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Chapter 14 – The Fall of Rome
Section Notes Video Fall of the Western Roman Empire The Byzantine Empire Ancient Rome and the World Today Maps History Close-up The Eastern and Western Empires Invasions of the Roman Empire The Byzantine Empire, 1025 The Glory of Constantinople Quick Facts Why Rome Fell The Western Roman and Byzantine Empires Chapter 14 Visual Summary Images Roman Ruins Time Line: Key Events in Roman History Justinian and Theodora
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Fall of the Western Roman Empire
7.1.2 The Big Idea Problems from both inside and outside caused the Roman Empire to split and the western half to collapse. Main Ideas Many problems threatened the Roman Empire, leading one emperor to divide it in half. Barbarians invaded Rome in the 300s and 400s. Many factors contributed to Rome’s fall.
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Main Idea 1: Many problems threatened the Roman Empire, leading one emperor to divide it in half.
At its height the Roman Empire included all the land around the Mediterranean Sea. The empire became too large to defend or govern efficiently. Emperor Diocletian divided the empire to make it more manageable.
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Problems in the Empire Emperors gave up territory because they feared the empire had become too large. Yet new threats to the empire were appearing. As frontier areas were abandoned because they were too dangerous, Germanic tribes moved in. To help produce more food, the Romans even invited Germanic farmers to grow crops on Roman lands. Disease and high taxes threatened Rome’s survival.
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Division of the Empire Emperor Diocletian divided the empire because it was too big for one person to rule. Emperor Constantine reunited the two halves shortly after he took power. He moved the capital east, into what is now Turkey. The new capital was called Constantinople. Power no longer resided in Rome.
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Main Idea 2: Barbarians invaded Rome in the 300s and 400s.
Not long after Rome’s capital moved, German barbarians raided the Roman Empire. In the late 300s, a new group, called the Huns, invaded Europe. They were from Central Asia. The Goths fled from the Huns into Rome. They moved into western Roman territory. Additional attacks by more invaders made the empire weak.
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The Sacking of Rome The Huns pushed a group called the Goths into Rome because they had nowhere else to go. The Goths destroyed Rome after Rome quit paying them not to attack. The Goths sacked, or destroyed, Rome in 410.
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The Empire in Chaos The Goths’ victory encouraged other groups to invade the western half of the empire. The Vandals invaded Spain, crossed into northern Africa, and destroyed Roman settlements. Led by Attila, the Huns raided most of the Roman territory in the east, except for Rome. Attila avoided Rome because he had been told diseases ran wild there. Roman emperors became weak, and military leaders took power. They did not protect the empire, however. A Barbarian general overthrew the last weak emperor in Rome and named himself king in 476. This event is considered the end of the western Roman Empire.
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Main Idea 3: Many factors contributed to Rome’s fall.
The large size of the empire made it hard to govern. Barbarian invasions weakened the empire. Corruption, or the decay of people’s values, in politics led to inefficiency in government. Bribes and threats were used to achieve goals. Wealthy citizens began to leave Rome, making life more difficult for those who remained.
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The Byzantine Empire The Big Idea
7.1.3 The Big Idea The Roman Empire split into two parts, and the Eastern Roman Empire prospered for hundreds of years after the western empire fell. Main Ideas Eastern emperors ruled from Constantinople and tried but failed to reunite the whole Roman Empire. The people of the eastern empire created a new society that was very different from society in the west. Byzantine Christianity was different from religion in the west.
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Main Idea 1: Eastern emperors ruled from Constantinople and tried but failed to reunite the whole Roman Empire. Justinian wanted to reunite the old Roman Empire. He conquered Italy and much land around the Mediterranean. He examined Rome’s laws and organized them into a legal system called the Justinianic Code. Removed out-of-date and unchristian laws Simplified Roman law to give fair treatment to all He made two groups of enemies who would have run him out of Constantinople had his wife, Theodora, not convinced him to stay. Theodora was smart and powerful, and advised Justinian on how to end the riots.
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The Empire after Justinian
After his death, the eastern Roman Empire began to decline. Later emperors lost all the land Justinian had gained. In 1453, a group called the Ottoman Turks captured Constantinople and ended the eastern Roman Empire. The 1,000-year history of the eastern Roman Empire came to an end.
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How the eastern empire differed from the western empire
Main Idea 2: The people of the eastern empire created a new society that was very different from society in the west How the eastern empire differed from the western empire The society was called the Byzantine Empire. People studied Greek, not Latin. They traded with and were influenced by other cultures. Emperors had more power and were thought to be chosen by God. They had both political and religious power.
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Main Idea 3: Byzantine Christianity was different from religion in the west.
Christianity was very important to both the East and the West. Churches and mosaics, or pictures made with pieces of colored stone or glass, reflected their devotion to God. People in the East and West began to interpret elements of Christianity differently. Eastern priests could get married, but Western priests could not. Religious services were performed in Greek in the East and in Latin in the West. The split became official and Eastern Christians formed what became known as the Orthodox Church.
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