Q&A

How did Byzantine culture influence Italy?

How did Byzantine culture influence Italy?

Byzantine culture would exert a great influence on the Western intellectual tradition, as scholars of the Italian Renaissance sought help from Byzantine scholars in translating Greek pagan and Christian writings. (This process would continue after 1453, when many of these scholars fled from Constantinople to Italy.)

How did the Byzantines influence Europe?

The Byzantine Empire insulated Europe from enemies and gave it the time it needed to recover from the chaotic medieval period. Byzantium’s role in shaping Orthodoxy was also hugely influential; the modern-day Eastern Orthodox Church is the second largest Christian church in the world.

Should the Byzantines wait out the Mongols?

They’re not going to do anything by trying to wait them out. Byzantines had a very good chance at beating the mongols, even when it was reduced to nothing. Not only could the mongols not conquer the byzantine empire, they could barely reach it.

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Was there a Byzantine Empire in Anatolia?

During the heydays of Mongol power in Anatolia, there was a Latin Empire in Constantinople not the Byzantine Empire. If we consider Empire of Nicaea as Byzantine Empire for the sake of argument , that’s another usage of terminology. Even in Wikipedia terminology had been mixed.

How did the Mongol invasion of Europe affect the Balkans?

When the vast armies of the Mongol Empire entered Europe in the mid-thirteenth-century, they would unleash a wave of change – smashing some kingdoms while benefitting others. How did the Mongol presence in the Balkans effect its two main political powers – the Byzantines and the Bulgarians?

Why did Genghis Khan not conquer Constantinople?

By the time the Mongol empire was established by Genghis Khan, Constantinople (or Byzantine) has been sacked by the Latins during the fourth crusade. So it was not the prize it once was and thus not a huge priority. During Subotai’s invasion in the 1220’s, he only reached Georgia and present-day Russia/Ukraine.