How did the result of foreign invasions differ between the two halves of the empire?
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The result of foreign invasions differed between the two halves of the empire in the following ways.
- In the year 30 C.E, the Roman emperor Constantine, known as Constantine the Great, split the Roman Empire into two halves.
- These were the western and eastern Roman Empires. The empire in the west was controlled from Rome, or later Ravenna, and the empire in the east was controlled from Constantinople.
- There were vast differences between the two halves of the empire. The west was struggling, weak, and in financial ruin. On the contrary, the east was prosperous and strong.
- The city of Constantinople sat protected behind the giant Thedosian Walls while Rome and the western territories lay vulnerable to foreign invasions.
- This meant that the western half of the empire constantly faced devastating raids while the east fared much better against the invaders.
- There are cases in which the Eastern Roman Emperor paid the invaders to leave their part of the empire and instead attack the western part.
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