There is no real evidence of the Romans persecuting Christians before at least 97 CE, and only sporadic periods of persecution even after that. Professor Keith Hopkins (A world full of gods: the Strange Triumph of Christianity) says that although in its early years Christianity was both illegal and at loggerheads with the state, it was largely ignored until the three purges of 250, 257 and 303- 311.
Any persecution of the Christians ended early in the fourth century, when Christianity received state patronage under Emperor Constantine. Then, later in the fouth century, Christianity became the official religion of Rome and was in a position to persecute pagans and Mithraists. It seems that persecution does not choose its victims - whichever religion is more powerful at the time persecutes the less powerful.
AnswerEuan Cameron (Interpreting Christian History: The Challenge of the Churches' Past) says, "Contrary to popular tradition, the first three centuries of Christianity were not times of steady or consistent persecution. Persecution was sporadic, intermittent, and mostly local." 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, which then only remained in effect until 251 CE. The only prolonged and very widespread "great persecution" of Christians was that initiated by Diocletian in 303 CE. It lasted until 305 in the West, but continued until 311 in the East.Over a period of almost three centuries, it has been estimated that the Christians suffered a total of about twelve years of official, widespread persecution.
Answer120yearsConstantine began the long persecution of the pagans, which lasted continuously for several centuries until no trace could be found of pagan worship. Even then, some were accused of witchcraft because of the belief that they were secretly engaging in pagan rites.
Persecutions of the Christians stopped in 312 after the Edict of Milan.
Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.
No, the Ottoman empire was long after the Roman empire. After the Roman empire, the byzantine empire followed. The Ottoman Turks did, however, take over the Byzantine captial of Constanope renaming it Istanbul.
Henry I, first but he did not last that long so then, Otto I to be the emperor, which is considered to be the ruler.But a result of an uprising by Czech Protestants against the Catholic ruler of the Holy Roman Empire was the Thirty Year War.
A:There is some dispute among historians as to whether Emperor Domitian (81-96 CE) really did persecute the Christians. Edward Gibbon (The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) says that any persecution that took place under Domitian must have been of no long duration.
3,000.
The last capital of the western part of the Roman Empire was Ravenna. It replaced Milan as the capital on 402.
Alexander the Great, but it didn't last very long.
Emperor Theodosius (378-395) made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire and banned the public worship of the pagan gods, thus formalising the long persecution of paganism.
Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.Three of the things that enabled the Roman empire to expand so well and last so long were the army, the common laws for all and the ability to absorb other cultures.
Modern historians say that widespread, official persecution lasted around twelve years in total. Gibbon suggests that under the Christian emperors the tradition of prolonged and widespread persecution of the Christians was created in order to justify the cruel treatment of pagans that was instituted by the Christians themselves once they had taken control of the empire.
There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.There were so many Roman emperors because the Roman empire lasted for a long, long, time.
well, the first Holy Roman Emperor (Otto I) was crowned in 962AD, and the last (Francis II) abdicated and dissolved the Empire in 1806. That is, 844 years
There was no such thing as a reign of terror in the Roman Empire
about 100 years
7
The eastern Byzantine Empire lasted another thousand years until taken over by the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
More than anyone before him, Emperor Constantine spread Christianity throughout the Roman Empire. True, Christianity was already well established, especially in the Greek-speaking east, long before the fourth century, but Constantine gave the religion state patronage, offered career preferment to those who claimed to be Christians, and began the long persecution of the pagan temples. From this time, and with this impetus, Christianity spread quickly in the Roman Empire.