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How did Theodosius the Great change the Roman Empire

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==Career of Theodosius I==
Theodosius was born in modern Spain and came from a distinguished family. He had many years’ experience as a governor and a general and was considered the ideal choice to deal with the Goths. Theodosius first rebuilt the army and in a series of maneuvers he tried to contain the GothsGermanic invaders. However, the Goths were ably led and their army was growing as they recruited other barbarians and local bandits. He was also able to secure some reinforcements from Egypt. However, he was not strong enough to face the Goths in battle. Instead, the Eastern Emperor adopted the diplomatic approach. He entered negotiations with the Goths and defeated some hardline barbarian groups who did not want to negotiate Finally, the Goths and the Romans signed a peace treaty. This allowed the Goths to govern themselves in a small area adjacent to the Danube. The Germans and their allies had to serve in the legions if requested and they had to protect the Danuban frontier. Theodosius managed to end the Gothic War but it came at a cost. The Goths were given special privileges in the Balkans and this angered many local people who had suffered greatly at their hands. In Thessalonica, the population rioted against the presence of a Gothic garrison. Theodosius, I ordered the Goths to suppress the riot and they did so with great fury and massacred thousands. The powerful Archbishop of Milan, Ambrose excommunicated the Emperor, effectively expelling him from the Christian Church, because of the massacre<ref> Brown, p. 78</ref>. The Emperor was only re-admitted to the Church after several months of penance. This is often seen as a pivotal moment when the Christian Church in the West could overrule and even dominate the secular ruler. Theodosius, I was very much concerned with imposing unity on the Church and he convened a series of Councils. He issued a series of edicts, called the Theodosian Edicts that outlawed every creed other than the Nicene Creed. Theodosius was the first Christian Emperor to proscribe paganism and in the famous Theodosian Decrees (379-382). These abolished the last remaining practices of the old Roman religion and branded pagan rites and beliefs as witchcraft. Despite the end of the Gothic War, the Empire was very unstable. The suspicious death of Emperor Gratian in the West led to the usurpation of the Western Provinces by a general Maximus. He attempted to invade Italy but was defeated by Theodosius with the backing of the Goths. However, Theodosius was not able to control the West. The Gothic General Arbogast quarreled with Theodosius and the Goth set up a puppet Emperor in the West. Arbogast was an Arian Christian and his puppet Eugenius was sympathetic to paganism and the old Roman religion<ref> Williams, Stephen and Friell, Gerard. Theodosius: The Empire at Bay (Yale, Yale University Press, 1995), p. 67</ref>. The rebellion in part was an attempt to overturn Theodosius religious policy. However, Theodosius was able to defeat Arbogast and Eugenius at the Battle of Frigidus (394 AD). Theodosius became the sole emperor after his victory but the unity of the Empire was to prove transitory. After the death of Theodosius, the Empire was divided among his two sons, who were both ineffectual and dominated by barbarian generals.
[[File: Theodosius 2.jpg|200px|thumb|left| Theodosius I with Bishop Ambrose of Milan, from a painting by Van Eyck, c. 17 century]]
 
==Nicene Christianity becomes the State Religion==
Constantine had made Nicene Christianity the official doctrine of the Christian Church. However, since then many Christian sects had appeared that disputed the veracity of the Nicene Creed. The Christian Church was divided among a series of groups who disagreed on the nature of Christ and his relationship to God. Arrian Christianity had become influential in the period prior to Theodosius I. The Emperor was a firm adherent of Nicene Christianity and he effectively made it the state religion at the Council of Constantinople. Theodosius in an edict of 380 AD, proscribed all other forms of Christianity and deposed bishops who challenged the Nicene Creed. This did not immediately result in religious unity in the Church. However, it did lead to a decline in the influence of groups such as the Arians but the Empire was to continue to be destabilized by religious divisions in the Church. However, Theodosius by making the Nicene Creed the state religion ensured that the Christian Church adopted the doctrine. The Nicene Creed is the accepted creed of the vast majority of Christians sects to this day.

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