And he wanted to have uniformity of belief, or at least not major disputes within the church under ... Roman Empire. When we go farther than that, we go to Eusebius and other apologists for ...
Constantine's death would drive a crack through the Roman Empire, splitting it into West and East. Over the next several hundred years, parts of it would even fall to foreign invaders.
Ancient shipwrecks have given scientists fresh insights into why the final remnants of the Roman Empire collapsed - nearly 1,000 years after the fall of Rome. In 330AD, Emperor Constantine split ...
A viral social media trend last year suggested the Roman Empire is frequently in men's ... a replica of a statue of Constantine from about AD312, created using 3D modelling technology from scans ...
Miltiades was pope when Constantine issued the Edict of Milan, which gave Christianity a legal status in the Roman Empire, but Sylvester was the first pope fully to reign under its benefits.
In the fifth and sixth centuries, Anglo-Saxons were pagan, but the Roman Empire had converted to Christianity in A.D. 380 under the emperor ... by the emperor Constantine in the fourth century ...
In 313 AD, the Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Milan, which accepted Christianity: 10 years later, it had become the official religion of the Roman Empire.
In 312 Emperor Constantine made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire. In the 7th century Christianity retreated under the advance of Islam. But it remained the chosen religion of ...
Initially it was the religion of the urban areas: the civitas. The population at large, though, continued for some time their polytheistic worship based on Roman and Celtic beliefs.
Constantine quickly became a major ... Silvester – control of the city of Rome, the western Roman Empire, huge tracts of land under imperial control, and authority over churches in the other ...