BYZANTINE EMPIRE

successor state to the Roman Empire (see under Rome), also called Eastern Empire and East Roman Empire. It was named after Byzantium, which Emperor Constantine I rebuilt (a.d. 330) as Constantinople and made the capital of the entire Roman Empire. Although not foreseen at the time, a division into Eastern and Western empires became permanent after the accession (395) of Honorius in the West and Arcadius in the East.

Throughout its existence the Byzantine Empire was subject to important changes in its boundaries. The core of the empire consisted of the Balkan Peninsula (i.e., Thrace, Macedonia, Epirus, Greece proper, the Greek isles, and Illyria) and of Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). The empire combined Roman political tradition, Hellenic culture, and Christian beliefs. Greek was the prevalent language, but Latin long continued in official use.

See the table entitled Rulers of the Byzantine Empire for a list of all the Byzantine emperors and the years they reigned.

Early Centuries

The characteristic Eastern influence began with Constantine I, who also introduced Christianity. Orthodoxy triumphed over Arianism under Arcadius' predecessor, Theodosius I, but violent religious controversy was chronic. The reigns (395–527) of Arcadius, Theodosius II, Marcian, Leo I, Leo II, Zeno, Anastasius I, and Justin I were marked by the invasions of the Visigoths under Alaric I, of the Huns of Attila, and of the Avars, the Slavs, the Bulgars (see Bulgaria), and the Persians. After the Western Empire fell (476) to Odoacer, Italy, Gaul, and Spain were theoretically united under Zeno but were actually dominated by, respectively, the Ostrogoths, the Franks, and the Visigoths, while Africa was under the Vandals. During this period arose the heresies of Nestorianism and Monophysitism and the political parties of Blues and Greens to divide the Byzantines.

Revival and Hellenization

Under the rule (527–65) of Justinian I and Theodora, Byzantine power grew. Their great generals, Belisarius and Narses, checked the Persians, repressed political factions, and recovered Italy and Africa, while Tribonian helped the emperor to codify Roman law. During Justinian's reign a great revival of Hellenism took place in literature, and Byzantine art and architecture entered their most glorious period.

Much was lost again under his successors. The Lombards conquered most of Italy; however, the Pentapolis (Rimini, Ancona, Fano, Pesaro, and Senigallia), Rome, Sardinia, Corsica, Liguria, and the coasts of S Italy and Sicily long remained under Byzantine rule, and at Ravenna the exarchs governed until 751. The Persians, under Khosrow I, made great gains against the empire, though Emperor Maurice temporarily checked them in 591.

The emperor Heraclius (610–41) defeated the Persians but was barely able to save Constantinople from the Avars. Muslim conquests soon afterward wrested Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Africa, and Sicily from the empire. Heraclius's attempt to reconcile Monophysitism and orthodoxy merely led to the new heresy of Monotheletism. His military reorganization of the provinces into themes proved effective and was continued by Constans II (641–48). Constantine IV (668–85) saved Constantinople from Arab attack.

The 7th cent. was marked by increasing Hellenization of the empire, outwardly symbolized by the adoption of the Greek title Basileus by the emperors. The church, under the patriarch of Constantinople, became increasingly important in public affairs. Theology, cultivated by emperors and monks alike, was pushed to extremes of subtlety. Literature and art became chiefly religious.

Under Justinian II and his successors the empire was again menaced by Arabs and Bulgars, but the Isaurian emperors Leo III (717–41) and Constantine V stopped the Arab advance and recovered Asia Minor. The grave issue of iconoclasm, which they precipitated, led to the loss of Rome. In 800, during the reign of Irene, the Frank Charlemagne was crowned emperor of the West at Rome. Thus ended even the theoretical primacy of Byzantium over Europe.

A Truly Eastern State

The political division of East and West was paralleled by a religious schism, intensified by the patriarch Photius, between the Roman and the Orthodox Eastern Church, later culminating in a complete break (1054). In all aspects the Byzantine Empire, having lost its claim to universality, became a Greek monarchy, though Constantinople still remained the center of both Greek and Roman civilization. Compared with its intellectuals, artists, writers, and artisans, those of Western Europe were crude and barbarous, though sometimes more vigorous and original.

In the empire the administrative machinery was huge, and competition among the courtiers was intense. Complex diplomacy, intrigue, and gross violence marked the course of events; yet moral decay did not prevent such emperors as Basil I, founder of the Macedonian dynasty, and his successors (notably Leo VI, Romanus I, Constantine VII, Nicephorus II, John I, and Basil II) from giving the empire a period of splendor and power (867–1025). The eastern frontier was pushed to the Euphrates River, the Bulgars were subjugated, and the Balkan Peninsula was recovered. Russia, converted to Christianity, became an outpost of Byzantine culture. In the unceasing struggle between the great landowners and the small peasantry, most of the emperors favored the peasants. Economic prosperity was paralleled by a new golden age in science, philosophy, and architecture.

The Ebb of Power

With the rule of Zoë (1028–50) anarchy and decline set in. The Seljuk Turks increased their attacks, and with the defeat (1071) of Romanus IV at Manzikert most of Asia Minor was permanently lost. The Normans under Robert Guiscard and Bohemond I seized S Italy and attacked the Balkans. Venice ruled the Adriatic and challenged Byzantine commercial dominance in the East, and the Bulgars and Serbs reasserted their independence.

Alexius I (1081–1118) took advantage of the First Crusade (see Crusades) to recover some territory in Asia Minor and to restore Byzantine prestige, but his successors of the Comnenus dynasty were at best able to postpone the disintegration of the empire. After the death (1180) of Manuel I the Angelus dynasty unwittingly precipitated the cataclysm of the Fourth Crusade. In 1204 the Crusaders and the Venetians sacked Constantinople and set up a new empire (see Constantinople, Latin Empire of) in Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece. The remainder of the empire broke into independent states, notably the empires of Nicaea and of Trebizond and the despotate of Epirus.

In 1261 the Nicaean emperor Michael VIII conquered most of the tottering Latin empire and reestablished the Byzantine Empire under the Palaeologus family (1261–1453). The reconstructed empire was soon attacked from all sides, notably by Charles I of Naples, by Venice, by the Ottoman Turks, by the new kingdoms of Serbia and Bulgaria, and by Catalonian adventurers under Roger de Flor. At the same time, the empire began to break down from within—the capital was at odds with the provinces; ambitious magnates were greedy for land and privileges; religious orders fought each other vigorously; and church and state were rivals for power.

Eventually the Turks encircled the empire and reduced it to Constantinople and its environs. Manuel II and John VIII vainly asked the West for aid, and, in 1453, Constantinople fell to Sultan Muhammad II after a final desperate defense under Constantine XI. This is one of the dates conventionally accepted as the beginning of the modern age. The collapse of the empire opened the way for the vast expansion of the Ottoman Empire to Vienna itself and also enabled Ivan III of Russia, son-in-law of Constantine XI, to claim a theoretical succession to the imperial title.

Bibliography

The classic, though biased, work on Byzantine history is Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. More recent standard works are those of J. B. Bury, C. Diehl, A. A. Vasil'ev, G. Ostrogorsky, and N. H. Baynes. See also studies by J. M. Hussey (1967, 1986), R. J. H. Jenkins (1967), D. Obolensky (1971), S. Runciman (1971, 1977), and M. Angold (1985).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...NUMMR 13 HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE BY A. A. VASILIEV IN TWO...Significance of This Event for the Byzantine Empire 324...The Byzantine Empire and the Arabs in the Epoch of...
...HISTORY HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE BY GEORGE FINLAY...IV. STATE OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE DURING THE ICONO CLAST...THE POWER AND GLORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE A.D. 867-1057...
...CHADWICK THE ORTHODOX CHURCH IN THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE J. M. HUSSEY CLARENDON...The Orthodox Church in the Byzantine Empire. Oxford history of the Christian...Orthodox Eastern Church -- Byzantine Empire. 2. Byzantine Empire -- Church...
...at the back of this book. THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE BY NORMAN H. BAYNES NEW...INDEX 255 THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE INTRODUCTION AN Empire...Roman Empire of the West and the Byzantine Empire of the East. But however satisfying...
HISTORY OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE HISTORY OF THE Byzantine Empire BY CHARLES DIEHL, MEMBRE DE LINSTITUT PROFESSOR...UNITED STATES OF AMERICA PREFACE THE history of the Byzantine Empire, notwithstanding the numerous works which have almost...
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...The Emperor Justinian and the Byzantine Empire. by James J. Cooke The Emperor Justinian and the Byzantine Empire. By James Allan Evans. (Westport...throne in Constantinople. The Byzantine Empire continued to expand in the Eastern...
...the Persians were menacing the Byzantine Empire from the east. In 611, the Persians...and Egypt were returned to the Byzantine Empire and the relic of the Holy Cross...the political fortunes of the Byzantine Empire in this early period"; while...
...administration of the empire. The laws discussed...continued to oppose Byzantine rule after the defeat...Jews in the Roman Empire: Legal Problems...Shaft, Andrew, Byzantine Jewry: from Justinian...Andrew Sharf, Byzantine Jewry: from Justinian...Jews in the Roman Empire. (33.) cf. Rabello...
...the ancient Roman and Byzantine Empires between Julius Caesar...their North African empire based in another lost...were a major threat to Byzantine Mediterranean sea traffic...was the eastern Roman empire of North Africa, Spain...
...an Islamized version of the Byzantine Empire. He implied that once one stops...carried over directly from the Byzantine Empire. In individual sub-chapters...a direct borrowing from the Byzantine Empire, had also existed in pre-Ottoman...
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...the Artistic Splendours of the Byzantine Empire, Dionysios Stathakopoulos Surveys...ILLUSTRATION OMITTED The Byzantine empire means different things to different...important constituting traits of the Byzantine empire date back to this early era...
...foreign policy than the Byzantine empire. For over 1,100 years...negotiating table. The Byzantines were the inheritors of the Roman empire. The Emperor Constantine...only in preserving the Byzantine Empire, but in preventing the...
...changed since the time of the Byzantine Empire--an era defined by the Eastern...holy mountain attest to the Byzantine Empires cultural diversity. On the...the opinion I formed of the Byzantine Empire would turn out to be less benign...
...had nursed a hatred for the Byzantine Empire ever since a mysterious incident...a quarter of the Roman i.e. Byzantine empire. This was to be followed by...their great victory over the Byzantine empire, it underpinned the association...
...armies passing through the Byzantine Empire en route to the Holy Land...have against the mighty Byzantine Empire? In fact, by the early...to support the new Latin Empire of Constantinople against Byzantine counter-attacks proved a...
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...more than 350 borrowed Byzantine Empire treasures at New York...the art displayed from Byzantine countries and territories...Second Golden Age of Byzantine civilization, from A...of his Eastern Roman Empire at the provincial city...
...encyclopedic, brilliant and Byzantine. Byzantine certainly describes Mr. Ecos latest effort...civilization: Our hero legitimizes the Holy Roman Empire, invents the legend of the Holy Grail...destiny of Christianity, and of every empire that wants to be holy and Roman, lies...
...its 1,000 years, the Byzantine Empire controlled much of...Byzantium: The Lost Empire," a four-part series...Channel (TLC). "The Byzantines," Mr. Romer says...bowls. A reduced Byzantine Empire fell to the Ottoman...
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...Portokalis Euro-centric Byzantium. Named after the Byzantine Empire (also known as the Eastern Roman Empire founded by...of the Eastern Orthodox Church, dating back to the Byzantine Empire and encompassing the Greek and Russian Orthodox faiths...
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BYZANTINE EMPIRE successor state to the Roman Empire...East. Throughout its existence the Byzantine Empire was subject to important changes in...the table entitled Rulers of the Byzantine Empire for a list of all the Byzantine emperors...
RULERS OF THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE (table) Rulers of the Byzantine Empire Emperor (or Empress) Dates of Reign Constantine I (the Great) 330 37 Constantius 337 61 Julian (the Apostate) 361 63 Jovian 363 64 Valens 364...
BYZANTINE MUSIC the music of the Byzantine Empire composed to Greek texts as ceremonial...development of ancient Greek music, Byzantine music is now regarded as an independent...after the founding of the Eastern Empire by Constantine I. Although two...
...son and successor of Manuel II. When he acceded, the Byzantine Empire had been reduced by the Turks to the city of Constantinople...Constantine XI, succeeded him in 1449 and was the last Byzantine emperor. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
...the capital of the Roman Empire (a.d. 330) and the work done under Byzantine influence, as in Venice...The architecture of the Byzantine Empire was based on the great...Secular architecture in the Byzantine Empire has left fewer traces...
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