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      • After restoring the unity of the Empire, Constantine the Great introduced many governmental reforms and increased financial resources for the Christian church. Then, he identified the site of Byzantium - a small Greek port - as the new center of the Empire and the seat of government, officially known as Nova Roma ('New Rome').
      www.ancientpages.com › 2020/03/09 › why-was-constantinople-called-new-rome
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  2. Mar 9, 2020 · The 'New Rome' (Nova Roma) was built over six years and inaugurated on May 11, 330, and new coins were struck by Constantine I to commemorate the founding of Constantinople. In many ways, the new city was an almost exact copy of the old and famous eternal city of Rome.

  3. Constantinople: The “New Rome”? Though not initially intended to replace Rome, Constantinople (“city of Constantine”) was formally dedicated as a city in 330 CE, and the emperor Constantine was celebrated with various monuments.

  4. Although the sources have been interpreted along different lines, it now seems very likely that Constantine did not declare from the start that he was founding a ‘New Rome’ or ‘Second Rome’, a city to replace Rome.

  5. constantinople. controlled trade between the Mediterranean sea and the black sea. Contantine. What was the name of the roman emperor who built constantinople. new rome. nick name for constantinople. Its emporers were roman who spoke latin.

  6. Apr 3, 2012 · Constantinople was named New Rome or Second Rome very soon after its foundation on the site of Byzantium in AD 324; over the next two hundred years it replaced the original Rome as the greatest city of the Mediterranean.

  7. In Late Antiquity Constantinople was explicitly presented as a “new Rome’’ and given institutions and buildings to match those of the old capital. This chapter examines how the two cities did in fact compare.

  8. The age of Constantine marked a distinct epoch in the history of the Roman Empire. He built a new imperial residence at Byzantium, and renamed the city Constantinople after himself (the laudatory epithet of “New Rome” came later, and was never an official title).