About the chronological periods of the Byzantine Empire
Chapter 1. About the chronological periods of the Byzantine Empire Dr. Evan Freeman
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
The Byzantine Empire endured for over 1,100 years from 330 to 1453, and scholars divide its history into three major periods—Early, Middle, and Late Byzantium—to mark significant events, contextualize art and architecture, and understand larger cultural trends.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What "Byzantine" means: The Byzantines called themselves "Romans" and saw their empire as a continuation of ancient Rome; "Byzantine" is a modern scholarly term applied after Constantinople fell in 1453.
- Three major periods: Early Byzantium (c. 330–843), Middle Byzantium (c. 843–1204), and Late Byzantium (c. 1261–1453), with the Latin Empire interruption (1204–1261).
- Key turning points: Constantine's legalization of Christianity (313), the dedication of Constantinople (330), the Iconoclastic Controversy (8th–9th centuries), the Fourth Crusade sack of Constantinople (1204), and the Ottoman conquest (1453).
- Common confusion: These period labels are modern inventions, not how the Byzantines themselves understood their history; the empire was always "Roman" to its inhabitants.
- Enduring legacy: Byzantine influence continued after 1453 in Ottoman architecture, Russian icons, Italian painting, and elsewhere.
🏛️ From Rome to Constantinople
🏛️ The birth of the Byzantine Empire
- In 313, the Roman Empire legalized Christianity, beginning the dismantling of its pagan tradition.
- Emperor Constantine transferred the capital from Rome to the ancient Greek city of Byzantion (modern Istanbul).
- Constantine renamed it "Constantinople" ("the city of Constantine") and dedicated it in 330.
- With these events, the Byzantine Empire was born.
🏺 The "Roman" identity
The Byzantines understood their empire to be a continuation of the ancient Roman Empire and referred to themselves as "Romans."
- The term "Byzantine Empire" only became widespread in Europe after Constantinople fell to the Ottomans in 1453.
- Some scholars prefer "medieval Roman" or "Eastern Roman" Empire.
- Don't confuse: "Byzantine" is a modern label; the people living in the empire always considered themselves Romans.
⏳ Remarkable longevity
- If we count from the dedication of Constantinople (330) to its fall (1453), the empire endured for 1,123 years.
- Scholars divide this into three major periods: Early, Middle, and Late Byzantium.
- These designations are modern inventions, not Byzantine self-understanding, but they help mark significant events and cultural trends.
🌅 Early Byzantium (c. 330–843)
🌅 Defining the period
- Scholars disagree about the exact parameters.
- On one hand, this period saw continuation of Roman society and culture.
- On the other, Christianity's acceptance and the geographical shift east inaugurated a new era.
⛪ Imperial patronage and monumental churches
- Following Constantine's embrace of Christianity, the church enjoyed imperial patronage.
- Monumental churches were constructed in Rome, Constantinople, and Jerusalem.
- Example: In Ravenna (northeastern Italy), which functioned as an imperial capital in the 5th–6th centuries, churches like San Vitale and Sant'Apollinare in Classe were adorned with opulent mosaics.
🗺️ Justinian's expansion (527–565)
- Under emperor Justinian I, the Byzantine Empire expanded to its largest geographical area.
- Territory encompassed:
- The Balkans (north)
- Egypt and other parts of north Africa (south)
- Anatolia and the Levant, including modern Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan (east)
- Italy and the southern Iberian Peninsula, now Spain and Portugal (west)
- Many of Byzantium's greatest architectural monuments were built during Justinian's reign, such as Hagia Sophia in Constantinople (a domed basilica).
🏙️ Constantinople's public life
- Following Rome's example, Constantinople featured outdoor public spaces:
- Major streets
- Fora (city centers: open spaces for markets and gatherings, surrounded by temples and public buildings)
- A hippodrome (course for horse or chariot racing with public seating)
- Emperors and church officials participated in showy public ceremonies such as processions.
- Christian monasticism, which began thriving in the 4th century, received imperial patronage at sites like Mount Sinai in Egypt.
🌑 The "dark ages" or "transitional period" (mid-7th century onward)
- Following the rise of Islam in Arabia and subsequent Arab invasions, Byzantium lost substantial territories, including Syria, Egypt, and the symbolically important city of Jerusalem.
- The empire experienced a decline in trade and an economic downturn.
🖼️ The Iconoclastic Controversy (8th–9th centuries)
- Against the backdrop of territorial losses and economic decline, the "Iconoclastic Controversy" erupted in Constantinople.
- Church leaders and emperors debated the use of religious images depicting Christ and the saints.
- Some honored them as holy images, or "icons"; others condemned them as idols (like ancient Roman deity images) and apparently destroyed some.
- In 843, Church and imperial authorities definitively affirmed the use of religious images and ended the controversy.
- This event was celebrated by the Byzantines as the "Triumph of Orthodoxy."
Orthodoxy: right Christian belief, believed to be essential for salvation.
🎨 Middle Byzantium (c. 843–1204)
🎨 Economic and territorial recovery
- After Iconoclasm, the Byzantine empire enjoyed a growing economy and reclaimed some lost territories.
- With the affirmation of images in 843, art and architecture flourished again.
🏛️ Changes in church architecture and patronage
- Middle Byzantine churches elaborated on Justinian's innovations but were often constructed by private patrons.
- They tended to be smaller than the large imperial monuments of Early Byzantium.
- The smaller scale coincided with a reduction of large, public ceremonies.
🖌️ Artistic themes and exclusions
- Monumental depictions of Christ and the Virgin, biblical events, and various saints adorned church interiors in mosaics and frescoes.
- Middle Byzantine churches largely exclude depictions of flora and fauna that often appeared in Early Byzantine mosaics.
- This exclusion was perhaps in response to accusations of idolatry during the Iconoclastic Controversy.
- Don't confuse: Early Byzantine art included natural-world imagery; Middle Byzantine art avoided it, likely due to lingering concerns about idolatry.
🎭 Other art forms
- Exquisite examples survive from this period:
- Manuscripts
- Cloisonné enamels
- Stonework
- Ivory carving
⛪ The Great Schism (1054)
- The Middle Byzantine period saw increased tensions between the Byzantines and western Europeans (whom the Byzantines called "Latins" or "Franks").
- The "Great Schism" of 1054 signaled growing divisions between Orthodox Christians in Byzantium and Roman Catholics in western Europe.
⚔️ The Fourth Crusade and the Latin Empire (1204–1261)
⚔️ The sack of Constantinople (1204)
- In 1204, the Fourth Crusade—undertaken by western Europeans loyal to the pope in Rome—veered from its path to Jerusalem and sacked the Christian city of Constantinople.
- Many of Constantinople's artistic treasures were destroyed or carried back to western Europe as booty.
- The crusaders occupied Constantinople and established a "Latin Empire" in Byzantine territory.
🏰 Byzantine successor states
- Exiled Byzantine leaders established three successor states:
- The Empire of Nicaea (northwestern Anatolia)
- The Empire of Trebizond (northeastern Anatolia)
- The Despotate of Epirus (northwestern Greece and Albania)
👑 The Palaiologan dynasty (from 1261)
- In 1261, the Empire of Nicaea retook Constantinople.
- Michael VIII Palaiologos was crowned emperor, establishing the Palaiologan dynasty that would reign until the end of the Byzantine Empire.
🎨 Cross-cultural exchange
- While the Fourth Crusade fueled animosity between eastern and western Christians, the crusades encouraged cross-cultural exchange.
- This is apparent in the arts of Byzantium and western Europe, particularly in Italian paintings of the late medieval and early Renaissance periods.
- Example: New depictions of St. Francis painted in the "Italo-Byzantine" style.
🌆 Late Byzantium (1261–1453)
🌆 The Palaiologan Renaissance
- Artistic patronage flourished after the Byzantines re-established their capital in 1261.
- Some scholars call this cultural flowering the "Palaiologan Renaissance" (after the ruling Palaiologan dynasty).
🏛️ Church renovation and decoration
- Several existing churches were renovated, expanded, and lavishly decorated with mosaics and frescoes.
- Example: The Chora Monastery in Constantinople.
🎨 Byzantine artists beyond Constantinople
- Byzantine artists were active outside Constantinople, both in Byzantine centers like Thessaloniki and in neighboring lands.
- Example: In the Kingdom of Serbia, the signatures of painters Michael Astrapas and Eutychios have been preserved in frescoes from the late 13th and early 14th centuries.
📉 Continued decline
- The Byzantine Empire never fully recovered from the blow of the Fourth Crusade.
- Its territory continued to shrink.
- Byzantium's calls for military aid from western Europeans against the growing threat of the Ottoman Turks in the east remained unanswered.
🕌 The fall of Constantinople (1453)
- In 1453, the Ottomans finally conquered Constantinople.
- They converted many of Byzantium's great churches into mosques.
- This ended the long history of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.
🌍 Post-Byzantium (after 1453)
🌍 The enduring legacy
- Despite the empire's demise, the legacy of Byzantium continued.
- This is evident in formerly Byzantine territories and beyond.
🎨 Regional continuations
| Region | Form of Byzantine influence |
|---|---|
| Crete | The "Cretan School" of iconography flourished under Venetian rule; produced Domenikos Theotokopoulos (El Greco) |
| Ottoman Empire | Byzantine influence in architecture (e.g., Süleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul, designed by Mimar Sinan, 1557) |
| Russia | Byzantine influence in icons (e.g., Andrei Rublev's The Trinity, c. 1410 or 1425–27) |
| Italy | Byzantine influence in paintings |
- Byzantium's influence spread beyond its former cultural and geographic boundaries.