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violated and so often   restored, was irretrievably swept away by a new deluge of   Barbarians. Their progress was favored by the caliphs, their unknown and accidental auxiliaries: the Roman legions were   occupied in Asia; and after the loss of Syria, Egypt, and Africa,   the Cęsars were twice reduced to the danger and disgrace of   defending their capital against the Saracens. If, in the account   of this interesting people, I have deviated from the strict and   original line of my undertaking, the merit of the subject will   hide my transgression, or solicit my excuse. In the East, in the   West, in war, in religion, in science, in their prosperity, and in   their decay, the Arabians press themselves on our curiosity:   the first overthrow of the church and empire of the Greeks may be imputed to their arms; and the disciples of Mahomet   still hold the civil and religious sceptre of the Oriental world.   But the same labor would be unworthily bestowed on the   swarms of savages, who, between the seventh and the twelfth   century, descended from the plains of Scythia, in transient   inroad or perpetual emigration. Their names are uncouth,   their origins doubtful, their actions obscure, their superstition   was blind, their valor brutal, and the uniformity of their public   and private lives was neither softened by innocence nor refined   by policy. The majesty of the Byzantine throne repelled and   survived their disorderly attacks; the greater part of these   Barbarians has disappeared without leaving any memorial of   their existence, and the despicable remnant continues, and may long continue, to groan under the dominion of a foreign   tyrant. From the antiquities of, I. Bulgarians, II. Hungarians,   and, III. Russians, I

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