Hello! Today is the third third of the Roman history series and the longest - under a millenium long, and comprising of 44.2% of the entire Roman timeline. This period was the Eastern Roman period, following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire and before the Fall of the east 950+ years later. This will be quite quick and broad of the large time period. Following the "Fall of Rome" in 476, Rome did not really fall. The eastern half remained territorially untouched following the Fall of Rome. The eastern half was ruled by a man named Zeno during the time of the fall of Rome. Anastasius succeeded him and was known for expanding the empire's wealth. Following him, the Justinian dynasty took power, starting with Justin I, who also enlarged the empire's wealth. Justinian would spend most of the empire's earning after expensive wars that reclaimed Italy and North Africa after the Fall of the West. The Justinian Plague really exhausted these wars, making the empire weak...
Hello! This is rhe first blog outside ReformedChildren to be posted since the new schedule change. This episode will continue the series and cover from the end of the turkic migrations until the Fall of Constantinople. In the early 11th century, a Turkic chieftain known as Tughril, now a Muslim, began to conquer large swathes of territory in Persia and Turkmenistan , quickly taking good parts of the Middle East and forming the Seljuk Empire centered around the city of Ishafan, modern day Iran. His sucessors made conquests west, defeating the Byzantine empire at Manzikert (1071) which asserted control over Turkey and taking Jerusalem from the Fatimids, and blocked Christian pilgrimage there. This prohibition caused the Byzantine emperor Alexios to call for European support in retaking lost regions, including Anatolia and Jerusalem. The First Crusade was launched and Jerusalem fell. The Seljuks stopped making much conquests they began to decline (a common theme of quickly decl...
Hello! Source: Wikipedia This Friday's weekly history episode is about the Battle of Vienna - a key historical event that had a large effect in history. The powerful Ottoman Turkish empire, though have weakened in the past century, aspired to take the key city of Vienna which would grant them power even deeper into the European continent. It was a key city and there was very intricate and well designed Ottoman logistical preparations under the Ottoman vizier (vizier is like an advisor) Kara Mustafa. Vienna was under the control of one of the many states in the larger state of the Holy Roman Empire. The Holy Roman Empire is a complex political entity. It was not Holy, nor Roman, nor an Empire. It was barely an organized empire - more of a semi united collection of lots of small and large smaller kingdoms and barely had legitimacy as being Roman. The ruling Habsburg dynasty also was very messy and inbred. It was a messy thing. The Ottoman Turks (Turks were from Central Asia bu...
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