Constantinople became the new capital of the Eastern Roman Empire after the fall of Rome to Germanic tribes in the 5th century. The Byzantine Empire, with Constantinople as its capital, carried on Roman traditions for over 1000 years, influencing the development of Orthodox Christianity. Under the rule of Justinian in the 6th century, the Byzantine Empire reached its greatest extent after recovering Roman territories in North Africa and Italy, and Justinian's legal code formed the basis of Byzantine law. However, the empire gradually declined due to plague, unrest, religious conflicts, and attacks from neighboring powers.
2. • Main Idea: Constantinople
ruled an eastern empire that
survived for over a thousand
years
• Why it matters now?
Byzantine culture deeply
influenced Orthodox
Christianity, a major branch of
modern Christianity
3. Setting the Stage
• Western Roman Empire
crumbled by invading
Germanic tribes
• Capital was moved from
Rome Byzantium
changed to
Constantinople (by
Constantine)
• Byzantine became the
name of the Eastern
Empire, with
Constantinople as its
capital
• Constantinople carried on
the legacy of Rome, even
after it’s fall
5. A New Rome in a New
Setting
• Constantine planned
Constantinople as a new
capital of the empire- the
New Rome
• Center of power moved
EAST
6. Justinian: A New Line of
Caesars
• Justinian=
• Ruled the Eastern Empire
• Sent his best general to
recover North Africa &
Rome
• After many battles,
Justinian controlled
almost all of ancient
Rome
• Ruled by absolute power
(over church & state)
8. Life in New Rome
• Lived the Roman traditions, but
spoke Greek (not Latin)
• Justinian set a panel of legal
experts to comb through 400
years of Roman law
JUSTINIAN CODE
(served as the code for 900
years)
• Code= 5,000 Roman laws still
considered useful
• Digest= Opinions from Rome’s
greatest legal thinkers
• Institutes= textbook for law
students
• Novellae (New Laws)
9. Creating the Imperial Capital
• Public Building
Programs by
Justinian:
• Rebuilt fortifications in
Constantinople (14
stone wall)
• Hagia Sophia=
church destroyed during
riots
• Enlarged his palace
• Baths, aqueducts, law
courts, schools and
hospitals
11. Constantinople’s Hectic Pace
• MESE= the “middle
way,” the main street
running through
Constantinople
• Merchants lined the
streets with products
from all over the world
• Hippodrome= chariot
races and performances
13. Nika Rebellion
• = fan groups that started a
riot because of their
hatred for the government
• Shouted “Nika! ” (victory)
• Flooded the Hippodrome
and demanded Justinian’s
remove
• Troops brought in and
30,000 were slaughtered
18. Attacks from East & West
• Enemies that
attacked…
• Lombards
• Avars, Slavs, and Bulgars
• Persians
• Arab armies
19. The Church Divides (1/2)
• Christianity grew and
started to differ in the east
and west
• East built on the works of
the early Church
• PATRIARCH= leading
bishop of Constantinople
(but even he bowed to the
emperor)
20. The Church Divides (2/2)
• First Controversy
• In the East, Emperor Leo 3
banned the use of ICONS
(religious images to aid in
devotion)
• Emperor viewed this as idol
worship
• In the West, the Pope
ordered the
EXCOMMUNICATION of
a Byzantine emperor
22. Byzantine Missionaries
Convert the Slavs
• The East and the West both
competed for CONVERTS
• Took Christianity to SLAVS
• Saints Cyril & Methodius
created an alphabet for the
Slavs so they could read the
Bible in their own tongue
• Many Slavic languages,
including Russian, are now
written in what is called
CYRILLIC ALPHABET