Lecture 13: Imperial Politics and Religion
o Symbolically, Constantinople was a New Rome that was also
a Christian Rome from the beginning: Materials from pagan
temples were used in its construction, and pagan idols were
melted to provide gold for ornamentation.
• In the future, Constantinople would become a genuine rival to the
old Rome, thriving especially when the old capital was weak and
challenging the old Rome for primacy in every respect.
o If the first Rome was important because it was the seat of
empire, then the new Rome must be at least equally important
for the same reason.
o But if the old Rome based its religious importance on being
the city of Peter and Paul, then Constantinople should
be secondary.
o The seeds of considerable later religious distress were sown by
Constantine’s political decision.
Fox, Pagans and Christians.
Pelikan, The Excellent Empire.
- Discuss the ancient premise, which obtained until the historical
“yesterday,” that unity of religious observance is the basis for political
unity and stability. - Imagine two things: (1) what Christianity might have become had
Constantine not sponsored it and (2) what the empire would have
become had Christianity remain encysted within it.
Suggested Reading
Questions to Consider