Thursday 7 May 2015

What are the differences between the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire?

The
Byzantine Empire was, in a sense, the continuation of the Roman Empire. It is even sometimes
called the eastern Roman Empire, it included the Greek speaking eastern part of the
Mediterranean. The Byzantine Empire was a Christian one and it was known for warring with the
Muslims. It was a flourishing empire during the reign of the Macedonian emperors and its demise
resulted as a consequence of attacks from Crusaders and Turks. Byzantium was a small but
important town, it acted as a frontier between the Persian and Greek world. Both would become a
part of Alexander the Greats hellenistic universe during the fourth century BCE. The approach of
the third century CE saw the Roman Empire with thousands of miles of borders to defend. It was
the Emperor Constantine that realized that the problems of empire could not be managed from
great distances. The Emperor Constantine renamed Byzantium after himself, Constantinople, and in
330 CE he moved there making it his new permanent restaurant. Constantinople was halfway between
the Euphrates and the Balkan, and was not very far from the wealth of Asia Minor which at the
time was a major part of the empire. After Constantine died the Roman empire divided into
eastern and western sections. The Western Roman Empire ended by 476 CE when the last ruler
got dethroned and a military leader took power. The Roman Empire during the fourth century
became increasingly Christian, and the Byzantine Empire was definitely Christian. It was the
first empire that was not just founded on worldly power, but on the authority of the Christian
Church. During the first few centuries of the Byzantine Empire polytheistic religions stuck
around as an important source of inspiration. Once Christianity got organized the Church had
five leading patriarchs who lived in Antioch, Alexandria, Constantinople, Jerusalem, and Rome.
In 451 CE the patriarch of Constantinople was named the second authority in ecclesiastical
hierarchy, only the Pope in Rome was superior. The Great Schism of 1054 CE resulted in the
eastern or Orthodox church(Byzantine) separating form the western church (Roman Catholic). Some
basic comparisons between the two empires were the reasons for the end of the empires. The
Byzantine Empire ended due to conquest where the Roman Empire ended because it was incorporated
into a New Entity. Both of the Empires has the same form of government, Authoritarian, also both
were ruled by hereditary rulers. The empires had differing main languages, in the Roman Empire
they mainly spoke latin and in the Byzantine Empire the most common language was Greek. In the
Roman Empire, until the reign of Constantine I, the main religion was polytheistic where they
worshiped the various renamed Greek gods. Emperor Constantine Is reign was when Christianity
became the main religion of the empire. The Byzantine Empire was a Christian one from the start.
The Roman Empire, before its division, covered a larger geographical area that the Byzantine
Empire ever did.

href="https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-middle-east/byzantine-empire">https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-middle-east/byzant...
href="https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-rome/ancient-rome">https://www.history.com/topics/ancient-rome/ancient-rome

No comments:

Post a Comment

In 1984, is Julia a spy? Please provide specific examples from the book. My teacher says that he knows of 17 pieces of evidence which proves that Julia...

There is some evidence to suggest thatwas a spy throughout 's classic novel . Julia portrays herself as a loyal admirer of Big ...