
History
/ Golden Horn / Emperors
/ Religion / Art
The arrival of the first Christians (the word "Christian" was
at first a term of abuse) made little impact on the world of Rome.
They were looked on as merely another foreign sect, like the cults
and mystery religions from Egypt and Persia. Slowly, however,
their discipline and missionary zeal brought them to official
notice. At last, when they had become powerful, official attempts
were made to suppress them. Persecution was intermittent, and
never widespread.
In Rome itself, Christians were imprisoned and tortured,
or thrown into the arena to be devoured by lions. But persecution
simply gave the sect even greater cohesion and powers of resistance
- a fact not lost on Emperor Constantine. In 313 Constantine granted
freedom of worship to all religions, and Christianity later became
the state religion.
Constantine made an immense contribution to the
spread of Christianity, but he failed in one of his primary aims.
He wanted to unite all Christians in one Church, but in fact he
succeeded in splitting them.The Christians of the West claimed
that the Pope in Rome was the leader of Christendom. Those in
the East recognised the Patriarch of Constantinople as their leader.
These two forms became the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern
Ortodox Church. The Byzantine emperors maintanied a large Christian
empire covering much of Asia and North Africa until a new dynamic
religious force apperaed in the East. This was the religious faith
of Islam.
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History
/ Golden Horn / Emperors
/ Religion / Art