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Byzantium, the reorganised Roman Empire
with its capital in the East, survive for more than 1100 years,
long after the Roman Empire in the West had perished. Byzantium
owed its wealth to its position astride trade routes from north
to south and from east to west. It owed its traditions of law
and government to Rome, and its language and learning to Greece.
At its heart lay the fabulously rich city of Constantinople in
AD 330 as a new capital for the Roman Empire as it faced the threat
of disintegration.
In 534 Byzantium reconquered
the North African states, in a campaign which culminated in the
capture of Carthage. From Africa, after five years fighting, Belisarius,
the greatest military leader produced by Byzantium, took Rome.
By 555 all Italy and the southern part of Spain were in Byzantine
hands.
The Byzantine system of government
included a senate which, like senate of Imperial Rome, had little
to do beyond endorsing the emperor's decisions. It was filled
with members from an aristocracy created by Constantine, and to
compesate senators for their lack of power they were given new
titles such as nobilissimus or illustris. Becouse Constantine
grafted a Roman Society on to Greek town, two languages were in
common use in Byzantium. At first, Latin was the official tongue
of the court, the government and the law courts. But, more and
more Greek-speaking people entered government and public service,
while scholars, writers, poets and philosophes turned incresingly
to the ancient Greek texts. Justinian tried to keep Latin, as
the language of the court, but he recognised that Greek was the
tongue of the people, and he published his last great legal works,
"The Novellae" in Greek. Soon after Justinian's death the Greek
language became supreme.
The tide turned in the 9th
century under dynasty of emperors which included Michael III (842-67),
and later Basil's dynasty, which held the throne of Byzantium
for the next two centuries. Basil's successors extended the empire's
boundaries to the Euphrates, and made considerable inroads into
Bulgaria. The empire's revival continues under Basil II (976-1025),
a man of strong will and courage , whose reign gave Byzantium
a period of prosperity and expension as great as that enjoyed
under Justinian. So succesful was his campaign agains the Bulgars
in the Balkans that he became known as Basil the Bulgar-Slayer.
When Basil died in 1025, the empire had reached a peak of success,
though at the cost of overstraining its economy.
The fall
of Byzantine Empire
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