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Title: The Rise of the


1
The Rise of the Byzantine Empire
2
objective
  • To use the pictures as subheadings and be able to
    identify the main ideas in each category of
    information for Byzantine.
  • First use ARS while reading. The spiral questions
    are a guide to what information to look for, each
    bullet contains noteworthy information.
  • Then try to identify the main idea(s) of each
    category by summarizing in a sentence or using 5
    or less words.
  • After completing you will participate in a class
    discussion as a review in preparation for project.

3
Essential questionsYou should be able to answer
by the end of activity
  • How does geography influence the growth of the
    Byzantine civilization?
  • What impact does trade/economics have on the
    organization and daily life of people?
  • What are the evolving principles and ideals that
    have shaped government over time-specific to
    Byzantine?
  • How does the legacy of civilizations impact
    their interaction throughout history?

4
Cityscape of Istanbul
5
Cityscape of Istanbul (Constantinople)
  • Questions to consider
  • What do you notice about the location of this
    city? Describe the buildings that stand out in
    the picture. Do you think the domed buildings
    are modern or historic? What do you think they
    are used for? Why might this city be considered
    a strategic locale for a city? How could you
    protect the city from invaders?

6
Cityscape notes
  • The picture is a view of modern-day Istanbul,
    Turkey, which was formerly Constantinople, the
    capital city of the Byzantine Empire (A.D.
    330-1453). This aerial view shows the citys
    position at the confluence of the Bosporus
    (center), the Golden Horn (left) and the Sea of
    Marmara (right).
  • The Byzantine Empire grew out of the fading Roman
    Empire. In the 4th century A.D., the western
    half of the Roman Empire had been weakened by
    barbarian invasions. At the same time,
    Christianity was a growing force and Constantine
    the Great became The first Christian emperor of
    Rome. Because the eastern portion of the Empire
    had a longer tradition of absolutism and
    monotheism than did the West, Constantine decided
    to consolidate his rule by moving the capital
    eastward, in A.D. 330. He chose the Greek
    seaport of Byzantium and renamed it New Rome.
    But it became known as his city Constantinople.
    This magnificent city of the Eastern Roman Empire
    became the hub of the Byzantine Empire.

7
  • Constantine chose the new capital for its fine
    harbor and strategic locale. The city was
    surrounded on 3 sides by water, which was
    excellent for trade, as well as for defense.
    Constantine needed only to build walls on one
    side to ensure the citys security. The city
    became a self-contained fortress, protected by 13
    miles of walls, watchtowers, and 50 fortified
    gates. The inlet of the Golden horn, one of the
    bordering bodies of water, was surrounded by
    hills. Consequently, ships in the Golden Horn
    were safe even in bad weather, and there was
    always one harbor safe for docking. Along this
    sea side of the city, walled harbors and a chain
    stretched across the Golden Horn protected ships
    from attacks launched at sea.
  • Located on the Bosporus Strait, the gateway from
    the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara,
    Constantinople was at a shipping and trading
    crossroads between two continents Europe and
    Asia. From the Sea of Marmara, another strait
    (the Dardanelles) led to the Aegean Sea, which
    joined the Mediterranean Sea. Thus, whoever
    ruled Constantinople was in a position to control
    all shipping from Asia to Europe, as well as the
    trade between Russia and the Mediterranean
    territories.
  • Since Constantinople began as the eastern capital
    of the Roman Empire, Byzantine culture was
    heavily influenced by the Roman Empire. The city
    itself was modeled after Rome, like Rome, it was
    built on 7 hills and divided into 14 districts.
    The buildings and structures in Constantinople
    also strongly reflected Roman influencethe
    hippodrome, forum and aqueducts were all derived
    from the old Empire.

8
  • The Byzantine Empire retained but relaxed many of
    the Roman Empires rules and customs.
    Extravagant circuses and chariot races continued
    in Constantinople, along with such traditions as
    the emperors distribution of bread to the
    citizens. The army followed Roman military
    traditions. While the Byzantines retained some
    of Rome's class-based standards of punishment and
    dress for the rich and poor, some mobility later
    became possible.
  • Progressive Byzantine emperors began to select
    their officials on the basis of talent and
    competence rather than simply hereditary social
    class. The Byzantine senate existed mainly as a
    result of Roman tradition and was not nearly as
    rigid and powerful body as it had been in Rome.
    The one major difference between Constantinople
    and Rome was that from its inception
    Constantinople was a Christian city.
  • The Byzantine Empire was a bridge between ancient
    and modern Europe. Its territory included the
    lands of Greece, Asia Minor, Palestine, Syria and
    Egypt, though this changed as the Empire expanded
    and contracted. Christianity, Roman customs and
    Greek classical culture all survived, blended and
    flourished in the Empire. The Empires military
    staved off barbarians in the West and Arabs and
    Turks in the East its scholars preserved Greek
    Literature and philosophy (Greek was the official
    language of Constantinoplehad to speak it to be
    a citizen) its legal experts, at the direction
    of the emperor, preserved and codified Roman
    legal traditions. The Empire-which saw no fewer
    than 88 rulers come and go and survived centuries
    of public riots, religious differences, and
    foreign threatsended 1453 when Constantinople
    fell to the Turks. Constantinople today is the
    modern city of Istanbul, Turkey, the only major
    city that straddles two continents.

9
Emperor Justinian
10
Mosaic Portrait of Emperor Justinian I
  • Questions to consider
  • For this piece of art answer the following
  • When looking at this
  • I feel
  • I see
  • I think
  • I wonder

11
Justinian I notes
  • The mosaic picture is representing Emperor
    Justinian I and his court. It is located in the
    Church of San Vitale, in Ravenna, Italy.
  • The Byzantine Empire's 16th and most ambitious
    ruler was the Emperor Justinian I, who held power
    from A.D. 527 until his death in A.D. 565.
    Justinian ascended the throne at age 45. he was
    very devout, determined and even stubborn.
    Rather than allow problems to develop, he took
    steps to prevent them (he preferred to invade
    rather than be invaded). During his reign a
    historian named Procopius praised the emperor as
    even-tempered and hard-working. After
    Justinians death, Procopius wrote in a Secret
    History that the emperor had been devious,
    false, hypocritical, two-faced, cruel, skilled in
    dissembling his thought, never moved to tears by
    either joy or paina liar always.

12
  • Justinian was an ambitious military leader. He
    funded his military ventures by taxing the people
    heavily. Eventually, Justinian's armies managed
    to dominate the Vandals in North Africa, the
    Ostrogoths in Italy, and the Visigoths in
    Southern Spain, and expanded the Empire to the
    greatest size it was ever to attain. In a church
    in Ravenna, Italy, he was celebrated in the
    mosaic (a picture or pattern made up of small
    pieces of colored glass or stone inlaid in
    plaster) shown here. In the long run, though,
    Justinians costly military projects were not so
    successful. His attempt to recapture Rome from
    the Barbarians led to 18 years of chaotic siege
    and counter siege, leaving the once-proud city in
    ruins.
  • Justinian, like all Byzantine emperors, played a
    dual role. He was the absolute head of both the
    Christian church and the state. The throne, in
    fact, was built wide enough to seat twothus
    symbolizing the emperors partnership with Jesus.
    In the mosaic, at Justinians left hand, stands
    the archbishop of Ravenna. Justinian served
    various roles as a Christian leader. Because he
    was the emperor and emperors were believed to
    rule by divine right, his authority over the
    church was above that of even the patriarch of
    Constantinople. Justinian also had the authority
    to choose and appoint the patriarch of
    Constantinople.

13
  • The Codification of 400 years worth of Roman law
    was one of Justinians major accomplishments.
    Justinian believed that many of the old laws were
    unnecessarily complicated, unorganized, and no
    longer relevant. Thus, he appointed a group of
    10 men, working under a legal scholar named
    Tribonian, to collect and organize the laws made
    and used by all the emperors before him.. As a
    result, the laws were revised and a new legal
    code called the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of
    Civil Law) was created. This code law, also
    known as the Code of Justinian, became the basis
    for much of Western legal codes in the subsequent
    centuries.
  • Justinian's finest, most lasting achievements
    were his massive building programs. The emperor
    undertook an ambitious program of public works,
    ordering new bridges, churches, monasteries,
    forums, forts and roads to be built. Hospitals,
    public baths, recreation centers, a law library,
    a seaside park filled with bronze and marble
    statuesall of these were the work of Justinians
    stonemasons, architects, and planners. When the
    city of Antioch was destroyed in an earthquake,
    Justinian had the entire city rebuilt!

14
Empress Theodora
15
Mosaic of Empress Theodora
  • For this piece of art answer the following
  • When looking at this
  • I feel
  • I see
  • I think
  • I wonder

16
Theodora notes
  • The subject of the mosaic is Empress Theodora and
    her court. It is located in Ravenna, Italy in
    the Church of San Vitale.
  • Justinians wife, the Empress Theodora, was a
    remarkable and influential woman who equaled and
    sometimes surpassed her husband in political
    skill and wisdom. Born into the lower classes
    (her father was the bear-keeper for
    Constantinoples circus), Theodora carved out a
    teenage career as a dancer and actress. She
    loved adventure, new friendships and travel. In
    her twenties, when she returned from a long trip
    to Africa, she settled down and married
    Justinian. Once he took power, Theodora was
    active in politicsadvancing her friends,
    destroying her enemies, and sometimes giving
    orders that canceled her husbands. She also was
    responsible for several social welfare programs,
    including one for the citys poor and homeless
    girls, and for convincing the emperor to expand
    women s rights.

17
  • On one occasion, Theodora saved the empire. In
    A. D. 532, in reaction to the huge amounts of
    money being poured into overseas wars and to
    Justinians sometimes tyrannical rule, there was
    a riot in Constantinople, later called the Nika
    Rebellion. It began as a simple shouting-match
    (in the stadium where chariot races took place),
    but soon a mob formed and the city was in flames.
    The royal family took refuge in the palace.
    Some of Justinians counselors argued for escape
    by sea, but then Theodora spoke. According to
    the court historian, Procopius, Theodora's advice
    to her husband was the following In my opinion
    this is no time to admit the maxim that a woman
    must not act as a man among men nor, if she
    fires the courage of the halting, are we to
    consider whether she does right or no. When
    matters come to a crisis, we must agree as to the
    best course to take. My opinion is that ,
    although we may save ourselves by flight, it is
    not to our interest. Every man that sees the
    light must die, but the man who has once been
    raised to the height of empire cannot suffer
    himself to go into exile and survive his dignity.
    God forbid that I should ever be stripped of the
    purple, or live a single day on which I am not to
    be saluted as Mistress. If thou desires to go,
    Emperor, nothing prevents thee. There is the
    sea there are the steps to the boat. But have a
    care that when thou leaves here, thou dose not
    exchange this set light for an ignoble death.
    For my part I like the old saying the empire is
    a fine winding sheet.
  • Rallied by her speech, Justinian sent troops to
    crush the rebellion. The emperor and his troops
    surrounded the hippodrome, killed 30,000 of the
    rebels and order was restored.

18
Hagia Sophia
19
Interior of the Hagia Sophia
  • Questions to consider
  • Describe the interior of this building. What
    kinds of shapes do you see? How long do you
    think it took to build it? How is this building
    illuminated? Which part of the building do you
    think took the longest to build? What type of
    building might this be? What aspects of the
    architecture strike you as interesting? How high
    do you think the dome is? How does the size of
    the building make you feel? Why would light be
    important in this building?

20
Hagia Sophia notes
  • In the wake of the riot in 532, Justinian
    undertook to rebuild and restore Constantinople.
    True to form, he did it on the grand scale. In
    addition to the many civic buildings Justinian
    had built, the crown jewel of Constantinoplethe
    largest of its 25 new Christian cathedralswas a
    domed church named the Hagia Sophia.
  • Built in only 5 years (532-537), Hagia Sophia, or
    the Church of Holy Wisdom, stood for centuries
    as the most magnificent structure in the Western
    world. Its dome, a marvel of engineering,
    reaches 180 feet (or some 12 stories) above the
    floor. The domes diameter is 107 feet and at
    its circumference it has 40 stained-glass
    windows. In Justinian's time, Hagia Sophias
    beauty became renowned as the sun crossed the
    sky, spokes of light spun slowly across the
    cathedrals walls, columns, arches, and
    glittering mosaics. Everywhere there was
    polished marble in 6 colors green, black, red,
    purple, blue, and white. After the sun set, a
    huge candelabrum, hanging on long chains blazed
    to life.

21
  • Hagia Sophia, while ornate on the inside, is like
    other Byzantine churches on the outside utterly
    plain. The contrast is deliberate and symbolic.
    The plain brick and mortar exterior represents
    the daily world and earthly life. The rich
    interior represents the ideal or spiritual
    universe that, the Byzantines believed,
    accompanied the coming of Christianity.
    Interestingly, Hagia Sophia has a second dual
    nature, as wellexpressed in its two styles of
    architecture. Here east meets west. The
    cathedrals size and strength thick pillars, a
    huge enclosed space, are reminders of the
    architecture of Rome. But the design and
    decorationintricate and ornate, down to the very
    last piece of mosaicreflect Eastern influences.
  • Two distinguished architects worked on the
    church Antemuis of Tralles and Isidorus of
    Miletus. With Hagia Sophia they solved a major
    design problem, and the solution was played out
    in smaller churches across the Byzantine Empire.
    The hardest part to build is what is called the
    pendentive. This is the strangely curved wall
    space that extends above the four central arches,
    reaching to the base of the dome. The pendentive
    joins two circular shapes. The architectural
    style of Hagia Sophia spread far through the
    Empire-Armenia, S. Italy, Russia, Serbia, and
    Sicily. In each region, local builders adjusted
    the style to suit their particular climate,
    technology and materials. When Constantinople
    fell to the Islamic Turks, Hagia Sophia became a
    mosque. Today it is a museum.

22
Icon of Mary and Jesus
23
Icon of Mary and Jesus
  • For this piece of art answer the following
  • When looking at this
  • I feel
  • I see
  • I think
  • I wonder

24
Notes Icons
  • Throughout the Byzantine Empire, the Christian
    church carried forward a long tradition of icons.
    An icon is a representation of sacred persons or
    events, such as the lives of Jesus and the
    saints. Icons appear in several forms mural
    painting, mosaic and most typically, painted on
    small wooden panes. These flat, two dimensional
    religious images can be venerated in special ways
    (prayed to and carried aloft in religious
    processions) and specific technical rules guide
    their artistic form.
  • Some Byzantine Christians opposed icons because
    they felt it was wrong to show devotions to a
    mere man- made image. They feared that the icons
    were being worshiped as though they represented
    gods. Those opposed to icons argued that worship
    should be offered only to God. For a long time,
    though, these Christians were in the minority,
    and icons were widely accepted. Those who
    supported the use of icons argued that the images
    helped the faithful honor the religious figures
    represented. Portraits of Jesus, his mother Mary
    and others saints become increasingly popular.
    Indeed some of the newest Christian converts
    barbarians into the Westaccepted icons with a
    vengeance, investing them with magical powers and
    making sacrifices before them.

25
  • Over the centuries, a rift developed between pro
    and anti icon Christians. Words flew, fists were
    raised, and riots broke out. The anti-icon
    Christians became known as iconoclasts (meaning
    icon smashers) and the Byzantine Emperor Leo
    III passionately joined their ranks. In A.D.
    730, partly in response to a volcanic eruption
    that he saw as a sign of Gods wrath, Leo banned
    icons. Moreover, the ordered that all religious
    imagesicons, mosaics, paintingsbe burned,
    whitewashed or destroyed. Leos decree deepened
    the growing rift between Easter (Byzantine and
    Western Christians. In the West, where few
    people could read, religious leaders often used
    images to explain Christian teachings. The Roman
    pope, Gregory III, who held sway in the West,
    claimed to lead the whole church, and favored
    icons, responded by declaring that Leo III was no
    longer a Christian and he excommunicated him.

26
  • For decades, controversy raged. Artwork was
    destroyed. Iconoclast emperors alternated with
    their pro-icon opponents. Though the Byzantines
    finally accepted icons for good, the damage was
    done. The rift between Eastern and Western
    Christians became a gaping chasm. In 1054, the
    Christian church split into two churches forever.
    In the West, the church became the Roman
    Catholic church (catholic is from a Latin worked
    meaning universal) in the East, the church became
    the eastern Orthodox church (orthodox from Greek,
    means correct belief).
  • The split between Eastern and Western
    Christianity, call the Great Schism, was the
    result of cleavages in tradition, custom and
    theology. According to the Catholic church of
    the West, masses were always in Latin, the pope
    was the supreme religious authority above any
    political ruler, all clergy were celibate, and
    religious icons of martyrs and saints were to be
    respected.
  • In the East, however, Christianity took on
    different traditions. Masses were in Greek, the
    language of the eastern people, so as to be
    understandable. Monks and other Christians who
    did missionary work often translated the bible
    into the language of the people they were trying
    to convert, in order to make Christianity more
    accessible. Another difference was that the
    Byzantine emperor appointed and was considered
    superior to the patriarch, they bishop of
    Constantinople, who dominated the Byzantine
    Church and whom the Byzantine Christians looked
    up to as a greater religious authority than the
    pope. In the East, bishops were not allowed to
    marry, but priests and other clergy were not
    required to be celibate. Icons were generally a
    subject of much controversy. For centuries, they
    were still used in the East, although many
    Orthodox Christian disapproved of them because
    they felt that Christian should be praying
    directly to and only to God.

27
  • According to the Catholic Church
  • Masses were always conducted in Latin.
  • The pope was the supreme religious authority.
  • All clergy were celibate (They did not marry).
  • Religious icons of martyrs and saints were to be
    respected.

Christianity in the east took on a different
tradition Masses were in Greek. Monks and
missionaries translated the Bible into the
language of the people they were trying to
convert. The patriarch, the bishop of
Constantinople, dominated the Byzantine Church.
The emperor appointed patriarch and was superior
to him. Bishops could not marry, but priests and
clergy could.
28
  • Less tangible differences also contributed to the
    split between the Eastern and Western Christians.
    The Western Church believed that the papacy and
    bishops of Rome held supreme authority over
    interpreting the Scripture. This belief was
    derived from Jesus statement to Peter in Matthew
    1618 Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
    build my church. In contrast, the Eastern
    Church put the authority of the Scriptures and
    the local church councils above the authority of
    the Pope in Rome.
  • The East was also more cosmopolitan in
    characterChristian Orthodoxy tended to be
    influenced by such diverse ideas as Eastern
    mysticism, Greek and Roman secular and pagan
    culture, and Monophysitism (the doctrine that
    holds that Christs nature remains altogether
    divine and not human). Greeks, Turks, Bulgur,
    Jews, Italians, Russian, Slavs, Khazars, Persian,
    and Armenians all lived in Constantinople. Many
    of them became Christians and such a diverse
    convergence of cultures and beliefs contributed
    to the unique form of Christianity that developed
    in the EAST.

29
Lands of the Byzantine Empire
30
Lands and Trading Routes of the Byzantine Empire
  • Questions to consider
  • Where is Constantinople? What do all the lines
    on the map represent? If you boarded a ship in
    Constantinople, where could you go? If you got
    on a camel or horse, where could you go? Why do
    you thinks Constantinople is called a
    crossroads? Why is Constantinople in a good
    location to be the capital of a military and
    trading Empire?

31
  • The map shows the lands and trading routes of the
    Byzantine Empire. The Byzantine Empire was a
    vast array of cultural and commercial threads,
    tied together by the great knot of
    Constantinople. The inhabitants of the Empire
    were descended from many ancient people,
    including the Armenians, Slavs, Bulgarians,
    Greeks, Normans, and Turks. Most of them were
    farmers who lived in one-room huts made of wood
    or mud bricks. They raised grapes, olives, and
    wheat or herded sheep, and lived on chasse,
    bread, and vegetable cooked in olive oil.
    Constantinople howeverwhich became known a s
    simply The City due to its magnificent
    edifices, large population, and commercial
    successwas home to the wealthy and powerful, who
    lived in stone mansions, feasted on meat cooked
    in garlic sauces, and enjoyed fine wines.

32
  • Byzantiums trade routes connected three
    continents with its system of caravan tracks,
    rivers, seaways, and roads. The Byzantines
    controlled only part of these trade routes, but
    merchants came from far away places to trade in
    Constantinople. As goods poured into the city
    from the distant corners of the Empire, merchants
    set up along the citys main street, displaying
    everything from rugs and shoes to fruits and
    vegetable to icons.

33
India Export Spices, pepper and jewels Import
ivory Africa Export ivory and
gold Import silk (after stealing the process
from China) Russia Export honey, wood and
furs Import art and architecture Spain Export
Cork and grain Import bronze church doors
34
France Export Fine wines and wool Import Silk
England Export Iron and tin Import Works of
the ancient Greeks Northern Europe Export
grain, wool, timber Import Eastern goodsbronze
doors China Export Silk Import Christianity
35
  • From China, on camels that plodded overland for
    some 230 days, came prized silksuntil Justinian
    imported the silk making process itself.
    Justinian, by persuading two missionaries to
    smuggle from China not only silkworms but seeds
    for the mulberry trees they thrive on, plucked
    from the Chinese their closely-kept, centuries
    secret. Thus, silk became one of
    Constantinoples exports along with carved ivory,
    enamel, glassware, and bronze church doors.
    Constantinople prospered by importing, refining
    and exporting the goods that reached its markets.
  • Constantinople was not only a source of
    manufactured goods, of course. Christian
    missionaries went out into the Empire, making new
    converts as far away as the Russian and Slavic
    regions. Art and architectural styles, too,
    spread to distant lands. Preserved by the
    scholars of Constantinople, the works of the
    ancient GreeksHomer, Plato, Archimedes,
    Euclidwent forth to influence Europe and the
    western world. The Byzantine legal codewith its
    laws on divorce, marriage, justice, and
    propertybecame reflected in the legal systems of
    Europe, and of many present-day nations.

36
  • As a crossroad of trade and culture,
    Constantinoples ability to protect itself from
    foreign invaders and unwanted traders was
    crucial. The side of Constantinople not
    protected by water was protected by three
    parallel walls in increasing heights, the highest
    wall stretching 40 to 70 feet high and 12 to 40
    feet thick. Watchtowers built onto the middle
    wall helped warn the army of coming invaders. A
    chain stretched across the Golden Horn inlet
    deterred enemy ships from docking at
    Constantinoples harbor. Constantinoples army
    also possessed Greek fire, the first secret
    weapon in history. This petroleum-based mixture
    could be thrown in pots or fired through tubes.
    When wet, it took fire and couldnt be
    extinguished with water. The citys military
    also employed spies, a Bureau of Barbarians,
    which was analogous to the CIA, and other
    merchant and foreigner informants.
  • Built to endure the invasions of barbarian hordes
    and later Muslim armies, Constantinople remained
    the strongest hub of Christianity in the East.
    It was finally sacked by the Turks in 1453.
    Constantinoples strategic location is now
    enjoyed by the modern city of Istanbul, Turkey.
    This city remains an important center of
    transportation and trade.

37
Answer these
38
Critical Thinking assessmentsChoose one to
create a product of your choice organizing your
information.
  • 1. Trace the development of Constantinople and
    explain how cultural diffusion played a part in
    the empire. Give at least 3 examples.
  • 2. How did religion shape the political and
    economical life of Constantinople?
  • 3.Explain 3 legacies from Constantinople to the
    modern world.

39
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