QUOTE (ThinkCommieSHEEP @ Mar 18 2008, 07:56 PM)

Wow you guys, I just asked a question. I doesn't mean I believe in it I just want some info on this point of view. If you can't deal with the idea of an alternative belief that deals with history then don't answer. Why shot down someone who wants information whether it be true or not???
Heavens, Ship and Mule, how dare you not approach this topic with all the respect and piety due to Jesus playing footie. And thank goodness you got here before I did to toughen up the OP before I hit him with historiography.
Mr Sheep: the idea is utterly ludicrous. Besides the sheer bulk of verified documents we have, there are several international events recorded in several dating systems in different civilizations that allow us to cross-check calendars. And there are no unaccounted for holes. Some false premises that this silly idea depends on.
1) Western Europe incorporates the entire world. If the entire world were missing centuries, they'd be gone in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, too. Unfortunately, all these cultures can happily account for themselves through the entirety of the Middle Ages.
2) Everyone in Western Europe was too stupid to write anything down, or that anything from that period is a fake. People who allege this have no idea of the amount of actual material dating back to the Early Middle Ages. There's far too much bulk to fake without incredibly obvious parchment/vellum-faking factories. Furthermore, there's an entire study of studying documents, how they were made, how they fit in with their time period and history. Every single historian in every single country on the planet since the Middle Ages involved with the Fake. This is wholly illogical and deeply ignorant of the actual field of history and of actual historians.
3) Language. Language develop at a reasonably predictable rate. This time period essentially covers the rise of the Romance languages out of Late Vulgar Latin. And we have a full record of those changes largely according to established timelines. According to this theory, all those languages would have perforce spring up over night, and people who one day spoken together with mutual intelligence would, the next day, not be able to communicate with the neighbours. There is no record of this happening, ever, but is the sort of thing someone, somewhere would record.
So in conclusion, they only way this could be true is if the progenitor of the idea were grossly misinformed about historical realities or very stupid. Now an interesting debate would be which of the two -- unless you paid $14.95 for him to tell you all about his idea... That'd settle it pretty quick.
--Jaylemurph