Byzantine Empire under the Justinian dynasty

Byzantine Empire
518–602
Flag of Byzantium
The Byzantine Empire at its greatest extent since the fall of the Western Roman Empire, under Justinian I in 565 AD.
The Byzantine Empire at its greatest extent since the fall of the Western Roman Empire, under Justinian I in 565 AD.
CapitalConstantinople
Common languagesGreek, Latin
GovernmentMonarchy
Emperor 
• 518–527
Justin I
• 527–565
Justinian I
• 565–574
Justin II
• 574–582
Tiberius II
• 582–602
Maurice
History 
• Accession of Justin I
10 July 518
• Deposition of Maurice
27 November 602
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Byzantine Empire under the Leonid dynasty
Ostrogothic Kingdom
Visigothic Kingdom
Vandal Kingdom
Byzantine Empire under the Heraclian dynasty
Kingdom of the Lombards
Visigothic Kingdom
Pannonian Avars

The Byzantine Empire underwent a golden age under the Justinian dynasty, beginning in 518 AD with the accession of Justin I. Under the Justinian dynasty, particularly the reign of Justinian I, the empire reached its greatest territorial extent since the fall of its Western counterpart, reincorporating North Africa, southern Illyria, southern Spain, and Italy into the empire. The Justinian dynasty ended in 602 with the deposition of Maurice and the ascension of his successor, Phocas.

Justin I

Early life and accession to the throne

The Justinian dynasty began with the accession of its namesake Justin I to the throne. Justin I was born in a big village, Bederiana, in the 450s AD.[1] Like many country youths, he went to Constantinople and enlisted in the army, where, due to his physical abilities, he became a part of the Excubitors, the palace guards.[2] He fought in the Isaurian and Persian wars and rose through the ranks to become the commander of the Excubitors, which was a very influential position. In this time, he also achieved the rank of senator. After the death of the Emperor Anastasius, who had left no clear heir, there was much dispute as to who would become emperor.[3] To decide who would ascend the throne, a grand meeting was called in the hippodrome. The Byzantine senate, meanwhile, gathered in the great hall of the palace. As the senate wanted to avoid outside involvement and influence, they were pressed to quickly select a candidate; however, they could not agree. Several candidates were nominated but were rejected for various reasons. After much arguing, the senate chose to nominate Justin; and he was crowned by the Patriarch of Constantinople, John of Cappadocia, on 10 July 518.[2]

Reign

A golden coin showing the bust of Justin I along with its reverse, which depicts victory holding a globus cruciger.
A coin showing the bust of Justin I.

Justin, who was from a Latin speaking province, spoke little Greek[1] and was mostly illiterate.[2] As such, he surrounded himself with intelligent advisers, the most notable of which was his nephew, Justinian. Justinian may have exerted great influence on his uncle and is considered by some historians, such as Procopius, to be the real power behind the throne.[3][4] After his accession, Justin removed the other candidates to the throne; two were executed, and three were punished either with death or exile. Unlike most emperors before him, who were Monophysite, Justin was a devout Orthodox Christian.[5] Monophysites and the Orthodox were in conflict over the dual natures of Christ. Past emperors had supported the Monophysites' position, which was in direct conflict with the Orthodox teachings of the papacy, and this strife led to the Acacian schism. Justin, as an Orthodox, and John of Cappadocia, immediately set about repairing relations with Rome.[6] After delicate negotiations, the Acacian schism ended in late March, 519.

After this initial ecclesiastical overhaul, the rest of Justin's reign was relatively quiet and peaceful. In 525, perhaps at the insistence of Justinian, Justin repealed a law which effectively forbade court officials from marrying people of low class. This allowed Justinian to marry Theodora, who was of low social standing. In his last years, conflict increased around the Empire. There was increased strife with the Ostrogothic Kingdom in the Italian Peninsula. Their king, Theodoric the Great, was suspicious of plots by the Byzantines; and turned on the Roman senatorial class, going so far as executing the philosopher Boethius, who was attempting to end the persecution.[7] However, Theodoric died in 526, ending the persecution. The Sasanian Empire, likewise, resumed hostilities with the Byzantines, and the Iberian War began in the east; which would not reach its conclusion until the reign of Justinian. In 527, Justin appointed Justinian co-emperor after becoming dangerously ill. Justin recovered from the illness, however, several months later, he died of an ulcer on an old wound; and Justinian then ascended the throne.[8]

Justinian I

A 6th-century head of an emperor at the Getty Villa, thought to represent Justinian I

The strength of the dynasty was shown under Justinian I. After the Nika riots, Justinian rebuilt the city and reformed the law with the "Code of Justinian".

Justinian had inherited a war with Persia from Justin I. Justinian continued the war, succeeding in sending a force all the way down the Euphrates, but the raid stalled, and he lost the beginnings of a new fortress in a crushing defeat. This impasse of sorts led to Justinian negotiating the "Perpetual Peace" in 532 in which he agreed to pay 11,000 pounds of gold in return for a cease in hostilities and the defense of several mountain passes.[9]

He then set about satisfying his dream to rebuild the Roman Empire. On his command, his favoured general Belisarius began reconquering former Roman territory, starting with the Vandals. The Vandals, after maintaining North African dominance since the fall of the Western Roman Empire, had become content and laid back; their army, despite being twice the size of the 15,000 men commanded by Belisarius, was poorly trained and ill-equipped to deal with an imperial threat. The Vandal king, Gelimer, attempted to surround the Byzantines at the Battle of Ad Decimum; he defeated Belisarius but went hysterical after finding the body of his dead brother. Belisarius rounded up his remaining men and broke the disorganized mass of Vandals. Belisarius went on to capture Carthage, and the Byzantines were victorious.[10]

Justinian then recalled the victorious Belisarius. In Italy, dynastic squabbles amongst the ruling Ostrogoths gave Justinian an opportunity to invade, and in 535 he sent Belisarius to Sicily with 7,500 men. Belisarius arrived and received only token resistance.[11] He then moved on to mainland Italy. After putting down a mutiny in recently conquered North Africa, Belisarius landed in mainland Italy, finding the same token resistance. The Gothic garrison of Naples resisted however, and after several months siege[12] Belisarius sacked the city. After more ensuing dynastic squabbles, resulting in the deaths of two kings, Belisarius was invited to Rome by Pope Silverius while the king was in Ravenna. Hearing of this, the Gothic king Witigis sent a huge force, some accounts put the force as large as 150,000, to besiege Rome.[13] Belisarius had been fortifying Rome, and a siege ensued. One year and nine days later, after a grueling siege, Witigis had displayed his utter inabilities as a king, and Belisarius had showed his brilliance as a commander.

The Goth army then moved to besiege Ariminium, which suffered from lack of food. Narses, another Byzantine general, was called in to help and he used his influence to help Belisarius break the siege. After a massacre at Milan, breaks in Narses' command chain were revealed; following a letter from Belisarius, Narses was recalled by Justinian. Thereafter, the campaign became a war of sieges, which came to an end after Belisarius pretended to accept an offer to become Western Roman Emperor.[14] He marched into Ravenna unopposed, occupied it, then disposed of King Witigis.

Belisarius was recalled from Italy and then immediately sent to the Persian front, which had flared into warfare again. During this period, the Ostrogoths retook most of Italy. After the Persian front died down, with the Persians swearing they would never fight the Byzantines again until after his death, Belisarius retook Italy and captured southern Spain in a war that lasted 18 years.[15]

Justinian's wars of reconquest had expanded the empire to include the former Roman provinces of Italia, Baetica, and Africa Proconsularis. These additions expanded the Byzantine Empire to the largest point in its history.

Justin II

After Justinian's reconquest and extensive rebuilding programs, the empire's treasury was left empty.[16] The financial mess weakened the empire and forced his successor, Justin II, to suspend payments to the Avars. While the Byzantines were distracted with the Persians, Lombard hordes under king Alboin invaded Italy and quickly conquered most of the peninsula. Later wars with the Persians did not go well in Syria, resulting in mental illness that drove Justin II to his grave.

The Empire, near the end of the reign of Maurice, after suffering deterioration since the end of Justinian's reconquests

Tiberius II

Tiberius II succeeded Justin II. His four-year reign was marked by Imperial weakness because the empire was over-stretched. He reinforced Ravenna, and his generals found success against the Persians in battles in Armenia and against the Berbers in North Africa. At the same time, the Slavs began migrating all the way down into Greece. The overstretched emperor ran out of money and could not pay the army of the East which was fighting the Persians, and they threatened to mutiny. As his forces were deployed elsewhere, the Avars took advantage of him and forced Tiberius to give up the key city of Sirmium. After this setback, Tiberius ate some bad food, which may have been intentionally poisoned, fell ill, and died.

Consular diptych (540) of Justin, son of Germanus, cousin of Justinian

Maurice

Maurice, the fifth and final emperor of the Justinian dynasty, reportedly came from Armenia and began his career in Constantinople as a notarius. He eventually rose to the rank of secretary of the imperial bodyguard and in 577 was appointed commander in chief of the army. After hard campaigning in the East in the Byzantine–Sassanid War of 572–591, he was promoted to the rank of patricius. In 582 he married Tiberius' daughter and succeeded him on the throne at the age of 43.[17]

Maurice's reign was marked by constant money troubles. Maurice ascended the throne and received a bankrupt empire, and this financial state continued until beyond the end of his reign. He also inherited military troubles: the Slavs were continuing to migrate into the empire, oftentimes violently; imperial hold over Italy was utterly collapsing; he also still had to continue the war with Persia that he had fought in for his entire military career. This Persian war also struggled with money difficulties, leading to a major mutiny in 588; however, the money dispute was resolved the following spring. During the mutiny, a civil war began between rival factions in Persia, and Maurice saw an opportunity. He gave his support to Khosrow II[18] in Persia, and he succeeded in gaining the throne. This ended the Byzantine-Sassanid War of 572–591.

Maurice then turned his attention to the Balkans, which, after a decade of inattention from the army, had become completely ravaged by the Slavs. With the full attention of the army, the Byzantines drove back the Slavs, expelled them from the empire, and then ravaged their lands beyond the Danube. The Byzantines, after this decisive victory, were now easily able to hold the frontier on the Danube as it had been since the Roman Empire, as well as gain control over some minor territories in southern Dacia.

Despite these extensive military victories, Maurice was unpopular within the borders of the empire because he always had an empty treasury and often had to reduce payments to his soldiers. As a result of this unpopularity, he was deposed by the army in 602 and replaced with their choice, Phocas.

Genealogy

Leo I
emperor
457-474
LEONIDS
AriadneAnastasius I
emperor
491-518
(sibling)Euphemia
Justin I
518–527
VigilantiaPetrus Sabbatius(sibling)
(daughter)ComitoTheodora
Justinian I
527–565
Vigilantia
∞ Dulcidius
GermanusBoraides
Anastasius
consul 517
Sophia
Justin II
(illeg.)
Theodora
Justin II
565–578
Marcellus
general
∞ Juliana
Praejecta
∞ 1.Areobindus
magister
2. John
Justin
consul 540
Justinian
general
Arabia
Baduarius
Areobindus
Tiberius II
578–582
Ino Anastasia
Anastasia AreobindaPeter
curopalates

Maurice
582–602
Constantina
TiberiusTheodosius
co-emperor
590–602
MariaKhosrow II
shah of Persia
(sister)Shahrbaraz
shah of Persia
Heraclius
emperor
610-641
HERACLIANS
NikeTheodosiosConstantine III
emperor
641

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Treadgold 1997, p. 174.
  2. ^ a b c Cameron 2000, p. 63.
  3. ^ a b Bury 1923, p. 19.
  4. ^ Procopius. Secret History, cited in: Bury (1923, p. 19)
  5. ^ Sarris 2011, p. 137.
  6. ^ Treadgold 1997, p. 175.
  7. ^ Cameron 2000, p. 64/65.
  8. ^ Bury 1923, p. 23.
  9. ^ Bury 1923, p. 88.
  10. ^ Bury 1923, p. 135.
  11. ^ Bury 1923, p. 171.
  12. ^ Bury 1923, p. 176.
  13. ^ Bury 1923, p. 183.
  14. ^ Bury 1923, p. 213.
  15. ^ Bury 1923, p. 283.
  16. ^ Corrick 2006, p. 59.
  17. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Maurice" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 909.
  18. ^ Meyer, Eduard (1911). "Chosroes" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 271–272.

Sources

Read other articles:

Chastity, poverty (perfect charity) and obedience Not to be confused with Evangelical council. Events in theLife of Jesusaccording to the canonical gospels Early life Annunciation Visitation Nativity Virgin birth Adoration of the Shepherds Circumcision Presentation Adoration of the Magi Flight into Egypt Massacre of the Innocents Return to Nazareth Finding in the Temple Ministry Baptism Temptation Commissioning the Twelve Apostles Sermon on the Mount / Plain Beatitudes Lord's Prayer Miracles ...

 

Mascaraàs-Haron Mascaraàs-Haron (Frankreich) Staat Frankreich Region Nouvelle-Aquitaine Département (Nr.) Pyrénées-Atlantiques (64) Arrondissement Pau Kanton Terres des Luys et Coteaux du Vic-Bilh Gemeindeverband Luys en Béarn Koordinaten 43° 32′ N, 0° 13′ W43.5411-0.2225Koordinaten: 43° 32′ N, 0° 13′ W Höhe 130–272 m Fläche 8,76 km² Einwohner 120 (1. Januar 2020) Bevölkerungsdichte 14 Einw./km² Postleitzahl 64330...

 

Eduardo de Edimburgo Príncipe del Reino UnidoDuque de Edimburgo El duque de Edimburgo, por entonces conde de Wessex, en 2021.Duque de Edimburgo Desde el 10 de marzo de 2023(272 días)Predecesor Carlos de GalesConde de Wessex 19 de junio de 1999-10 de marzo de 2023(23 años y 264 días)Predecesor Guillermo FitzOsbern (primera creación)Sucesor Jacobo (como título de cortesía)Información personalNombre completo Eduardo Antonio Ricardo Luis (Edward Anthony Richard Louis)Tratamiento...

See also: 2009 swine flu pandemic by country and 2009 swine flu pandemic timeline Main article: 2009 swine flu pandemic Detected human cases in Asian countries Country Cases Deaths Laboratory confirmed Confirmed(Suspected)‡ ECDC  totals (world)† 13,763[1] Total 394,133 3,787 India 19,947[2] 1035[1] China 120,940[3] 659[4] Turkey 1,870[3] 415[1] Thailand 28,939[5] 192[1] South Korea 108,234[3] 170[1 ...

 

سان خوستو شهر الاسم الرسمي San Justo الإحداثيات 34°41′S 58°33′W / 34.683°S 58.550°W / -34.683; -58.550 تأسس December 25, 1856 تقسيم إداري  البلد الأرجنتين[1][2]   محافظات الأرجنتين بوينس آيرس (محافظة)  Partido La Matanza خصائص جغرافية  المساحة 15.130 كيلومتر مربع[3]  ارتفاع 26 عدد...

 

  لمعانٍ أخرى، طالع نصرت‌ أباد (توضيح). نصرت‌ أباد تقسيم إداري البلد إيران  التقسيم الأعلى محافظة أذربيجان الشرقية  إحداثيات 38°26′15″N 46°22′59″E / 38.4375°N 46.38305556°E / 38.4375; 46.38305556  تعديل مصدري - تعديل   نصرت‌ أباد هي قرية في مقاطعة تبريز، إيران. عدد سكان ...

مطار بودغوريتسا الدولي Aerodrom Podgorica إياتا: TGD – ايكاو: LYPG موجز نوع المطار مدني المشغل الخطوط الجوية المونتنيغرية يخدم بودغوريتسا[1]  البلد الجبل الأسود  الموقع بودغوريتسا - الجبل الأسود الارتفاع 43 م؛ 141 قدم إحداثيات 42°21′34″N 19°15′07″E / 42.359444444444°N 19.251944444444°E...

 

Beaterator Обложка игры Разработчик Rockstar Leeds Издатель Rockstar Games Локализатор СофтКлаб[1] Дата анонса 14 марта 2007[2] Даты выпуска 2 октября 2009[3] 29 сентября 2009[3] 28 октября 2009[1] 7 декабря 2009 (iOS)[4] Онлайн-поддержка прекращена 31 мая 2014[5] Жанр музыкальная игра С...

 

2022 studio album by RammsteinZeitCover photo by Bryan Adams showing the band at the Trudelturm in BerlinStudio album by RammsteinReleased29 April 2022 (2022-04-29)RecordedSeptember 2020 – February 2021StudioLa Fabrique (Saint-Rémy-de-Provence)Genre Neue Deutsche Härte[1] industrial metal[1][2] industrial rock[3] Length44:06LabelUniversalProducer Olsen Involtini Rammstein Rammstein chronology Untitled(2019) Zeit(2022) Singles from Zei...

Gaya atau nada penulisan artikel ini tidak mengikuti gaya dan nada penulisan ensiklopedis yang diberlakukan di Wikipedia. Bantulah memperbaikinya berdasarkan panduan penulisan artikel. (Pelajari cara dan kapan saatnya untuk menghapus pesan templat ini) Jadon Sancho Jadon Sancho berlatih saat di Manchester City tahun 2017Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Jadon Malik Sancho[1]Tanggal lahir 25 Maret 2000 (umur 23)[2]Tempat lahir London, InggrisTinggi 590 kaki (180 m)[3&...

 

Dam in Niigata, JapanToyomi DamLocationAgano, Niigata, JapanCoordinates37°41′48″N 139°33′59″E / 37.69667°N 139.56639°E / 37.69667; 139.56639Dam and spillwaysImpoundsAgano RiverHeight34.2 metersDam volume18,667,000 m3 Toyomi Dam (豊実ダム) is a dam in Agano, Niigata, Japan, completed in 1929.[1] References ^ Toyomi Dam [Niigata Pref.]. damnet.or.jp. Retrieved 2 November 2019. vteDams in Niigata Prefecture Aburumagawa Dam Agekawa Dam Asag...

 

This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Cendana Education Foundation – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)Cendana Education FoundationYayasan Pendidikan CendanaThe Official Logo of Yayasan Pendidikan CendanaFormation1958TypePrivate school organi...

American boxer (1941–2011) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Ron Lyle – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Ron LyleLyle c. 1967BornRonald David Lyle[1](1941-02-12)February 12, 1941Dayton, Ohio, U.S.DiedNovember ...

 

إدين هازارد (بالفرنسية: Eden Hazard)‏ هازارد مع تشيلسي قبل نهائي الدوري الأوروبي 2019 معلومات شخصية الاسم الكامل إدين مايكل هازارد[1] الميلاد 7 يناير 1991 (العمر 32 سنة)[2]لا لوفيير، بلجيكا الطول 1.73 م (5 قدم 8 بوصة)[3] مركز اللعب جناح / وسط مهاجم الجنسية بلجيكا الوزن 74 ك...

 

Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang penulis. Untuk pemimpin Xiongnu, lihat Modu Chanyu. Ini adalah nama Tionghoa; marganya adalah Shen. Mao Dun茅盾Mao Dun seperti digambarkan dalam The Most Recent Biographies of Important Chinese PeopleMenteri Kebudayaan RRTMasa jabatan21 Oktober 1949 – Januari 1965Perdana MenteriZhou EnlaiPenggantiLu DingyiKetua Asosiasi Penulis TiongkokMasa jabatan23 Juli 1949 – 27 Maret 1981PenggantiBa Jin Informasi pribadiLahir(1896-07-04)4 Juli 189...

Private university in Jilin, China Yanbian University of Science and Technology延大科学技术学院 (Chinese)연변과학기술대학 (Korean)Other name延科大 / YUSTMottoTruth, Peace, LoveTypePrivateEstablished1992PresidentChin Kyung Kim (김진경)Academic staffc. 400 (incl staff)Undergraduatesc. 1,800LocationYanji, Jilin, China42°55′35″N 129°31′30″E / 42.9264°N 129.5250°E / 42.9264; 129.5250Websitewww.yust.eduifec.or.krChinese nameS...

 

Las Tres Gracias Año 1531Autor Lucas Cranach el ViejoTécnica temple sobre tablaEstilo Renacimiento alemánTamaño 37 cm × 24 cmLocalización Museo del Louvre, París, Francia[editar datos en Wikidata] Las Tres Gracias es una pintura al temple sobre tabla de 37 cm x 24 cm, de Lucas Cranach el Viejo; data de 1531 y se conserva en el Museo del Louvre de París. Presenta las figuras procedentes de la mitología clásica de las Gracias, de las que Cranach realizó varias versiones. El...

 

AliensThe original 1986 theatrical posterSutradaraJames CameronProduserGale Anne HurdGordon CarrollDavid GilerWalter HillDitulis olehCerita:James CameronDavid GilerWalter HillSkenario:James CameronPemeranSigourney WeaverMichael BiehnLance HenriksenCarrie HennPaul ReiserBill PaxtonPenata musikJames HornerSinematograferAdrian BiddlePenyuntingRay LovejoyDistributor20th Century FoxTanggal rilis18 Juli 1986DurasiTheatrical Cut:137 menitSpecial Edition:154 menitNegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaIngg...

『オフィーリア』英語: Ophelia作者ジョン・エヴァレット・ミレー製作年1851年 - 1852年種類油彩、キャンバス寸法76.2 cm × 111.8 cm (30.0 in × 44.0 in)所蔵テート・ブリテン、ロンドン 『オフィーリア』(英: Ophelia)は、1851年から1852年にかけて制作されたジョン・エヴァレット・ミレーによる絵画である。 ロンドンにあるテート・ブリテン美術...

 

Questa voce sull'argomento cestisti giapponesi è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Reika Takahashi Reika Takahashi con la maglia delle JX Sunflowers Nazionalità  Giappone Altezza 179 cm Peso 65 kg Pallacanestro Ruolo Ala grande / centro Termine carriera 2018 Carriera Squadre di club 2007-2011Japan Airlines Rabbits2011-2012Niigata Albirex Rabbits2012-2015JX Sunflowers2015-2018 Hit...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!