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The Land & The people
of Byzantines The three greatest civilizations to occupy the Anatolian
land display great similarities in regards to the relationship of man and soil. This
parallelism can be seen in the Hittite,Byzantine,and,later,in the Ottoman periods.
According to the Byzantines, land, air, and sun are all possessions of God, but he
bequeaths these to the king for his use. The land was to be used by the king in the name
of God. The king then bequeathed much of this land to the royalty. A tiny part of this
land was reserved for the use of the villagers. The laborers had to pay a usage tax for
the right to use the land.If this person were found to be guilty of a crime by the
government, then he lost the right to work this land. In the later Byzantine period the
military gained ownership of some of the land. Farmers in the Byzantine period primarily
raised grain crops. Cotton was the second largest crop. There were also villagers who kept
fruit orchards.Those who engaged in animal husbandry raised sheep, goats, cows, pigs, and
horses. In the year 552 two priests brought in silkworms from China in hollowed-out canes
Textiles were an important industry in Byzantine times, and the production of silk soon
became quite advanced.The silk factory that was built in the Marmara Eregli region
produced silk cloth for the clothing of the royal family. The use of silk then spread to
Europe from the Byzantines. The Byzantines also engaged in cotton and linen weaving. Rug
making was also an important industry for the Byzantines. Other sectors within the
Byzantine economy were mining, and jewelry and glass making. The Byzantines and the
Ottomans were similar in terms of industry. Various craftsman were trained in the
apprenticeship program of the Yonca (guild) system. The Byzantines were powerful traders,
both by land and by sea, and the Byzantine gold money was important all over the world.
The Byzantines, however, began to lose this power in the eleventh century. When they were
no longer able to mint gold coins they became totally forceless. The emperor acted as the
highest judge of the land until the beginning of the fourteenth century. The other members
of the court consisted of high-ranking bureaucrats. This judge sat on cases that were very
serious, such as treason and murder. For many years capital punishment was not enforced in
the Byzantine Empire. In place of the death penalty other punishments such as the cutting
off of hands, feet, or ears or blinding by gouging out the eyes were used. It can of
course to be argued whether the death penalty or the penalties listed above were the most
cruel. Most of those found guilty were exiled or banished to a monastery. As is
well-known, when the emperor Romanos Diogenes was defeated by Alparslan his eyes were
gouged out and he was banished to Heybeli Island
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