Travels Through Time: Sixth-Century Movers and Shakers - 2 minutes read


Saint Benedict delivering his Rule to the monks of his order, Monastery of St Gilles, Nîmes, France, 1129. Wiki Commons.

The Byzantine emperor Justinian I was highly intelligent, determined and hugely ambitious. In AD 529, he published the first edition of the Codex Justinianus, which would be adopted across Europe. The code revised and updated existing late Roman legislation alongside other legal works, which included new prescriptions for legal education. Justinian also carried out a building programme throughout his empire. This boom of churches and monasteries, as well as orphanages, fortifications, bridges and aqueducts, created an inexorable tide of Christianity. This had devastating consequences for Neoplatonic teachers in Athens.

In our latest podcast, Violet Moller discusses the year 529, when three events took place which would have profound consequences for the transmission of knowledge. 

Moller begins by discussing Justinian I, whose code in 529 banned pagans from teaching. This rule forced the Neoplatonic academy in Athens to close. The school’s pagan teachers and philosophers left for the Persian Empire in the hope of freedom. In the same year, St Benedict founded the monastery of Monte Cassino, on a mountain south of Rome. Here he wrote his Rule, destined to become a practical blueprint for Western monasticism.

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Travels Through Time. Tailored tours of the past. 
Travels Through Time is presented by bestselling historian Peter Moore. In each episode we are joined by an expert guest, to journey to the time and place of their choice. Enjoy a ringside view of history as never before, with the action described by those who understand it best. Browse other episodes in this series here.

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