Byzantine Slavic Viking Influences On Russia
Byzantine Slavic Viking Influences On Russia
Byzantine Slavic Viking Influences On Russia
Who are the Vikings? Vikings, Slavs, Byzantines and the Development of Russia
Who are the Slavs?
VIKINGS
NOTES ON RUSSIA
SLAVS
Kiev
BYZANTINE EMPIRE
Who are the Byzantines?
THE SLAVS
Who are the Slavs?
The Slavs were people who lived among the forests of north of the
Black Sea in Eastern Europe. These Slavic peoples had similar
languages but had no political unity. The Slavs were farmers, but also
hunted and fished. The Slavs were polytheistic whose most
important gods were animals (bear was the master of the forest;
wolf was the master of the hunt).
The Vikings were not only warriors but also traders, farmers,
and explorers. They ventured far beyond western Europe.
Vikings journeyed down rivers into the heart of Russia, to
Constantinople, and even across the icy waters of the North
Atlantic. The Viking explorer Leif Ericson reached North America
around 1000, almost 500 years before Columbus. Gradually, the Vikings accepted Christianity and stopped raiding Europeans
as the climate of Europe warmed and farming became easier.
Under Emperor Justinian, the Hagia Sophia was constructed and was the largest
Christian church in the world and served as the model for later Eastern
Orthodox churches. Justinian also brought together all of the laws of the Roman
Empire into a single legal code that became the basis for modern legal systems.
Byzantine missionaries from the Orthodox Church spread their religion north to the Slavs. Two missionaries, Saint Methodius and Saint
Cyril, converted many Russians to Christianity. To help themselves spread their religion they developed an alphabet for the Slavic
languages called the Cyrillic alphabet. The Cyrillic alphabet allowed Slavic peoples to read the Bible in their own language.
In 980, Vladimir the king of Kiev sent out teams to observe the major religions of the times. Three of the teams returned with lukewarm
accounts of Islam, Judaism, and Western Christianity. But the team from Byzantium told quite a different story:
The [Byzantines] led us to the [buildings] where they worship their God, and we knew not whether we were in heaven or on
earth. For on earth there is no such splendor or such beauty, and we are at a loss how to describe it. We only know that God
dwells there among men, andwe cannot forget that beauty.
This report convinced Vladimir to convert his people to Orthodox Christianity. Vladimir appreciated the Byzantine idea of the emperor as
supreme ruler of the Church. Eventually, Russian kings viewed themselves as the Third Rome and took the title of Czar, a Slavic term
for the Roman and Byzantine title of Caesar
RUSSIA
Viking traders moved into western Russia and developed river trade routes that
reached south to Constantinople. Furs from Scandinavia were traded for luxury
products from the Byzantine Empire. The mixture of Slavic, Viking, and Byzantine
influences shaped the culture and development of Russia:
The city of Kiev grew because of trade with the Byzantine Empire. The rise of
Kiev marked the appearance of Russias first important unified territory. Kiev was
located on a main water trade route and became a prosperous trading center,
and from there many Russians visited Constantinople.
Russian trade in the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and the arrival of
Byzantine missionaries in Russia led to the spread the Eastern Orthodox religion.
Orthodox Christianity is the main religion in Russia today.
The Russian title Czar comes from the Roman and Byzantine term Caesar.
The curved domes of Russian architecture were influenced by Byzantine designs.
Russias Cyrillic alphabet was created by the Orthodox missionaries from the
Byzantine Empire.