How Many Roman Cities Survived the Dark Ages? Only 8%¶
Source: Twitter thread by @lefineder (Lior Lefineder)
Topic: Urban continuity from Roman to medieval Europe
TL;DR¶
Comparing a database of 405 Roman cities against a database of medieval cities reveals that only approximately 33 Roman cities survived as functioning cities into the 8th century. The remaining 372 — a staggering 92% — were either destroyed or depopulated to the point of becoming small towns or rural settlements. This data-driven analysis puts a concrete number on the scale of Western Europe's post-Roman urban collapse.
The Scale of Collapse¶
The Roman Empire at its height maintained an extensive network of cities across Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East — administrative centers, military colonies, and commercial hubs connected by roads, aqueducts, and trade routes. The conventional historical narrative acknowledges a decline after the empire's fall, but the raw numbers are stark:
- 405 Roman cities tracked
- 33 survived as cities into the 8th century (8%)
- 372 were destroyed or depopulated (92%)
What Constitutes "Survival"¶
The key metric is whether a Roman settlement continued to function as a city — meaning it maintained urban density, administrative function, and economic activity — into the 8th century. Many sites that were once cities became small villages or were completely abandoned; their names might live on in geographic place names, but the urban settlement itself was gone.
This analysis provides a quantitative foundation for understanding just how transformative the collapse of Roman urban infrastructure was for European civilization — and how remarkable the cities that did survive (Rome, Paris, London, Cologne, etc.) are as continuous urban entities.