ancient rome & the origin of christianity

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Ancient Rome & The Origin of Christianity Outcome: The Fall of the Roman Empire

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Ancient Rome & The Origin of Christianity. Outcome: The Fall of the Roman Empire. The Fall of the Roman Empire. A Century of Crisis Pax Romana came to an end with Marcus Aurelius (AD 161-180) The rulers that followed were unable to manage the large empire and its growing problems . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

Ancient Rome & The Origin of ChristianityOutcome: The Fall of the Roman Empire

Page 2: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

1. A Century of Crisisa. Pax Romana came to an end with Marcus Aurelius (AD

161-180)b. The rulers that followed were unable to manage the large

empire and its growing problems.c. Result: The Roman Empire began to decline

Page 3: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

2. Problemsa. Economic

i. Trade was disrupted by hostile tribes and piratesii. No new gold or silver sources = raise taxesiii. Created more money = inflation (bad)iv. Soil in Italy and Western Europe became

increasingly less fertile

Page 4: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

b. Politicali. Citizens were losing their patriotism towards

Romeii. Government began to be controlled by militaryiii. Terrible emperors such as Nero, Commodus, &

Caligula murdered, raped, and impoverished their people

Page 5: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

c. Sociali. People were slowly losing their confidence in the

Empireii. Gap between rich and poor was still very wideiii. Decline in interest in public affairs

Page 6: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

d. Militaryi. Low funds for defenseii. Mercenaries (foreign soldiers) hired who

accepted lower pay iii. Soldiers were less disciplined and loyal

Page 7: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

3. Reform Attempteda. Emperor Diocletian

i. Becomes emperor in 284 ADii. Ruled with iron fist and limited personal freedomsiii. Doubled size of armyiv. Sought to control inflationv. Divided empire in two: Greek Speaking East & Latin

Speaking West

Page 8: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

Split of the Empire

Page 9: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

Emperor Constantine

Page 10: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empireb. Emperor Constantine

i. Embraced Christianity due to vision he had at the battle of Milvian Bridge; victory at Milvian Bridge made him sole ruler of Rome

ii. First Christian Roman emperoriii. Issued the Edict of Milan which allowed Christians

to worship freelyiv. Moves capital of empire east to Byzantium; builds

new cityv. New city is later renamed Constantinople (in

modern day Turkey)vi. Eastern empire flourishes due to trade and wealth

Page 11: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

4. Western Empire Crumblesa. The decline of the Western Roman Empire took place

over many yearsb. Final collapse was due to:

i. Worsening internal problemsii. The separation of the Western Empire from wealthier Eastiii. Outside invasions

Page 12: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

c. Germanic Invasionsi. Mongol nomads, The Huns, forced Germanic

peoples on empire’s borders to push into Roman lands

ii. Last Roman Emperor, Romulus Augustulus, ousted by Germanic forces in 476 AD

Page 13: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

Invasion Routes

Page 14: Ancient Rome  & The Origin of Christianity

The Fall of the Roman Empire

Result: The Western Roman Empire was no more but the eastern empire would continue to thrive as a region known today as Byzantium