Byzantine Empire

Overview

The Byzantine Empire was the eastern half of the Roman Empire, beginning in 330 CE and lasting until 1453 CE—lasting 1,000 years longer than its western counterpart. Unlike the classical, polytheist Roman Empire, Byzantium was Christian, mostly Greek-speaking, and centered on the city of Constantinople (modern Istanbul). But until the end, the Byzantines called themselves "Romaioi"—Romans.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Hagia Sophia, Istanbul's most famous and controversial landmark

    A short video about the iconic Byzantine church. Still Istanbul’s most famous and, since its reconversion to a mosque, most controversial building. The recognizable dome has partially collapsed several times over the centuries, but remains a marvel of engineering. The mosaics, though fragmentary, are among the finest ever created and trace both the gradual evolution and the remarkable continuity of Byzantine art.

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    Hagia Sophia, Istanbul's most famous and controversial landmark

  • The mosaics of San Vitale, Italy's Byzantine city

    This video explores the unique artistic heritage of Ravenna, the center of Byzantine power in Italy. The city’s churches and baptistries still sparkle with a dazzling array of Byzantine mosaics. The most famous of these, in the Church of San Vitale, show Justinian and his wife Theodora with their courtiers. A visit to Ravenna – or at least a look at this video – is highly recommended to anyone interested in Byzantine history or art.

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    The mosaics of San Vitale, Italy's Byzantine city

  • The rise and fall of the Byzantine Empire

    A short but informative TED-Ed video summarizing the most important aspects of Byzantine civilization: how it all started, why Constantinople was so special, a few remarkable Byzantine authors (including Princess Anna Comnena, historian of her father’s reign), the Ottoman conquest, and why don’t just call the Byzantines “Romans.”

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    The rise and fall of the Byzantine Empire

  • The underground cities of the Byzantine Empire

    This TED-Ed video explores the mysterious cave cities of Cappadocia. Although their oldest sections may go back to the Bronze Age, most of these subterranean complexes were excavated during the Byzantine period, when the locals went underground to take shelter from Arab raiders. Monasteries were also cut into pinnacles of the local tufa, and decorated with frescoes that have often survived to the present.

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    The underground cities of the Byzantine Empire

  • A medieval Italian visits Constantinople

    In the tenth century, the Holy Roman Emperor Otto I sent Liudprand of Cremona, an Italian bishop, to Constantinople on a diplomatic mission. He was not successful. But the very undiplomatic report he sent back to the emperor about his experiences provides a unique – and often very entertaining – look at life and ceremony in the Byzantine capital, dramatically different from anything in Liudprand’s Italy.

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    A medieval Italian visits Constantinople

  • Where every Roman emperor was buried

    Over 1,500 years of Roman and Byzantine imperial history, roughly 150 emperors reigned for an average of 11 years. Their median age was 51, and just less than half of them were killed. Historian Garrett Ryan compiles the macabre history of their final resting places, including several whose bodies were thrown into the Tiber. Then there's Nicephorus I, whose skull reportedly became the favorite drinking cup of Krum, the khan of the Bulgars. Watch the video here.

    A screenshot of a map showing the burial places of the emperors
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    Where every Roman emperor was buried

  • The impressive walls of Constantinople

    This video explores the land walls of Constantinople, built on the orders of Theodosius II in the mid-fifth century. They consisted of a triple line of defenses, studded with hundreds of towers and supplemented with a moat. The walls were besieged dozens of times, but were only broken in 1453 by the power of Ottoman cannons. As repaired by the Ottomans, the walls are still largely intact today.

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    The impressive walls of Constantinople

  • What was the Fourth Crusade?

    Originally destined for Jerusalem, the Crusaders became entangled in a Byzantine civil war, and found themselves besieging the greatest city in Christendom. After breaching the sea walls and subjecting the city to the worst sack in its history, they installed a Flemish nobleman as Latin emperor of Constantinople.

  • The Chora Church, the height of Byzantine art

    The Palaeologan Renaissance took place in the final centuries of Byzantium, and in the face of steep political and economic decline. Perhaps the movement’s most famous artistic product is the Chora Church in Istanbul. Renovated in the early fourteenth century by Theodore Metochites, a learned court official, the church features remarkably vibrant mosaics and frescoes. Although the building was recently reconverted into a mosque, most of its decorations are still visible.

  • A map of the Byzantine Empire

    This map, hosted on the World History Encyclopedia, shows the Byzantine Empire in four eras. The area shaded dark purple is the original Eastern Roman Empire. The light purple areas represent the conquests of Justinian. The dark purple line surrounds the middle Byzantine Empire. The hatched area, finally, indicates the small “Latin Empire” established after the Fourth Crusade.

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