Title: Heirs of Rome
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2Heirs of Rome
- The Byzantine Empire
- The Muslim Empire
- Christian Europe
3The Empire at its height, c 250
4Diocletian, The Tetrarchy, 285 CE
5In 324, Constantine moves East
6The Germanic Tribes c. 362
7Theodosius, 379-395 The last Emperor who could
claim to rule both East and West. Upon his
death, the empire was divided between his two
sons, Arcadius (East) and Honorius
(West)
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9Romes real last gasps! Theodoric the Great
489-526
- - Ostrogoth king ruled Italy from Rome after
killing Odovacer - His rule was enlightened, peaceful and just-
praised by Romans barbarians. - Retained the Roman Senate, civil service and
schools. Old, aristocratic families still held
high positions in the government
10Greco-Roman culture lived on The Byzantine Empire
11The Byzantine Empire, The East Roman Empire, 550
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13Justinian the Great, 527-565
- Three principal goals 1)
restore the western provinces 2) reform
the laws and institutions 3) promote art
and architecture
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15Trade and Industry flourished
16Hagia Sophia, 532-537
17Mosaics
18Corpus Juris Civilis, the Body of Civil Law
19The Byzantine Legacy
- The codification of the laws of ancient Rome
under Justinian - Preserved and expanded the philosophy, science,
mathematics and literature of ancient Greece. - It prevented Muslim Arabs from advancing into
Europe
20Around 610, Muhammad was a prosperous merchant
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23The Muslim Golden AgeThe 8th 9th Centuries
- The Arab Empire stretched from Spain to India and
was unified by a common language-Arabic,
religion-Islam and culture - Muslims preserved and expanded the
Greco-Roman-Byzantine achievements in science,
philosophy and mathematics
24Muslim contributions to civilization
- Education- great universities at Cairo, Baghdad
and Cordova - Mathematics- introduced Arabic numerals,
furthered the study of algebra, geometry, and
trigonometry - Science- discovered many chemical compounds,
including sulfuric acid - Agriculture- improved farming by crop rotation
- Industry- Cordovan leather Damascus swords
damask cloth crystal glass smooth paper
beautiful rugs - Navigation- they believed the world to be round
- Literature- 1001 Arabian Nights
- Medicine- used anesthetics, compiled medical texts
25The Mongols Genghis Khan
- In 1258, Baghdad was plundered and burned. 50,000
dead, including the last Baghdad Caliph - For 200 years, Mongols devastated palaces,
libraries and universities
26The Mongol Empire at its height
27- The cultural greatness of the Byzantine and
Islamic Empires enriched the western world but - did not produce the major breakthroughs that
created the modern world. That is the singular
achievement of western Europe.
28The Church as Unifier
- Became the dominant institution after the
collapse of Roman authority - assumed many
political functions - It preserved the high culture of the Greco-Roman
civilization - Membership in a universal religion (Catholic)
replaced membership in a universal empire (Rome)
29Saul of Tarsus became St. Paul the Apostle who
transformed a small Jewish sect into the religion
of Christianity which taught that Jesus was
savior and God. 34-64 Early Christians were
brutally persecuted by the Romans for over 200
years.
30Christianity gained many converts
- People were dissatisfied with the old pagan
religions and were attracted by the ideas of One
God, equality, universal love and eternal
salvation - Early Christians displayed courage and sincerity,
willing to suffer persecution rather than
renounce their faith. - The concept of equality appealed to the poor and
oppressed - Missionaries could travel and preach- Romes
transportation system!
31Pope Gregory The Great, 590-604
- 588 Lombard invasions
- Maintained productive lands - kept food coming
into Rome - Ransomed captives
- Organized defense of the city
- Sponsored hospitals and schools
- Aided women and orphans
- Negotiated truce in 598
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33The Medieval monk
- Monks and nuns built monasteries and converted
the people - Maintained libraries with theological works and
the ancient Latin classics - Reclaimed the land and instructed peasants in
farming -rejected classical disdain for manual
labor - Provided help to the old, the sick, the destitute
- Adopted a code of poverty
34 35Monks worked in a Scriptorium
36- Christianity ended the classical, Greco-Roman
view of the world. - To the classical mind, human worth came from the
capacity of individuals to use reason, and shape
their life based on rational standards - Christianity taught that Lifes purpose was not
to achieve excellence in this world, but to
attain salvation in a heavenly city. - To the western church which was to dominate and
shape European civilization that emerged during
the Middle Ages- a persons worldly
accomplishments amounted to very little if one
did not accept the Christian God and his
revelations.
37- Charlemagne
- R 768-814
- Holy Roman Emperor
38Any Questions?