Byzantine Essay

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    I-Tabari. The Byzantine resurgence of 960’s caused a sparing between the remaining Christian city-states. The book takes some time to explain urban development in the region as well as the trade, commerce, and the economy. The book moves into a description of civil war and the ta’ifa period. The restructuring of the army in Sicily and ‘Ali’s ibn Ja’far unsuccessful revolt. The Byzantines started several attempts to reclaim parts of Italy. In roughly 1038 George Maniakes launches the Byzantine campaign

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    The Emperor Justinian had spread his Byzantine Empire around the rim of the Mediterranean and throughout Europe, laying the groundwork for what he hoped would be a long-lived dynasty. His dreams were shattered when disease-bearing mice from lower Egypt reached the harbor town of Pelusium in AD

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    Question No. 1 Answer: In Procopius' life, the Byzantine Empire became out of the Eastern Roman Empire in Greece and was controlled by the emperor Justinian. Justinian, regularly considered the best Byzantine emperor, set out to reconquer lands that had once had a place with the Western Roman Empire. In this endeavor, Justinian depended on his splendid general Belisarius. Procopius, who filled in as Belisarius' consultant, composed a record of these wars in his distinctive compositions (Procopius)

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    Leo III, the Byzantine emperor, started to come up with a theory of why the Muslims were having such great military success against him after the siege of Constantinople. He knew that the Muslims had removed any religious images from their mosques and that in the Ten Commandments it says “Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them nor serve them” (Exodus 20:5). Leo III saw the Muslims victories as a reward from God for ridding the images from their life and thus started a program of “iconoclasm” (destroying

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    The impact of Christianity on the Byzantine Empire, presented primarily by research in JH’s work, is represented well in three main points: the overwhelming influence of pagan and Christian traditions throughout their culture, the influence that music made and has continued to make over the many years following the fall of Constantinople in 1453, and lastly and most importantly the effect of the religious writings during the period. History tells us that a ruler’s first order of business when conquering

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    Constantinople was a city strategically built both on the outside and inside. Constantine founded Constantinople on the remains of Byzantium for economic and military reasons, which were excellently seen through in the city. With the benefits of those actions, Constantine developed a rich and religious community for his citizens. The site of Byzantium was located on a peninsula and therefore had innate advantages with trade and protection. Being surrounded by water meant trade across the Black

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    The Ancient Greece civilization can be defined as the flourishing of the area between 776 B.C. and 30 B.C. Typically, historians have defined three periods of Ancient Greece: The Archaic between 776 and 480 BC, the Classical between 480 and 323 BC, and the Hellenistic between 323 and 30 BC. During the first two periods, Greece was not unified but consisted of hundreds of small and independent city-states. It was not until the Hellenistic period that we can begin to see Greek civilization spread and

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    The Ottoman Empire was one of the largest and strongest Turkish Muslim empires in the world, with its capitol Constantinople it led the trade in the eastern and western world. Constantinople had total control of the Silk Road due to location, being in the middle of the black and Mediterranean Sea gave Constantinople total control of the trade market. Leading for more than 600 years (Modern World History, chap. 5, sect. 2) the Ottoman Empire served as a unification between different and separated

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    The Crusades Essay

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    The pope was led by his position as the spiritual head of Western Europe, by the weakness of the rulers in Germany (the Holy Roman Empire) or France who could take over the effort, and by a call for help from the Byzantine emperor, Alexius I. These factors were perfect causes, and at the same time, it made sense for the call of a Crusade. The first crusade is said to fall in two parts. Part One: "A crusade for the people." And Part Two: a crusade for the princes."

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    smaller nations losing their autonomy. A continuity of culture in Eastern Europe is religious belief, in which Orthodox Christianity remained predominant and under the state’s control. Ivan III of Russia married the niece of the last Byzantine emperor, gaining control over the Christian Orthodox church. Christian Orthodox faith was used to his advantage for support of his campaigns. Later on, Alexis Romanov also gained new powers over the Eastern Orthodox church and returned Orthodox traditions

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