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Q: Why did the byzantine empire so much more prosperous than the holy roman empire during the middle ages?
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Did the middle east attacked the byzantine empire?

Yes, the Middle East attacked the Byzantine Empire, i.e. in the Levant. The Turks also attacked the Byzantine Empire.


The period during the Middle Ages when Europeans struggled to achieve the prosperous lifestyle of the Roman Empire is known as the?

Dark ages


What is the role of byzantines?

The Byzantines were people of the Byzantine Empire, which was called the Roman Empire during the Middle Ages. The reason it is called Byzantine is to distinguish it from the ancient Roman Empire, the Carolingian Empire, and the Holy Roman Empire, all of which were called the Roman Empire by at least someone. The Byzantines provided a center of learning, government, and trade through the Middle Ages, until they were conquered by the Ottoman Turks, an event many call the end of the Middle Ages. There is a link below to an article on the Byzantine Empire.


What lands did the byzantine empire conquer?

The Byzantine Empire was the Eastern side of the Roman Empire, centered on Constantinople. At its core were Greece and the Anatolian Peninsula, but the Empire also included Italy, Egypt, North Africa, the Middle East, Southern Spain, and Bulgaria during the course of its existence.


What two areas became part of the byzantine empire before justinians conquests?

The Byzantine Empire, also referred to as the Eastern Roman Empire or Byzantium, was the continuation of the Roman Empire in its eastern provinces during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, when its capital city was Constantinople.


How did the Byzantine empire lead to the middle ages?

The Byzantine Empire did not lead to the Middle Ages so much as it was a product of the Middle Ages. The Byzantine Empire was not given that name until the 17th century. Prior to that it was called the Roman Empire, and it was a country that remained from that empire. The problem was that historians needed a way to distinguish it from the Roman Empire as it existed during the time of when it effectively enclosed the Mediterranean Sea. Its nature had changed in a number of important ways, perhaps the single most important being that it was essentially Greek in nature rather than Greco-Roman or Latin.


Which religions sprang up in the Middle East during the Roman Empire not the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire?

the goth _______________________________________________ For you gamers playing Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader the answer is Goths


Who raced chariots in the Middle Ages?

Chariots were raced in the Byzantine Empire in the Early Middle Ages.


What byzantine legal code influenced modern law?

The Byzantine Empire was the predominantly Greek-speaking continuation of the Roman Empire during Late Antiquity and the middle Ages. The laws that influenced the modern legal codes dates further back to the Babylonian empire and that is the Hammurabi code of law.


Why did the byzantine emperors fear the seljuk Turks?

The Seljuk Turks were a large and threatening force in the Middle East during the Middle Ages, and the Byzantine Empire suffered a crippling defeat at their hands at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071. Taking advantage of this victory and the ensuing turmoil within the Empire, the Turks were able to seize most of Asia Minor and remained a threat to the Byzantines for the remainder of the Empire's existence. It was, in fact, a Turkish nation that dealt the death blow to the Byzantine Empire in 1453.


Was Syria part of the Persian Empire in 629 AD?

After the Byzantine-Sassanid War of 602-28 Syria became again a province of the Byzantine Empire. During the Muslim conquests of 634-718 Syria is conquered and became a caliphate (Islamic state) in the Middle East.


Who had control of the Middle East during 500 CE?

Much of the upper Middle East (like the Levant, Anatolia, Iraq, and Egypt) was controlled by the Byzantine Empire. Persia was controlled by the Sassanian Empire. The Arabian Peninsula was controlled by various small tribes.