A cross of light bearing the inscription
“in hoc signo vinces” (in this sign you
will conquer) miraculously
appeared to Roman Emperor Constantine
before the battle of Milvian Bridge. His
victory over his
brother-in-law and co-emperor Maxentius
and subsequent conversion to
Christianity had a profound
impact on the course of Western
civilization.
Byzantine is the term commonly used
since the 19th century to refer to the
Greek-speaking Roman
Empire of the Middle Ages centered in
the capital city of Constantinople.
During much of its history, it
was known to many of its Western
contemporaries as the Empire of the
Greeks, due to the dominance of
the Greek language and culture. However,
it is important to remember that the
Byzantines referred to
themselves as simply as the Roman
Empire. As the Byzantine era is a period
largely fabricated by
historians, there is no clear consensus
on exactly when the Byzantine age
begins; although many
consider the reign of Emperor
Constantine the Great, who moved the
imperial capital to the glorious city
of Byzantium, renamed Constantinople and
nicknamed the “New Rome,” to be the
beginning. Others
consider the reign of Theodosius I (379-
395), when Christianity officially
supplanted the pagan beliefs,
to be the true beginning. And yet other
scholars date the start of the Byzantine
age to the era when
division between the east and western
halves of the empire became permanent.
While Christianity replaced the gods of
antiquity, traditional Classical culture
continued to flourish.
Greek and Latin were the languages of
the learned classes. Before Persian and
Arab invasions devastated
much of their eastern holdings,
Byzantine territory extended as far as
south as Egypt. After a period of
iconoclastic uprising came to resolution
in the 9th Century, a second flowering
of Byzantine culture
arose and lasted until Constantinople
was temporarily seized by Crusaders from
the west in the 13th
Century. Christianity spread throughout
the Slavic lands to the north. In 1453,
Constantinople finally fell
to the Ottoman Turks effectively ending
the Byzantine Empire after more than
1,100 years. Regardless of
when it began, the Byzantine Empire
continued to carry the mantle of Greek
and Roman Classical
cultures throughout the Medieval era and
into the early Renaissance, creating a
golden age of Christian
culture that today continues to endure
in the rights and rituals of the Eastern
Orthodox Church.
Byzantine art and culture was the
epitome of luxury, incorporating the
finest elements from the artistic
traditions of both the East and the
West.
This bronze oil lamp dates to the
Byzantine era. The ring handle is
surmounted by a leaf-shaped
attachment incorporating a Christian
cross. The filling hole is covered with
a hinged lid. The spout
terminates in a wide circular opening
for the wick.The majority of lamps in
the ancient world were
fashioned from clay. The use of bronze
was a costly and luxurious alternative.