Slavs Migration, Settlement, and the Making of Medieval GreeceBetween the sixth and tenth centuries, the Greek peninsula underwent one of the most profound demographic and cultural transformations in Mediterranean history. When Slavic-speaking peoples crossed the Danube, driven southward by plague, climate deterioration, and the organizational pressure of the Avar Khaganate, they entered a Byzantine world already weakened by Justinian's overextended wars and devastated by pandemic. Over two centuries, these settlers established autonomous tribal enclaves known as Sklaviniai across the Macedonian interior, the Thessalian plain, and deep into the Peloponnese, fundamentally reshaping the human geography of the Greek world.Yet the story did not end in displacement. Through a remarkable combination of military recovery, administrative ingenuity, ecclesiastical Christianization, and economic interdependence, the Byzantine Empire gradually absorbed the Slavic settlers into the Orthodox Greek-speaking provincial world. The result was neither the total replacement that Fallmerayer's notorious 19th-century thesis claimed, nor the seamless Hellenic continuity that Greek nationalist historiography insisted upon, but something far more interesting: a genuine synthesis, confirmed by modern ancient DNA research, that produced the medieval Greek civilization from which the modern Greek world ultimately descends. Drawing on written sources, archaeology, toponymic analysis, and cutting-edge genetic science, this book reconstructs the full arc of that transformation.