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.When his father died in 306, the army recognized Constantine as their new leader.They chose wisely.Not long after, when the Barbarian Franks invaded Gaul, Constantine led the cavalry charge against them and defeated them.Constantine celebrated this victory with a triumph that marched through the streets of Trier.The citizens loved him.While Constantine was gaining support in Gaul and Britain, a usurper rose to power in Italy and North Africa.Maxentius had taken over by promising lower taxes and free grain.(He is not to be confused with Maximian, who was one of the original tetrarchy.) When the people realized the promises he made would be delivered only to the wealthy, they began to revolt.Riots broke out all over Rome.Constantine saw it as his duty to overthrow the upstart and restore order.He formed an alliance with Licinius, who now controlled the eastern half of the empire.Together they rallied their troops to fight their fellow Romans just outside Rome.This was exactly what Diocletian had sought to avoid, civil war.On the eve of battle, Constantine is said to have seen the Greek letters chi and rho appear in the sky (the first two letters of the word Christ).He heard a voice say, “Under this, you will conquer.” Constantine had witnessed the resilience of the Christians when they were undergoing persecution by Diocletian.Rather than discouraging the faith, the number of Christians had grown at an enormous rate.It is possible that Constantine saw a people whom he could use to help win the empire.Whether it was motivated by politics or a spiritual awakening, Constantine ordered his men to paint the Christian symbol on their shields.Together the forces of Constantine defeated Maxentius at the Milvian Bridge.Constantine had the head of his enemy paraded around the empire.With this single victory, Constantine became the sole ruler of the western empire.Despite Constantine’s victory, there was no peace.The alliance Constantine formed with Licinius broke down.As the conflict between the two rulers grew more tense, Licinius found a way to strike out against his nemesis in the west.Like Diocletian before him, he persecuted the very sect of people whom Constantine had claimed as own: the Christians.The persecutions were not founded on religious divergence; they were purely political.Licinius saw the Christians as Constantine’s people.For nine more years, tensions between the east and west worsened until the antagonism came to a head.Once again the country was on the verge of civil war.The battle that would decide who would take possession of all the vast expanses of the Roman Empire took place at Chrysopolis in 324.Constantine defeated Licinius’ army and became the sole emperor.Because Constantine’s sister, who was married to Licinius through the previous alliance, had begged for mercy for her husband, Constantine spared him, at least for a while.But he later had his enemy killed while imprisoned.With his enemies annihilated, Constantine could focus on what meant the most to him: his new Christian empire.Because the brunt of economic and military activity in the empire took place in the northeast, he decided to establish a new capital on the site of the former Greek city of Byzantion.He chose the location because of its great strategic advantage.It lay near the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea and allowed access to Anatolia and the Danube.He changed the city’s name to Constantinople.The city became his obsession.He focused all of his resources on building roads, elaborate cathedrals, schools, and more secure walls.He transformed the city into the jewel of the east.It became a center of knowledge, wealth, and prosperity.It was cosmopolitan.It was Christian.But, most of all, it was Greek.The split Diocletian began was complete.After Constantine’s death, his capital city continued to flourish.But the Latin-speaking west did not.The empire was politically and culturally split due to language differences, philosophical differences, and eventually religious differences.Power struggles developed between the pope in Rome and the patriarch in Constantinople.These would eventually lead to the Great Schism in the Church.By 395, the empire was officially split yet again.Without the support of the east, the west fell prey to barbarian invasions and was lost in the sixth century.This is often seen as the end of the Roman empire.But it was not until 1453, when the Turks took Constantinople, that the last and long separate eastern half of the empire truly ceased to exist.Once Diocletian split the Roman empire, it changed everything.The rich east even diverted barbarian invasions toward the west.Diocletian’s dream of an efficient and divided but cooperative empire was a nightmare that doomed the western half of the Roman empire.Had the empire stayed united, Rome might have had the resources and strength to survive for centuries more, like Byzantium did.At first it was more efficient for Diocletian to divide up the empire [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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