Title: Europe
 1Europe
  2History  Government(major events)
- Ancient Greece  Rome  laid foundations of 
 Europe  Western civilization
- Greeks introduced ideas of democracy, art, 
 literature, drama, philosophy, mathematics,
 medicine  highly influential
3The Roman Empire
- 27 B.C.  476 A.D. 
- (The fall of the Roman Empire 
- began in 398 A.D.)
41st Emperor of Rome
- Historians usually date the beginning of the 
 Roman Empire from 27 BC when the Roman Senate
 gave Octavius the name Augustus and he became the
 first emperor after many years of bitter civil
 war.
5The Roman Empire
- Although the Roman Empire began in the city of 
 Rome, it gradually expanded over hundreds of
 years to include what are today known as North
 Africa, the Middle East, southern England, Spain,
 Switzerland, Austria, and parts of Germany and
 France.
6The Roman Empire
- Roman Empire  imitated Greeks (art, literature, 
 science, architecture)
- Had own developments in government, law, and 
 engineering  built vast network of roads,
 bridges  aqueducts
7The Roman Army 
- was spread throughout Western Europe. 
- each part had its own idea as to who should be 
 emperor.
- When one part succeeded in putting its own man 
 into the position of emperor, another part of the
 army would fight to put its own man in power.
- From 211-284 AD, there were 23 soldier-emperors 
 - and 20 of these men were killed by rivals!
8Emperor Diocletian 
- 284 AD - he realized that something had to be 
 done or the Roman Empire would disintegrate.
- He decided to divide the Roman Empire in two to 
 make it easier to rule - he created the Western
 Empire and the Eastern Empire, each with its own
 leader.
9Why was the empire attacked by these fierce 
tribes of people? 
- Tribes such as the Goths wanted to move south 
 into parts of Europe that experienced a better
 climate that would assist their farming.
- This, of course, could only bring them into 
 conflict with the Romans
- Also, in about AD 190, Rome also experienced a 
 succession of emperors who did a very poor job of
 ruling and thus the Roman Empire became weaker
 much easier to conquer.
10Emperor Constantine 
- In the late 300s became the first Christian 
 emperor of Rome
- made Christianity the official religion of the 
 Roman Empire
- Emperor from 306 to 337. 
- 1st Roman emperor to convert to Christianity 
 (issued the Edict of Milan in 313) which
 proclaimed tolerance of all religions throughout
 the empire.
11Emperor Constantine 
- Constantine moved the capital of the empire from 
 Rome to the city of Byzantium.
- This left the western empire very vulnerable 
- He built a new city on the site of the city of 
 Byzantium and named it Constantinople after
 himself.
- Today the city is called Istanbul  is located in 
 the country of Turkey.
12The Fall of Rome
- 398 AD, the leader of the Visigoths realized that 
 the Roman Army was so thinly spread, that Rome
 itself was for the taking.
- The Visigoths moved cautiously south  in 
 410 AD he captured the city of Rome. The city was
 sacked.
- In 455 AD , Rome was attacked again. This time 
 the damage was done by the Vandals. The city
 suffered serious damage.
13The Fall of Rome
- In 476 AD, the last Roman emperor in the west, 
 Romulus, was removed from power by the leader of
 the Goths.
- This date is usually used by historians as the 
 year the Roman Empire ended.
14The Roman Empire
- The grandeur of Rome has had long-lasting effects 
 on the societies of the entire world.
- Evidence of the brilliance and creativity of the 
 Romans can be found in many modern countries
 remains of roads, walls, baths, basilicas,
 amphitheaters, and aqueducts.
- These show the technological advances made by the 
 engineers and architects of the Roman Empire.
15The Roman Empire
- Many modern civic buildings have been built using 
 the Romanesque styling.
- Perhaps the most important and far-reaching 
 contributions were their administrative
 institutions - the legal codes and government
 systems - that have influenced western political
 life.
16Roman Empire
- As the western part of the Roman Empire, 
 including the city of Rome, began to be taken
 over by invading tribes, the eastern part of the
 Roman Empire continued to be successful and the
 city of Constantinople grew.
- Constantinople was more easily defended from 
 intruders than the city of Rome and was therefore
 able to avoid being taken over.
17Roman Empire
- The city of Constantinople became 
 the center of the Byzantine Empire.
- The people of Constantinople carried on the 
 traditions and culture of the Roman Empire, but
 since the city is located where Europe and Asia
 meet, the Byzantine Empire slowly became a
 mixture of Asian, Roman, and Greek cultures and
 people.
- After Constantine, the most famous Byzantine 
 leader was the Emperor Justinian who together
 with his wife, Theodora, ruled from 527 A.D. to
 565 A.D.
18Roman Empire
- Roman law was used as a reference by later 
 governments to write the laws for their
 countries.
- Two examples of characteristics of Roman law 
- the law considered above all the rights of 
 individuals
- a person is innocent until proven guilty. 
- Are these characteristics similar to the laws we 
 have today in the United States?
- Why these are important laws? 
- What would happen if these laws did not exist?  
19Roman Empire to the Byzantine Empire
- Late 300s, Christianity became the official 
 religion of the Roman Empire
- Was ruled by TWO emperors  Eastern half  
 Western half  developed different cultures,
 politics, and religious traditions formed.
20Roman Empire to the Byzantine Empire
- In the 400s, Germanic groups overthrew Roman rule 
 in the western half of Roman Empire.
- When the Western half fell, the Eastern half of 
 the Roman Empire became known as Byzantine Empire
 with the capital still at Constantinople.
21Byzantine Empire
(AKAEastern Roman Empire) 
 22Byzantine Empire
- Emperor Heraclius made sweeping reforms, forever 
 changing the face of the Roman Empire.
- Greek was readopted as the language of government 
 - thus Latin influence faded.
23Byzantine Empire
- By 610, the eastern part of the Roman Empire had 
 come under Greek influence and evolved into what
 modern historians now call the Middle Age
 Byzantine Empire, although the Empire was never
 called that by its contemporaries.
24Byzantine Empire
- The Byzantines continued to call themselves 
 Romans until their fall to Ottoman Turks in 1453.
 
- ? That year the eastern part of the Roman Empire 
 was ultimately ended by the Fall of
 Constantinople.
25Byzantine Empire
- Even though Mehmed II - the conqueror of 
 Constantinople, declared himself the Emperor of
 the Roman Empire, but Constantine XI, ?
 emperor of the Byzantine Empire during 1453 - is
 considered the last Roman Emperor.
26The Middle Ages
- AD 500 to 1500 
- Began after the Fall of Rome 
- Is considered the period between ancient and 
 modern times
- Feudalism developedsystem in which monarchs or 
 lords gave land to nobles in return for pledges
 of loyalty.
- This replaced centralized government
27Feudalism
- During the Middle Ages, peasants could no longer 
 count on the Roman army to protect them.
- German, Viking, and Magyar (the largest ethnic 
 group of the Huns in Hungary) tribes overran
 homes and farms throughout Europe.
-  The peasants turned to the landowners, often 
 called lords, to protect them.
- Many peasants remained free, but most became 
 serfs.
28Feudalism
- A serf was bound to the land. 
-  He could not leave w/o buying 
-  his freedom, an unlikely 
-  occurrence in the Middle Ages. 
- Life for a serf was not much 
-  better than the life of a slave. 
- - Only difference a serf could not be sold to 
 another manor.
29Expansion of Europe
- 1000s  western European armies fought the 
 Crusades  a series of brutal religious wars to
 win Palestine (birthplace of Christianity)
- Failed to win permanent control of region, but 
 did extend trade routes to eastern Mediterranean
 world
- 1300s  Renaissance began  300 year period of 
 discovery  learning  great advances in European
 civilization
30Renaissance
- Europeans made many great scientific discoveries 
 and inventions, explored other regions of the
 world, and created great works of art, literature
 and music.
- New interest in cultures of ancient Greece  Rome 
- Scientific advances made  Gutenberg press 
 (movable type in printing)
- The increase in the production of books aided in 
 religious movement called The Reformation
 lessened power of Roman Catholic Church
- Beginnings of Protestantism
31The Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Turkish???? ????? ??????? Devlet-i 
Âliye-yi Osmâniyye
  32The Ottoman Empire
- Othman was the founder of the Ottoman Empire in 
 what is now known as Balkan Peninsula.
- Othman at first raided Christian territory. He 
 found many Arabs, Iranians, and Turkmen nomads
 willing to follow him for money.
- In 1326, his son, Orhan, captured Bursa, Turkey. 
 This gave the Ottomans a military and
 administrative base.
- Finally Constantinople (now Istanbul) was 
 captured by Mehmed II in 1453.
33The Ottoman Empire
- The empire had a practice of taking Christian 
 children as tribute and training them to be
 feared soldiers and able administrators of taxes.
 
- These Christian captives were called Janissaries. 
34The Ottoman Empire
- The Ottoman Empire was a force to be reckoned 
 with and was at its height under Suleyman. ?
- After Suleyman retired, the empire began to go 
 downhill.
35Changing Europe
- The Enlightenment (AKA  Age of Reason) 
- late 1600s to early 1700s 
- led to political and economic revolutions 
- emphasized the importance of reason  
 questioning long-standing traditions  values
36Changing Europe
- English Bill of Rights - limited the monarchy 
- French Revolution - overthrew the monarchy  
 spread ideals of democracy
- 1800s - uprisings challenged power of monarchs 
- The Industrial Revolution began in England  
 spread to other countries.
- Power-driven machinery  new methods of 
 production - transformed life in Europe
- Middle class developed 
- Early 1900s - 2 world wars resulte in major 
 changes in Europe
37First half of the 1900sEurope was the center of 
devastating wars
- The complex system of alliances and Great Power 
 support was extremely unstable
- Among the Balkan groups harboring resentments 
 over past defeats, the Serbs maintained
 particular animosity toward the Austro-Hungarian
 annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
38First half of the 1900sEurope was the center of 
devastating wars
- Leading to WWI 
- In June 1914, a Serbian terrorist assassinated 
 Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of
 Austria-Hungary, which then held the Serbian
 government responsible.
39- Princip attempted suicide, first with the use of 
 his pistol after the assassination, then by
 ingesting cyanide, but he vomited the past-date
 poison. The pistol was wrestled from his hand
 before he had a chance to fire another shot.
- Princip was too young to receive the death 
 penalty, being 27 days short of his 20 birthday
 at the time of the assassination.
- Instead, he received the maximum sentence of 20 
 years in prison.
- He was held in harsh conditions which were 
 worsened by the war. He contracted
 tuberculosis, and had one of his arms amputated
 in prison when the disease infected an arm bone.
- He died on April 28, 1918 at TerezÃn (a place 
 which, under the Nazi regime, in the 1940s, would
 become infamous as the Theresienstadt
 concentration camp), 3 years  10 months after he
 assassinated the Archduke and Duchess.
- At the time of his death, Princip weighed around 
 88 lbs, weakened by malnutrition, blood loss from
 his amputated arm, and disease.
40First half of the 1900sEurope was the center of 
devastating wars
- Leading to WWI 
- Austria-Hungary delivered an ultimatum to Serbia. 
 Serbia believed that the terms were too
 humiliating to accept.
- Although Serbia did submit to the ultimatum, 
 Austria-Hungary declared the response
 unsatisfactory and recalled its ambassador.
- This gives Austria an excuse to declare war on 
 Serbia.
41First half of the 1900sEurope was the center of 
devastating wars
- Leading to WWI (cont) 
- Russia supported Serbia. 
- Once the Serbian response was rejected, the 
 system of alliances began to operate
 automatically, with Germany supporting
 Austria-Hungary and France backing Russia.
- When Germany invaded France through Belgium, the 
 conflict escalated into World War I.
42Sinking of the Lusitania
- The Lusitania was an American passenger ship 
 traveling to Britain (that we were SECRETLY
 transporting weapons on)
- It was torpedoed by a German submarine b/c 
 Germany had suspicions that it WAS carrying
 weapons.
- We claim it was NOT carrying weapons 
- This event causes the USA to enter the war 
 against Germany  1917.
43Bloody Sunday Massacre
- January 22, 1905 - "Bloody Sunday Massacre" by 
 Tsarist troops in St. Petersburg left Russian
 workers dead and cost Tsar Nicholas support among
 the workers and farmers.
- Beginning of Communism 
44Mustard Gas
- The most deadly biological weapon that was used 
 in the trenches.
- It was odorless  took 12 hrs to take effect 
- Very Powerful - only small amounts needed to be 
 effective and it remained active for several
 weeks when it landed in the soil
- It made the skin blister, the eyes sore and the 
 victim would start to vomit.
- It would cause internal and external bleeding, 
 and would target the lungs.
- It could take up to 5 weeks to die!
45Armenian Genocide
- 1.5 million Armenians were killed, out of a total 
 of 2.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
 because they were Christian  non-Muslim
 non-Turkish inhabitants should either be forcibly
 Islamized, or otherwise they ought to be
 destroyed
- American Protestant missionaries did the most to 
 save the remnants of the death marches, the
 orphaned children.
- Armenians all over the world commemorate this 
 great tragedy on April 24, because it was on that
 day in 1915 when 300 Armenian leaders, writers,
 thinkers and professionals in Constantinople
 (present day Istanbul) were rounded up, deported
 and killed.
- Also on that day in Constantinople, 5,000 of the 
 poorest Armenians were butchered in the streets
 and in their homes.
46World War I - Summary
- WWI (1914-1918) began from rivalries among 
 European powers for colonies  economic power
- Monarchies collapsed in Austria-Hungary, Germany 
 Russia  other countries
- Versailles Peace Treaty found Germany guilty of 
 starting the war
- Demands that Germany make Reparations for 
 damages
- Economic depression started after the war
47Versailles Peace Treaty
- Treaty between Germany and the Allies. 
- Germany was forced to pay heavily for her defeat. 
 
- Germany had to take responsibility for starting 
 the war and had to pay reparations (about 393.6
 Billion!).
- Germany was also divided in two. 
- It was a very harsh treaty! 
- This is essentially the cause of WWII
48Adolf Hitler, 1923
- So it had all been in vain. 
- In vain 
- all the sacrifices and privations... 
- In vain 
- the hours in which, with moral fear clutching at 
 our hearts we nevertheless did our duty
- In vain 
- the deaths of two millions ... had they died for 
 this?
- So that a gang of wretched criminals could lay 
 their hands on the Fatherland.
49World War II
- Dictators able to take control in Italy  Germany 
 - Mussolini  Hitler
- Expanded their territoriesWWII broke out in 1939 
- By 1945, most of Europe  rest of world were 
 involved
- Holocaustkilling of more than 6 million European 
 Jews  others by the Nazis
50Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7th, 1941
- Exactly 70 years ago today, Japan launched more 
 than 350 fighters, bombers, and torpedo planes
 against the U.S. naval base in Hawaii -- a "date
 which will live in infamy," in the words of
 President Franklin Roosevelt. In fact, that
 Sunday morning is so seared into America's memory
 that the tumult of the weeks and months afterward
 is often overlooked.
51World War II to the Cold War
- Europe was left ruined  divided by WWII 
- Most of Eastern Europe came under communist 
 control
- Western Europe backed democracy  received 
 economic  military support from the U.S.
- Cold War  Western Europe became secure/ Eastern 
 Europe lagged behind
52Cold War
- 1945 to 1991 - revolts against Communist rule 
 swept across Europe
- Berlin Wall came down - 1989 
- 1990 - 2 Germanies reunited 
- Czechoslovakia split into 2 countries 
- Yugoslavia split (p. 292-3 in textbook!)
531945-1991
- After WWII, Europe was dived into Communist 
 Eastern Europe  backed by the Soviet Union  and
 noncommunist Western Europe  backed by the
 United States  which resulted in a power
 struggle between the two sides called the Cold
 War.
- Europe endured the Cold War until revolts against 
 communist rule in Eastern Europe led to the fall
 of communism.
54Languages
- 50 different languages  over 100 dialects of 
 languages
- Almost all languages are in Indo-European 
 familySlavic, Baltic, Germanic, Romance (come
 from Latin), Greek, Albanian  Celtic
- Many countries have one or more official languages
55Religion
- Christianity  dominant religion deeply shaped 
 European values, societies  cultures
- Roman Catholicism  largest Christian faith in 
 Europe  Southern Europe, parts of Western Europe
 northern part of Eastern Europe
- Protestant faiths (Lutheran, Anglican  Reformed) 
 in North  Northwestern Europe
- Eastern Orthodox  southern part of eastern 
 Europe
56Religion
- Muslims live in Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovia, 
 Bulgaria, and Kosovo
- Jewish communities found in all major cities 
- ? Religious freedom did not come to Eastern 
 Europe until fall of communism in later 1991.
57Religious conflict
- Balkan Peninsula  Roman Catholic Croats, Eastern 
 Orthodox Serbs,  Bosnian Muslims fought over
 land in Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Kosovo  Serbs fought Albanian Muslims
58Northern Ireland
- In Northern Ireland, Roman Catholics and 
 Protestants have been in conflict for years.
- Conflict 
- Roman Catholics want to be part of Ireland 
-  (mostly Catholic) 
- Protestants favor keeping ties with the UK 
-  (mostly Protestant) 
- Conflicts between Irish Catholics and Northern 
 Irish Protestants stem from disagreements over
 whether to unify Ireland and/or remain under the
 British throne and a difference in religious
 beliefs.
59Ethnic Diversity
- Results from centuries of migration, cultural 
 diffusion, conflict  changing borders
- Most Europeans descend from Indo-European or 
 Mediterranean peoples
- Recent immigrants from Asia, Africa  Caribbean 
 during last 100 years
60Ethnic Groups
- 160 ethnic groups 
- Most countries have one major ethnic group Ex 
 Sweden 89 are Swedes
61Ethnic Tensions
- Some have led to armed conflict 
- Balkan Peninsula 
- 1990s battleground among Serbs, Croats, Bosnian 
 Muslims, and Kosovar Albanians
- All had been united under communist-ruled 
 Yugoslavia after WWII
- Ethnic tensions erupted after communism fell.
62United Nations
- This includes 5 veto-wielding permanent members  
 China, France, Russia, the UK, and the US  based
 on the great powers that were the victors of
 World War II.
63Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo
- Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo are sites of recent 
 violent ethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia.
- Ethnic hatreds here fueled the greatest European 
 violence since WWII.
- Serbs instituted a program of ethnic cleansing, 
 killing ethnic Albanians and expelling them
- International forces now keep peace in the 
 region.
64Population 
- 3rd most populous continent 
- High population density 
- Highly industrialized urban areas near mineral 
 resources  fertile land
65Urbanization
- Began during Industrial Revolution (late 
 1700s)transformed Europe from rural,
 agricultural society to urban, industrial society
- People moved to cities to work in factories 
- 75 of Europeans live in cities today 
- Overcrowding  pollution are problems
66Population Movements
- 1800s to 1900s Europeans migrated to the 
 Americas, parts of Africa  the South Pacific
- Since mid-1900s, few have permanently migrated 
- Now many are migrating to Europe 
- Guest worker program started in 50s  60s to fill 
 jobs
- Overall population is shrinkingsome of worlds 
 lowest birthrates.
67European Union
- In 2007, Turkey stated that they were aiming to 
 comply with EU law by 2013, but Brussels has
 refused to back this as a deadline for
 membership.
- In a visit to Germany on 31 October 2012, Turkish 
 Prime Minister made clear that Turkey was
 expecting membership in the EU to be realized by
 2023, the 100th Anniversary of the Turkish
 Republic.
68A New Era for Europe
- Europe is unifying and rebuilding former 
 communist economies
- The European Union formed in 1990s - organization 
 whose goal was a united Europe in which goods,
 services,  workers could move freely among
 member countries
- 1999 - Euro adopted as common currency 
- 27 member nations as of 2011