Western Civilization

(Sean Pound) #1
and his death in captivity, an event unprecedented in
Roman history. Germanic tribes also poured into the
empire. The Goths overran the Balkans and moved into
Greece and Asia Minor, while the Franks advanced into
Gaul and Spain. Not until the reign of Aurelian (aw-
REEL-yun) (270–275) were most of the boundaries
restored. Although he abandoned the Danubian prov-
ince of Dacia, Aurelian reconquered Gaul and reestab-
lished order in the East and along the Danube. Grateful
citizens hailed him as “restorer of the world.”
As civil wars and invasions wore down the central
government, provinces began to break away from the
empire. A military commander named Postumus
seized control of Gaul and then gained the support of
Britain and Spain. He defended his “Gallic empire”
until he was killed by his own soldiers in 269. In the
East, Zenobia (zuh-NOH-bee-uh), the wife of the ruler
of Syria, seized power after his death and then in 270
extended her control over Egypt and much of Asia
Minor. In 272, Emperor Aurelian ended this threat to
imperial power by defeating Zenobia and her forces
in Syria.

Economic and Social Crises
Invasions, civil wars, and a recurrence of the plague
came close to causing an economic collapse of the
Roman Empire in the third century. The population
declined drastically, possibly by as much as one-third.
There was a noticeable decline in trade and small
industry, and the labor shortage created by the plague
affected both military recruiting and the economy.
Farm production deteriorated as fields were ravaged by
Germanic tribes and even more often by the defending
Roman armies. Provincial governors seemed powerless
to stop these depredations, and some even joined in
the extortion. The monetary system began to show
signs of collapse as a result of debased coinage and the
beginnings of serious inflation.
Armies were needed more than ever, but financial
strains made it difficult to enlist and pay the necessary
soldiers. Short of cash, the imperial government paid
its soldiers with produce, causing bitter resentment.
Whereas in the second century the Roman army had
been recruited among the inhabitants of frontier prov-
inces, by the mid-third century the state had to rely on
hiring barbarians to fight under Roman commanders.
These soldiers had no understanding of Roman tradi-
tions and no real attachment to either the empire or
the emperors. By the end of the third century, a new
political structure would emerge (see Chapter 7).

Transformation of the Roman


World: The Rise of Christianity


Q FOCUSQUESTION: What characteristics of
Christianity enabled it to grow and ultimately to
triumph?

The advent of Christianity marks a fundamental break
with the dominant values of the Greco-Roman world.
Christian views of God, human beings, and the world
were quite different from those of the Greeks and
Romans. Nevertheless, to understand the rise of Christi-
anity, we must first examine both the religious environ-
ment of the Roman world and the Jewish background
from which Christianity emerged.

The Religious World of the Roman
Empire
Augustus had taken a number of steps to revive the
Roman state religion, which had declined during the
turmoil of the late republic. The official state religion
focused on the worship of a pantheon of gods and god-
desses. Observance of proper ritual by state priests the-
oretically established the proper relationship between
Romans and the gods and guaranteed security, peace,
and prosperity. The polytheistic Romans, who were
extremely tolerant of other religions, allowed the wor-
ship of native gods and goddesses throughout their
provinces and even adopted some of the local gods. In
addition, the imperial cult of Rome and Augustus was
developed to bolster support for the emperors. After
Augustus, deceased emperors deified by the Roman
senate were included in the official imperial cult.
The desire for a more emotional spiritual experience
led many people to the mystery religions of the Hellen-
istic East, which flooded into the Western Roman
world during the early empire. The mystery religions
offered secret teachings that promised their followers
advantages unavailable through Roman religion: entry
into a higher world of reality and the promise of a
future life superior to the present one. They also fea-
tured elaborate rituals with deep emotional appeal. By
participating in their ceremonies and performing their
rites, an adherent could achieve communion with spir-
itual beings and undergo purification that opened the
door to life after death.
Perhaps the most important mystery cult was
Mithraism. Mithra was the chief agent of Ahuramazda,
the supreme god of light in Persian Zoroastrianism

138 Chapter 6The Roman Empire

Copyright 2017 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.



`ˆÌi`Ê܈̅Ê̅iÊ`i“œÊÛiÀȜ˜ÊœvÊ
˜vˆÝÊ*ÀœÊ* Ê
`ˆÌœÀÊ
/œÊÀi“œÛiÊ̅ˆÃʘœÌˆVi]ÊۈÈÌ\Ê
Free download pdf