SOL QUIZ 14 Byzantine Empire 1. The capital of the Eastern Roman Empire was a.

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Transcript SOL QUIZ 14 Byzantine Empire 1. The capital of the Eastern Roman Empire was a.

Slide 1

SOL QUIZ 14
Byzantine Empire


Slide 2

1. The capital of the Eastern Roman Empire was

a. Rome
b. Jerusalem
c. Alexandria
d. Constantinople
The capital of the Eastern Roman Empire was Constantinople.
This city was built (in 330 A.D.) on the site of the ancient Greek
city of Byzantium. It is from that ancient Greek city that the
Eastern Roman Empire received the name Byzantine Empire.


Slide 3

2. Who established the city that was to later become the capital of
the Eastern Roman Empire?

a. Julius Caesar
b. Diocletian
c. Constantine

d. Justinian
Constantinople, the city which later became the capital of the
Eastern Roman Empire, was established by the Emperor Constantine
in 330 A.D.


Slide 4

3. Which religion became the strongest rival of Christianity in the
Mediterranean area during the time of the Byzantine Empire?

a. Judaism
b. Buddhism
c. Islam
d. Hinduism
Islam or the Muslim religion became the strongest rival of
Christianity in the Mediterranean area. Buddhism and Hinduism
are religions that arose in India. They never spread to the
Mediterranean region during the time of the Byzantine Empire.


Slide 5

4. Which was an achievement of the Byzantine Empire?

a. regaining Palestine from the Muslims
b. preserving Greek and Roman civilization
c. promoting paganism
d. conquering Persia
The Byzantine Empire preserved Greek and Roman civilization after
the fall of the western half of the Roman Empire during the 5th
century A.D.


Slide 6

5. The area of which modern country was never a part of the
Byzantine Empire?

a. Syria
b. Turkey
c. France

d. Greece
The area of France was never a part of the Byzantine Empire. France,
or Gaul, as it was then called, was a part of the Western Roman
Empire. It was never conquered by the Byzantine Empire. What are
today Syria, Turkey, and Greece, were originally part of the Eastern
Roman Empire (Byzantium Empire).


Slide 7

6. The Justinian Code is important because it was a collection of
the

a. laws of the Roman Empire
b. teachings of Jesus and the Christian fathers
c. scientific discoveries of the ancient world

d. military tactics used by Roman generals
The Justinian Code was a collection of laws from all over the empire
that were organized and simplified by a committee of officials
appointed by Justinian. The Justinian Code was later introduced to
Western Europe and influenced law codes in European countries.


Slide 8

7. What language became the major language of the Byzantine
Empire?

a. Arabic
b. Greek
c. Latin

d. Hebrew
Greek replaced Latin as the major language of the Byzantine Empire
300 years after that empire was created. This occurred because the
Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire was influenced by Greek culture
to a larger extent than it was by the culture of Rome and Italy. After
the 11th century, the Eastern Christian Church was known as the
Greek Orthodox Church.


Slide 9

8. What statement CORRECTLY describes the connection between the government
and the church in the Byzantine Empire?

a. The emperor controlled both the government and the church.

b. The emperor controlled the government, but the pope
controlled the church.
c. The pope controlled both the government and the church.
d. The emperor tried to persecute officials of the church.

In the Byzantine Empire the emperor controlled both the government
and the church. The Greek Orthodox Church was supported by the
government and the emperor selected its officials. The emperor was
considered the absolute ruler of the empire and God's representative on
earth.


Slide 10

9. What issue was the most important cause of the split between the
eastern and western halves of the Christian church?

a. Should Greek or Latin be used in church services?
b. Should the pope be supreme in church affairs?
c. Should a crusade be declared against the Muslims in Palestine?

d. Should all religions be tolerated in the empire?
The split between the eastern and western halves of the Christian
church was caused by the issue of whether the pope should be
supreme in church affairs. The pope was the head of the western
church. He was elected by church officials. The head of the eastern
church was the patriarch of Constantinople. He was appointed by the
Byzantine emperor.


Slide 11

10. Why did Diocletian divide the Roman Empire into eastern and western sections
in 285 A.D.?
a. There were religious differences between people living in
the eastern and western parts of the empire.

b. People in the west spoke Latin, while people the east
spoke Greek.
c. Civil wars and foreign invasions showed that the empire
had become too large to be ruled by one person.
d. Rome's conquest of the huge Persian Empire in the east
made such a division necessary.

Diocletian divided the Roman Empire because civil wars and foreign
invasions showed that the empire had become too large to be ruled by
one person.