Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - A Brief History of Constantinople
Episode Date: June 28, 2022In the year 330, the Roman Emperor Constantine decided that the capital of the entire Roman empire should be moved. The location he selected was a small Greek town by the name of Byzantium located i...n the middle of the Bhosperous Straits approximately 500 miles or 800 kilometers from Rome. From there it grew into one largest and wealthiest cities in the world today and was the seat of more than one major empire. Learn more about Constantinople, now known as Istanbul, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Search Past Episodes at fathom.fm Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast." or "Everything Everywhere is part of the Airwave Media podcast network Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the year 330, the Roman Emperor Constantine decided that the capital of the entire Roman Empire should be moved.
The location he selected was a small Greek town by the name of Byzantium,
located in the middle of the Bosphorus Straits, approximately 500 miles, or 800 kilometers from Rome.
From there, it grew into one of the largest and wealthiest cities in the world,
and was the seat of more than one major empire.
Learn more about Constantinople, now known as Istanbul, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the Thurline podcast from NPR.
Before I get into the history of the city, I should address the issue of the name.
Today, the city is known as Istanbul.
and it was changed to this in 1930.
So when you refer to Constantinople, you're referring to the city pre-1930.
This is very similar to the use of Leningrad and St. Petersburg.
If you refer to the siege of Leningrad, you are referring to St. Petersburg during the Soviet period
when the city was known as Leningrad.
There is also an issue of geography.
Today, Istanbul is a huge sprawling city, one of the largest in the world.
Most of what is Istanbul today was never part of Constantinople.
Even if you wanted to be cheeky and said that you were flying to Constantinople, you really wouldn't be.
The historical city of Constantinople is only a small part of modern Istanbul.
To that extent, it's a lot like Manhattan.
Manhattan used to be synonymous with New York, but when the boroughs merged a little over 100 years ago,
Manhattan just became a smaller part of a larger city.
So when I say Constantinople, I'm referring to both a particular place within the city of Istanbul and a particular time,
before 1930.
So with that being said, let's go back to the very beginning.
Going back over 3,000 years ago, the settlement in the current location was probably a Thracian
city by the name of Ligos.
This Thracian settlement was abandoned and was resettled as a colony in the year 657 BC by Greeks
from the city of Meghara, who called it Byzantium.
No one is sure the origin of the word Byzantium, but its origins might have been Thracian.
And Thrace, by the way, was located in what is today the year.
European side of Turkey and southeastern Bulgaria. Byzantium was located directly across the
Bosphorus Strait from another community known as Chancelden, which is also today part of Istanbul.
The city changed hands over time between the Persians, the Athenians, Spartans, and Macedonians,
before finally settling into the hands of the Roman Empire. The name of the community was changed
under Roman rule in the year 193 by the Emperor Septimius Severus. He renamed it Augusta Antonina
and also raised the city to the ground due to its part in a civil war.
The fortunes of the city changed, and the story really starts, with Emperor Constantine,
aka Constantine the Great.
Constantine became the sole ruler of Rome in 324 and decided that Rome needed a new capital,
and the location he selected was Augusta Antonina.
I have to give props to Constantine because he selected a really good location.
The geography of his new capital city, which he dubbed Nova Roma, or New Rome,
was almost perfect.
The new capital was located on a triangular-shaped peninsula.
On one side, you had an inlet known as the Golden Horn.
This was wide enough to provide a water barrier for the city,
but also narrow enough to easily block with a chain that stretched across it.
On the other side was the Bosphorus.
The Bosphorus was also easy to defend as it was extremely narrow,
and it was possible to build forts up and down it.
Its location also allowed for complete sea control of everything going in and out of the Black Sea.
They were also able to repel an invasion by sea with their secret weapon, Greek fire, which I previously did an episode on.
That left only a single side that was exposed to land, and on that side they just built a gigantic wall,
and that would mean that they only had to defend one side of the city, not everything.
One of the reasons why Constantinople lasted so long was due to its superb geography.
When Constantine made the decision to move the capital, he was able to plan the city basically from scratch.
He designed wide avenues, public cisterns filled with water, baths, a forum, a Senate House, Triumphal Arches, and a huge hippodrome.
He tempted the nobility to move with free land, and he tempted lower-class people to move with free bread.
He also moved much of the artwork from Rome to Constantinople.
Most importantly, perhaps, he designed Constantinople to be first and foremost a Christian city.
Even after the Eastern and Western Empire split, Rome was still abandoned as the Western capital with Emperor's moving.
the capital to both Milan and Ravenna. In addition to New Rome, the city was alternatively called
Second Rome and Eastern Rome before the term Roma Constantinopalitana settled into use, which simply
meant Constantine's Rome, and from there it became Constantinople. It was officially established as
the capital in the year 330. The city grew and became quite wealthy, although some emperors immediately
after Constantine didn't always spend time there. But by the early 5th century, Emperor Theodosius I
built the giant triple-lined walls which protected the city for over a thousand years.
As the Western Empire fell, the Eastern Empire became much more culturally Greek.
Greek became the dominant daily language.
Christianity became the dominant religion, eventually to the exclusion of paganism.
Constantinople, as the imperial seat became the center of Christianity in the East,
a position which it still holds, at least in theory, today.
The Empire, which, if you recall from the very first episode of this podcast ever,
always considered itself to be the Roman Empire, even though history later called it the Byzantine Empire,
just to separate this period of Roman history from that which came before it.
In the mid-sixth century, the city probably reached its imperial zenith under the Emperor Justinian I first.
Justinian oversaw the construction and the completion of the structure which defined the city and still does today,
the Hyas Sophia, of which I did a previous episode.
The Ayasophia was the largest building in the world, and remained so for over a thousand years.
years. And perhaps the most remarkable thing was that it was built in only five years.
Justinian also ruled during the Nika riots, which I also did an episode on, which almost
destroyed the city. Finally, it was also struck by the plague of Justinian, which almost killed
half the city. The Battle of Yarmuk in 636 marked the high water mark for the Eastern Roman
Empire as the Islamic Caliphate eventually conquered much of the land it held in Egypt,
North Africa, and the Levant. While the empire began a long, slow process of collapse, the city
itself was still wealthy and vitally important. Over the next several centuries, the city was besieged
by numerous enemies, including the Sassanid Persians, Arabs, Avars, and Bulgars. However, the city never fell
due to its location and its massive walls. In the early 8th century, Emperor Leo III, in addition
to renovations to the walls and the buildings in the city, outlawed the use of religious icons and
worship, a movement that was known as iconoclasm. This period lasted for over a century and greatly
shaped the churches within the city.
In 1054, the great schism between the Eastern and Western churches took place.
The Pope and Rome and the Patriarch of Constantinople both excommunicated each other.
This became the formal start of Constantinople as being the seat of Eastern Orthodoxy.
The seats of the other great patriarchs in the East, Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Antioch,
had all by this time come under Islamic control.
In 1204, one of the seminal events in the history of the city took place.
The city was sacked by Western Crusaders, led by the city's state.
of Venice. They didn't lay siege to the gray walls of the city, rather they entered the city
via the sea. They well and truly sacked the city, looting and destroying many of the cultural
and artistic treasures which the city held. Over the next 50 years, what became known as the
Latin Empire ruled Constantinople. This was basically a crusader state, which was ruled by a Catholic
emperor. But in 1261, it eventually fell apart when many of the Latin Empire soldiers were off
Crusade, and a force led by Orthodox troops from the city of Nicaea snuck into the city and
recaptured it. By this time, the Byzantine Empire was reduced to parts of Western Turkey
and southern Greece. As a political center of power, Constantinople was basically spent.
As a religious center of power, however, Constantinople was still the center of Eastern Orthodoxy.
The biggest day in the history of Constantinople occurred on May 29, 1453. That was today the
Ottoman Turks broke through the walls, Constantinople fell, and the emperor was killed.
By this time, the population in the city had dropped to about 50,000 people, from a peak of
almost one million during their reign of Justinian. I've covered this on a previous episode,
but with the fall of the Byzantines and the rise of the Ottomans, the city actually had a new
lease on life. It was once again the center of a big empire. The Iosophia was converted into a mosque,
as were most of the churches in the city, and other large mosques such as the Blue Monarches,
mosque were built. A huge
imperial palace, the Topkapi Palace,
was built for the Ottoman sultans.
The Ottomans had an empire on a par with
the Byzantine Empire at its height, and now
the riches from the empire were once again
flowing back to the city. Within
a century of the fall of Constantinople,
the population of the city was back up by around
half a million people.
The Ottomans allowed the patriarch of
Constantinople to continue to live in the city,
and despite being Muslim controlled,
the patriarch of Constantinople
remained preeminent, even though other
orthodox centers such as Moscow grew in significance. Here I should note that the
Ottomans kept the name of the city the same, albeit in Turkish. Well before the fall of
Constantinople, the Greek-speaking residents of the city began informally calling the city
Istanbul. Istanbul is believed to have come from the medieval Greek phrase,
Istambolan, which means to the city. Constantinople was so dominant that everything in its vicinity
was defined as being towards or away from the city. The Ottoman Empire peaked at about
the end of the 17th century when it reached the gates of Vienna. Over the next several
centuries, the Ottoman Empire, like the Byzantine Empire before it, began to slowly
collapse. By the start of the 20th century, the Ottoman Empire was down to what is today
Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Israel, Lebanon, and parts of Saudi Arabia along each coast.
The next big change for Constantinople occurred with the end of the First World War. The
Ottoman Empire had picked the losing side, and it resulted in the end of the empire. By the
end of the war, Constantinople was occupied by allied forces. The allies actually agreed to allow the
Sultan to continue to rule, but an internal revolt called the Turkish War of Independence resulted in
the final fall of the empire and the creation of the Turkish Republic in 1923. The new capital of
Turkey was moved from Constantinople to Ankara, where it still exists today. This removed Constantinople
as a political capital for the first time since it was created by the Emperor Constantine. However, the city was
not done, not by a long shot. The population of Constantinople had grown considerably during the
19th and early 20th centuries. At the time of the creation of the Republic of Turkey, it had a population of
about 818,000 people. After the name changed to Istanbul in 1930, the city grew in importance
as an economic center. Over the last century, the population of Istanbul has grown rapidly and
expanded well beyond the original boundaries of Constantinople. Today, the city is a population of 15 million
people, and it's home to 20% of the population of Turkey.
And it's currently the 15th largest city in the world.
The Istanbul airport is one of the busiest airports in the world,
and given its location between Europe and Asia, one of the best connected airports.
This modern city of 15 million people today is there, simply because of a Roman emperor
in the early 4th century who wanted a new capital city where he could be close to the
frontiers of his empire, yet still be well defended.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast.
The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Shoah Lynn over at Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write, best ever.
Without exception, the best podcast I've listened to.
Well researched and perfectly presented.
Just the right length.
No extra nonsense.
Just the facts.
The best part is my two boys love it.
The youngest told me, no need to go to school anymore, Pops.
Just need to listen.
Thanks, show-al-in.
If your kids enjoy the podcast, then you clearly have raised them well.
Given the number of kids who do enjoy the show, I should probably open up the Everything Everywhere Academy.
I could undercut private prep schools by tens of thousands of dollars per year and still do okay.
However, I don't think we'd have a very good football team.
Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostagram, you two can have it read on the show.
Istanbul was Constantinople.
Now it's Istanbul, not Constantinople.
Been a long time gone, oh, Kostaghan.
Constantinople still is Turkish delight on a moonlight night.
Every gal in Constantinople lives in Istanbul, not Constantinople.
So if you would date in Constantinople, she'll be waiting in Istanbul.
Even old New York was once new Amsterdam.
