Hunnic Empireball

Hunnic Empireball, also known as Hunball, was a nomadic empire in Central Asia, and later, Eastern and Central Europe.

History
Hunnic  Empireball may have decended from the Xiongnu, a Turkic Confederacy in Eastern Asia, who were also called the Huns. Invading Europe, Hunnic Empireball caused the Great Migration of the native Germanic tribes, thereby causing the Gothic War and the Battle of Adrianople (378 CE), as well as the Sack of Rome (410) by the Visigoths, as well as the creations of the Visigothic Kingdomball, the Kingdom of the Suebiball, and the Vandal Kingdomball. Led by Attila the Hun from 434 CE to his death in 453 CE, Hunnic Empireball expanded into Europe until being defeated in 451 CE at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, against a coalition of Germanic Tribes, led by Flavius Aetius. Hunnic Empireball eventually invaded Italy, but was unable to take Romeball, and was convinced by Pope Leo I to turn back. After Attila's death at his wedding with a Germanic princess (possibly after either a nosebleed, causing him to choke to death, or from heavy drinking, causing internal bleeding from esophageal varices), Hunnic Empireball fell into decline, and eventually disintigrated into the native populations.