Byzantine Empire Middle Ages Medieval Period All the
Byzantine Empire
• Middle Ages / Medieval Period All the empires we Ancient history is the study have studied to this of the written past from the point have been beginning of recorded referred to as ancient human history until the civilizations. Early Middle Ages in Europe. – Mesopotamia • The Middle Ages or – Fertile Crescent Medieval Period began with the fall of the Roman – Egypt Empire in 476 A. D. and – India lasts to about 1500. – China • – Greece – Rome 3
The New Rome n 395—Roman Empire split Roman Empire (West) & Byzantine Empire (East) n Greeks=most of Byzantine Empire’s population n Wealthy families moved to Constantinople when barbarians invaded Rome
n Constantinople (crossroads of Europe & Asia) n Bosporus & Dardanelles— 2 important waterways
Emperor Justinian n 527 - 565 n Nicknamed “Emperor who never sleeps”
Justinian’s Code code: Corpus of Civil Law (Justinian’s Code) n. Law –Based on Roman laws http: //www. fordham. e du/halsall/basis/535 in stitutes. html#XV. %20 Agnate%20 Tutorship.
Theodora n Justinian’s wife & advisor n Allowed women to own land n 532: Nika Revolt – Theodora talked him into staying – General Belisarius- put down revolt & won back Roman lands
Hippodrome- Chariot races (like Rome’s Circus Maximus) http: //www. knowledgerush. com/kr/encyclopedia/Hippodrome_of_Constantinople /
http: //www. livius. org/a/1/maps/istanbul_hippodrome_map. gif
n Justinian wanted strength of old Roman Empire n By 554— reclaimed Italy, North Africa, & Spain from Germanic tribes – Chemical weapon “Greek fire” – After Justinian’s death, Germanic tribes reclaimed lands
Christian Church n Emperors crowned by Patriarch of Constantinople –Defend Christianity –Appoint Church officials
n Icons (religious images) – Iconoclasts believed having icons was idol worship n 726: Byzantine Emperor Leo III– destroyed icons – 787: Pope in Rome-- heresy not to allow icons (some couldn’t read & icons helped them learn Christianity) – Church council threatened iconoclasts with excommunication
n Pope & Patriarch excommunicated each other – 700 s: Lombards invaded Italy, Byzantine emperor refused to help Pope – Frankish leader helped--Pepin the Short—Pope gives him title “emperor” – 1054: SPLIT---WEST (Roman Catholic Church) EAST (Eastern Orthodox Church)
n Trade: –Goods from Asia & Europe –Silk Road – 2 Orthodox monk missionaries brought silkworms from China
n Art- religious subjects – Icons- displayed saints – Mosaics- pieces of tile or glass – Religious scholars used art in books – Illuminated manuscripts (decorated books)
n. Literature focused on salvation, obedience to God, & preserving Greek & Roman works
Architecture n 532: Church of Hagia Sophia (meaning “holy wisdom”) in Constantinople
n. Cyril & Methodius-missionaries – 860: Cyril created alphabet for Slavic people –Cyrillic Alphabetused by Russia today
n AD 1071—Seljuk Turks threaten Constantinople n Byzantine emperor asked Pope to help “defend Christianity” n Europeans went to Palestine to fight Muslims-Crusades (holy wars)
n 1204—Venetians looted Constantinople n 1453—Ottoman Turks attacked –Byzantine emperor killed –End of Byzantine Empire
The Slavs n Steppe- treeless grassland n Taiga- thick forests n Long, cold winters n 3 major rivers –Dnieper All flow North to South –Dniester –Volga
The Eastern Slavs Setting and People n 3 major ethnic groups lived in the area north of the Black Sea n 1. ) Western Slavs n – Poles, Czechs, Slovaks – Close ties to Roman Catholic Church and Western Europe n 2. ) Southern Slavs – Serbs, Croats, Slovenes – Located on the northern part of the Balkan Peninsula – Lots of contact with the Byzantines n 3. ) Eastern Slavs – Largest group – Ukranians, Russians, Belarussians – Lived between the Dnieper and Dniester Rivers
Kievan Rus n 800 s AD- Vikings from Scandinavia (Norway, Denmark, Sweden) settled town of Novgorod n Vikings=Ruotsi=Russia n Kiev (major trading village) n Kiev grew into group of principalities called Kievan Rus
n Principalities ruled by princes –Grand Prince—like emperor –Princes—paid tribute to GP –Boyars—landowners –Artisans & merchants –Peasants
n 988 AD—Grand Prince Vladimir I adopted Christianity & Cyrillic Alphabet n Yaroslav the Wise (10191054) – 1 st library of Kiev –Built churches, created 1 st law code
http: //z. about. com/d/goeasteurope/1/5/T/3/-/-/Ukraine. St. Sophia. jpg
n 1240—Mongols invaded n 1240—Alexander “Nevsky” defeated Swedes at Neva River n 1380—Mucovites (people of Moscow) defeated Mongols at Battle of Kulikovo
n 1493—Ivan III ruler of Moscow refused to pay Mongol taxes, made himself sovereign of all Russia— “Ivan the Great” n. Orthodox Church called rd Russia the “ 3 Rome”
Ivan IV “the terrible” n. Paranoid- mentally unstable n. Killed his own son n. Massacre at Novgorod n. Took title czar “Caesar”
http: //www. uoregon. edu/~alayne/Images/stbasil-cathedral-exterior. jpg
http: //www. uoregon. edu/~kimball/images/repin%20 I-4%20 ssn. jpg
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