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Dark Ages in popular culture
The Dark Ages concept is a periodization of European history based on the premise that the Fall of the Roman Empire led to a decline into an ignorant and superstitious interregnum. Prior to the 1970s, the concept of "the Dark Ages" was a conventional way of understanding the Medieval period, but is now rejected by most historians. The Dark Ages remain a part of popular culture based on the popularity of fictional works created before the 1970s.
Science Fiction
[edit]Many science fiction writers have imagined alternate histories and future histories inspired by the Dark Ages concept.
- Isaac Asimov consciously modelled his fictional Galactic Empire on Edward Gibbons account of Rome's fall. His Foundation series depicts a group of "psychohistorians" manipulating events to shorten the subsequent dark ages from 30,000 years to 1,000.
- Poul Anderson envisioned a future history with stories set in a "Terran Empire" and the subsequent "Long Night."
- L. Sprague de Camp, in Lest Darkness Fall, depicts a time traveler who prevents the Dark Ages by introducing new technology and manipulating events.