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World History Unit 4 – “Empires and Kingdoms: Growth and Expansion”. SSWH4 The student will analyze the importance of the Byzantine and Mongol empires between 450 CE and 1500 CE. Explain the relationship of the Byzantine Empire to the Roman Empire.
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World History Unit 4 – “Empires and Kingdoms: Growth and Expansion” SSWH4 The student will analyze the importance of the Byzantine and Mongol empires between 450 CE and 1500 CE. Explain the relationship of the Byzantine Empire to the Roman Empire. Describe the significance of Justinian’s law code, Theodora and the role of women, and Byzantine art and architecture. Analyze the establishment of Christianity as the official religion of the Byzantine Empire. Analyze the role of Constantinople as a trading and religious center. Explain the influence of the Byzantine Empire on Russia, with particular attention to its impact on Tsar Ivan III and Kiev. Define the role of Orthodox Christianity and the Schism.
BYZANTINE EMPIRE • WHAT DO YOU KNOW? • WHAT IS THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE AND THE ROMAN EMPIRE?
The origins • 330 A.D. • Roman emperor Constantine I dedicated a "new Rome" on the site of the ancient Greek colony of Byzantium • NEW ROME, CONSTANTINOPLE, CAPITAL OF ERE, BE, sometimes call the 2nd Rome. • Though the western half of the Roman Empire crumbled and fell in 476 • the eastern half survived for 1,000 more years, spawning a rich tradition of art, literature and learning and serving as a military buffer between the states of Europe and the threat of invasion from Asia and Islamic peoples • The Byzantine Empire finally fell in 1453, after an Ottoman army stormed Constantinople during the reign of Constantine XI.
A New Rome • CONSTANTINOPLE, BYZANTINE EMPIRE • "Byzantine" derives from Byzantium, an ancient Greek colony founded by a man named Byzas • Located on the European side of the Bosporus (the strait linking the Black Sea to the Mediterranean) • the site of Byzantium was ideally located to serve as a transit and trade point between Europe and Asia Minor • In 330 A.D., Roman Emperor Constantine I chose Byzantium as the site of a new Roman capital, Constantinople • Five years earlier, at the Council of Nicaea, Constantine had established Christianity (once an obscure Jewish sect) as Rome's official religion • Constantinople and the rest of the Eastern Roman Empire identified strongly as Romans and Christians, though many of them spoke Greek and not Latin
THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE AND CHRISTIANITY • official language was Latin • Greek was also widely spoken, and students received education in Greek history • religion: the Council of Chalcedon in 451 • division of the Christian world into five patriarchates (geographic regions), each ruled by a patriarch (religious leader) • 1 Rome (where the patriarch would later call himself pope • 2 Constantinople • 3 Alexandria • 4 Antioch • 5 Jerusalem • (Beginning of Roman Catholic Church ,RCC) • Byzantine emperor was the patriarch of Constantinople, and the head of both church and state • (After the Islamic empire absorbed Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem in the seventh century, the Byzantine emperor would become the spiritual leader of most eastern Christians.)
CONSTANTINOPLE • CONSTANTINOPLE • CITY OF CONSTANTINE • CAPITAL OF B.E. (E.R.E) • AND LATER THE ISLAMIC • OTTOMAN TURK EMPIRE
CONSTANTINOPLE • built on seven hills and the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmara • impregnable fortress with 3 surrounding walls enclosing magnificent palaces, domes and towers • The Church of Hagia Sophia • palace of the emperors • the hippodrome • the Golden Gate
HOLY WISDOM JUSTINIAN EASTERN ORTHODOX ROMAN CATHOLIC MUSLIM MOSQUE MUSEUM
HIPPODROME • HIPPO-HORSE • DROMOS-RACEWAY
EMPEROR JUSTINIAN • Justinian the Great • Byzantine Emperor from 527 • to 565 • revived the Empire's greatness • and reconquered the lost • western half of the classical • Roman Empire. • General Belisarius
Legacy • rewriting of Roman law, the Corpus Juris Civilis • Byzantine culture • Hagia Sophia, which was to be the center of Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Plague of Justinian) in the early 540s marked the end of an age of splendor • The Empire entered a period of territorial decline not to be reversed until the ninth century. • Procopius, historian, provides the primary source for the history of Justinian's reign • his empress, Theodora, improved role of women in empire
THEODORA • expanded the rights • of women in divorce • and property ownership • instituted the death penalty • for rape • forbade exposure of unwanted • infants • gave mothers some guardianship • rights over their children • and forbade the killing of a wife • who committed adultery • Procopius wrote that she • was naturally inclined to assist • women in misfortune
http://www.history.com/topics/byzantine-empire/videos#the-black-death-and-the-byzantine-empirehttp://www.history.com/topics/byzantine-empire/videos#the-black-death-and-the-byzantine-empire
EASTERN ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY • The Eastern Orthodox Church • Orthodox Catholic Church • commonly referred to as the Orthodox Church • second largest Christian church in the world • 300 million adherents • Eastern and Southeastern Europe • religious denomination of the majority of the populations of Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Romania, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Cyprus
traces its development back through the Byzantine or Roman empire, to the earliest church established by St. Paul and the Apostles • Icons can be found adorning the walls of Orthodox churches facing eas
Cathedral of Saint Sava, Belgrade, Serbia, • the world's largest Orthodox Church
The East–West Schism • Great Schism • Division Christianity into Eastern (Greek) and Western (Latin) branches, which later became known as the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church, respectively • Relations between East and West had long been due to theological differences
11TH CENTURY: COMPARING THE CHRISTIAN CHURCHES,ROMAN CATHOLIC AND EASTERN ORTHODOX • RCC • ROME • LATIN • POPE IS OVER ALL BISHOPS, KINGS, EMPERORS • PRIESTS CANNOT MARRY • NO DIVORCE • EOC • CONSTANTINOPLE • GREEK • PATRIARCHS/BISHOPS HEAD CHURCH AS GROUP • MARRIED PRIESTS • DIVORCE ALLOWED • SIMILARITIES • THE GOSPEL, JESUS, BIBLE • SACRAMENTS, BAPTISM • PRIESTS AND BISHOPS • GOAL: CONVERSION TO CHRISTIANITY
Video, great schism • http://www.getonfacebook.com/search.php?get=DjFch3j6LWc7xK6WCQfFHs8wwy%2BC%2FBC291nLU2V2eJqazHB8CpYKfuo8KWbcD7ZN8VL4GaHN0zX3LYchxtcBBU%2B5FuJCTWc7milaMZ5m6riYvCP6mafWmY%2FzR1WfKNQN&sa=54bde95f11e&opt=3
BYZANTINE EMPIRE AND RUSSIA • CONVERTS (FOLLOWERS) COMPETITION • MISSIONARIES CONVERT SLAVS (RUSSIANS) TO ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY • SAINT METHODIUS • SAINT CYRIL • DEVELOP ALPHABET FOR SLAVIC LANGUAGE, BASED ON GREEK • BIBLE READING • CYRILLIC ALPHABET • TRADE BETWEEN RUSSIANS (KIEVAN RUSSIA, CITY OF KIEV) DIFFUSED CULTURE
KIEVAN RUS • KIEVAN RUSSIA
KIEVAN RUSSIA • late 9th to the mid 13th century • Vikings called Rus: FOUNDERS • LEADERS • Vladimir the Great (980–1015) • son Yaroslav I the Wise (1019–1054) • "Golden Age" of Kiev • introduction of Christianity • creation of the first East Slavic written legal code, the Russkaya Pravda ("Justice of Rus")
Ivan III (The Great) • 22 January 1440 - 27 October 1505; reign, 1462-1505 • Moscow, Russia • Ivan the Great • Grand Prince of Moscow and "Grand Prince of all Rus“ • “gatherer of the Russian lands,“ • ended the dominance of the Golden Horde (Mongol Empire of East Asia) over the Rus • laid the foundations of the Russian state • one of the longest-reigning Russian rulers in history • reign was "militarily glorious and economically sound • centralized control over local rulers • period of cultural depression and spiritual barrenness • Freedom was stamped out within the Russian lands • anti-Catholic Ivan brought down the curtain between Russia and the west • For the sake of territorial aggrandizement he deprived country of Western learning and civilization.“ • Married a Byzantine princess
IVAN III, THE GREAT SUCCESSOR TO BYZANTINE EMPERORS (AFTER FALL OF CONSTANTINOPLE TO MUSLIM OTTOMAN TURKS)