The Byzantium Empire or the
Eastern Roman Empire had its origin in the city of Constantinople founded in
330 CE by Constantine on the Ancient Greek City of Byzantium. It grew into an
important center in and around 395 CE following the split of the Roman Empire
into East and West portions and unlike the West which fell in 476 CE persisted
and indeed flourished until the fall of Constantinople to Arab forces in 1453.
The greatest Byzantine Emperor
was Justinian who took power in 526 CE and then advanced to re-conquer parts of
the Fallen Western Roman Empire – in Italy, North Africa and Spain – from the
various Germanic tribes. It was Justinian who codified Roman Law into one
document and built the incredible Hagia Sofia Church in Constantinople (it is a
Mosque today).
However his gains were short
lived. The Lombards drove the Byzantines out of Italy in 568 and from 610
onwards considerable territory in Syria, Palestine and Egypt was lost to the
expanding Muslim forces. The Empire would also change its language from Latin
to Greek under the 7th century Emperor Heraclius.
Muslim attacks persisted from
land and Sea but Constantinople held firm beating off the invaders in 693 and
717-718. Territory continued to be lost to the Arabs although Asia Minor was
recovered in 721.
In 726 Leo III banned the use of
Icons in the Empire as graven images of the divine–the use of Icons was
restored in 843 following what would be later called the ‘Inconoclast
Controversy’.
In the 10th century
the Byzantines struggled against a new enemy the Bulgars who overran Thrace but
failed to take Constantinople. The Russians also attacked the Byzantines but
suffered the loss of their fleet in 941.
However it wasn’t until the reign
of Basil II that the Byzantines enjoyed a renaissance. This new Emperor would
retake Syria from the Muslims in 995 and finally drive the Bulgars out of
Greece in the following year earning himself the epithet in 1014 after his
final destruction of the Bulgaroktonos (Bulgar slayer).
Nevertheless the Byzantines could not hang on to their gains
after Basil’s death. In 1055 they lost Southern Italy to the Normans and then
twenty years later surrendered Syria to the Muslims. The Turks secured a major
victory against the Byzantines in 1071 at Manzikert. Thrace fell in 1087 and
Asia Minor was lost in 1179.
Even Constantinople would eventually be occupied by Western
knights who succeeded in conquering the city in 1204 and establishing a Latin
Empire in the newly acquired territory.
Constantinople was restored to the Byzantine Empire in 1261
but its fall in 1453 at the hands of the Ottoman Turks signalled the end of an
Empire that at one time represented the essence of what was Rome.
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