What changes occurred in the transition from Roman Empire to Byzantine Empire?
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What changes occurred in the transition from Roman Empire to Byzantine Empire?
Changes: The Byzantine Empire shifted its capital from Rome to Constantinople, changed the official religion to Christianity, and changed the official language from Latin to Greek.
Did the Eastern Roman Empire speak Latin or Greek?
Greek continued as the language of the Eastern Roman Empire, and developed into a distinctive medieval Greek that gave rise to modern Greek.
What language started to replace Latin in the Eastern Roman Empire?
Greek
Although the people living in the Eastern Roman Empire referred to themselves as Romans, they were distinguished by their Greek heritage, Orthodox Christianity, and their regional connections. Over time, the culture of the Eastern Roman Empire transformed. Greek replaced Latin as the language of the empire.
Why did the Eastern Roman Empire become Greek?
Originally Answered: Why does the Eastern Roman Empire speak Greek instead of their traditional language, the Latin? Because it was not their traditional language. In the Roman Empire many cultures coexisted, the Eastern Roman empire or Byzantium was Hellenic, Greek.
What language did the Byzantines speak?
Byzantine Greek language
Byzantine Greek language, an archaic style of Greek that served as the language of administration and of most writing during the period of the Byzantine, or Eastern Roman, Empire until the fall of Constantinople to the Turks in 1453.
Why did the Eastern Roman Empire speak Greek?
Originally Answered: Why does the Eastern Roman Empire speak Greek instead of their traditional language, the Latin? Because it was not their traditional language. In the Roman Empire many cultures coexisted, the Eastern Roman empire or Byzantium was Hellenic, Greek. It was a Greek state, not a Latin civilisation.
What did the Eastern Roman Empire speak?
Why did the Byzantine Empire change their official language from Latin to Greek?
When did Byzantine Empire stop using Latin?
In 395 AD when the Roman Empire split into western and eastern (Byzantine), Latin continued to be used as the official language but in time it was replaced by Greek as that language was already widely spoken among the Eastern Mediterranean nations as the main trade language.