Armenia had been annexed by the Eastern …

Years: 964 - 1107

Armenia had been annexed by the Eastern Roman Empire in 1045, but religious animosity between the Armenians and the Greeks prevent these two Christian peoples from cooperating against the Turks on the frontier.

Although Christianity had been adopted as the official religion of the state by King Tiridates III around CE 300, nearly one hundred years before similar action was taken in the Roman Empire, Armenians had been converted to a form of Christianity at variance with the Orthodox tradition of the Greek church, and they have their own patriarchate independent of Constantinople.

After their conquest by the Sassanians around 400, their religion had bound them together as a nation and provided the inspiration for a flowering of Armenian culture in the fifth century.

Large numbers of Armenians, when their homeland falls in the late eleventh century to the Seljuks, are dispersed throughout the Empire, many of them settling in Constantinople, where in its centuries of decline they will become generals and statesmen as well as craftsmen, builders, and traders.

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