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The Commonwealth of Byzantium

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Title: The Commonwealth of Byzantium


1
Chapter 13
  • The Commonwealth of Byzantium

2
Byzantine Empire
  • -After the collapse of the western half of the
    Roman Empire the Byzantine eastern section
    survived for another millennium.
  • - Byzantium dominated the eastern Mediterranean
    world politically and economically for centuries.
  • - Even after its collapse the Byzantine Empires
    influence could be seen in the Slavic peoples of
    Eastern Europe and Russia.

3
The Early Byzantine Empire
  • At its height Byzantium included Greece,
    Anatolia, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, northeast
    Africa, and the Balkans.
  • Byzantium faced threats from the Sasanid dynasty
    in Persia but managed to escape the Germanic
    invasions that had devastated the western half of
    the empire.

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5
Political Structure
  • the Byzantine state was marked by a highly
    centralized rule centered around a remarkably
    powerful emperor.
  • Byzantine emperors wielded a mixture of political
    and religious authority known as caesaropapism.
  • In theory, the emperor possessed absolute
    authority in all political, military, judicial,
    and religious affairs

6
Justinian
  • Justinian, despite humble origins, became the
    most influential of the Byzantine emperors.
  • attempted to re-create the Roman Empire.
  • Justinians codification of Roman law, as seen in
    the Corpus iuris civilis, was the emperors most
    influential legal and political contribution.
  • The general Belisariuss conquests reconstructed
    most of the Roman Empire.

7
Did it last???
  • A combination of limited Byzantine resources and
    Arabic expansion made holding the old empire
    together impossible.
  • The former western half of the empire
    increasingly fell to successor states.
  • The Frankish king Charlemagne received an
    imperial crown from the pope in 800 and Otto of
    Saxony claimed to rule the west in 962.

8
Byzantine Economy and Society
  • While its political authority fluctuated over the
    centuries, Byzantium remained an economic power.
  • Byzantium was at its strongest when free peasants
    formed the engine that drove the state.
  • free peasants were bolstered by the theme system
    that provided land in return for military
    service.

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10
Byzantine Economy and Society
  • The consolidation of power and land in the hands
    of the nobles not only hurt the peasants but also
    damaged the Byzantine empire militarily.
  • Constantinople remained the major center of trade
    and industry in the Mediterranean world.
  • major innovation was the rise of a silk industry
  • Byzantiums domination of trade is best shown in
    the bezant, which became the standard currency in
    the Mediterranean for centuries.
  • Constantinoplethe largest city in Europe, with a
    population of around one millionstood in the
    center of everything and was a worthy successor
    to Rome as the city of the Mediterranean basin.

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12
Classical Heritage and Orthodox Christianity
  • Byzantium was most strongly influenced by Greek
    culture.
  • Greek became the official language
  • Byzantine education clearly showed the Greek
    influence
  • a state-supported school system provided for
    widespread literacy.
  • A school for the study of law, medicine, and
    philosophy in Constantinople survived for a
    thousand years.

13
Classical Heritage and Orthodox Christianity
  • Big difference between the western and eastern
    halves of the empire in ecclesiastical matters
  • The Byzantine emperors played a very active role
    in religious issues
  • Constantine calling together the Council of
    Nicaea to attack Arian views on the nature of
    Jesus
  • Leo IIIs iconoclasm is a classic example of
    imperial meddling in religious affairs.

14
Council of Nicaea, 325 CE
15
Classical Heritage and Orthodox Christianity
  • Monasticism
  • Byzantine monasteries were known for their
    spiritual and social aid to their communities
  • Tensions over issues ranging from doctrine to
    power led to the patriarch and pope mutually
    excommunicating each other in 1054,
  • the beginning of the schism between the Eastern
    Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.

16
The Influence of Byzantium in Eastern Europe
  • Byzantine power was threatened by internal social
    problems and challenges from the west and east.
  • The sacking of Constantinople by the Fourth
    Crusade in 1204 devastated Byzantium and
    increased tensions between the old halves of the
    Roman Empire.

17
The 4th Crusade and Constantinople falls
18
The Influence of Byzantium in Eastern Europe
  • The victory of the Saljuq Turks at Manzikert in
    1071 led to the loss of Anatolia and economic
    devastation.
  • After centuries of decay, Constantinople fell to
    the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
  • While Byzantiums direct hold on the
    Mediterranean world threatened by Islamic
    expansion,
  • its influence on the Slavic peoples of Eastern
    Europe and Russia only increased.

19
The Influence of Byzantium in Eastern Europe
  • Greek Orthodox missionaries spread the faith
    northward
  • Two missionaries, Saints Cyril and Methodius,
    adopted the Greek alphabet to the Slavic tongue
    to create the Cyrillic alphabet,
  • which allowed for the further spread of religious
    as well as secular thought.

20
The Influence of Byzantium in Eastern Europe
  • Prince Vladimirs conversion turned Kiev, the
    first center of Russian power, into a center of
    Byzantine culture.
  • By the sixteenth century Russians spoke of
    Moscow as the worlds third Rome.

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