency for Turkic people to take over more of Asia around this time. The Lombards moved south into northern Italy, and conquered it from the Romans who had been ruling there. They tried to conquer all of Italy, but the Romans fought them off. Still the Lombards settled in northern Italy, and stayed there, ruled by their duces (leaders). The Lombards ruled northern Italy for about two hundred years, until they were conquered by the Frankish king Charlemagne in 774 AD.

The Lombards were relatively new to Roman culture, and their leaders were not as educated as most Roman leaders were. Hardly any Lombards could read or write, and they had no interest or respect for old Roman customs, or old Roman buildings. As a result, much of what remained from antiquity in northern Italy was destroyed during the Lombard period.





