Constantinople fell on a Tuesday. In Greece, Tuesday is still an unlucky day. In Istanbul, May 29 is a national holiday. In Western textbooks, 1453 is where the Middle Ages end. Three civilizations remember the same event. None of them remembers it the same way.
On May 29, 1453, the Ottoman army of Sultan Mehmed II breached the Theodosian Walls after a seven-week siege and took the city that had called itself the capital of the Roman Empire for over a thousand years. The emperor died in the fighting. The Hagia Sophia became a mosque. The ancient world—the political tradition that traced itself back through Constantine I to Augustus—ended on a single morning.
The Fall of Constantinople is an investigation, not a retelling. It asks the question the other books don’t: what actually ended when the walls came down, and why does this particular siege resonate more powerfully than almost any other military event in the pre-modern world?
The siege narrative is here—the cannon, the ships dragged overland into the Golden Horn, the three-wave final assault, the wound that cost Giustiniani his command and Constantinople its defense. But the investigation goes further. What was Constantinople in 1453—not the abstraction called “Byzantium” but the specific, diminished, still-magnificent city that Mehmed was determined to take? What survived the fall—the patriarchate, the culture, the city itself under a new name? And what explains the fall’s extraordinary persistence in cultural memory, from the Marble Emperor legend to the Megali Idea to the Hagia Sophia’s reconversion in 2020?
The sources disagree on almost everything that matters. The most dramatic account of the emperor’s death is a sixteenth-century fabrication. The investigation is honest about what the evidence supports and what it does not.
Every factual claim sourced to the primary sources and peer-reviewed scholarship. Greek and Turkish perspectives presented with analytical respect throughout. No “clash of civilizations” framing. No editorial position on the Hagia Sophia’s current status.
The evidence is the story. The reader draws the conclusions.
Byzantium Revisited is a series of standalone investigations into the thousand-year history of the Eastern Roman Empire. Each book examines a single event, figure, or period in depth. Each is built on primary sources and modern scholarship. Each asks why the event still matters.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : Bluemindbooks, PACHECO, CA, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. New Book. N° de réf. du vendeur NJ-INGR-9798195442637
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)