CONSTANTINOPLE

kŏnˌstănˌtĭnōˈpəl, former capital of the Byzantine Empire and of the Ottoman Empire, since 1930 officially called Istanbul (for location and description, see Istanbul). It was founded (a.d. 330) at ancient Byzantium as the new capital of the Roman Empire by Constantine I, after whom it was named. The largest and most splendid European city of the Middle Ages, Constantinople shared the glories and vicissitudes of the Byzantine Empire, which in the end was reduced to the city and its environs. Although besieged innumerable times by various peoples, it was taken only three times—in 1204 by the army of the Fourth Crusade (see Crusades), in 1261 by Michael VIII, and in 1453 by the Ottoman Sultan Muhammad II. Defended by Greek fire, it was also well fortified. An early inner wall was erected by Constantine I, and the enlarged Constantinople was surrounded by a triple wall of fortifications, begun (5th cent.) by Theodosius II. Built on seven hills, the city on the Bosporus presented the appearance of an impregnable fortress enclosing a sea of magnificent palaces and gilded domes and towers. In the 10th cent., it had a cosmopolitan population of about 1 million. The Church of Hagia Sophia, the sacred palace of the emperors (a city in itself); the huge hippodrome, center of the popular life; and the Golden Gate, the chief entrance into the city; were among the largest of the scores of churches, public edifices, and monuments that lined the broad arcaded avenues and squares. Constantinople had a great wealth of artistic and literary treasures before it was sacked in 1204 and 1453. Virtually depopulated when it fell to the Ottoman Turks, the city recovered rapidly. The Ottoman sultans, whose court was called the Sublime Porte, embellished Constantinople with many beautiful mosques, palaces, monuments, fountains, baths, aqueducts, and other public buildings. After World War I the city was occupied (1918–23) by the Allies. In 1922 the last Ottoman sultan was deposed and Ankara became (1923) the new capital of Turkey.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Constantinople  - 9761 results

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PROCLUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE CULT OF THE VIRGIN...WINDEN VOLUME LXVI PROCLUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE CULT OF THE VIRGIN...John Chrysostom, and Atticus of Constantinople Sources and Baclcground 7...
THE PATRIARCH NICEPHORUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE Oxford University Press, Amen House...ACCRA THE PATRIARCH NICEPHORUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE ECCLESIASTICAL POLICY AND IMAGE...church of the Virgin at Blachernae at Constantinople. This church had been adorned before...
...Policies of the Patriarch Athanasios of Constantinople by JOHN L. BOOJAMRA Fordham...policies of Patriarch Athanasios of Constantinople / John L. Boojamra p. cm. Includes...Empire. 3. Athanasios I, Patriarch of Constantinople, ca. 1230--ca. 1323--Political and...
Constantinople: Birth of an Empire Books by Harold Lamb BIOGRAPHICAL...Eastward 1974 HISTORICAL NARRATIVES Constantinople: Birth of an Empire 1957 New Found World...VITALIS AT RAVENNA, COMPOSED ABOUT A.D. 547. CONSTANTINOPLE Birth of an Empire by Harold Lamb Alfred...
The Story of Constantinople INTERIOR OF S. SOPHIA. Showing...and the stairs to the pulpit. Constantinople The Story of the old Capital...this sketch of the history of Constantinople. It is the holiday-task, very...
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journal articles on: Constantinople  - 638 results

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From Constantinople to Istanbul two sources on the historical folklore of...print. One of these sources is in French, Folklore de Constantinople (Folklore of Constantinople), which was published in 1894 by Emile Henry Carnoy...
Venetians in Constantinople: Nation, Identity, and Coexistence...Eric R. Dursteler. Venetians in Constantinople: Nation, Identity, and Coexistence...Eric Durstelers Venetians in Constantinople presents an original and timely...
...Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople by Louis Haas...Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople. Second Edition. By Donald...Fourth Crusade: The Conquest of Constantinople, 1201-1204, in 1977, and as...
Jean Wauquelin: La Belle Helene De Constantinople: Mise En Prose Dune Chanson De Geste...Jean Wauquelin: La Belle Helene de Constantinople: mise en prose dune chanson de geste...fourteenth-century verse text La Belle Helene de Constantinople was produced in or after 1448 for...
...Robert De Clari: La Conquete De Constantinople. by Peter Damian-Grint...Robert de Clari: La Conquete de Constantinople, edition bilingue, ed. and...Villehardouins Conquete de Constantinople, Claris can hardly claim to...
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magazine articles on: Constantinople  - 516 results

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On Foot in Constantinople - Hidden in the Modern Turkish...a thousand years, its capital, Constantinople, was the light of the Western...Tudela wrote, "Wealth like that of Constantinople is not to be found in the whole...
The Fall of Constantinople and the End of Empire. by Charles Foster Constantinople: The Last Great Siege, 1453. Roger Crowley...0-571-22185-8. On Tuesday, 29 May 1453, Constantinople fell to the besieging army of Sultan...
The fall of Constantinople: Judith Herrin tells the dramatic...Nicolo Barbaro recorded the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks. His eyewitness...Venice had strong links with Constantinople and its citizens fought bravely...
...Art and diplomacy in Ottoman Constantinople. by Philip Mansel...Mehmed II, the conqueror of Constantinople in 1453, was an ally and trading...across the Golden Horn from Constantinople itself. He had long been at...
...The Russians shall not have Constantinople: Roman Golicz looks at English...in Russia and the other in Constantinople. The image recalls the empresss...arch inscribed The Way to Constantinople. As Byzantium, this city had...
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newspaper articles on: Constantinople  - 254 results

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...once more; Umberto Ecos latest set in Constantinople Byline: Rex Roberts, SPECIAL...Baudolino," set during the sack of Constantinople at the start of the 13th century...Baudolino, now nearing 60, on the lam in Constantinople as barbarians plunder the city. By...
...Traces These Nomadic Footprints to Constantinople. Byline: BRIAN SEWELL IF ANY...Africa the great European city of Constantinople, and formed the Ottoman Empire...borders and moved on before the fall of Constantinople stabilised the onward drift and anchored...
...Traces These Nomadic Footprints to Constantinople. Byline: BRIAN SEWELL IF ANY...Africa the great European city of Constantinople, and formed the Ottoman Empire...borders and moved on before the fall of Constantinople stabilised the onward drift and anchored...
...2) A Studio Construction: William Allens Slave Market, Constantinople, Its Figures Strained, Fails to Convey Any Sense of Period...Orientalism.Almost as irrelevant is William Allans Slave Market, Constantinople, of 1838,described in the exhibitions catalogue as "one...
...Byzantine emperor Heraclitus, who ruled Constantinople from 610 to 641 A.D., was in a league...supporter, the Patriarch Sergius of Constantinople, had floated huge loans to pay for...jihad had carried them to the gates of Constantinople. In desperation, the Byzantines fell...
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encyclopedia articles on: Constantinople  - 285 results

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CONSTANTINOPLE kon stan tino p l, former capital of the Byzantine...and most splendid European city of the Middle Ages, Constantinople shared the glories and vicissitudes of the Byzantine...wall was erected by Constantine I, and the enlarged Constantinople was surrounded by a triple wall of fortifications...
CONSTANTINOPLE, LATIN EMPIRE OF 1204 61, feudal empire established...Crusade (see Crusades ) after they had sacked (1204) Constantinople; also known as the empire of Romania (not to be...Nicaean Emperor John III had recovered Asia Minor. Constantinople, nearly captured by Ivan Asen in 1234, fell to Emperor...
IGNATIUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE, SAINT c.800 877, Greek churchman, patriarch of Constantinople. A son of Byzantine Emperor Michael I...846 or 847, he was made patriarch of Constantinople by the Empress Theodora, who approved...
CONSTANTINOPLE, THIRD COUNCIL OF 680, regarded by Roman Catholic...accepts as an ecumenical part of the Third Council of Constantinople the Council of 692, summoned by Justinian II, son...in the Trullo, i.e., in the dome of the palace at Constantinople, or the Quinisext Synod Lat.,=fifth-sixth because...
CONSTANTINOPLE, FOURTH COUNCIL OF 869 70, regarded as the eighth...to confirm the restoration of St. Ignatius of Constantinople to the see that Photius had resigned. Only 12 bishops...condemned, without a hearing, at a Roman synod. At Constantinople his defense was cut short, and when he refused to...
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