The Byzantium empire was the prolongation of the Roman empire in the East throughout the Middle ages which came to power by the establishment of the city Constantinople in 324 AD. The Byzantium empire lasted for as long as a thousand years and its capital Constantinople was considered one of the greatest cites of the world. The Byzantium empire and China shared many similarities and differences about the divinity of its leaders, the bureaucratic class, and the peasant class. The Byzantine political system shared numerous resemblances of the initial patterns of China. The people of the Byzantium empire believed that God himself ordained the emperor to rule the church and the state. Likewise, The Zhou emperors justified their rule by a principle that the gods transmitted power to a specific family, permitting each dynasty to claim authority for …show more content…
Byzantine bureaucrats were drafted from all social classes. They were specialized into various offices, and those close to the emperor were called eunuchs. Regional governors were selected from the center and were responsible for keeping tabs on military leaders. A complicated system of spies helped maintain loyalty while forming extreme suspicion amongst the empire. During the Qin dynasty from 221-206 BCE, China’s structure and centralized administration were improved by forming a powerful bureaucratic class that shaped the new upper-class of China. Shi Huangdi, the brutal ruler of the Qins, understood the problem with the regional power of aristocrats and operated to undermine them by shaping China into provinces ruled by bureaucrats selected by the emperor. Governors chosen by the emperor controlled each district and implemented military and legal powers in the name of the emperor. Governors appointed officials for smaller regions—thus, starting a method of centralized government that would continue throughout dynastic