Constantine the Great did not lose power in a traditional sense, as he remained the Emperor of Rome until his death in 337 AD. However, following his death, the Roman Empire faced divisions and power struggles among his sons and successors, which gradually led to a decline in centralized power. His reign is often marked by significant reforms and expansion, but the fragmentation of authority began shortly thereafter.
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Constantine I, also called Constantine the Great, became Emperor of Rome in 306AD. He became the sole ruler of the Roman Empire in 324AD.
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A:Lorenzo Valla proved the Donation of Constantine, by which Emperor Constantine supposedly granted great wealth and power to Pope Sylvester and his successors, to be a forgery in the fifteenth century.
No, there were no popes at the time of Constantine. Constantine moved the capital because of economic and logistical reasons. The eighth-century forgery now known as the Donation of Constantine claimed that Constantine moved his imperial capital to the east, in order to grant the pope temporal power in the west. However, nothing in this document was true.
Power was always moving east even before Constantine moved the empire's capital. The western part of the region was already conquered. They moved east was into unconquered territory.
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When they move over dry land they begin to lose power.
It was forged to establish the pope's power over the western roman empire
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prior to Constantine gaining power, rome was suffering an economic downfall. trade levels and birth rates fell, the government became less effective, and both the economy and population deteriorated.
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