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The Byzantine Empire and Russia

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The Byzantine Empire and Russia Section 1: The Byzantine Empire Section 2: The Rise of Russia Section 3: Shaping Eastern Europe Section 1: The Byzantine Empire ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Byzantine Empire and Russia


1
The Byzantine Empire and Russia
  • Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe

2
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • Summary
  • The emperor Justinian expanded the Byzantine
    empire, erected grand buildings, and established
    a code of laws

3
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • During the Middle Ages, the cities of the Western
    Roman Empire crumbled
  • At the same time, the eastern part, called the
    Byzantine empire, became a rich center of world
    trade
  • The Eastern Greek Orthodox Church, not the Church
    of Rome, became the religion of the East

4
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • Emperor Justinian ruled the Byzantine empire from
    527 to 565
  • Justinian wanted his empire to be as great as
    ancient Rome
  • He started a building program to make the city of
    Constantinople beautiful

5
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • Justinians most important accomplishment was his
    collection of all the laws of ancient Rome
  • Justinians Code as this collection of laws came
    to be known, influenced legal thinkers for
    hundreds of years

6
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • The Byzantine empire lasted 1,000 years
  • Byzantine emperors built a strong government,
    that was supported by an equally strong economy
  • Byzantine civilization blended Christian beliefs
    with Greek science, philosophy, arts, and
    literature

7
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • Scholars preserved the classic works of ancient
    Greece and wrote their own histories
  • They also expanded Roman engineering and law

8
Section 1 The Byzantine Empire
  • However, in 1453, the Ottoman Turks conquered
    Constantinople
  • Despite this defeat, Byzantine culture continued
    to influence western civilizations for centuries

9
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • Summary
  • In its early years Russia was influenced by the
    Slavs, Vikings, Byzantines, and Mongols

10
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • In the 700s and 800s, the Vikings settled among
    the native Slavs on the vast Eurasian plain
  • These two groups mixed and became the early
    Russians
  • The city of Kiev was the center of the first
    Russian state

11
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • Other civilizations influenced the early Russians
  • Byzantine missionaries brought Christianity to
    Russia
  • In time, Byzantine Christians formed the Russian
    Orthodox Church

12
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • The Russians borrowed from Byzantine art, music,
    and architecture
  • They built their churches with Byzantine-style
    domes

13
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • In the early 1200s, fierce warriors called the
    Mongols conquered Russia
  • The Absolute power of the Mongols served as a
    model for later Russian rulers
  • Most important, Mongol rule cut Russia off from
    western Europe while Europeans were advancing in
    science and art

14
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • Little by little, the princes of Moscow grew more
    powerful
  • The location of their city on river trade routes
    helped
  • When the Russian Orthodox Church moved to Moscow,
    the city became the spiritual capital of Russia

15
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • In 1380, the princes of Moscow defeated the
    Mongols
  • Czar Ivan the Great brought most of northern
    Russia under his control
  • Ivan the Great, and his grandson, Ivan the
    Terrible were absolute rulers
  • Together they began a tradition of absolute power
    government in Russia

16
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • 1200-1300s Mongols
  • Force Russian to accept their rule
  • Force Russians to pay tribute
  • Introduce absolute power

17
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • 1462-1505 Ivan the Great
  • Limits power of the nobles
  • Takes title of czar
  • Claims ruler was like highest god

18
Section 2 The Rise of Russia
  • 1547-1584 Ivan the Terrible
  • Centralizes royal power
  • Takes power from the nobles
  • Kills nobles who revolt
  • Destroys towns that do not support him

19
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • Summary
  • Ethnic diversity contributed to the varied
    cultural traditions of Eastern Europe

20
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • During the Early Middle Ages, many different
    groups settled in Eastern Europe
  • West Slavs settled in Poland
  • South Slavs and other ethnic groups moved into
    the Balkans
  • Jews went to Poland to escape persecution in
    Western Europe
  • Waves of Asian peoples, such as the Huns and
    Magyars, also migrated into the area

21
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • As a result of this immigration, Eastern Europe
    became a region of many different peoples,
    languages, and cultures

South Slavs
Jews
Eastern Europe
Huns
West Slavs
22
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • Eastern Europe was made up of many small kingdoms
  • These kingdoms often fought with each other
  • Wars and alliances caused the blending of cultures

23
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • Powerful neighboring states also influenced
    Eastern Europe
  • Byzantine missionaries brought Eastern Orthodox
    Christianity and Byzantine culture
  • German missionaries and knights spread Roman
    Catholic Christianity to Poland and Hungry

24
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • Eastern European kingdoms faced threats from
    inside and out
  • The Kingdom of Poland fought against Germans,
    Russians, and Mongols
  • In 1386, Poland formed an alliance with another
    powerful kingdom, Lithuania, that made the
    combined nation very powerful

Poland
25
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • However, Polish nobles slowly gained power, which
    would later cause the decline of Poland

26
Section 3 Shaping Eastern Europe
  • Both Hungary and Serbia had some success
    enlarging their kingdoms
  • However, both were eventually conquered by the
    Ottoman Turks

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