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No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.No, Christianity was brought to Europe by the disciples of Christ. The Roman empire served as a vehicle for the spread of the religion due to its peace, good roads, safe travel and the Roman tolerance for foreign cults.
Christianity provided a degree of cultural unity to the west, as most learning was "protected" and continued in the monasteries after the fall of the Roman Empire. politicalunity also owes its due to Christianity in the development of the Holy Roman Empire.
it was due to the sepration of the western empire
Rome the city never truly fell. The Ancient Roman Empire's falling was due to the fact that the military spread itself too thin. At one point, the Roman Empire spanned nearly the entire known world.
Christianity. At first the Roman Empire thought it was dangerous and persecuted Christians, however later on more sympathetic Emperors tolerated it and finally, near the end of the Roman Empire, Emperor Constantine embraced it. The spread of the Empire actually allowed Christianity to move from the Middle-East right through to Northern Europe. It is now the biggest religion in the world.
The first Christian churches in the Roman empire were private homes. Christianity was a clandestine cult at its start and there could be no public display of the faith. This was due to the persecution of the mainstream Jews who considered the Christians a blasphemous offshoot of Judaism. When Christianity spread to other parts of the empire, the private home type of church continued, especially when the persecutions began.
Three? A recent German study has come up with 210 reasons for the decline and fall of the Roman empire. (Don't worry, I won't list them all) Three of the main reasons were a population shift which caused pressure on the borders. The population shift came about because Germanic tribes were being pushed into Roman territory by Asian tribes. The Roman army at the fall, was weak and apathetic as there was no incentive for a strong army, such as loot and Roman citizenship for the auxiliaries. There was, in addition, a monetary factor, as more money left the empire than was taken in, due to excessive consumerism.
greed for land and money
The land now known as England was conquered by the Roman Empire in the 1st Century AD.In the 5th Century, due to trouble elsewhere in the Roman Empire the Roman armies were withdrawn from Britain, and Roman rule ended.
The fall of the western part of the Roman Empire was precipitated by the invasions of this part of the empire by the Germanic peoples, rather than citizens indifference and loss of patriotism. It was said that many citizens were indifferent to these invasions because they were not worse than the Roman government. This attitude was due to resentment towards the oppressive taxation regime which the Roman state needed to fund a large army and a bloated bureaucracy.
It was due to a decline in trade and manufacturing. Many towns prospered on manufacturing and trade. This decline had already started in the later days of the Roman Empire. It accelerated afterwards due to a splintering of western Europe into several kingdoms and the breakdown in trading linkages across this area. Trade became localised and reduced in scale, also leading to a decline in manufacturing. Political instability due to fights between the kingdoms and/or aristocrats did not help. This worsened during the period of the Carolingian Empire (800-888). Charlemagne united most of western Europe under his empire. However, the rules of succession provided for he partition of the empire among the sons of the incumbent emperor. This led to continuous fights between the successors and also between other members of the imperial family. This empire collapsed because all this fighting led to the extinction of the Carolingian dynasty. This also had a devastating impact of the economy of western Europe.
The Roman army was in all parts of the empire. It was due in large part to the army that Rome established the greatest western empire of its time. To Rome, all parts of the empire were important.