The Byzantine Empire
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Transcript The Byzantine Empire
The Byzantine Empire
7th Grade World History
By Ms. Thompson
The Fall of The Roman
Empire
The Empire existed from 330 to 1453
It got its name from the Roman Empire’s new capital Byzantium (330)
Became the Byzantine Empire in 395 with the official split of the
Roman Empire
In 476, became the only Roman Empire after the last Roman
Emperors were removed in the west
Emperor Diocletian (284-305): Divided the Roman Empire into east
and west
Emperor Constantine (310-337): Reunited the empire and moved the
capital to Byzantium
Emperor Theodosius I (379-395): Granted Barbarians land and made
orthodox Christianity the sole religion
Became permanently divided empire in 395 after his death
The Founding of
Byzantium
Founded by a Greek man named Byzas in 660 B.C. and
named Byzantium
Originally referred to as Nova Roma (New Rome), but
later renamed Constantinople for Constantine
Modeled after Rome
Religious symbols all over the city
Protected due to its location (near the Bosporus)
Had theaters, churches, aqueducts, bathhouses,
underground sewers, streetlights, medical and hospital
care and firefighters
Why So Successful?
Economic prosperity
Controlled major caravan
routes
Controlled sea traffic
Monopoly on silk production
Strong military
Best trained in the world
Navy had “Greek Fire” (a
flame thrower)
Walls
Diplomacy
Prevented invasions by
barbarians, Huns, Persians and
Russians
Justinian the Great
Born a peasant in the Balkans, well
educated and became Emperor at 45
years old
Served as Emperor from 527-565 A.D.
He was adopted by his uncle so he could be
the next Emperor
He married a woman named Theodora
who was considered below his class, but
he married her for love
He wanted to reunite the Roman Empire
Known as “the emperor who never
sleeps”
Theodora
Theodora would help guide Justinian
during his reign.
She helped to improve the lives of
women in the Byzantine Empire:
Divorce
Property ownership
Gave mothers guardian rights over
children
Death penalty for rape
Theodora died early in Justinian's reign,
548 A.D., and was buried at the Church
of the Holy Wisdom.
Justinian would not remarry
The Nika Riots
Occurred in 532 over taxing chariot racing to fund war
The people were being taxed for everything and they were tired of it.
The Hippodrome
A large arena were people gathered to watch chariot racing
Some event in the Hippodrome were known to lead to violence among the audience.
Fans would often cheer "Nika!” ("Conquer!", "Win!" and "Victory!”)
The Blues and the Greens: The most popular chariot team color
Blue was the team that Justinian liked best
The Riots
When the emperor takes his place in the stadium, there are chants of “Nika!”
The races begin but are soon cancelled. For five days, the rioters burn churches and
buildings.
Each day they return to the Hippodrome with new demands. One of these demands,
includes a new emperor.
Justinian wants to flee, but his wife stops him.
To end the riots, Justinian sends in soldiers to block the exits and kill the protesters. A total
of 30,000 people are killed.
Justinian's Laws
“Corpus Juris Civilius” (Body of Civil Law)
Reduced the constitutions of many emperors
into one code
Classified the major legal decisions of Rome
Made laws more fair and efficient (civil law)
Civil law deals with private matters only (EX:
business, contracts, estates, family relations,
accidents)
Made criminal laws harsher
The system became the basis of the legal
system in many European countries today.
Religion in the Byzantine
Empire
The emperor was
considered to be a
representative of Christ
and God Himself
Iconoclast Controversy
Icon: images of Jesus,
Mary and saints
People were ordered to
stop praying to images
Emperor Leo III ordered
all religious statues to
be destroyed and
religious images in
churches to be
covered
The Church of Hagia
Sophia
Also referred to as Church of the Holy Wisdom
It was the largest Byzantine church
First dedicated, in 360, by Emperor Constantine.
Rebuilt by Justinian after the Nika Riots
The Great Schism
The Byzantine split with Roman Catholicism began when Pope Leo III
crowned Charlemagne as the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire
This annoyed the Byzantines, because they were the real Holy Roman
Empire.
Charlemagne’s crowning made the Byzantine Emperor seem
unnecessary
Language: The Byzantine Church began to use Latin less.
Most patriarchs in Constantinople couldn’t read any Latin, and most
popes in Rome couldn’t read any Greek.
Different theologies:
The West (Latin) was more practical and, although fully believing in the
divinity of Christ, put emphasis on his humanity when depicting Jesus in
art — especially by making realistic crucifixes.
The East (Byzantine) was more theoretical and, although fully believing
in the humanity of Christ, focused on his divinity, which was much more
mysterious.
Religion in Areas Today:
Western Europe (Roman Catholic)
Eastern Europe (Orthodox)
Decline of the Empire
and Legacy
Declining Factors
Outside invasions
Economic: loss of monopoly over the eastern
Mediterranean
The Crusades
The fall of Constantinople
Legacy
Preserved Greco-Roman civilization and culture
Established and preserved the Eastern Orthodox
Church
Provided the model for Europe’s legal system
Resources
http://www.historyworld.net/wrldhis/PlainTextHistories.asp
?historyid=160
“World Civilization: Volume 1: To 1715” by Joseph M. Leon