yes
The Roman Government began persecuting Christians under Emperor Nero. Nero began to execute large numbers of Christians following the Great Fire of Rome. According to the Roman historian Tacitus, the population searched for a scapegoat and rumors held Nero responsible. To deflect blame, Nero targeted Christians.
It is generally agreed that there was no organised, general, centrally directed persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire before the edict of Emperor Decius in 249. This remained in effect until 251 CE. The "great persecution" of Christians was initiated by Emperor Diocletian in 303 CE. It lasted until 305 in the West, but continued until 311 in the East.
AnswerThis is false. Whereas Christianity was by and large tolerated by the pagan Romans, apart from three short periods of official and widespread persecution, the Manichaean religion was totally banned within the Roman Empire. Manichaeanism was only permitted after the Edict of Toleration, and then only for a short time, as Christian emperors began to persecute non-Christian faiths.From the time of Constantine, Jews were also widely persecuted by the Roman Empire.
It began in Roman Empire. Plato has written in his treatise on Republic.
The Roman republic began in 509 BC, after the ouster of the kings. It lasted until 30 BC after several years of decline.
The Roman Government began persecuting Christians under Emperor Nero. Nero began to execute large numbers of Christians following the Great Fire of Rome. According to the Roman historian Tacitus, the population searched for a scapegoat and rumors held Nero responsible. To deflect blame, Nero targeted Christians.
The Roman Government began persecuting Christians under Emperor Nero. Nero began to execute large numbers of Christians following the Great Fire of Rome. According to the Roman historian Tacitus, the population searched for a scapegoat and rumors held Nero responsible. To deflect blame, Nero targeted Christians.
It is generally agreed that there was no organised, general, centrally directed persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire before the edict of Emperor Decius in 249. This remained in effect until 251 CE. The "great persecution" of Christians was initiated by Emperor Diocletian in 303 CE. It lasted until 305 in the West, but continued until 311 in the East.
The tenth emperor to persecute the Christians was Diocletian. It began in 303 and lasted until 313. Historians have named it the Great Persecution.
St. Sebastian was a Roman soldier and a member of the Imperial Guard. He refused a direct order to persecute the early Christians. For this he was ordered to be executed. He was shot with numerous arrows and left for dead. However, he survived and was nursed back to health by St. Irene. He began preaching on the streets of Rome and when the emperor learned of this, he was again arrested and stabbed to death. He was a martyr, considered an instant saint by the early Christians.
AnswerThis is false. Whereas Christianity was by and large tolerated by the pagan Romans, apart from three short periods of official and widespread persecution, the Manichaean religion was totally banned within the Roman Empire. Manichaeanism was only permitted after the Edict of Toleration, and then only for a short time, as Christian emperors began to persecute non-Christian faiths.From the time of Constantine, Jews were also widely persecuted by the Roman Empire.
A:The Bible tells us that Christianity began in Galilee, a Roman province in northern Palestine. The majority of active Christians today are in the Americas.
It began in Roman Empire. Plato has written in his treatise on Republic.
There were three systems of government in use by the Roman society over its long history. They began with a monarchy which evolved into a republic which in turn morphed into a principate.
Rome's government began with the overthrow of the Etruscans in 509 B.C.E. The Roman's then established a republic. It is a government in which citizens elect representatives to rule on their behalf.
Christians probably began to enter Spain in small numbers from the first century CE. In the fifth century, Visigoths allied with Rome to keep other barbarians away from the Roman border, and received Roman Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula) and Southern Gaul as a payment for their loyalty. The Visigoths at this stage were Unitarian Christians (Arians), while the Roman Empire followed Trinitarian Catholicism.
After the Great Fire of Rome, in the year 64, Emperor Nero did, perhaps unfairly, blame the Christians of Rome for starting the fire. However, there is no evidence that he persec uted the Christians more generally.