wargreed
bankruptcy
famine
one of these
No, as religion was what kept The Empire going.
The Ottoman Empire, but truthfully due to a series of civil wars and partial defeats by other empires the Byzantine empire had been in decline for centuries prior to their final defeat
Turks, Arabs and European crusaders
The Arab conquest of Byzantine Syria, Phoenicia (Lebanon), Palestine and Egypt contributed the decline of the Byzantine Empire. So did the conquest of much of what is now Turkey by the Seljuk Turks and the conquest of much of the Balkan Peninsula (southeastern Europe) by the Slavs. The Arabs and the Turks were and still are Muslims.
The Byzantine Empire declined after Islam spread. The words "Islam spread" are nebulous. If the question is referring to the Rise of Islam period, when Mohammed and the Rightly-Guided Caliphs were spreading Islam, then yes, the Byzantine Empire decline after these events. If, however, you are referring to the Seljuk and Ottoman conquests of Anatolia nearly 600 years later which eventually ended the Byzantine Empire, the Empire was in decline long before these armies trampled the Byzantines to the ground. The answer is more complex than the above answers would purport. See the link below for another relevant answer.
After the decline of Byzantine empire, Moscow's most successor person was ivan III. He ruled most of the byzantine as well as russian territories. He also married the niece of the last emperor of the byzantine empire. he also adapted the culture, religion, and the symbol of the byzantine empire. so, it is called as the third rome or compared as the empire of rome.
What were the causes and consequences of the decline of the Mughal empire
If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.
They competed with the Byzantines in order to trade with Asia. They were successful and ended up gaining positions in the Empire.
During the decline of the Roman Empire, the empire was split into a western and eastern half. The capital of the western half was Rome, until it was invaded and captured by the visa-goths from modern day Germany. The eastern half was centered around Constantinople or modern day Istanbul After the collapse of the eastern empire, the western half was renamed the Byzantine Empire. So the Byzantine Empire was the eastern half of the Roman Empire.
The main cause was the conquest by the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
yes its true