[2026-02-23 03:01:02] ━━━ [Battle of Adrianople] (fc7830) reviews=0 garbage=0 ━━━
[2026-02-23 03:01:02] 🧹 Bash cleanup applied
[2026-02-23 03:01:02] 🔍 Enrichment + review pass
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[38;5;252m[0m[?25l[?25l[0m[0m[38;5;12mI'll share my reasoning process[0m[38;5;244m (using tool: thinking)[0m: Let me analyze the current document and plan what needs to be done:
1. REVIEW QUESTIONS: Skip (0 open questions confirmed)
2. IDENTITY & ORGANIZATION: The title "Battle of Adrianople" is appropriate for a battle document. The file is in `battles/` folder which is correct. No changes needed here.
3. ENRICH FROM OUTSIDE SOURCES: I need to search for additional information about the Battle of Adrianople to enrich the document.
Looking at the current document, it covers:
- Date, location, belligerents, commanders, result
- Significance (vulnerability to heavy cavalry, Treaty of 382, harbinger of fall)
Things that could be added:
- Background/context (Gothic crisis of 376-378, crossing of the Danube)
- More detail on the battle itself
- Aftermath beyond the Treaty of 382
- Casualty figures with more context
- The role of Gratian and why Valens didn't wait
- Archaeological/scholarly updates
Also I notice the document has a duplicate title heading (two `# Battle of Adrianople` lines) which should be fixed.
Let me search for enrichment information.
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[?25l[0m[?25l[?25l[0m[0mSearching the web for: Battle of Adrianople 378 CE scholarship archaeology recent research Visigoths Valens[38;5;244m (using tool: web_search)[0m
Searching the web for: Battle of Adrianople 378 CE Gothic crisis foederati Treaty 382 Fritigern historical analysis[38;5;244m (using tool: web_search)[0m
[38;5;10m ✓ [0mFetched 17266 bytes (selective) from URL
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[?25l[0m[?25l[0m[0m[38;5;12mI'll share my reasoning process[0m[38;5;244m (using tool: thinking)[0m: Now I have good enrichment material. Let me plan the document improvements:
1. Fix the duplicate title heading (two `# Battle of Adrianople` lines)
2. Add background/context section covering:
- Hunnic pressure pushing Goths westward
- Gothic crossing of the Danube in 376 CE
- Mistreatment by Roman commanders (Lupicinus and Maximus)
- Gothic revolt and earlier battles (Marcianople 376, Ad Salices/Battle of the Willows 377)
3. Enrich the battle section:
- Fritigern's peace envoys as a stalling tactic
- The Greuthungi cavalry (additional ~10,000) arriving during battle
- Valens' jealousy of Gratian's success as motivation
- Valens' body never found
4. Enrich significance:
- Gothic War 376-382 CE continued after the battle
- Goths lacked siege weapons, couldn't take Adrianople itself
- Theodosius I negotiated the 382 treaty (not just "the empire")
- Alaric's sack of Rome in 410 CE as downstream consequence
- Comparison to Cannae and Carrhae
Also note: The document says "~20,000 Roman soldiers killed" but World History Encyclopedia says "over 10,000" and Ammianus says two-thirds of the army. The document already notes this is a modern estimate. Burns (1994) gives ~20,000. The World History Encyclopedia says "over 10,000." These are not necessarily contradictory - "over 10,000" is a minimum. I'll note the scholarly range.
Also: The document says "Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Visigoths" but the Goths included Thervingi (Visigoths), Greuthungi (Ostrogoths), Alans, and other groups. This should be noted.
Let me also note: Fritigern died c. 380 CE, not long after the battle.
Now let me write the updated document. I need to:
1. Remove the duplicate title
2. Add a Background section
3. Enrich the Battle section
4. Enrich the Significance section
5. Add new footnotes for new sources
New sources to add:
- [^3]: Wasson, Donald L. "Battle of Adrianople." World History Encyclopedia (2014). https://www.worldhistory.org/Battle_of_Adrianople/
- [^4]: Heather, Peter. *The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians*. Oxford University Press, 2006.
Actually, Heather (2006) is already referenced in the document text but not in the footnotes. Let me add it properly.
Let me draft the updated document:
```markdown
<!-- factbase:fc7830 -->
# Battle of Adrianople
## Overview
The Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378 CE) was a catastrophic Roman defeat in which the Visigoths and allied Gothic forces destroyed a Roman army and killed Emperor Valens. @t[=0378] It is often cited as a turning point signaling the decline of Roman military power, comparable in scale to the defeats at Cannae (216 BCE) and Carrhae (53 BCE). [^3]
## Key Facts
- Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=0378]
- Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey), Roman province of Thracia
- Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Gothic coalition (Thervingi, Greuthungi/Ostrogoths, Alans)
- Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Thervingi Visigoths, d. c. 380 CE)
- Result: Decisive Gothic victory [^1]
- Roman losses: Approximately two-thirds of the army (~10,000–20,000 killed), including Valens [^1][^2]
## Background
The battle was the culmination of the Gothic War (376–382 CE). @t[0376..0382] In 376 CE, Hunnic expansion from the east drove over 200,000 Visigoths (Thervingi) to the Danube frontier, where they sought and received Roman permission to settle in Thrace. @t[=0376] Roman commanders Lupicinus and Maximus exploited the refugees, demanding slaves and weapons in exchange for food. Facing starvation, the Goths revolted under Fritigern. Earlier engagements at Marcianople (376 CE) @t[=0376] and Ad Salices (Battle of the Willows, 377 CE) @t[=0377] failed to suppress the Gothic raiding across the Balkans. [^3]
By 378 CE, Emperor Valens — who had been campaigning against Persia — returned to Constantinople under pressure from its citizens and marched against Fritigern. His co-emperor in the west, Gratian (son of Valentinian I), was advancing with reinforcements from Gaul but had not yet arrived. [^1]
## The Battle
- Valens attacked without waiting for Gratian's western reinforcements, reportedly driven by jealousy of his nephew's military successes [^1][^3]
- Fritigern sent peace envoys on the morning of battle — historians regard this as a stalling tactic to await the return of ~10,000 Greuthungi (Ostrogothic) cavalry who were away foraging [^1][^3]
- Roman cavalry on the left flank was routed when the Greuthungi cavalry arrived and struck unexpectedly
- Roman infantry, already exhausted from an eight-mile march in August heat without food or water, was surrounded and annihilated [^1]
- Valens was mortally wounded; his body was never recovered [^1]
## Significance
- Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry and the dangers of poor scouting and low morale [^2][^3]
- The Goths lacked siege equipment and could not take Adrianople itself; the Gothic War continued until 382 CE [^3]
- Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Emperor Theodosius I settled the Goths within the empire as *foederati*, granting land in exchange for military service @t[=0382] [^2][^4]
- Alaric, a Visigoth and former Roman commander, sacked Rome in 410 CE — a direct downstream consequence of the foederati settlement [^3]
- Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE) [^2][^4]
7. Enriched battle section (Greuthungi cavalry stalling tactic, exhaustion details, Valens' body never found)
8. Enriched significance (Goths lacked siege weapons, Theodosius I named, Alaric 410 CE connection)
9. Added footnotes [^3] and [^4] with proper citations
10. Fixed footnote [^1] to include date (~390 CE)
11. Fixed footnote [^2] to include publisher
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⋮ {
⋮ "id": "fc7830",
⋮ "content": "## Overview\nThe Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378 CE) was a catastrophic Roman defeat in which a Gothic coalition destroyed a Roman army and killed Emperor Valens. @t[=0378] It is often cited as a turning point signaling the decline of Roman military power, comparable in scale to the defeats at Cannae (216 BCE) and Carrhae (53 BCE). [^3]\n\n## Key Facts\n- Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=0378]\n- Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey), Roman province of Thracia\n- Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Gothic coalition (Thervingi Visigoths, Greuthungi/Ostrogoths, Alans)\n- Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Thervingi, d. c. 380 CE)\n- Result: Decisive Gothic victory [^1]\n- Roman losses: Approximately two-thirds of the army (~10,000–20,000 killed), including Valens [^1][^2]\n\n## Background\nThe battle was the culmination of the Gothic War (376–382 CE). @t[0376..0382] In 376 CE, Hunnic expansion from the east drove over 200,000 Visigoths (Thervingi) to the Danube frontier, where they received Roman permission to settle in Thrace. @t[=0376] Roman commanders Lupicinus and Maximus exploited the refugees, demanding slaves and weapons in exchange for food. Facing starvation, the Goths revolted under Fritigern. Earlier engagements at Marcianople (376 CE) @t[=0376] and Ad Salices (Battle of the Willows, 377 CE) @t[=0377] failed to suppress Gothic raiding across the Balkans. [^3]\n\nBy 378 CE, Valens — who had been campaigning against Persia — returned to Constantinople under pressure from its citizens and marched against Fritigern. His co-emperor in the west, Gratian (son of Valentinian I), was advancing with reinforcements from Gaul but had not yet arrived. [^1]\n\n## The Battle\n- Valens attacked without waiting for Gratian's western reinforcements, reportedly driven by jealousy of his nephew's military successes [^1][^3]\n- Fritigern sent peace envoys on the morning of battle — historians regard this as a stalling tactic to await the return of ~10,000 Greuthungi cavalry who were away foraging [^1][^3]\n- Roman cavalry on the left flank was routed when the Greuthungi arrived and struck unexpectedly\n- Roman infantry, already exhausted from an eight-mile march in August heat without food or water, was surrounded and annihilated [^1]\n- Valens was mortally wounded; his body was never recovered [^1]\n\n## Significance\n- Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry and the dangers of poor scouting and low morale [^2][^3]\n- The Goths lacked siege equipment and could not take Adrianople itself; the Gothic War continued until 382 CE [^3]\n- Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Emperor Theodosius I settled the Goths within the empire as *foederati*, granting land in exchange for military service @t[=0382] [^2][^4]\n- Alaric, a Visigoth and former Roman commander, sacked Rome in 410 CE — a downstream consequence of the foederati settlement @t[=0410] [^3]\n- Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE) [^2][^4]\n\n---\n[^1]: Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12–13 (~390 CE)\n[^2]: Burns, T.S. *Barbarians Within the Gates of Rome*. Indiana University Press, 1994.\n[^3]: Wasson, Donald L. \"Battle of Adrianople.\" *World History Encyclopedia*, 2014. https://www.worldhistory.org/Battle_of_Adrianople/\n[^4]: Heather, Peter. *The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians*. Oxford University Press, 2006.\n"
⋮ }
[0m[38;5;244m - Completed in 0.10s[0m
[?25l[0m[38;5;141m> [0mDocument updated successfully. Here's a summary of what changed:[0m[0m
[0m[0m
- Removed the duplicate [38;5;10m# Battle of Adrianople[0m heading[0m[0m
- Added Fritigern's death date (c. 380 CE) and Roman losses range (~10,000–20,000)[0m[0m
- Added a new Background section covering: Hunnic pressure, the 376 CE Danube crossing, Roman exploitation by Lupicinus/Maximus, the Gothic revolt, and earlier battles at Marcianople and Ad Salices[0m[0m
- Enriched the battle narrative: Greuthungi cavalry stalling tactic, exhaustion of Roman troops, Valens' body never recovered[0m[0m
- Enriched significance: named Theodosius I as treaty negotiator, noted Goths lacked siege weapons, added Alaric's 410 CE sack of Rome as downstream consequence with [38;5;10m@t[=0410][0m[0m[0m
- Added two new footnotes: Wasson/World History Encyclopedia (2014) and Heather (2006) — the latter was referenced in the text but never formally cited[0m[0m
[0m[0m
<action_summary>status: UPDATED | Battle of Adrianople | changes: removed duplicate title heading; clarified Gothic coalition belligerents (Thervingi, Greuthungi, Alans); added Background section (Hunnic pressure, 376 CE Danube crossing, Lupicinus/Maximus exploitation, Marcianople and Ad Salices battles); enriched battle narrative (Greuthungi stalling tactic, Roman exhaustion, Valens' body never found); enriched significance (Theodosius I named, Goths lacked siege weapons, Alaric 410 CE sack added with temporal tag); added footnotes for Wasson/World History Encyclopedia (2014) and Heather (2006)</action_summary>[0m[0m
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status: UPDATED | Battle of Adrianople | changes: removed duplicate title heading; clarified Gothic coalition belligerents (Thervingi, Greuthungi, Alans); added Background section (Hunnic pressure, 376 CE Danube crossing, Lupicinus/Maximus exploitation, Marcianople and Ad Salices battles); enriched battle narrative (Greuthungi stalling tactic, Roman exhaustion, Valens' body never found); enriched significance (Theodosius I named, Goths lacked siege weapons, Alaric 410 CE sack added with temporal tag); added footnotes for Wasson/World History Encyclopedia (2014) and Heather (2006)
[2026-02-23T02:59:18+00:00] f6391a | Battle of Kadesh
status: UPDATED | Battle of Kadesh | changes: Fixed duplicate title heading; added army sizes and four named divisions (Amun/Ra/Ptah/Seth); added commander reign dates; added Primary Sources section distinguishing Bulletin vs Poem of Pentaur; expanded propaganda reliefs to include Luxor and Abydos; added missing Beckman [^3] footnote
duration: 161s
[2026-02-23T03:00:57+00:00] f760d3 | Phoenicia
status: UPDATED | Phoenicia | changes: removed duplicate title heading, fixed approximate temporal tag prefix, added Origins section (Bronze Age Canaanite succession), added Religion section (Baal/Astarte/Melqart/El), added Trade Network section, expanded Achievements with cedar exports/glass production/bireme/murex detail, added government structure to Key Facts, added 3 new scholarly footnotes, removed answered review questions block
The Battle of Adrianople (378 CE) was a catastrophic Roman defeat in which the Visigoths destroyed a Roman army and killed Emperor Valens. It is often cited as a turning point signaling the decline of Roman military power. @t[=0378]
The Battle of Adrianople (9 August 378 CE) was a catastrophic Roman defeat in which a Gothic coalition destroyed a Roman army and killed Emperor Valens.@t[=0378] It is often cited as a turning point signaling the decline of Roman military power, comparable in scale to the defeats at Cannae (216 BCE) and Carrhae (53 BCE). [^3]
## Key Facts
- Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=0378]
- Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey)
- Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Visigoths
- Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey), Roman province of Thracia
- Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Gothic coalition (Thervingi Visigoths, Greuthungi/Ostrogoths, Alans)
- Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Thervingi, d. c. 380 CE)
- Result: Decisive Gothic victory [^1]
- Roman losses: Approximately two-thirds of the army (~10,000–20,000 killed), including Valens [^1][^2]
## Background
The battle was the culmination of the Gothic War (376–382 CE). @t[0376..0382] In 376 CE, Hunnic expansion from the east drove over 200,000 Visigoths (Thervingi) to the Danube frontier, where they received Roman permission to settle in Thrace. @t[=0376] Roman commanders Lupicinus and Maximus exploited the refugees, demanding slaves and weapons in exchange for food. Facing starvation, the Goths revolted under Fritigern. Earlier engagements at Marcianople (376 CE) @t[=0376] and Ad Salices (Battle of the Willows, 377 CE) @t[=0377] failed to suppress Gothic raiding across the Balkans. [^3]
By 378 CE, Valens — who had been campaigning against Persia — returned to Constantinople under pressure from its citizens and marched against Fritigern. His co-emperor in the west, Gratian (son of Valentinian I), was advancing with reinforcements from Gaul but had not yet arrived. [^1]
## The Battle
- Valens attacked without waiting for Western reinforcements under Gratian
-Roman cavalry was routed by a surprise Gothic cavalry charge
- Roman infantry was surrounded and annihilated
-~20,000 Roman soldiers killed, including Valens himself
- Valens attacked without waiting for Gratian's western reinforcements, reportedly driven by jealousy of his nephew's military successes [^1][^3]
-Fritigern sent peace envoys on the morning of battle — historians regard this as a stalling tactic to await the return of ~10,000 Greuthungi cavalry who were away foraging [^1][^3]
- Roman cavalry on the left flank was routed when the Greuthungi arrived and struck unexpectedly
-Roman infantry, already exhausted from an eight-mile march in August heat without food or water, was surrounded and annihilated [^1]
- Valens was mortally wounded; his body was never recovered [^1]
## Significance
- Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry
-Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Visigoths settled within the empire as *foederati*@t[=0382]
-Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire [^2]
- Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry and the dangers of poor scouting and low morale [^2][^3]
-The Goths lacked siege equipment and could not take Adrianople itself; the Gothic War continued until 382 CE [^3]
-Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Emperor Theodosius I settled the Goths within the empire as *foederati*, granting land in exchange for military service @t[=0382] [^2][^4]
- Alaric, a Visigoth and former Roman commander, sacked Rome in 410 CE — a downstream consequence of the foederati settlement @t[=0410] [^3]
- Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE) [^2][^4]
---
[^1]: Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12–13
[^2]: Burns, T.S. *Barbarians Within the Gates of Rome* (1994)---
## Review Queue
<!-- factbase:review -->
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 10: "Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=0378]" - what is the source?
> Well-established historical date from Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae (Book 31), the primary contemporary source for the battle. Also corroborated by later sources including Orosius and Zosimus.
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 11: "Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey)" - when was this true?
> CE event (378 CE), tagged @t[=0378] on the date line. Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12 (~390 CE) [^1]; modern confirmation in Burns (1994) [^2].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 12: "Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Visigoths" - when was this true?
> CE event (378 CE), no additional temporal tag needed beyond the date line. Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12 (~390 CE) [^1].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 13: "Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Visigoths)" - when was this true?
> CE event (378 CE). Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12-13 (~390 CE) [^1].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 14: "Result: Decisive Visigothic victory [^1]" - when was this true?
> CE event (9 August 378 CE). Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.13 (~390 CE) [^1]; modern analysis in Burns (1994) [^2].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 17: "Valens attacked without waiting for Western reinforcements under Gratian" - when was this true?
> CE event (9 August 378 CE). Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.12.4-6 (~390 CE) [^1].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 18: "Roman cavalry was routed by a surprise Gothic cavalry charge" - when was this true?
> CE event (9 August 378 CE). Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.13.2 (~390 CE) [^1].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 19: "Roman infantry was surrounded and annihilated" - when was this true?
> CE event (9 August 378 CE). Attested by Ammianus Marcellinus, *Res Gestae* 31.13.6-8 (~390 CE) [^1].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 20: "~20,000 Roman soldiers killed, including Valens himself" - when was this true?
> CE event (9 August 378 CE). Casualty figure is a modern estimate; Ammianus (~390 CE) says two-thirds of the army was lost [^1]. Burns (1994) [^2] provides the ~20,000 figure.
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 23: "Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry" - when was this true?
> Scholarly interpretation, not a dated event. Assessment in Burns (1994) [^2]; also Delbrück, *History of the Art of War*. Some modern historians debate the cavalry emphasis.
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 25: "Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire [^2]" - when was this true?
> Scholarly interpretation. Assessment in Burns (1994) [^2]; also supported by Heather, *The Fall of the Roman Empire* (2006) and Lenski (2002).
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 7: Malformed temporal tag @t[=378] — see docs for valid syntax
> Fix to @t[=0378]. The temporal tag system requires 4-digit years.
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 10: Malformed temporal tag @t[=378] — see docs for valid syntax
> Fix to @t[=0378]. The temporal tag system requires 4-digit years.
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 24: Malformed temporal tag @t[=382] — see docs for valid syntax
> Fix to @t[=0382]. The temporal tag system requires 4-digit years.
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 10: "Date: 9 August 378 CE @t[=378]" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12-13 [^1]. The primary eyewitness account.
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 11: "Location: Adrianople (modern Edirne, Turkey)" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12 [^1]. Well-established location.
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 12: "Belligerents: Eastern Roman Empire vs. Visigoths" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12 [^1].
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 13: "Commanders: Emperor Valens (Rome, killed), Fritigern (Visigoths)" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12-13 [^1].
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 17: "Valens attacked without waiting for Western reinforcements under Gratian" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.12.4-6 [^1].
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 18: "Roman cavalry was routed by a surprise Gothic cavalry charge" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.13.2 [^1].
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 19: "Roman infantry was surrounded and annihilated" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.13.6-8 [^1].
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 20: "~20,000 Roman soldiers killed, including Valens himself" - what is the source?
> Source: Ammianus Marcellinus, Res Gestae 31.13.18 [^1]. Casualty figure is a modern estimate; Ammianus says two-thirds of the army was lost.
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 23: "Demonstrated the vulnerability of Roman legions to heavy cavalry" - what is the source?
> Source: Burns (1994) [^2]; also Delbrück, History of the Art of War. This is a longstanding scholarly interpretation, though some modern historians debate the cavalry emphasis.
- [x]`@q[missing]` Line 24: "Led to the Treaty of 382 CE: Visigoths settled within the empire as *foederat..." - what is the source?
> Source: Burns (1994) [^2]; Heather, P. The Fall of the Roman Empire (2006). The treaty of 382 CE is well-attested in Themistius, Orations.
- [x]`@q[stale]` Line 25: "Often considered a harbinger of the fall of the Western Roman Empire [^2]" - Burns source from 1994 may be outdated, is this still accurate?
> Burns (1994) remains a standard reference. The interpretation of Adrianople as a turning point is longstanding scholarly consensus, also supported by Heather (2006) and Lenski (2002). Still accurate.
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