http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3013146.stm

Space impact 'saved Christianity'
 
By Dr David Whitehouse 
BBC News Online science editor  


Did a meteor over central Italy in AD 312 change the course of Roman and
Christian history? 
 
About the size of a football field: The impact crater left behind 
A team of geologists believes it has found the incoming space rock's
impact crater, and dating suggests its formation coincided with the
celestial vision said to have converted a future Roman emperor to
Christianity. 

It was just before a decisive battle for control of Rome and the empire
that Constantine saw a blazing light cross the sky and attributed his
subsequent victory to divine help from a Christian God. 

Constantine went on to consolidate his grip on power and ordered that
persecution of Christians cease and their religion receive official
status. 

Civil war 

In the fourth century AD, the fragmented Roman Empire was being further
torn apart by civil war. Constantine and Maxentius were bitterly fighting
to be the sole emperor. 

Constantine was the son of the western emperor Constantius Chlorus. When
he died in 306, his father's troops proclaimed Constantine emperor. 


 ...a most marvellous sign appeared to him from heaven... 

Eusebius  
But in Rome, the favourite was Maxentius, son of Constantius'
predecessor, Maximian. 

With both men claiming the title, a conference was called in AD 308 that
resulted in Maxentius being named as senior emperor along with Galerius,
his father-in-law. Constantine was to be a Caesar, or junior emperor. 

The situation was not a stable one, however, and by 312 the two men were
at war. 

Constantine overran Italy and faced Maxentius at the Milvian Bridge over
the Tiber a few kilometres from Rome. Both knew it would be a decisive
battle with Constantine's forces outnumbered. 

'Conquer by this' 

It was then that something strange happened. Eusebius - one of the
Christian Church's early historians - relates the event in his Conversion
of Constantine. 

"...while he was thus praying with fervent entreaty, a most marvellous
sign appeared to him from heaven, the account of which it might have been
hard to believe had it been related by any other person. 

"...about noon, when the day was already beginning to decline, he saw
with his own eyes the trophy of a cross of light in the heavens, above
the Sun, and bearing the inscription 'conquer by this'. 

"At this sight he himself was struck with amazement, and his whole army
also, which followed him on this expedition, and witnessed the miracle." 

Spurred on by divine intervention, Constantine's army won the day and he
gave homage to the God of the Christians whom he believed had helped him.


This was a time when Christianity was struggling. Support from the most
powerful man in the empire allowed the emerging religious movement to
flourish. 

Like a nuclear blast 

But what was the celestial event that converted Constantine and altered
the course of history? 

Jens Ormo, a Swedish geologist, and colleagues working in Italy believe
Constantine witnessed a meteoroid impact. 

 
Drill rig: Sampling the crater 
The research team believes it has identified what remains of the
impactor's crater. 

It is the small, circular Cratere del Sirente in central Italy. It is
clearly an impact crater, Ormo says, because its shape fits and it is
also surrounded by numerous smaller, secondary craters, gouged out by
ejected debris, as expected from impact models. 

Radiocarbon dating puts the crater's formation at about the right time to
have been witnessed by Constantine and there are magnetic anomalies
detected around the secondary craters - possibly due to magnetic
fragments from the meteorite. 

According to Ormo, it would have struck the Earth with the force of a
small nuclear bomb, perhaps a kiloton in yield. It would have looked like
a nuclear blast, with a mushroom cloud and shockwaves. 

It would have been quite an impressive sight and, if it really was what
Constantine saw, could have turned the tide of the conflict. 

But what would have happened if this chance event - perhaps as rare as
once every few thousand years - had not occurred in Italy at that time? 

Maxentius might have won the battle. Roman history would have been
different and the struggling Christians might not have received state
patronage. 

The history of Christianity and the establishment of the popes in Rome
might have been very different. 

 

----

"Christians, it is needless to say, utterly detest each other.  They
slander each 
other constantly with the vilest forms of abuse and cannot come to any
sort of 
agreement in their teachings.  Each sect brands its own, fills the head
of its own 
with deceitful nonsense, and makes perfect little pigs of those it wins
over to its
side."
- Celsus (2nd century C.E.) 
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