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  2. Constantine the Great and Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great_and...

    Constantine's vision and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in a 9th-century Byzantine manuscript. During the reign of the Roman emperor Constantine the Great (306–337 AD), Christianity began to transition to the dominant religion of the Roman Empire.

  3. Religious policies of Constantine the Great - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_policies_of...

    Constantine's holdings at this time were not much: mostly Britain, Gaul and Spain. [19]: 189 Leithart says that, Constantine realized Galerius was an insecure foundation to build his future on, so Constantine made alliance with Maximian and Maxentius, sealing that alliance by marrying Maximian's daughter Fausta in the summer of AD 307.

  4. Christianity as the Roman state religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_as_the_Roman...

    By the time Christianity became the state religion of the empire at the end of the 4th century, scholars in the West had largely abandoned Greek in favor of Latin. Even the Church in Rome, where Greek continued to be used in the liturgy longer than in the provinces, abandoned Greek.

  5. Constantine the Great - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great

    Constantine is associated with the religiopolitical ideology known as Caesaropapism, which epitomizes the unity of church and state. He founded the city of Constantinople and made it the capital of the Empire, which remained so for over a millennium.

  6. Role of Christianity in civilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Role_of_Christianity_in...

    In AD 325, Constantine conferred the First Council of Nicaea to gain consensus and unity within Christianity, with a view to establishing it as the religion of the Empire. The population and wealth of the Roman Empire had been shifting east, and around the year 330, Constantine established the city of Constantinople as a new imperial city which ...

  7. Christian state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_state

    As a Christian state, Armenia "embraced Christianity as the religion of the King, the nobles, and the people". [3] In 326, according to official tradition of the Georgian Orthodox Church, following the conversion of Mirian and Nana, the country of Georgia became a Christian state, the Emperor Constantine the Great sending clerics for baptising ...

  8. Christianity in the 4th century - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_the_4th...

    Christianity in the 4th century was dominated in its early stage by Constantine the Great and the First Council of Nicaea of 325, which was the beginning of the period of the First seven Ecumenical Councils (325–787), and in its late stage by the Edict of Thessalonica of 380, which made Nicene Christianity the state church of the Roman Empire.

  9. Constantinian shift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinian_shift

    But Constantine reinstated Arius just before the heresiarch died in 336 and exiled the Orthodox Athanasius of Alexandria from 335 to 337. In 380 Emperor Theodosius I made Christianity the Roman Empire's official religion (see State church of the Roman Empire). In 392 Theodosius passed legislation prohibiting all pagan cultic worship. [7]