Christ Crucified: A Faith That Reshaped the World
The crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth by Roman authorities in Jerusalem, most likely around 30-33 AD, was a routine execution in a province prone to messianic movements. Pontius Pilate had crucified hundreds. What made this execution different was what happened after. Within weeks, Jesus' followers claimed he had risen from the dead. Within decades, communities of believers had spread across the Roman Empire. Within three centuries, Christianity became Rome's official religion. The crucifixion narrative became the central story of Western civilization, shaping art, law, philosophy, and ethics for two millennia. Roughly 2.4 billion people today identify as Christian, making this single execution the most consequential in recorded history.
April 7, 30
1996 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on April 7
Attila the Hun sacked the Roman city of Metz on April 7, 451 AD, during an invasion of Gaul that had already destroyed multiple cities along the Rhine. His army…
Attila the Hun razed the city of Metz, slaughtering its inhabitants and incinerating the structures in a brutal display of force. This devastation forced the Ro…
Emperor Justinian I commissioned the Corpus Juris Civilis in 529 AD, tasking the jurist Tribonian with compiling, organizing, and reconciling over a thousand ye…
King Uneh Chan of Calakmul shattered the defenses of Palenque, plunging the rival city-state into a period of political chaos and architectural stagnation. This…
She didn't just wear a crown; she marched into London with her brother-in-law's head in a basket. In 1141, after crushing King Stephen at Lincoln, Matilda decla…
A single scroll in 1348 didn't just open doors; it burned bridges between Prague and Paris, forcing scholars to flee France for Bohemia. Charles IV bet his crow…
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