"Spread of Christianity by the Roman Empire" Christianity began with Judaism in the eastern Mediterranean. A man named Jesus who is both human and sacred has been sent from Earth to God to save his people. He will eventually be executed to rescue his people from sin and begin opening doors to heaven. The Jews saw their scriptures and the accomplishments of the prophets of Jesus. For these reasons they began to obey him, and Christianity began to spread throughout the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire promoted the spread of Christianity through missionary work, especially through the missionary work of the Holy Spirit.
Christianity itself has also spread to the Roman Empire; since Theodosius I (AD 379-395), the official church of the Roman Empire was a Christianity. Later, the territory of former Rome became a Christian country and its religion was exported to other parts of the world through colonization and missionaries. Christianity is also a channel for the preservation and dissemination of Greek and Roman literary cultures. After the collapse of the Medieval Christian University Empire, the classical educational tradition of liberal arts was preserved. Medieval education relied heavily on Euclidian elements and Greek and Roman books such as influential quadrilateral textbooks (AD 480-524) written by Roman politicians in Latin
The division of the two sides of Roman politics and culture, the rise of Christianity and the empire that ended in the East Roman Empire and the Western Roman Empire changed dramatically. Christianity changed the way of life in Rome and the decentralization of the empire left Western Europe without the strong political regime until the formation of the Holy Roman Empire. These changes indicate the beginning of the Byzantine Empire, but the important continuity shapes the political attitude of Byzantine and keeps the laws and thoughts of Greece and Rome
The Mediterranean area is shaped by the later Roman Empire. But there are certainly important links to explain the characteristics of Christianity and the subsequent history of Rome. Although it is not a product of the Roman Empire, although some of the benefits of the empire's decline are also received, some Christian characteristics can be counted as part of Greek and Roman heritage.
In the Christian era, the Roman Empire divided into a weak Western Roman Empire (headquartered in Ravenna and Rome) and the East Roman Empire (headquartered in Constantinople), which brought about a change in the art of the late Roman era. Mural paintings, mosaic art and funeral sculpture become popular, life-size statues and panel paintings gradually disappear. At Constantinople, Roman art absorbed the influence of the East, surpassed by Visigoths under Roman al - laric (410), and produced Byzantine art of the late Empire who was rejected by Vandals under Gaiser It was. Roman artists, craftsmen, craftsmen immigrated to the east. The capital continues their trade. For example, Haya Sophia of Constantinople, one of the most famous examples of the Roman dome, offers employment opportunities to about 10,000 of these experts and other workers.