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Heirs of Rome

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While Europe lagged behind for almost 800 years, in the 12th century, the west not only caught up, but in succeeding centuries went on to create movments that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heirs of Rome


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Heirs of Rome
  • The Byzantine Empire
  • The Muslim Empire
  • Christian Europe

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The Empire at its height, c 250
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Diocletian, The Tetrarchy, 285 CE
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In 324, Constantine moves East
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The Germanic Tribes c. 362
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Theodosius, 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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Romes 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

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Greco-Roman culture lived on The Byzantine Empire
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The Byzantine Empire, The East Roman Empire, 550
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Justinian 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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Trade and Industry flourished
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Hagia Sophia, 532-537
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Mosaics
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Corpus Juris Civilis, the Body of Civil Law
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The 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

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Around 610, Muhammad was a prosperous merchant
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The 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

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Muslim 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

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The 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

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The Mongol Empire at its height
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  • 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.

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The 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)

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Saul 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.
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Christianity 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!

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Pope 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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The 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

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  • A monk being tonsured.

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Monks worked in a Scriptorium
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  • 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.

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  • Charlemagne
  • R 768-814
  • Holy Roman Emperor

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