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Byzantine Empire - Early history

Byzantine Empire - Early history: Encyclopedia II - Byzantine Empire - Early history

The Eastern Roman Empire was largely spared the difficulties of the west in the 3rd and 4th centuries (see Crisis of the Third Century) in part because urban culture was better established there and the initial invasions were attracted to the wealth of Rome. Throughout the 5th century, various invasions conquered the western half of the Roman Empire and at best only demanded tribute from the eastern half. Theodosius II fortified the walls of Constantinople, leaving the city impenetrable to attacks: it was to be preserved from foreign conques ...

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Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - The term Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - Identity continuity and consciousness, Byzantine Empire - Origin, Byzantine Empire - Early history, Byzantine Empire - The age of Justinian I, Byzantine Empire - The fight for survival, Byzantine Empire - Golden era, Byzantine Empire - The Comneni and the crusaders, Byzantine Empire - Underlying reasons for decline, Byzantine Empire - Decline and fall of the Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - Legacy and importance, Byzantine Empire - Economy, Byzantine Empire - Science, Byzantine Empire - Religion, Byzantine Empire - Bibliography

Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - Bibliography, Byzantine Empire - Decline and fall of the Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - Early history, Byzantine Empire - Economy, Byzantine Empire - Golden era, Byzantine Empire - Identity continuity and consciousness, Byzantine Empire - Legacy and importance, Byzantine Empire - Origin, Byzantine Empire - Religion, Byzantine Empire - Science, Byzantine Empire - The Comneni and the crusaders, Byzantine Empire - The age of Justinian I, Byzantine Empire - The fight for survival, Byzantine Empire - The term Byzantine Empire, Byzantine Empire - Underlying reasons for decline, Western Roman Empire, List of Byzantine Empire-related topics, Roman Empire, Roman Emperors, Byzantine Emperors, History of Greece, History of the Ottoman Empire, History of the Balkans, History of Europe, History of the Middle East, History of Rome, Latin Empire, Lombards, Empire of Nicaea, Empire of Trebizond, Despotate of Epirus, Despotate of Morea, Byzantine currency, Byzantine architecture, Byzantine aristocracy and bureaucracy, Byzantine army, Byzantine battle tactics, Byzantine navy, Comnenus, Palaeologus, Eastern Orthodox Church Calendar, Derogatory use of Byzantine

Byzantine Empire: Encyclopedia II - Byzantine Empire - Early history



Byzantine Empire - Early history

The Eastern Roman Empire was largely spared the difficulties of the west in the 3rd and 4th centuries (see Crisis of the Third Century) in part because urban culture was better established there and the initial invasions were attracted to the wealth of Rome. Throughout the 5th century, various invasions conquered the western half of the Roman Empire and at best only demanded tribute from the eastern half. Theodosius II fortified the walls of Constantinople, leaving the city impenetrable to attacks: it was to be preserved from foreign conquest until 1204. To spare the Eastern Roman Empire from the invasion of the Huns of Attila, Theodosius gave them subsidies of gold. Moreover, he favored merchants living in Constantinople who traded with the barbarians. His successor, Marcian, refused to continue to pay the great sum. However, Attila had already diverted his attention from the Western Roman Empire and died in 453 after the Battle of Chalons. The Hunnic Empire collapsed and Constantinople was free from the menace of Attila. This started a profitable relationship between the Eastern Roman Empire and the remaining Huns. The Huns would eventually fight as mercenaries in Byzantine armies during the following centuries.

At the time since the fall of Attila, the true chief in Constantinople was the Alan general Aspar. Leo I managed to free himself from the influence of the barbarian chief favouring the rise of the Isauri, a crude semi-barbarian tribe living in Roman territory, in southern Anatolia. Aspar and his son Ardabur were murdered in a riot in 471, and henceforth, Constantinople became free from foreign influences for centuries. Leo was also the first emperor to receive the crown not from a general or an officer, as evident in the Roman tradition, but from the hands of the patriarch of Constantinople. This habit became mandatory as time passed, and in the Middle Ages, the religious characteristic of the coronation had totally substituted the old form. In 468, Leo unsuccessfully attempted to reconquer North Africa from the Vandals. By that time, the Western Roman Empire was already restricted to Italy (Britain had fallen to Angles and Saxons, Spain fell to the Visigoths, Africa fell to the Vandals and Gaul fell to the Franks).

In 466, as a condition of his Isaurian alliance, Leo married his daughter Ariadne to the Isaurian Tarasicodissa, who took the name Zeno. When Leo died in 474, Zeno and Ariadne's minor son (Leo I's grandson) succeeded to the throne as Leo II, with Zeno acting as regent. When Leo II died later that year, Zeno I became emperor. The end of the Western Empire is sometimes dated to 476, early in Zeno's reign, when the barbarian general Odoacer deposed the titular Western Emperor Romulus Augustus, but declined to replace him with another puppet. To recover Italy, Zeno could only negotiate with the Ostrogoths of Theodoric who had been settled in Moesia. He sent the barbarian king in Italy as magister militum per Italiam ("chief of staff for Italy"). After the fall of Odoacer in 493, Theodoric, who had lived in Constantinople during his youth, ruled over Italy on his own, maintaining a merely formal obedience to Zeno. He revealed himself as the most powerful Germanic king of that age, but his successors were greatly inferior to him and their kingdom of Italy started to decline in the 530s.

In 475, Zeno was deposed by a plot to elevate Basiliscus (the general who led Leo I's 468 invasion of North Africa) to the throne. Zeno recovered the throne twenty months later. However, Zeno had to face the threat coming from his Isaurian former official Illo and the other Isaurian, Leontius, who was also elected rival emperor. Isaurian prominence ended when an aged civil officer of Roman origin, Anastasius I, became emperor in 491 and after a long war defeated them in 498. Anastasius revealed himself to be an energetic reformer and an able administrator. He perfected Constantine I's coin system by definitively setting the weight of the copper follis, the coin used in most everyday transactions. He also reformed the tax system in which the State Treasury contained the enormous sum of 320,000 pounds of gold when he died.

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10th, 11th centuries, 1453, 3rd, 4th centuries, 9th, Abbasid Caliphate, Adriatic Sea, Africa, Alamanni, Alan, Aleppo, Alexiad, Alexius Comnenus, Alp Arslan, Amalfi, Anastasius I, Anatolia, Angles, Anna Comnena, Antioch, Antiochia, Arab, Arabs, Arcadius, Architecture, Armenia, Armenians, Asia Minor, Aspar, Athens, Attila, Attila the Hun, Avars, Azerbaijan, Balkan peninsula, Balkans, Basil II, Basiliscus, Battle of Adrianople, Battle of Chalons, Battle of Mons Lactarius, Battle of Myriokephalon, Battle of Yarmuk, Belisarius, Britain, Bulgaria, Bulgarians, Bulgars, Busta Gallorum, Byzantine Emperors, Byzantine architecture, Byzantine aristocracy and bureaucracy, Byzantine army, Byzantine art, Byzantine battle tactics, Byzantine currency, Byzantine medicine, Byzantine music, Byzantine navy, Byzantines' superior navy, Byzantium, Calabria, Caliphate, Caracalla, Carthage, Chalcedonian Orthodox, Charlemagne, Christian, Christianity, Christianization, Cilicia, Comneni, Comnenian dynasty, Comnenus, Constans II, Constantine I, Constantine Porphyrogenitus, Constantine XI Paleologus, Constantine the Great, Constantinople, Coptic, Cordoba, Corpus Juris Civilis, Crete, Crimea, Crisis of the Third Century, Cyprus, Dalmatia, Danishmends, Danube, Derogatory use of Byzantine, Despotate of Epirus, Despotate of Morea, Digenis Acritas, Diocletian, Donation of Constantine, Dyrrachium, Eastern Orthodox, Eastern Orthodox Church Calendar, Eastern Orthodoxy, Edward Gibbon, Egypt, Egyptians, Emperor, Empire of Nicaea, Empire of Trebizond, Empress Irene, Ethiopia, Exarchate of Africa, Exarchate of Ravenna, Exarchates, Fall of Constantinople, Fatimid, Fatimids, First Crusade, Fourth Crusade, Franks, Gaeta, Gaiseric, Gallipoli, Gaul, Gelimer, Georgia, Germanic, Gothic Wars, Goths, Grand Dukes, Great Schism, Greece, Greek, Greek East, Greek Orthodox, Greek fire, Gulf of Corinth, Hagia Sofia, Hellene, Hellenization, Heraclius, Hieronymus Wolf, History of Europe, History of Greece, History of Rome, History of the Balkans, History of the Middle East, History of the Ottoman Empire, Holy Land, Holy Roman Empire, Honorius, Huns, Icons, Illyricum, Iraq, Isauri, Isaurian, Italy, Ivan III, Ivan IV, Jerusalem, John I, John I Tzimiskes, Julian, Justin I, Justin II, Justinian I, Khosrau I, Khosrau I of Persia, Khosrau II, Kiev, Konya, Latin, Latin Empire, Latium, Leo I, Leo II, Leo III, Liguria, List of Byzantine Empire-related topics, Lombard, Lombards, Macedonian, Manuel Comnenus, Manuel I Comnenus, Manzikert, Marcian, Maurice, May 29, Mediterranean, Mehmed II, Mesopotamia, Middle Ages, Mistra, Moesia, Monophysite, Monophysitism, Montesquieu, Moscow, Motto, Muscovy, Muslim, Muslims, Names of the Greeks, Naples, Narses, Nemanjic, Nicaea, Nikephoros I Phokas, Nonnus, Normans, North Africa, Nova Roma, Odoacer, Orthodox Christianity, Ostrogoths, Ottoman Empire, Ottoman occupation, Ottomans, Outremer, Palaeologan dynasty, Palaeologus, Palestine, Paul the Silentiary, Persians, Photios, Pope, Priscus, Procopius, Ravenna, Renaissance Italy, Robert Byron, Roman Catholic Church, Roman Emperors, Roman Empire, Roman army, Roman legal code, Roman triumph, Romanus IV, Rome, Romulus Augustus, Russia, Russian Empire, Sassanid Empire, Sassanid Persian, Sassanid Persians, Sassanids, Saxons, Scythian, Second Council of Nicaea, Second Crusade, Seljuk Turks, Serbian Empire, Serbian Kingdom, Sicily, Silk Road, Sirmium, Slavic peoples, Slavs, Southern Italy, Spain, Sun Tzu, Syria, Teias, Tetrarchy, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Theodora (9th century), Theodoric, Theodosius I, Theodosius II, Thermopylae, Third Rome, Thrace, Tiberius II, Totila, Trebizond, Tsar, Turks, Valens, Vandals, Varangian, Varangian Guard, Venetians, Venice, Visigoths, Western Roman Empire, Witiges, Zara, Zeno I, acritic songs, battle of Kleidon, cataphracts, citizenship, demography, derogatory use of 'Byzantine', eighth century, epic poem, eunuch, fall of Constantinople, forged, heretics, iconoclasm, legions, mercenaries, mosaic, mosaics, mule, nation, ninth century, nomadic, pagan, paganism, patriarch, próniai, solidus, successor states, superpower, thémata, trade, twelfth century



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Early history", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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