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Constantine the Great

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Constantine the Great 'And God himself, whom Constantine worshipped, has ... the coin reads: SOLI INVICTO COMITI, which translates as Sol, invincible comrade. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Constantine the Great


1
Constantine the Great
  • And God himself, whom Constantine worshipped,
    has confirmed this truth by the clearest
    manifestations of his will, during the course,
    and at the end of his reign, and holding him up
    to the human race as an instructive example of
    godliness. -Eusebius Pamphilus
  • Julia W.

2
Early Years
  • Constantine was born on February 27, 272 or 273.
  • Was born Flavius Valerius Constantius.
  • Son of Constantius and Helena.

3
Tetrarchy
  • The empire is broken in half into east and west,
    with an emperor ruling each half emperors title
    Augustus
  • Each of the emperors chooses a junior ruler to
    help them junior rulers title Caesar
  • Constantine destroyed the tetrarchy and restored
    the concept of sole ruler.

4
The Contest July, 306
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
5
The Contest September, 307
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
6
The Contest 310 A.D.
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
7
The Contest May, 311
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
8
The Contest October, 312
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
9
The Contest 313 A.D.
Key AAugustus CCaesar RRetired lNot in
contest (yet) Dead
10
Constantine and Licinius
  • Constantine tries to appoint his brother-in-law
    Caesar instead of Licinius son.
  • Licinius refuses, and Constantine attacks him in
    the fall of 316.
  • Constantine does well, but then loses a major
    battle and is forced to come to terms.
  • Crispus, Constantinus (Constantines sons), and
    Licinius the younger (Licinius son) are named
    Caesars.

11
The Final Battle
  • Licinius began to persecute Christians.
  • Their armies met on July 3, 324 at Hadrianopolis,
    and Constantine was the victor.
  • They fought again on September 18, 324, and
    Constantine won.
  • Licinius surrendered, and Constantine sent him
    away.
  • In 325, Constantine killed Licinius and his son.

12
Constantine on a Coin
  • This is a very common copper coin that was
    probably issued sometime from 312-320.
  • The figure is Sol, the sun god. You can tell this
    because of the headdress.
  • The writing around the coin reads SOLI INVICTO
    COMITI, which translates as Sol, invincible
    comrade.
  • This coin is interesting because it has a picture
    of a Roman god on it, and Constantine converted
    to Christianity.

13
The Christian Constantine
  • Before the battle of Milvian Bridge, Constantine
    saw a cross in the sky with the inscription
    Conquer by this on it.
  • Constantine fought for the cross and was
    victorious in the battle.
  • He made Christianity the religion of the empire
    and stopped the persecution of the Christians.
  • Constantine included bishops in politics.

14
Constantine in History
  • In Christian history, Constantine is portrayed as
    a wonderful man who did everything right.
  • Constantine stopped the persecution of the
    Christians and made Christianity an important
    religion.
  • This (of course) made him popular among
    Christians.
  • For the next thousand years, most of the
    historians were Christian, so their accounts of
    Constantine are flattering.

15
The Arch of Constantine
  • In the tradition of the period, the Arch of
    Constantine is a usurped monument.
  • The arch depicts the Battle of Milvian Bridge
    (where Constantine defeated Maxentius).
  • It is made of materials that were stripped from
    other imperial monuments.
  • Inscription on the arch Constantine overcame
    his enemies by divine inspiration.

16
The Arch and Basilica of Constantine
17
Moving the Capitol
  • Constantine changed the capital from Rome to
    Constantinople.
  • Constantinople was dedicated on May 11, 330 as a
    private imperial residence it was not until 359
    that it became the new capital of the empire.
  • Constantinople was
  • a Christian capital
  • built on the cite of a Greek city, Byzantium
  • an excellent trade location
  • a better position to rule the empire from because
    it was more central than Rome.

18
Building Churches
  • Constantine built and restored many Christian
    churches.
  • The bigger churches were beautiful with mosaics
    covering the floors, walls, and ceilings.
  • Constantine often set aside time for himself to
    go and pray.
  • He frequently preached in various churches during
    his reign.

19
Running the Empire
  • Military
  • Divided the army in half.
  • One half is the frontier troops, the other is the
    central army.
  • Constantine made the city citizens pay a heavy
    tax called chrysargyron. ( The tax was so bad
    that even the Christians complained.)

20
Constantine the God?
  • The (Christian) historian Eusebius compared
    Constantine and his bishops the Apostles and
    Jesus Christ.
  • Constantine was buried in Constantinople with
    twelve fake sarcophagi, which symbolizes him as
    the thirteenth Apostle.
  • Constantine portrayed himself as holy and took to
    wearing a crown covered in jewels to remind the
    people of his rank.
  • In many pictures, Constantine has a halo of light
    around his head like Jesus Christ.

21
Succession
  • Constantines sons (Constantine II,
    Constantius,and Constans) and the son of his half
    brother (Flavius Dalmatius junior) were to be his
    heirs.
  • Constantines plan was for them to rule the
    empire as a tetrarchy.
  • That was a thoughtless move, because he had just
    destroyed the old tetrarchy!

22
Death
  • Constantine fell ill and was baptized by the
    bishop Eusebius.
  • He died at Ankyrona on May 22, 337.
  • His body was buried in Constantinople, which made
    the Roman people angry.
  • The senate deified Constantine. (How ironic!)
  • Constantine completely changed the course of
    history.

23
Bibliography
  • www.newadvent.org/cathen/04295c.htm This is a
    Christian website that I found by means of a
    search engine. Has an encyclopedia (about saints
    and such) with a bibliography on Constantine.
    Also has a primary source.
  • http//harpy.uccs.edu/roman A very helpful
    website with lots of color pictures of the roman
    world.
  • www.roman-emperors.org/conniei.htm An online
    encyclopedia of roman emperors, very detailed
    bibliographies some photographs.
  • Scarre, Chris. Chronicle of the Roman Emperors.
    London Thames Hudson Ltd, 1995- Great for
    basic information. Some color pictures
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