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Heirs of Rome The Byzantine Empire The Muslim Empire Christian Europe The Franks The Empire at its height, c 250 Diocletian, The Tetrarchy, 285 CE In 324, Constantine moves East The Germanic Tribes c. 362 Rome’s last gasps… Theodoric the Great 489-526 • - Ostrogoth king ruled Italy from Rome… after killing Odoacer • His rule was enlightened, peaceful and just- praised by Romans & barbarians. • Retained the Roman Senate, civil service and schools. Old, aristocratic families still held high positions in the government Roman culture lived on: The Byzantine Empire The Byzantine Empire, The East Roman Empire, 550 Justinian the Great, 527-565 • Three principal goals: 1) restore the western provinces 2) reform the laws and institutions 3) promote art and architecture Corpus Juris Civilis, the Body of Civil Law Hagia Sophia, 532-537 Trade and Industry flourished Mosaics The Byzantine Legacy… • The codification of the laws of ancient Rome under Justinian • Preserved and expanded the philosophy, science, mathematics and literature of ancient Greece. • It prevented Muslim Arabs from advancing into Eastern Europe Around 610, Muhammad was a prosperous merchant Islam in 632 The Muslim Golden Age The 8th & 9th Centuries • The Arab Empire stretched from Spain to India and was unified by a common language-Arabic, religion-Islam and culture • Muslims preserved and expanded the Greco-Roman-Byzantine achievements in science, philosophy and mathematics… Muslim contributions to civilization • Education- great universities at Cairo, Baghdad and Cordova… • Mathematics- introduced Arabic numerals, furthered the study of algebra, geometry, and trigonometry… • Science- discovered many chemical compounds, including sulfuric acid… • Agriculture- improved farming by crop rotation • Industry- Cordovan leather; Damascus swords; damask cloth; crystal glass; smooth paper; beautiful rugs … • Navigation- they believed the world to be round… • Literature- 1001 Arabian Nights… • Medicine- used anesthetics, compiled medical texts The Mongols: Genghis Khan • In 1258, Baghdad was plundered and burned. 50,000 dead, including the last Baghdad Caliph… • For 200 years, Mongols devastated palaces, libraries and universities The Mongol Empire at its height • The cultural greatness of the Byzantine and Islamic Empires enriched the western world …but… • did not produce the major breakthroughs that created the modern world. That is the singular achievement of western Europe. Christianity gained many converts: • People were dissatisfied with the old pagan religions and were attracted by the ideas of One God, equality, universal love and eternal salvation… • Early Christians displayed courage and sincerity, willing to suffer persecution rather than renounce their faith. • The concept of equality appealed to the poor and oppressed… • Missionaries could travel and preach- Rome’s transportation system! Pope Gregory The Great, 590-604 • 588 Lombard invasions • Maintained productive lands - kept food coming into Rome • Ransomed captives • Organized defense of the city • Sponsored hospitals and schools • Aided women and orphans • Negotiated truce in 598 The Church as Unifier • Became the dominant institution after the collapse of Roman authority - assumed many political functions • It preserved the high culture of the GrecoRoman civilization • Membership in a universal religion (Catholic) replaced membership in a universal empire (Rome) • Taught a higher morality than Germanic culture The Medieval monk • Monks and nuns built monasteries and converted the people… • Maintained libraries with theological works and the ancient Latin classics • Reclaimed the land and instructed peasants in farming -rejected classical disdain for manual labor • Provided help to the old, the sick, the destitute • Adopted a code of poverty Monks worked in a Scriptorium The Merovingian Dynasty, 481-787 • King Clovis I, united the various Frankish tribes and conquered most of Gaul • In 496, he married Clothild who converted him to Christianity • King Clovis r. 481-511 • After Clovis – 250 years of “do-nothing” kings! • Mayors of the palace ran the kingdom Pepin of Heristal, Mayor of the Palace, 687 • Pepin’s son Charles Martel, later known as “Charles the Hammer,” cultivated this new aristocracy while also giving substantial support to Christian missionaries and Monasteries The Battle of Tours, 732. Military innovation: The stirrup The Carolingian Dynasty Pepin III (the Short) r. 752-768 • • • • Carolus Magnus Charles the Great Karel de Grote Charlemagne King of the Franks (768-814) & Holy Roman Emperor (800-814) Charlemagne: • Conqueror • Defender of the Church • Patron of the Arts & Learning • State-builder: missi dominici Missi dominici among the people…. Missi dominici… reporting back to Charlemagne The Holy Roman Emperor, 800 • His religious duty: raise the educational level of the clergy so they read the Bible and properly teach the faith • Teach reading and writing - scriptures free of copying errors • Create an enjoyable experience for churchgoersGregorian chants Alcuin of York (735804) oversaw the Palace School at Aachen, attracting the greatest minds of the age. Carolingian miniscule… • The Carolingian RenaissanceA flowering of art, architecture, literature, music and education in an attempt to recapture the past glory of the Roman Empire The Treaty of Verdun, 843 Any Questions?