500-701 Updated Jun 2026
The years 500 to 701 AD were not merely a bridge between antiquity and the Middle Ages; they were the crucible in which the modern world was forged. The era witnessed the final death throes of Classical Antiquity and the violent birth of the medieval order. By 701, the Roman Empire was a memory in the West and a survivor in the East; the Persians were gone; and a dynamic new Islamic civilization stretched from Spain to the Indus. The relative homogeneity of the Mediterranean world had ended, replaced by a tripartite division of Latin Christendom, Byzantine Orthodoxy, and the Islamic Caliphate—a geopolitical reality that would define the next thousand years of history.
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While the West fractured, the Eastern Roman Empire—what historians now call the Byzantine Empire—reached its zenith. Centered on the impregnable walls of Constantinople, the empire preserved the legacy of Rome, speaking Greek but governing with Roman law. Under Justinian (r. 527–565), the empire codified Roman law in the Corpus Juris Civilis , a text that remains the foundation of civil law today. 500-701
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Platforms like NWExam and ClearCatNet offer updated question sets. The years 500 to 701 AD were not
Collectors often seek "High Number" sets where cards numbered 401-500 and 701-725 are designated as rarer Short Prints.
The 2026 exam version focuses on three primary pillars: cloud-native and hybrid integration, high availability and security, and QoS (Quality of Service) with bandwidth planning. Key Exam Topics: The relative homogeneity of the Mediterranean world had
Numerically, 500 to 701 covers a fascinating range.