The Middle Ages are usually defined as the period in European history from about the 5th century to the late 15th century, roughly 500–1500 CE.

Quick answer: dates and big picture

Most historians place the Middle Ages:

  • Start: after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, often dated to 476 CE.
  • End: somewhere between about 1450 and 1500 CE, commonly tied to the Renaissance and Age of Discovery.

A simple way to remember it: about a thousand years in the middle between ancient Rome and the modern era, so roughly 500–1500 CE.

Mini breakdown of the period

Historians often divide the Middle Ages into three phases:

  1. Early Middle Ages (c. 500–1000)
    • Follows the fall of Rome, with new kingdoms forming across Europe.
  1. High Middle Ages (c. 1000–1250/1300)
    • Population growth, rising cities, universities, and the age of knights and castles.
  1. Late Middle Ages (c. 1300–1500)
    • Crises like the Black Death, but also the roots of the Renaissance and new exploration.

Why the dates aren’t exact

There is no single “official” start and end date; different historians and regions use slightly different markers:

  • Common start markers :
    • Fall of the Western Roman Empire (476).
    • Broader collapse of Roman authority in the 5th century.
  • Common end markers (vary by region and focus):
    • Fall of Constantinople (1453).
    • Columbus’s voyage to the Americas (1492).
    • Start of the Protestant Reformation (1517).

Forum and scholarly discussions often stress that the “Middle Ages” is a modern label, and real historical change was gradual, not a clean switch in a single year.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.