Title: World History, Chapter 12
1World History, Chapter 12
2Background for Chapter 11
3Diocletian
- In 285, Diocletian reformed the empire and
divided the empire into East and West. - West Latin speaking Italy, Gaul, Britannia
and Spain - East Greek speaking Greece, Anatolia, Syria
and Egypt - Diocletian took the eastern half of the empire,
which was included most of the great cities and
trade centers of the time and was wealthier.
4Emperor Constantine
- rebuilt the old post city of Byzantium on the
Bosporus strait for 2 reasons - 1. In Byzantium, he could respond to the danger
of the Germanic tribes. - 2. He could also be close to his rich eastern
provinces - He renamed the city Constantinople
- the power of the Roman empire was shifted to the
east - the Empire was officially divided in 395
5Map of Constantinopleabout 550
- What landform describes the site on which Byzas
decided to build his colony? - How would you describe the situation of the
colony? - Why might Byzas have thought the people of
Chalcedon blind? - When the Romans took over Byzantium, they
realized that the site might be - difficult to defend from the west. How did
they remedy this? - What do the symbols and words on the map tell
you about the cultural life of the - city?
6What made Constantinople a great city?
- geography favorable location for trade
- history shift from west gave opportunity for
new vitality - culture blending of Greek and Roman traditions
with the added feature of Christianity - Constantinople was the first Christian capital of
the first Christian empire
7Map of Constantinople under Justinian
- Describe the landform on which Constantinople is
located. - Identify the body of water that connects the Sea
of Marmara with the Aegean Sea. - What is the Bosporus?
- Name five regions with which Constantinople
trades. - What are the commercial and military advantages
of the location of Constantinople?
8Byzantine Empire under Justinian
9The Byzantine Empire
10Justinian
- In 527, Justinian became ruler of the eastern
empire of the Roman Empire
11Justinian had three major goals
12goals 1 To reunited the empire by conquering
Roman lands to the west
13goals 2 To create a single, uniform code for
Justinian's New Rome
- Justinian ordered a team of Greek and Latin
scholars to compile and simplify the laws. and
legal opinions of the preceding 400 years - Justinian's Code became the basis of Byzantine
law for the next 900 years and later of western
European laws - Justinian's most important contribution.
14goals 3 To create an Imperial capital.
- He undertook a massive building program in
Constantinople. - Constantinople was a well protected city.
- Sea walls guarded it from hostile navies.
- To the west, a moat and three walls blocked the
only land route to the city
15How well did Justinian achieve his goals?
- His works on the city and the laws were of
lasting value to civilization. - His wars, however, proved to be a waste of men
and money
16Hagia Sophia
- When the first church burned down, Justinian
immediately commissioned a new one. - More than 10,000 workers labored for almost 6
years - illuminated each night by thousands of candles,
- It was described as a "sacred light" that guided
sailors into the city's safe harbor. - It symbolized a spiritual lighthouse for the
world's first Christian capital.
17Hagia Sophias beauty convinced visiting Russian
nobles that they should adopt Byzantine
Christianity rather than the Roman Catholic
Church http//www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/H
agia_Sophia.html
18Roman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox
(Byzantine) Church
- discuss Latin and Vatican II
- Latin
- Petrine doctrine
- The Pope
- Priests do not marry
- No divorce
Vernacular The patriarch The emperor Priests
marry Divorce permitted
- One God
- The bible
- Many beliefs
19The Rise of Russia
20Russia about 1100
- What modern day Scandinavian country borders
Russia? - What 3 countries border the Baltic Sea?
- What modern-day countries are in the region
labeled Hungary? - Why is the location of Kiev advantageous for
trade with Constantinople? - Russians did not control the territory alone the
coast of the Black Sea. Why would they want to
control this area and control the Dnieper River?
21The Slavs
- The people from the forests north of the Black
Sea - began trading with Constantinople
- As they traded, they began absorbing Greek
Byzantine ideas - Russian culture grew out of this blending of
Slavic and Greek traditions
22The first unified Russian territory
- West of the Ural Mountains in the region that
runs from the Black Sea to the Baltic - Three great rivers, the Dnieper, the Don and the
Volga - Forests were inhabited by tribes of Slavic
farmers and traders - No political unity
23The Rus
- probably Vikings
- built forts along the rivers and settled among
the Slavs - Russian legend says the Slavs invited the Vikings
to rule them
24The city of Kiev
- Settled originally as a trading port on the
Dnieper River - good access by river to the sea and
Constantinople. - Grew into a principality (a small state ruled by
a prince)
25Kiev choose the Orthodox Christian Church
- Vladimir sent teams to check out the three major
religions Islam, Judaism and Western
Christianity - Teams that scouted Islam, Judaism and Roman
Christianity were not really sold on them - The team that checked out Byzantine Christianity
was excited by the Hagia Sophia
26Cyril
- A Greek monk
- Used the vernacular to celebrate mass (use of
native language helped convert) - developed written alphabet for Slavonic language
(Cyrillic alphabet)
27Kiev the growth and declined
- Kiev became a commercial and cultural center
- Yaroslav changed the way the ruler was chosen
- He divided his empire among his sons
- His sons tore the state apart fighting over it
28The Mongol invasion of Russia
- During the mid-1000s, Kiev reached the height of
its power as a center of trade and culture. - By the end of the 1200s, Kiev had suffered a
steep decline. - Kiev was under attackfirst by princes within its
borders, and then by invaders from beyond.
29The Mongols
- Genghis Khan, swept across Asia and defeated the
Rus - Set up an Empire that lasted 200 years
- Allowed religious and cultural freedom in
exchange for high taxes and obedience - Left local princes in charge, did not interfere
with church - Prince Alexander encouraged Russians not to
rebel against new masters, so - Mongols did not destroy as much as in other lands
- Mongol rule helped Moscow rise and united Russia
30The Mongol Empire
- Over what 2 continents did the Mongol empire
extend? - How far east did the empire extend?
- How far west?
- Name 4 Khanates that made up the Mongol empire
- What was the capital of the Mongol empire?
- What areas shown on the map were not part of the
Mongol empire?
31The Swedes
- At same time Mongols attacked Rus, Swedes invaded
Russian territory in the north of - Swedes wanted control of rich trade route between
Russia and the Byzantine Empire - Prince Alexander launched surprise attack
against the Swedish camp - The Swedes were defeated
- Alexander known as Alexander Nevsky after victory
32Invasion from the Baltic
- Teutonic Knights
- German military order of knights
- Tried to force Russians to abandon Orthodox
Church and convert to Roman Catholicism - Invaded from Baltic Sea Alexander fought several
battles with them - Massacre on the Ice
- April 1242, Alexanders army lured Knights onto
thinning ice - Ice cracked men, horses fell into freezing water
- Battle known as massacre on the ice, one of
Russias most famous
33Christianity in Western Europe
34The effects of Germanic invasions on the western
Roman Empire
- disruption of trade
- downfall of cities
- population shifts
- decline of learning
- loss of common language
35Results of the fall of Rome
- In the east, the Byzantine Empire flourished.
- In the west, no single empire arose from Romes
ashes. Germanic groups established many small
kingdoms.
36Germanic ideas about government differ from Roman
ideas about government
- Roman loyalty to Rome, citizenship, public
government and written law had unified Roman
society - Germanic Family ties and personal loyalty bound
Germanic society together. Germanic people lived
in small communities. They had unwritten rules
and traditions.
37Germanic Peoples began New Kingdoms in Europe and
they became Christian
38Angles and Saxons
- 2 groups of Germanic peoples establishing
kingdoms in Europe - group of monks led by Augustine of Canterbury
converted people of Kent - Christianity spread to the rest of England
39The Franks
- Led by king named Clovis, who vowed to become
Christian if troops won in battle - Under Clovis and his successors, the Franks
became major power in western Europe - 800s, height of Frankish power, led by
Charlemagne (next chapter)
40The events leading to the rise of the Frankish
kingdom
- Charles Martel expands Frankish rule through
conquest - Battle of Tours - Charles defeated Muslim raiders
from Spain -significance if Muslims had won,
western Europe might have become part of the
Muslim empire. - Pepin, Martel's son, becomes king and forms an
alliance between Frankish kings and the pope - Pope anointed Pepin king by the grace of God"
- Charlemagne, Pepin's son, inherits a strengthened
kingdom.
41Christianity appealed to many Europeans
- During the Middle Ages (or medieval times)
peoples lives filled with doubt, suffering
hardship - Christianity offered comfort, promise of happy
afterlife, sense of community
42The Papacy strengthens
- In the early middle ages, the pope had little
authority - Pope Gregory expanded papal power
- the church became a political as well as a
spiritual power - used Church revenues to raise armies, repair
roads, and help the poor - negotiated peace treaties with invaders
- acted as mayor of Rome, but influence extended
beyond city's borders
43Benedictine Rule
- Benedicts rule, collection of guidelines for
monks, called Benedictine Rule - Based on daily schedule combination of prayer,
labor - Organization of Benedictine Order
- Each monastery a distinct entity
- No central authority
- Each run by abbot chosen by monks, or local noble
44Monks and monasteries
- operated schools
- maintained libraries
- copied books
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