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Constantine put the sign of the cross on the shields of his men before the Battle of Milvian Bridge because it had appeared to him in a dream, a dream he thought had come from God.

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because he had a dream to do so. After he painted the shields , they won the battle

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12y ago
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Q: What did Constantine tell his soldiers to put on their shields?
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Continue Learning about History of Western Civilization

Did Constantine have any kids?

he had four sons.


What kind of abuse was used during the Crusades?

A crusade is when a bunch of preist select the most attractive men of a village and take them back to there catheidrals for "special" training. Here they molest them and send them out to war afterwards so that they cannot tell anyone about it. Durning the trianing the would beat the soldiers and put muzzles over them so they could not resist. This is controversal as to the fact that this could have lead up to the way that preists act towards the alter boys today.


How was Charlemagne hardhearted and merciless?

Charlemagne insisted that his subjects convert to Christianity, and he was cruel to populations that resisted conversion. When the Saxons refused conversion, Charlemagne ordered the deaths of more than 4,000 of their soldiers. He also declared that anyone who did not convert would be put to death.


How did Constantine convince the Romans to become christian?

A:The Roman emperor was traditionally the head of the pagan religion, required to perform certain pagan rites annually. Instead, Constantine saw himself as the head of the Christian Church. He completely controlled the bishops and chose every bishop when a vacancy arose. His dominance over them was embodied in the statement "my will must be considered binding". Concerned at divisions in the Christian Church, Constantine called the Council of Nicaea and ensured that its agenda passed. He granted state patronage to the Church, provided substantial stipends to its clergy and exempted them from taxes, and embarked on a campaign of building magnificent churches across the empire. The new city of Constantinople was to be a Christian city, devoid of the usual pagan temples. Along with Constantine's personal extravagance, this required the imposition of swingeing taxes on the middle classes, as the landed classes were favoured. Lactantius, a Christian who usually supported Constantine, said that as the fatal time for taxation approached, all the towns were seen in tears and grief. The scourge and the rack were used against those whose extreme poverty could not support this unjust tax. Mothers sold their children, and fathers prostituted their daughters to pay the tax.In addition to the state patronage and support Constantine provided for the Christian Church, he began the long persecution of the pagan temples. Across the empire many were demolished on various pretexts, to make way for Christian churches. He sent Christians into the temples to plunder them for the state treasury and allowed the Church to enrich itself from some of the plunder. The temples were being weakened as the churches prospered.Another AnswerConstantine the Great even commissioned the construction of several grand cathedrals.


What mineral did roman soldiers receive as their pay?

The ancient Roman scholar Pliny the Elder thought that the word salarium (salary) came from salarius (salt), and said this was because in the old days soldiers were paid in salt. However, he wriote in the mid-first century A.D. and was referring to a nonspecific and hazily remembered distant past. This was unlikely to have been the case. At most the soldiers would have received an allowance for the purchase of salt, probably because the price of salt was liable to increase at times of military conflict. The ancient Roman historian Livy wrote that pay for the soldiers was introduced in 405 B.C. when Rome decided to besiege the neighbouring Etruscan city of Veii. Livy also said that this pay was called stipendium and that a tax, which was called tributum, was raised to fund this pay. The soldiers were paid with money. The first mention of the amount of money the soldiers received was by the Greek scholar Polybius, who, writing in the second century B.C., said that they were given two (Greek) oboli per day which was the equivalent of 100 Roman asses a month.