Usuario:XxEl Soto14xX/Taller2/Imperio bizantino bajo la dinastía frigia

Imperio bizantino
Βασιλεία Ῥωμαίων  (griego antiguo)
Imperium Romanum  (latín)
Dinastía y período histórico
820-867



El imperio Bizantino en el 864 d. C. después de la cristianización de los búlgaros
Capital Constantinopla
Entidad Dinastía y período histórico
Idioma oficial Griego
Religión Cristianismo niceno
Moneda Sólido bizantino
Período histórico Alta Edad Media
 • 25 de diciembre
de 820
Ascenso de Miguel II
 • Septiembre
de 867
Asesinato de Miguel III
Forma de gobierno Monarquía Autocrática
Emperador
820–829
829–842
842–867

Miguel II
Teófilo
Miguel III
Precedido por
Sucedido por
Imperio bizantino bajo la dinastía de Nicéforo
Imperio bizantino bajo la dinastía macedonia
Primer imperio búlgaro
Emirato de Creta
Emirato de Sicilia

El Imperio bizantino fue gobernado por la Dinastía amoriana (o dinastía frigia) ruled from 820 to 867. The Amorian dynasty continued the policy of restored iconoclasm (the "Second Iconoclasm") started by the previous non-dynastic emperor Leo V in 813, until its abolition by Empress Theodora with the help of Patriarch Methodios in 842.[1]​ The continued iconoclasm further worsened relations between the East and the West, which were already bad following the papal coronations of a rival line of "Roman Emperors" beginning with Charlemagne in 800. Relations worsened even further during the so-called Photian Schism, when Pope Nicholas I challenged Photios' elevation to the patriarchate. However, the era also saw a revival in intellectual activity which was marked by the end of iconoclasm under Michael III, which contributed to the upcoming Macedonian Renaissance.

During the Second Iconoclasm, the Empire began to see systems resembling feudalism being put in place, with large and local landholders becoming increasingly prominent, receiving lands in return for military service to the central government.[2]​ Similar systems had been in place in the Roman Empire ever since the reign of Severus Alexander during the third century, when Roman soldiers and their heirs were granted lands on the condition of service to the Emperor.[3]

Plantilla:Amorian dynasty Plantilla:History of the Byzantine Empire

  1. Parry, Kenneth (1996). Depicting the Word: Byzantine Iconophile Thought of the Eighth and Ninth Centuries. Leiden and New York: Brill. pp 11-15. ISBN 90-04-10502-6.
  2. A. A. Vasiliev, History of the Byzantine Empire: 324–1453, p. 564.
  3. A.A. Vasiliev, History of the Byzantine Empire, p. 566.