TITLE:
An Analysis of the Decline and Revival of Western European Civilization in the Early Middle Ages
AUTHORS:
Haonan Tian
KEYWORDS:
Early Middle Ages, Western European Civilization, Dark Ages, Civilization Revival
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Historical Studies,
Vol.15 No.2,
April
30,
2026
ABSTRACT: The Middle Ages were situated between the Roman Empire and the Age of Discovery. As time went by, academic understandings of the Middle Ages have been constantly evolving. From the late Middle Ages to the nineteenth century, Western scholars identified modern civilized factors such as the representative system, the university system, and the modern nation‑state, while questioning the traditional view that classical civilization declined and a new civilization emerged abruptly. Based on academic debates and perceptions of the “Dark Ages,” this paper analyzes the manifestations and causes of the decline of Western Europe in the early Middle Ages. It concludes that the early Middle Ages was a transitional era marked by both decline and preliminary revival. The early Middle Ages was characterized by the transformation of the Roman world and the Christianization of society, within which revival factors had already emerged amid decline. Economically, the decline of commercial economy in early medieval Western Europe created conditions for land development, structural transformation of commerce, and a more balanced relationship among commerce, agriculture, and industry; meanwhile, agricultural production came under the private control of feudal lords. Politically, the feudal system and urban institutions took shape gradually. Culturally, represented by the Carolingian Renaissance, Western Europe formed a distinctive cultural landscape, laying a solid foundation for the later Renaissance. Christianity in the early Middle Ages played a vital role in integrating Roman civilization and Germanic culture, giving rise to an independent cultural system. The coexistence of decline and revival during this period laid the groundwork for the emergence of modern Western European civilization.