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Byzantines, Russians, and Turks Interact 500-1500 AD. Chapter 11. Vocabulary. Justinian Code : The Body of Roman Law, collected and organized by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian Hagia Sophia : The Cathedral of (Holy Wisdom in Constantinople) built by Justinian
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Byzantines, Russians, and Turks Interact500-1500 AD Chapter 11
Vocabulary • Justinian Code: The Body of Roman Law, collected and organized by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian • Hagia Sophia: The Cathedral of (Holy Wisdom in Constantinople) built by Justinian • Patriarch: Principal Bishop in the Eastern Branch of the Christianity (Eastern Orthodox) • Icon: A religious image used by Eastern Orthodox Christians • Excommunication: The taking away of a person’s right of membership in a Christian Church
Vocabulary • Cyrillic Alphabet: The alphabet for “Slavic” languages • Slavs: People from the forests North of the Black Sea (Now Eastern European) • Ivan III: Russian who established the Russian control from the Mongols • Czar: Russian emperor (Roman title for Caesar) • Seljuks: Turkish group who started their own empire in Turkey in the 11th century • Malik Shah: Most famous Seljuk sultans/prime minister
Byzantium Becomes the New Rome New Rome in a New Setting • Justinian: A New Line of Caesars • Rome was officially divided in two in 395 • Justinian became Caesar of the Eastern Roman Empire in 527 • The Absolute Power of the Emperors • The Byzantine Emperors controlled politics and religion
Building the New Rome Justinian’s Code • The Code consisted of four works aimed at created a uniform set of laws for Byzantium • a. The Code - Contained 5,000 Roman Laws • b. The Digest – Summarized the opinions of Rome’s legal thinkers • c. The Institutes – A Textbook that taught students about the laws • d. The Novellae – Any new laws created after 534 • Strange Laws
Building A New Rome • Creating the Imperial Capital • Justinian rebuilt massive fortificationsaround Constantinople • Construction of hospitals, aqueducts, and schools rivaled old Rome • Hagia Sophia(Holy Wisdom)/Hippodrome • Reconquered most of the OLD ROMAN EMPIRE!!!!! • Constantinople’s Hectic Pace • The City’s main streets were crowded with merchants from Asia, Africa, and Europe • Free entertainment provided at the Hippodrome (horse-track) which sat 60,000 people
Life In The New Rome Byzantium Preserves Learning • Schools and Subjects • Almost all children attended either monastic or public schools • Byzantium helped to preserve ancient Greek and Roman knowledge through the Middle Ages The Empire Confronts Its Enemies • The Mysterious Plague of Justinian • From 542-700 a series of plagues swept through Byzantium • By 700, Byzantium had lost a large amount of its population
Attacks On The Empire Attacks From East and West • Germanic tribes, Seljuk Turks, and Russians launched invasions of Byzantine territory between 600-1400 • Constantly attacked due to resources/trade routes • By 1350, only immediate area around Constantinople was controlled by Byzantium
The Division of Christianity The Church Divides • A Split Between Rome and Constantinople • The head of the Eastern Church was known as the Patriarch • In 1054, the Patriarch and the Pope had a disagreement over religious doctrine • Each excommunicated the other, or kicked them out of the church • The Great Schism, it forever split Roman Catholicism with Eastern Orthodox
Division of Christianity Roman Catholic Eastern Orthodox Old Pope Rome New Patriarch Constantinople
Religious Conversations Byzantine Missionaries Convert the Slavs • Missionaries from the Orthodox Church began to convert Slavs in the 9th Century • Cyrillic Alphabet • Basis for Slav/Russian Lang.
The Russian Empire Chapter 11:2
Russians Adapt Byzantine Culture Both Slavic and Greek • The Land of Russia’s Birth • Three great rivers (Dnieper, Don, and Volga) connect Russia to the Black and Caspian Seas • Ural Mountains • Slavs and Vikings • The original inhabitants of Eastern Europe were a mix between Slavs and Vikings • Vikings called Rus (Russia) • Slaves invited Viking King (Rurik) to be their king
The Birth of Russia Kiev Becomes Orthodox • Kiev become powerful trade city (Constantinople) • Prince Vladimir Investigates Monotheism • Prince Vladimir converted to Orthodox Christianity in 989, and made it the official religion of Kiev • Created link between Kiev and Byzantine Empire
Kiev’s Power and Decline • Kiev due to trade with Constantinople (Educated, Prosperous) • Kiev held great power in 11th century, led by great Kievan ruler: • Yaroslav the Wise • Married off daughters for political power/alliances • After his death, civil war and crusades disrupted prosperity
Mongolian Invasion Mongol Invasions Favor the Rise of Moscow • Mongol Rule in Russia • In 1240, Mongol warriors destroyed Kiev, slaughtering most inhabitants • Khanate Golden Horde (Kingdom, Royal Color Camp) • Mongols allowed Russians to keep their customs in return for obedience and monetary tribute • Mongol rule cut off the Russians from Western Europe, setting them back 200 years in technology
Life Under The Mongols • Allowed to continue culture/religion (tax) • Mongol Demands: “Absolute Obedience/Massive Tributes” • Religious toleration • Separated from Western Europe/Isolated (No new Technology/Cultural Diffusion) • Moscow became center of Russian government under Mongols • Patriarch of Eastern Church moved to Moscow, linking religion with government
Russia Breaks Free • By 1156 Moscow grew to be an important city (Volga, Dnieper, Don Rivers) • Prince Ivan I grew in power b/c tax collector • Convinced the Patriarch in Kiev to move to Moscow • Church now supported Moscow • Ivan III: 43 year reign • Challenged Mongol Rule, named himself “Czar” • Marched to battle but both sides turned around (Bloodless Revolution)
Turkish Empires Rise In Anatolia Chapter 11:3
Rise of the Turks • Nomadic Herders • Known for their military skill/craftsmanship • Abbasids bought Turkish child-slaves to train as soldiers (Mamelukes) • Seljuk Turks (family/clan) grew in power • Captured the Abbasid capital (Baghdad) in 1055 AD • Captured Persia • Adopted Religion, language, literature • Shah (king) • Eventually pushed their forces into Anatolia • Pressured the Byzantine Empire
Challenges Facing the Seljuk The Seljuk and the Crusaders The Seljuk Face the Mongols Pope II launched the First Crusade in 1095 Christians to drive the Turks/Muslims out of Anatolia/Holy Land 1099 the Crusaders captured Jerusalem (Massacred Jewish/Muslims) Saladin lead Muslims recaptured Jerusalem 1187 Mongol Armies eventually turned to the West Destroyed/Conquered/slaughtered everything in the way Captured Baghdad Wrapped the Caliph in blankets (Horses)