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Chapter 9 Civilizations in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe
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Chapter 9

Mar 23, 2016

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Chapter 9. Civilizations in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe . The Basics . The Word Byzantine Suggests the distinction from Rome itself Political heir to Rome but still its own thing Constantinople. Constantinople . Constantine names capital after himself - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Chapter 9

Chapter 9Civilizations in Eastern Europe:

Byzantium and Orthodox Europe

Page 2: Chapter 9

The Basics

• The Word Byzantine– Suggests the distinction from Rome itself• Political heir to Rome but still its own thing

• Constantinople

Page 3: Chapter 9

Constantinople

• Constantine names capital after himself– moves capital there 340 CE

• 1453 falls to Turks, renamed Istanbul– Major event in WH and the impact with be

resounding• Song

• One of the most important cities at the time– Located on a trading route

Page 4: Chapter 9
Page 5: Chapter 9

Meet Justinian

Page 6: Chapter 9

Justinian (527-565 CE)

• The “sleepless emperor”• Wife Theodora as advisor– Background: circus performer

• Uses army to contain tax riots, ambitious• construction program– Hagia Sophia

• Law Code– Codification of Roman Law– Body of Civil Law: made Roman law coherent basis for

political and economic life

Page 7: Chapter 9

Meet Theodora

Page 8: Chapter 9

Hagia Sophia

• First built by Constantine• Rebuilt by Justinian • The greatest surviving example of Byzantine

Architecture • It is an example of Eastern Orthodox, Roman

Catholic and Islam • It was the seat of the Orthodox patriarch

Page 10: Chapter 9

Byzantine Conquests

• General Belisarius recaptures much of western• Roman Empire under Justinian• Unable to consolidate control of territories• Withdrew to defend empire from Sassanids,

Slavs

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The Byzantine empire and its neighbors 527-554 C.E.

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The Byzantine empire and its neighbors about 1100 C.E.

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Islam and Arab Pressure

• Constant vigilance against Muslim Invaders • The Byzantine Empire had to focus on

protecting the borders• This pressure from the Muslim world is going

to be one of the issues that brings about the split between east and west

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Split

• In 1054 a longstanding disagreement came to a head, and the Christian church split into two groups.

• The Western or Roman Catholic, and Eastern or Orthodox Catholic.

• The Byzantine Empire goes into slow decline

Page 17: Chapter 9

Disagreements

• Papal attempts to interfere over icons• Charlemagne claims to be Roman Emperor• Rituals in Latin not Greek• Pope as first bishop• Religious art• Celibacy for priests

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Eastern Orthodox

• Requires services to be in Greek • Patriarch and bishops were head of the church– The emperor was above the patriarch

• Believed in a different interpretation of the Bible

• Eastern Orthodox missionaries spread northward into Russia and the Balkans

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Cyrillic• Cyril and Methodius are the two most famous

of the missionaries.• Slavic language/alphabet derived from Greek

letters• Allowed for literature to be spread– HOW?

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Icons

• Images of religious figures venerated by byzantine Christians

• Iconoclasm– The breaking of images – Religious controversy of the 8th century– Byzantine emperors attempted but failed to

suppress icon veneration– Believed it was the worship of idols

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Decline

• 1071 Byzantine defeat in Asia• 1204 Constantinople sacked by Crusaders• 1453 Constantinople taken by Ottoman Turks

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Very Similar to China

• The Byzantine political system had remarkable similarities to China.

• The emperor was held to be ordained of God.• He was head of the church as well as state.• Women could and did serve as emperor.• They had an elaborate bureaucracy to

administer the government.

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KIEVAN RUSSIA

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Who were the Slavs?• People who migrated from Asia– Mix with earlier populations– Family tribes, villages

• Trade – with Byzantines– Trade with Northerners

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Scandinavian merchants

• Vikings• During the 6th and 7th centuries moved into the

region• c. 855, monarchy under Rurik (Danish)– Center at Kiev• Prosperous

commercial center

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Meet Vladimir I •(980-1015)•Converts to Orthodoxy due to contact with Byzantium •Controls church

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Meet Yaroslav I

• Issued a unifying code of laws, while not as advanced as Constantinople it still had nobles called Boyars.– Boyars: Russian landholding aristocrats• Possessed less political power than their western

European counterparts (feudalism)

Page 31: Chapter 9

The Tarters

• The Russian name for the Mongols. The Invasion of Russia by the Mongols and the destruction of Constantinople by Muslims, isolated Russia.

• The region was cut off from western contacts, stifling economic, political, and cultural sophistication.

Page 32: Chapter 9