section four: the fall of the roman empire. i. a century of crisis end of pax romana marked by end...

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Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire

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Page 1: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire

Page 2: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

I. A Century of Crisis• end of Pax Romana marked by end of the

reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD)• following rulers had no idea how to deal w/

giant empire and its problems

Page 3: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

A. Rome’s Economy Weakens• During its 3rd century of existence, several

factors began to weaken the Roman economy1. Pirates & hostile tribes along borders

disrupt trade2. Reached limit of expansion, lacked new

sources of gold and silver3. Desperate for money, gov’t raised taxes4. Inflation—drastic drop in value of money

coupled w/ a rise in prices

Page 4: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

5. Agriculture also faced serious problems—overworked soil started to produce less crops along w/ years of war destroying farmland

6. Serious food shortage and disease began to spread, and population declined

Page 5: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

B. Military and Political Turmoil• soldiers once again became disloyal, gave

allegiance to commanders• Commanders fought amongst themselves to

become emperor• gov’t recruited mercenaries— foreign soldiers

who fought for money• Citizens lost sense of loyalty/pride in their

empire- no longer cared what happened to the empire

Page 6: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

II. Emperors Attempt Reforms•Rome able to survive for another 200 years

due to reform minded emperors and division of the empire

Diocletian

Page 7: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

A. Diocletian Reforms the Empire• Diocletian- strong willed army leader became

emperor in 284 AD• Reforms:• Strict, limited personal freedoms• doubled the army• set fixed prices on some goods• restored prestige of the emperor, claimed he

was a descendent of gods• most significant reform- division of empire

into Greek speaking East and Latin Speaking West

Page 8: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

• Eastern Empire- Greece, Anatolia, Syria, Egypt•Western Empire—Italy, Gaul, Britain, Spain• Diocletian ruled East, assigned a co-ruler for west,

but kept overall control over both halves • Eastern half contained most major cities and was

far wealthier than west • Diocletian forced to retire due to ill health in 305

AD= civil war broke out

Page 9: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

The Split of the Roman Empire

Page 10: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

B. Constantine Moves the Capital• 312 AD- Constantine gained control of western empire • 324 AD- Constantine reunited empire• 330 AD- moved capital from Rome to Byzantium in present day

Turkey• Name changed to Constantinople, or city of Constantine • After Constantine’s death empire would again be divided- east

would survive while west collapsed

Page 11: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

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Page 12: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

III. The Western Empire Crumbles• collapse of western empire would take

many years• final collapse result of 3 main problems:

1. worsening internal problems ($$$$)2. the separation of the Western empire3. outside invasion

Page 13: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

A. Germanic Invasions• Germanic tribes lived on edge of

Empire’s borders peacefully for 100’s of years• 70 AD- group of Huns invaded

Germanic lands= Germanic tribes flee into Roman lands• Romans referred to Germanic invaders

as barbarians—all non Romans • Romans not able to stop Germanic

tribes who eventually made it to Rome, plundered Rome for 3 days

Page 14: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following
Page 15: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

B. Attila the Hun• 444- Huns united for first time

under a powerful chief, Attila• Huns terrorized both halves of

empire, defeating many cities in east and west• failed to take either

Constantinople or Rome • After Attila’s death Huns no

longer a threat, but Germanic invasions continued to weaken Roman Empire

Page 16: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

C. An Empire No More• last Roman Emperor, 14 year old boy Romulus

Augustulus, ousted by Germanic forces in 476• Western empire had finally completely

collapsed- Eastern half survived, flourished • Eastern half known as Byzantine Empire• new empire preserved Greek and Roman

culture for another 1,000 years

Page 17: Section Four: The Fall of the Roman Empire. I. A Century of Crisis end of Pax Romana marked by end of the reign of Marcus Aurelius (161-180 AD) following

• Even though Rome’s political power in the west had ended, its cultural influence had not- its ideas, customs, and institutions influenced development of western culture even to present times