Continuity and change in Europe and West Asia During the 6th and 7th centuries the Byzantine Empire survived the attack wave thanks to effective leadership and a natural and artificial fortress around Constantinople (Martin 206). From this strategic point of view, Emperor Byzantine organized and preserved the ancient Roman regime, and the Byzantine Empire survived until 1453. In particular, Emperor Justinian led to the creation of this Code by eliminating obsolete laws, condensing Roman legal geniuses coherently and consistently. And to the contrary, we clarify the law itself.
The Byzantine Empire expanded to Eastern Europe in Western Europe and Southeastern Europe. The Byzantine Empire is located in the Balkans, Middle East, eastern Mediterranean, maintaining a very high level of political, economic and cultural life between the years 500 AD and 1450 AD. The empire keeps many Romanesque styles and throughout most of its orthodox Christian civilization Eastern Europe, Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia. Catholic Christianity without Empire Center spreads
The Romans broke Europe a second time, that they divided their empire in the west and the east. Purely bureaucratic decisions have spread rapidly into cultural and religious competition and continue today in various ways.
Geographically, Europe, including the British Isles, is the Western peninsula of the Asian continent; like many geographers, it refers to Europe, Asia and Eurasia. Traditionally, Europe is seen as an independent continent, the Ural Mountains and the Caucasus Mountains form the boundary between Europe and Asia. Europe is a large peninsula with long and irregular coastline and diverse mountains and islands. The continent of Europe is a relatively small area of Eurasia and includes 3,827,308 square miles. The Atlantic Ocean in the west, the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea in the south, the Asia in the east, the Arctic Ocean in the north. The highest point in Europe is the mountain of Elbus in Russia, 18,510 feet above sea level. The lowest point is Russia's Caspian Sea, 90 feet above sea level. The longest river in Europe is the Volga River, about 2,300 miles from Russia.