Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter,...

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Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder

Transcript of Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter,...

Page 1: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

Chapter 9

Civilization in Eastern Europe:Byzantium and Orthodox Europe

Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder

Page 2: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Byzantine Empire500-1450 CE

Page 3: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

Origins of the Empire• In the 4th century CE, the Romans set up Constantinople as the capital

• Constantinople became the home of many elegant buildings and Christian churches

• The city was built on the old town of Byzantium

• Invading Huns and other intruders were warded off

• There was a solid tax base in the peasant agriculture of the Eastern Mediterranean

• The empire succeeded on high levels of trade

• Latin becomes an inferior language as Greek is the common tongue

• Knowledge of Greek allowed Easterners to read ancient classics and Hellenistic writings

• Hellenized Egyptians and Syrians became integrated into the culture

• Armies were recruited from the Middle Easterners

• The empire focused on an emperor surrounded by administrators

• Leaders of the East and West were kept separate

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Justinian’s Achievement

• Eastern emperors relied on a military base to fight off the Sassanian Empire and Germanic invaders

• Justinian tried to reconquer the western empire in 533 CE to restore a way similar to Rome

• Procopius described him as a “moron” that was easily hoodwinked

• Theodora stiffened his resolve and pushed plans for expansion

• Justinian is well known for recapturing Constantinople, which was ravaged by riots and taxes

• He codified Roman law, organizing the empire and spreading legal principles

• He chose his leaders based on their merit

• He made Christian the state religion, and only Christians were citizens

• With Belisarius, he conquered North Africa and the Iberian peninsula

Page 5: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Hagia Sophia

The Hagia Sophia was constructed in the year 537 CE by Justinian’s builders. It was a wonder of the Christian world for

many years and it still stands today. It is now a museum.

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Arab Pressure and the Empire’s Defenses

• Persian successes in the Middle East were reversed and they were made Christians

• The Byzantine Empire was strong enough by the 7th century to survive the strengthening Arab Muslims

• The Arabs built a strong fleet that led to their capture of the Eastern seaboard and push into the heartland

• Greek Fire, a Byzantine chemical weapon, helped protect the capital from Arab invaders

• Weak and strong emperors for the Byzantine did not help the strength of the military

• The Arabs took over Crete in the 9th century, enabling harassment of Byzantine trade

• Slavic kingdoms like Bulgaria occasionally threatened the Byzantine borders

• Military success and marriage alliances brought down the power of the Bulgarians

• Basil II bribed the Bulgarians and then defeated them, killing the king and capturing 15,000 men

• At the end of the 10th century, the Byzantine Emperor may have been the world’s most powerful man

Page 7: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

Byzantine Society and Politics

• The politics of the Byzantines were extremely similar to that of the Chinese

• The leader of the Byzantines ruled politics and religion, and the leader could even be a woman

• The leader was surrounded by a court educated in Hellenistic ways to help with decisions

• The court could be made of all classes but was usually aristocratic

• The empire relied on Constantinople’s dominance of the countryside

• Peasants supplied the food and paid most taxes, and food prices stayed low

• Trading was a large part of the empire but merchants never held political power

• Silk imported from China became a symbol among the wealthy

• Domed buildings, colored mosaics, and painted icons linked to the Orthodox Christianity

Page 8: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Split Between Eastern and Western Christianity

• The Great Schism was the split between Eastern and Western Christianity

• Many disagreements led to the split, but a debate over yeast in bread was the last straw

• Emperors were resisting the attempts of papals to interfere with religious issues

• Charlemagne claimed to be the Roman King in the year 800

• Rituals were put in Latin instead of Greek, even though the East’s language was Latin

• The pope was seen as the first bishop in the West but not in the East

• Priests were allowed to marry and have families in the East but remained solitary in the West

• Religious art in the east was focused on suffering and appeared Asian to the Westerners

• Michael the first led the rebellion for the East

Page 9: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Empire’s Decline

• The Empire began its long period of decline after the split of East from West

• Turkish troops invaded from the East and eventually defeated the Byzantines in the Battle of Manzakurt

• The larger army of the Byzantines had been defeated, paving the way for Slavik establishments

• The East asked the West for help but the West focused instead on the Crusades

• Italians with strong navies took control of Constantinople and managed trade

• In 1453, a Turkish Sultan brought an army with artillery from Hungary, that by 1461, had conquered the

remaining pockets of Byzantine rule

• The influence of the Byzantine Empire left a lasting impression on other empires like the Ottomans

Page 10: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Spread of Civilization in Eastern Europe

• Orthodox missionaries from Constantinople converted some Balkans to Christianity and brought other

forms of Byzantine influence

• Cyril and Methodius were sent to the territories of the Czech and Slovak republics in 864

• Roman Catholic missionaries were more effective in these areas

• In the Balkans and Southern Russia, the two devised a written script for Slavic language

• The possibility of literature and literacy developed along with Christianity outside of the Byzantine Empire

• Byzantine missionaries were even willing to use local languages in Church services, which differed from

other cultures that insisted on church Latin

Page 11: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The East Central Borderlands

• The Latin alphabet prevailed in the Czech area as well as Hungary and Poland

• This area would long be an area of competition between Eastern and Western political and intellectual models

• After becoming Christian, this area was loosely governed amid a powerful land-owning aristocracy

• Eastern Europe received lots of Jews who were fleeing the Middle East and the Western intolerance

• Poland received the most Jews

• Eastern Jews, who were barred from agriculture and were resented by Christian authority, gained strength in

local commerce while maintaining their own beliefs

• An emphasis on education and literacy, though mainly for males, separated Jewish culture from most of the

societies around Europe and the world

Page 12: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The Emergence of Kievan Rus’

• Slavic peoples had moved into the sweeping plains of Russia and Eastern Europe during the time of the

Roman Empire

• They mixed with Bulgarians, used iron, extended agriculture, and held an animist religion while holding a

rich tradition of folk music and oral legend

• Scandinavian traders followed rivers and developed trading with Constantinople

• These traders developed the city of Kiev along the routes and Rurik became the first ruler

• The name Russia came from Kiev, and the city became a center of trade

• Vladimir I ruled the land from 980 to 1015, converting the area to Christianity

• It became the largest single state in Europe and its final leader, Yaroslav, issued legal codification while

building churches and arranging religious translations from Greek to Slavic

Page 13: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

Institutions and Culture in Kievan Rus’

• Kievan Rus’ borrowed some things from Byzantium but could not replicate major institutions

• Kievan rulers liked the Byzantine luxury as well as the concept of a central ruler with wide powers

• Orthodox Christianity spread into Kiev, passing along the culture and traditions of Christianity with it

• Russian literature developed using the Cyrillic alphabet, writing of religious and royal events

• Polygamy fell to monogamy, and God was seen as a leader who punished

• Ukrainian and Russian art focused on religion as well

• Orthodox churches were similar to Byzantine models, but were wood instead of stone

• Russian peasants were fairly free farmers, although boyars (aristocrats) existed

• Yaroslav made ties with marriages, and he used Byzantine styles in Kievan cathedrals and law codes

Page 14: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

Kievan Decline• The Kievan principality began to decline in the 12th century.

• Asian invaders invaded Russia, taking some of their land in the process.

• The decline of the Byzantines led to a loss of trade and wealth for Russia.

• The final blow dealt to Russia was in 1237-1238 and 1240-1241, when two groups of Mongol

invaders attacked Russia, defeating it until it's uprising later.

• Russian peoples called the Mongols 'Tartar' from the Turkish name.

• Tartars held back at the Russian culture in its writings, but not its Christian influence.

• Tartars were pushed out of Russia later, making the country free from the Mongol influence, and

able to let their culture grow and blossom.

• When Constantinople fell in 1453, Russia had just began to assert it's independence from the

Tartars.

Page 15: Chapter 9 Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox Europe Sam Gehman, Caroline Potter, and Alfred VanGilder.

The End of an Era in Eastern Europe

• Post classical Eastern Europe fell on hard times after the collapse of Russia and the Byzantine

Empire.

• The Western European areas were free, unrestricted, and had a much better economy, political

thoughts, and religious advancement than its Eastern counterpart.

• During post classical eras, West and East Europe separated slightly, leaving west to become more

prosperous and east to be left in the dust.

• Tartar invasion and the fall of the Byzantine Empire led this collapse of the East.

• Christianity, European assumptions about political rulers, the church-state relations, and the pride

in a lively artistic culture served as threads in the rebuilding of the Russian and Slavic communities.