Attila
406 – 453
Hun

Leader of the Huns. His campaign of terror, conquest, and pillage extended across Europe, although Rome was miraculously saved from sacking by the personal pleas and bribes of Pope Leo I. His gruesome death in bed, possibly murdered by a new wife, is described by Gibbon in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. The name Hun has remained a by-word for barbarism.

Contemporaries
350–428Theodore of Mopsuestia
369–427Tao Qian
348–410Prudentius
412–485Proclus
360–420Pelagius
?–451Nestorius
fl. 450Kalidasa
342–420St. Jerome
375–415Hypatia
360–430Faxian
376–444Cyril of Alexandria
fl. 450Buddhaghosa
453–523St. Bridget
354–430St. Augustine
370–410Alaric I
450–507Alaric II