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Fall of Constantinople

The Fall of Constantinople, also known as the Conquest of Constantinople, was the capture of the capital of the Byzantine Empire by the Ottoman Empire. The city was captured on 29 May 1453[13][14] as part of the culmination of a 53-day siege which had begun on 6 April.

Fall of Constantinople
Part of the Byzantine–Ottoman Wars and the Ottoman wars in Europe

The siege of Constantinople (1453), French miniature by Jean Le Tavernier after 1455.
Date6 April – 29 May 1453
(1 month, 3 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Constantinople (present-day Istanbul)
41°01′00″N 28°58′37″E / 41.0167°N 28.9769°E / 41.0167; 28.9769Coordinates: 41°01′00″N 28°58′37″E / 41.0167°N 28.9769°E / 41.0167; 28.9769
Result

Ottoman victory

  • Fall of the Byzantine Empire
Territorial
changes
  • Ottoman Empire annexes the remaining Byzantine territories with some exceptions; Constantinople becomes its new capital
  • Morea, Trebizond, Theodoro and Epirus continue as Byzantine rump states until their conquests in 1460, 1461, 1475 and 1479, respectively
  • Belligerents
    Commanders and leaders
    Strength
    Land forces:

    Naval forces:

    Land forces:
    • 7,000–10,000
    • 600 defectors[4]
    • 200 archers[5]
    • unknown number of the Catalan retinue

    Naval forces:
    26 ships

    Casualties and losses

    200–18,000 (first day)[6]

    Heavy; at least 15,000 up to 50,000 (disputed)
    4,500 killed in action (both military and civilian)[7][8][9]
    30,000–50,000 civilians enslaved[10][11][12]

    The attacking Ottoman Army, which significantly outnumbered Constantinople's defenders, was commanded by the 21-year-old Sultan Mehmed II (later nicknamed "the Conqueror"), while the Byzantine army was led by Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos. After conquering the city, Mehmed II made Constantinople the new Ottoman capital, replacing Adrianople.

    The conquest of Constantinople and the fall of the Byzantine Empire was a watershed of the Late Middle Ages, marking the effective end of the last remains of the Roman Empire, a state which began in roughly 27 BC and had lasted nearly 1500 years. Among many modern historians, the Fall of Constantinople is considered the end of the medieval period.[15][16] The city's fall also stood as a turning point in military history. Since ancient times, cities and castles had depended upon ramparts and walls to repel invaders. The Walls of Constantinople, especially the Theodosian Walls, were some of the most advanced defensive systems in the world at the time. These fortifications were overcome with the use of gunpowder, specifically in the form of large cannons and bombards, heralding a change in siege warfare.[17]

    State of the Byzantine Empire

    Constantinople had been an imperial capital since its consecration in 330 under Roman emperor Constantine the Great. In the following eleven centuries, the city had been besieged many times but was captured only once before: the Sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade in 1204.[18]: 304  The crusaders established an unstable Latin state in and around Constantinople while the remainder of the Byzantine Empire splintered into a number of successor states, notably Nicaea, Epirus and Trebizond. They fought as allies against the Latin establishments, but also fought among themselves for the Byzantine throne.

    The Islamic prophet Muhammad once said “One day Constantinople will be conquered. Great is the commander who will conquer it. Great are his soldiers."[19] Although, this hadith has been debated by many scholars as weak.[20]

    The Nicaeans eventually reconquered Constantinople from the Latins in 1261, reestablishing the Byzantine Empire under the Palaiologos dynasty. Thereafter, there was little peace for the much-weakened empire as it fended off successive attacks by the Latins, Serbs, Bulgarians and Ottoman Turks.[18][page needed][21][22][23]

    Between 1346 and 1349 the Black Death killed almost half of the inhabitants of Constantinople.[24] The city was further depopulated by the general economic and territorial decline of the empire, and by 1453, it consisted of a series of walled villages separated by vast fields encircled by the fifth-century Theodosian Walls.

    By 1450, the empire was exhausted and had shrunk to a few square kilometers outside the city of Constantinople itself, the Princes' Islands in the Sea of Marmara and the Peloponnese with its cultural center at Mystras. The Empire of Trebizond, an independent successor state that formed in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade, was also present at the time on the coast of the Black Sea.

    Preparations

    When Mehmed II succeeded his father in 1451, he was just nineteen years old. Many European courts assumed that the young Ottoman ruler would not seriously challenge Christian hegemony in the Balkans and the Aegean.[25] In fact, Europe celebrated Mehmed coming to the throne and hoped his inexperience would lead the Ottomans astray.[26] This calculation was boosted by Mehmed's friendly overtures to the European envoys at his new court.[18]: 373  But Mehmed's mild words were not matched by his actions. By early 1452, work began on the construction of a second fortress (Rumeli hisarı) on the European side of the Bosphorus,[27] several miles north of Constantinople. The new fortress sat directly across the strait from the Anadolu Hisarı fortress, built by Mehmed's great-grandfather Bayezid I. This pair of fortresses ensured complete control of sea traffic on the Bosphorus[18]: 373  and defended against attack by the Genoese colonies on the Black Sea coast to the north. In fact, the new fortress was called Boğazkesen, which means "strait-blocker" or "throat-cutter". The wordplay emphasizes its strategic position: in Turkish boğaz means both "strait" and "throat". In October 1452, Mehmed ordered Turakhan Beg to station a large garrison force in the Peloponnese to block Thomas and Demetrios (despotes in Southern Greece) from providing aid to their brother Constantine XI Palaiologos during the impending siege of Constantinople.[note 3] Karaca Pasha, the beylerbeyi of Rumelia, sent men to prepare the roads from Adrianople to Constantinople so that bridges could cope with the massive cannons. Fifty carpenters and 200 artisans also strengthened the roads where necessary.[8] The Greek historian Michael Critobulus quotes Mehmed II's speech to his soldiers before the siege:[29]: 23 

    My friends and men of my empire! You all know very well that our forefathers secured this kingdom that we now hold at the cost of many struggles and very great dangers and that, having passed it along in succession from their fathers, from father to son, they handed it down to me. For some of the oldest of you were sharers in many of the exploits carried through by them—those at least of you who are of maturer years—and the younger of you have heard of these deeds from your fathers. They are not such very ancient events nor of such a sort as to be forgotten through the lapse of time. Still, the eyewitness of those who have seen testifies better than does the hearing of deeds that happened but yesterday or the day before.

    European support

    Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI swiftly understood Mehmed's true intentions and turned to Western Europe for help; but now the price of centuries of war and enmity between the eastern and western churches had to be paid. Since the mutual excommunications of 1054, the Pope in Rome was committed to establishing unity with the eastern church. The union was agreed by the Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos in 1274, at the Second Council of Lyon, and indeed, some Palaiologoi emperors had since been received into the Latin Church. Emperor John VIII Palaiologos had also recently negotiated union with Pope Eugene IV, with the Council of Florence of 1439 proclaiming a Bull of Union. The imperial efforts to impose union were met with strong resistance in Constantinople. A propaganda initiative was stimulated by anti-unionist Orthodox partisans in Constantinople; the population, as well as the laity and leadership of the Byzantine Church, became bitterly divided. Latent ethnic hatred between Greeks and Italians, stemming from the events of the Massacre of the Latins in 1182 by the Greeks and the Sack of Constantinople in 1204 by the Latins, played a significant role. Ultimately, the attempted union between east and west failed, greatly annoying Pope Nicholas V and the hierarchy of the Roman church.[citation needed]

     

    In the summer of 1452, when Rumeli Hisarı was completed and the threat of the Ottomans had become imminent, Constantine wrote to the Pope, promising to implement the union, which was declared valid by a half-hearted imperial court on 12 December 1452.[18]: 373  Although he was eager for an advantage, Pope Nicholas V did not have the influence the Byzantines thought he had over the Western kings and princes, some of whom were wary of increasing papal control. Furthermore, these Western rulers did not have the wherewithal to contribute to the effort, especially in light of the weakened state of France and England from the Hundred Years' War, Spain's involvement in the Reconquista, the internecine fighting in the Holy Roman Empire, and Hungary and Poland's defeat at the Battle of Varna of 1444. Although some troops did arrive from the mercantile city-states in northern Italy, the Western contribution was not adequate to counterbalance Ottoman strength. Some Western individuals, however, came to help defend the city on their own account. Cardinal Isidore, funded by the Pope, arrived in 1452 with 200 archers.[30] An accomplished soldier from Genoa, Giovanni Giustiniani, arrived in January 1453 with 400 men from Genoa and 300 men from Genoese Chios.[31]: 83–84  As a specialist in defending walled cities, Giustiniani was immediately given the overall command of the defence of the land walls by the Emperor. The Byzantines knew him by the Latin spelling of his name, "John Justinian", named after the famous 6th century Byzantine emperor Justinian the Great.[13] Around the same time, the captains of the Venetian ships that happened to be present in the Golden Horn offered their services to the Emperor, barring contrary orders from Venice, and Pope Nicholas undertook to send three ships laden with provisions, which set sail near the end of March.[31]: 81 

    Meanwhile, in Venice, deliberations were taking place concerning the kind of assistance the Republic would lend to Constantinople. The Senate decided upon sending a fleet in February 1453, but the fleet's departure was delayed until April, when it was already too late for ships to assist in battle.[32][page needed][31]: 85  Further undermining Byzantine morale, seven Italian ships with around 700 men, despite having sworn to defend Constantinople, slipped out of the capital the moment Giustiniani arrived. At the same time, Constantine's attempts to appease the Sultan with gifts ended with the execution of the Emperor's ambassadors.[18]: 373 [33][34][35][36][37][38]

     
    Restored Walls of Constantinople
     
    The chain that closed off the entrance to the Golden Horn in 1453, now on display in the İstanbul Archaeology Museums.

    Fearing a possible naval attack along the shores of the Golden Horn, Emperor Constantine XI ordered that a defensive chain be placed at the mouth of the harbour. This chain, which floated on logs, was strong enough to prevent any Turkish ship from entering the harbour. This device was one of two that gave the Byzantines some hope of extending the siege until the possible arrival of foreign help.[32]: 380  This strategy was used because in 1204, the armies of the Fourth Crusade successfully circumvented Constantinople's land defences by breaching the Golden Horn Wall, which faces the Horn. Another strategy employed by the Byzantines was the repair and fortification of the Land Wall (Theodosian Walls). Emperor Constantine deemed it necessary to ensure that the Blachernae district's wall was the most fortified because that section of the wall protruded northwards. The land fortifications consisted of a 60 ft (18 m) wide moat fronting inner and outer crenellated walls studded with towers every 45–55 metres.[39]

    Strength

     
    Map of Constantinople and the dispositions of the defenders and the besiegers

    The army defending Constantinople was relatively small, totalling about 7,000 men, 2,000 of whom were foreigners.[note 4] At the onset of the siege, probably fewer than 50,000 people were living within the walls, including the refugees from the surrounding area.[40]: 32  [note 5] Turkish commander Dorgano, who was in Constantinople working for the Emperor, was also guarding one of the quarters of the city on the seaward side with the Turks in his pay. These Turks kept loyal to the Emperor and perished in the ensuing battle. The defending army's Genoese corps were well trained and equipped, while the rest of the army consisted of small numbers of well-trained soldiers, armed civilians, sailors and volunteer forces from foreign communities, and finally monks. The garrison used a few small-calibre artillery pieces, which in the end proved ineffective. The rest of the citizens repaired walls, stood guard on observation posts, collected and distributed food provisions, and collected gold and silver objects from churches to melt down into coins to pay the foreign soldiers.

    The Ottomans had a much larger force. Recent studies and Ottoman archival data state that there were some 50,000–80,000 Ottoman soldiers, including between 5,000 and 10,000 Janissaries,[3][page needed] 70 cannons,[41]: 139–140 [40][page needed][42][page needed] and an elite infantry corps, and thousands of Christian troops, notably 1,500 Serbian cavalry that Đurađ Branković was forced to supply as part of his obligation to the Ottoman sultan[1][2] —just a few months before, Branković had supplied the money for the reconstruction of the walls of Constantinople.[1][2] Contemporaneous Western witnesses of the siege, who tend to exaggerate the military power of the Sultan, provide disparate and higher numbers ranging from 160,000 to 300,000[3][page needed] (Niccolò Barbaro:[43] 160,000; the Florentine merchant Jacopo Tedaldi[44] and the Great Logothete George Sphrantzes:[45][page needed] 200,000; the Cardinal Isidore of Kiev[46] and the Archbishop of Mytilene Leonardo di Chio:[47] 300,000).[48]

    Ottoman dispositions and strategies

     
    The Dardanelles Gun, cast by Munir Ali in 1464, is similar to bombards used by the Ottoman besiegers of Constantinople in 1453 (British Royal Armouries collection).

    Mehmed built a fleet (crewed partially by Spanish sailors from Gallipoli) to besiege the city from the sea.[40][page needed] Contemporary estimates of the strength of the Ottoman fleet span from 110 ships to 430 (Tedaldi:[44] 110; Barbaro:[43] 145; Ubertino Pusculo:[49] 160, Isidore of Kiev[46] and Leonardo di Chio:[50] 200–250; (Sphrantzes):[45][page needed] 430). A more realistic modern estimate predicts a fleet strength of 110 ships comprising 70 large galleys, 5 ordinary galleys, 10 smaller galleys, 25 large rowing boats, and 75 horse-transports.[40]: 44 

    Before the siege of Constantinople, it was known that the Ottomans had the ability to cast medium-sized cannons, but the range of some pieces they were able to field far surpassed the defenders' expectations.[18]: 374  The Ottomans deployed a number of cannons, anywhere from 12 to 62 cannons. They were built at foundries that employed Turkish cannon founders and technicians, most notably Saruca, in addition to at least one foreign cannon founder, Orban (also called Urban). Most of the cannons at the siege were built by Turkish engineers, including a large bombard by Saruca, while one cannon was built by Orban, who also contributed a large bombard.[51][52]

    Orban, a Hungarian (though some suggest he was German), was a somewhat mysterious figure.[18]: 374  His 27 feet (8.2 m) long cannon was named "Basilica" and was able to hurl a 600 lb (270 kg) stone ball over a mile (1.6 km).[53] Orban initially tried to sell his services to the Byzantines, but they were unable to secure the funds needed to hire him. Orban then left Constantinople and approached Mehmed II, claiming that his weapon could blast "the walls of Babylon itself". Given abundant funds and materials, the Hungarian engineer built the gun within three months at Edirne.[31]: 77–78  However, this was the only cannon that Orban built for the Ottoman forces at Constantinople,[51][52] and it had several drawbacks: it took three hours to reload; cannonballs were in very short supply; and the cannon is said to have collapsed under its own recoil after six weeks. The account of the cannon's collapse is disputed,[3][page needed] given that it was only reported in the letter of Archbishop Leonardo di Chio[47] and in the later, and often unreliable, Russian chronicle of Nestor Iskander.

     
    Modern painting of Mehmed and the Ottoman Army approaching Constantinople with a giant bombard, by Fausto Zonaro.

    Having previously established a large foundry about 150 miles (240 km) away, Mehmed now had to undertake the painstaking process of transporting his massive artillery pieces. In preparation for the final assault, Mehmed had an artillery train of 70 large pieces dragged from his headquarters at Edirne, in addition to the bombards cast on the spot.[54] This train included Orban's enormous cannon, which was said to have been dragged from Edirne by a crew of 60 oxen and over 400 men.[18]: 374 [31]: 77–78  There was another large bombard, independently built by Turkish engineer Saruca, that was also used in the battle.[51][52]

    Mehmed planned to attack the Theodosian Walls, the intricate series of walls and ditches protecting Constantinople from an attack from the West and the only part of the city not surrounded by water. His army encamped outside the city on 2 April 1453, the Monday after Easter.

    The bulk of the Ottoman army was encamped south of the Golden Horn. The regular European troops, stretched out along the entire length of the walls, were commanded by Karadja Pasha. The regular troops from Anatolia under Ishak Pasha were stationed south of the Lycus down to the Sea of Marmara. Mehmed himself erected his red-and-gold tent near the Mesoteichion, where the guns and the elite Janissary regiments were positioned. The Bashi-bazouks were spread out behind the front lines. Other troops under Zagan Pasha were employed north of the Golden Horn. Communication was maintained by a road that had been destroyed over the marshy head of the Horn.[31]: 94–95 

    The Ottomans were experts in laying siege to cities. They knew that in order to prevent diseases they had to burn corpses, sanitarily dispose of excrement, and carefully scrutinize their sources of water.[30]

    Byzantine dispositions and tactics

     
    Painting of the Fall of Constantinople, by Theophilos Hatzimihail

    The city had about 20 km of walls (land walls: 5.5 km; sea walls along the Golden Horn: 7 km; sea walls along the Sea of Marmara: 7.5 km), one of the strongest sets of fortified walls in existence. The walls had recently been repaired (under John VIII) and were in fairly good shape, giving the defenders sufficient reason to believe that they could hold out until help from the West arrived.[40]: 39  In addition, the defenders were relatively well-equipped with a fleet of 26 ships: 5 from Genoa, 5 from Venice, 3 from Venetian Crete, 1 from Ancona, 1 from Aragon, 1 from France, and about 10 from the empire itself.[40]: 45 

    On 5 April, the Sultan himself arrived with his last troops, and the defenders took up their positions. As Byzantine numbers were insufficient to occupy the walls in their entirety, it had been decided that only the outer walls would be guarded. Constantine and his Greek troops guarded the Mesoteichion, the middle section of the land walls, where they were crossed by the river Lycus. This section was considered the weakest spot in the walls and an attack was feared here most. Giustiniani was stationed to the north of the emperor, at the Charisian Gate (Myriandrion); later during the siege, he was shifted to the Mesoteichion to join Constantine, leaving the Myriandrion to the charge of the Bocchiardi brothers. Girolamo Minotto [el; es; fr; it] and his Venetians were stationed in the Blachernae Palace, together with Teodoro Caristo, the Langasco brothers, and Archbishop Leonardo of Chios.[31]: 92 

    To the left of the emperor, further south, were the commanders Cataneo, who led Genoese troops, and Theophilus Palaeologus, who guarded the Pegae Gate with Greek soldiers. The section of the land walls from the Pegae Gate to the Golden Gate (itself guarded by a Genoese called Manuel) was defended by the Venetian Filippo Contarini, while Demetrius Cantacuzenus had taken position on the southernmost part of the Theodosian wall.[31]: 92  The sea walls were guarded more sparsely, with Jacobo Contarini at Stoudion, a makeshift defence force of Greek monks to his left hand, and Prince Orhan at the Harbour of Eleutherios. Genoese and Catalan troops were stationed at the Great Palace; Cardinal Isidore of Kiev guarded the tip of the peninsula near the boom. Finally, the sea walls at the southern shore of the Golden Horn were defended by Venetian and Genoese sailors under Gabriele Trevisano.[31]: 93 

    Two tactical reserves were kept behind in the city: one in the Petra district just behind the land walls and one near the Church of the Holy Apostles, under the command of Loukas Notaras and Nicephorus Palaeologus, respectively. The Venetian Alviso Diedo [es; fr] commanded the ships in the harbour.[31]: 94  Although the Byzantines also had cannons, the weapons were much smaller than those of the Ottomans, and the recoil tended to damage their own walls.[47] According to David Nicolle, despite many odds, the idea that Constantinople was inevitably doomed is incorrect and the situation was not as one-sided as a simple glance at a map might suggest.[40]: 40  It has also been claimed that Constantinople was "the best-defended city in Europe" at that time.[55]

    Siege

     
    Painting by Fausto Zonaro depicting the Ottoman Turks transporting their fleet overland into the Golden Horn.

    At the beginning of the siege, Mehmed sent out some of his best troops to reduce the remaining Byzantine strongholds outside the city of Constantinople. The fortress of Therapia on the Bosphorus and a smaller castle at the village of Studius near the Sea of Marmara were taken within a few days. The Princes' Islands in the Sea of Marmara were taken by Admiral Baltoghlu's fleet.[31]: 96–97  Mehmed's massive cannons fired on the walls for weeks but due to their imprecision and extremely slow rate of fire, the Byzantines were able to repair most of the damage after each shot, mitigating the effect of the Ottoman artillery.[18]: 376 

    Despite some probing attacks, the Ottoman fleet under Baltoghlu could not enter the Golden Horn due to the chain across the entrance. Although one of the fleet's main tasks was to prevent any foreign ships from entering the Golden Horn, on 20 April, a small flotilla of four Christian ships managed to get in after some heavy fighting, an event which strengthened the morale of the defenders and caused embarrassment to the Sultan.[18]: 376 [note 6] Baltoghlu was most likely injured in the eye during the skirmish. Mehmed stripped Baltoghlu of his wealth and property and gave it to the janissaries and ordered him to be whipped 100 times.[26]

    Mehmed ordered the construction of a road of greased logs across Galata on the north side of the Golden Horn and dragged his ships over the hill, directly into the Golden Horn on 22 April, bypassing the chain barrier.[18]: 376  This action seriously threatened the flow of supplies from Genoese ships from the nominally neutral colony of Pera and it demoralized the Byzantine defenders. On the night of 28 April, an attempt was made to destroy the Ottoman ships already in the Golden Horn using fire ships but the Ottomans forced the Christians to retreat with many casualties. Forty Italians escaped their sinking ships and swam to the northern shore. On orders of Mehmed, they were impaled on stakes, in sight of the city's defenders on the sea walls across the Golden Horn. In retaliation, the defenders brought their Ottoman prisoners, 260 in all, to the walls, where they were executed, one by one, before the eyes of the Ottomans.[31]: 108 [56] With the failure of their attack on the Ottoman vessels, the defenders were forced to disperse part of their forces to defend the sea walls along the Golden Horn.

    The Ottoman army had made several frontal assaults on the land wall of Constantinople, but they were costly failures.[57] Venetian surgeon Niccolò Barbaro, describing in his diary one such land attack by the Janissaries, wrote

    They found the Turks coming right up under the walls and seeking battle, particularly the Janissaries ... and when one or two of them were killed, at once more Turks came and took away the dead ones ... without caring how near they came to the city walls. Our men shot at them with guns and crossbows, aiming at the Turk who was carrying away his dead countryman, and both of them would fall to the ground dead, and then there came other Turks and took them away, none fearing death, but being willing to let ten of themselves be killed rather than suffer the shame of leaving a single Turkish corpse by the walls.[43]

     
    Siege of Constantinople as depicted between 1453 and 1475[58]

    After these inconclusive attacks, the Ottomans sought to break through the walls by constructing tunnels to mine them from mid-May to 25 May. Many of the sappers were miners of Serbian origin sent from Novo Brdo under the command of Zagan Pasha.[59] An engineer named Johannes Grant, a German who came with the Genoese contingent, had counter-mines dug, allowing Byzantine troops to enter the mines and kill the miners.[note 7] The Byzantines intercepted the first tunnel on the night of 16 May. Subsequent tunnels were interrupted on 21, 23 and 25 May, and destroyed with Greek fire and vigorous combat. On 23 May, the Byzantines captured and tortured two Turkish officers, who revealed the location of all the Turkish tunnels, which were destroyed.[60]

    On 21 May, Mehmed sent an ambassador to Constantinople and offered to lift the siege if they gave him the city. He promised he would allow the Emperor and any other inhabitants to leave with their possessions. He would recognize the Emperor as governor of the Peloponnese. Lastly, he guaranteed the safety of the population that might choose to remain in the city. Constantine XI only agreed to pay higher tributes to the sultan and recognized the status of all the conquered castles and lands in the hands of the Turks as Ottoman possessions. The Emperor was not willing to leave the city without a fight:

    As to surrendering the city to you, it is not for me to decide or for anyone else of its citizens; for all of us have reached the mutual decision to die of our own free will, without any regard for our lives.[note 8]

    Around this time, Mehmed had a final council with his senior officers. Here he encountered some resistance; one of his Viziers, the veteran Halil Pasha, who had always disapproved of Mehmed's plans to conquer the city, now admonished him to abandon the siege in the face of recent adversity. Zagan Pasha argued against Halil Pasha and insisted on an immediate attack. Believing that the Byzantine defence was already weakened sufficiently, Mehmed planned to overpower the walls by sheer force and started preparations for a final all-out offensive.

    Final assault

     
    Painting by the Greek folk painter Theophilos Hatzimihail showing the battle inside the city, Constantine is visible on a white horse

    Preparations for the final assault began in the evening of 26 May and continued to the next day.[18]: 378  For 36 hours after the war council decided to attack, the Ottomans extensively mobilized their manpower for the general offensive.[18]: 378  Prayer and resting was then granted to the soldiers on 28 May before the final assault would be launched. On the Byzantine side, a small Venetian fleet of 12 ships, after having searched the Aegean, reached the Capital on 27 May and reported to the Emperor that no large Venetian relief fleet was on its way.[18]: 377  On 28 May, as the Ottoman army prepared for the final assault, mass religious processions were held in the city. In the evening, a solemn last ceremony of Vespers before Pentecost was held in the Hagia Sophia, in which the Emperor with representatives and nobility of both the Latin and Greek churches partook.[62]: 651–652  Up until this point, the Ottomans had fired 5,000 shots from their cannons using 55,000 pounds of gunpowder. Criers roamed the camp to the sound of the blasting horns, rousing the Ghazis:[63]

    Shortly after midnight on 29 May, on the Greek Orthodox feast of Pentecost, the offensive began. The Christian troops of the Ottoman Empire attacked first, followed by successive waves of the irregular azaps, who were poorly trained and equipped and Anatolian Turkmen beylik forces who focused on a section of the damaged Blachernae walls in the north-west part of the city. This section of the walls had been built earlier, in the 11th century, and was much weaker. The Turkmen mercenaries managed to breach this section of walls and entered the city but they were just as quickly pushed back by the defenders. Finally, the last wave consisting of elite Janissaries, attacked the city walls. The Genoese general in charge of the defenders on land, Giovanni Giustiniani, was grievously wounded during the attack, and his evacuation from the ramparts caused a panic in the ranks of the defenders.[3][page needed][46][47][note 9]

    With Giustiniani's Genoese troops retreating into the city and towards the harbour, Constantine and his men, now left to their own devices, continued to hold their ground against the Janissaries. Constantine's men eventually could not prevent the Ottomans from entering the city and the defenders were overwhelmed at several points along the wall. When Turkish flags were seen flying above the Kerkoporta, a small postern gate that was left open, panic ensued and the defence collapsed. Janissaries, led by Ulubatlı Hasan, pressed forward. Many Greek soldiers ran back home to protect their families, the Venetians retreated to their ships and a few of the Genoese escaped to Galata. The rest surrendered or committed suicide by jumping off the city walls.[32]: 388  The Greek houses nearest to the walls were the first to suffer from the Ottomans. It is said that Constantine, throwing aside his purple imperial regalia, led the final charge against the incoming Ottomans, perishing in the ensuing battle in the streets alongside his soldiers. The Venetian Nicolò Barbaro claimed in his diary that Constantine hanged himself at the moment when the Turks broke in at the San Romano gate. Ultimately, his fate remains unknown.[note 10]

    After the initial assault, the Ottoman army fanned out along the main thoroughfare of the city, the Mese, past the great forums and the Church of the Holy Apostles, which Mehmed II wanted to provide as a seat for his newly appointed patriarch to better control his Christian subjects. Mehmed II had sent an advance guard to protect these key buildings.

    A few civilians managed to escape. When the Venetians retreated over to their ships, the Ottomans had already taken the walls of the Golden Horn. Luckily for the occupants of the city, the Ottomans were not interested in killing potentially valuable slaves but rather in the loot they could get from raiding the city's houses, so they decided to attack the city instead. The Venetian captain ordered his men to break open the gate of the Golden Horn. Having done so, the Venetians left in ships filled with soldiers and refugees. Shortly after the Venetians left, a few Genoese ships and even the Emperor's ships followed them out of the Golden Horn. This fleet narrowly escaped prior to the Ottoman navy assuming control over the Golden Horn, which was accomplished by midday.[32]: 388 

    The army converged upon the Augusteum, the vast square that fronted the great church of Hagia Sophia whose bronze gates were barred by a huge throng of civilians inside the building, hoping for divine protection. After the doors were breached, the troops separated the congregation according to what price they might bring in the slave markets.[citation needed] Ottoman casualties are unknown but they are believed by most historians to be severe due to several unsuccessful Ottoman attacks made during the siege and final assault.[citation needed] The Venetian Barbaro observed that blood flowed in the city "like rainwater in the gutters after a sudden storm" and that bodies of Turks and Christians floated in the sea "like melons along a canal".[43]

    Atrocities

    According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, Mehmed II "permitted an initial period of looting that saw the destruction of many Orthodox churches", but tried to prevent a complete sack of the city.[65] The looting was extremely thorough in certain parts of the city. On 2 June, the Sultan found the city largely deserted and half in ruins; churches had been desecrated and stripped, houses were no longer habitable, and stores and shops were emptied. He is famously reported to have been moved to tears by this, saying, "What a city we have given over to plunder and destruction."[31]: 152 

    Looting was carried out on a massive scale by sailors and marines who entered the city via other walls before they had been suppressed by regular troops, who were beyond the main gate. According to David Nicolle, the ordinary people were treated better by their Ottoman conquerors than their ancestors had been by Crusaders back in 1204, stating that only about 4,000 Greeks died in the siege, while according to a Venetian Senate report, 50 Venetian noblemen and over 500 other Venetian civilians died during the siege.[66] Many of the riches of the city were already looted in 1204, leaving only limited loot to the Ottomans.[67]

    Other sources claim far more brutal and successful pillaging by the Ottoman invaders. Leonard of Chios made accounts of the atrocities that followed the fall of Constantinople stated the Ottoman invaders pillaged the city, murdered or enslaved tens of thousands of people, and raped nuns, women and children:

    All the valuables and other booty were taken to their camp, and as many as sixty thousand Christians who had been captured. The crosses which had been placed on the roofs or the walls of churches were torn down and trampled. Women were raped, virgins deflowered and youths forced to take part in shameful obscenities. The nuns left behind, even those who were obviously such, were disgraced with foul debaucheries.[68]

    During three days of pillaging, the Ottoman invaders captured children and took them away to their tents, and became rich by plundering the imperial palace and the houses of Constantinople. The Ottoman official Tursun Beg wrote:

    After having completely overcome the enemy, the soldiers began to plunder the city. They enslaved boys and girls and took silver and gold vessels, precious stones and all sorts of valuable goods and fabrics from the imperial palace and the houses of the rich... Every tent was filled with handsome boys and beautiful girls.[69]: 37 

    If any citizens of Constantinople tried to resist, they were slaughtered. According to Niccolò Barbaro, "all through the day the Turks made a great slaughter of Christians through the city". According to Makarios Melissenos:

    As soon as the Turks were inside the City, they began to seize and enslave every person who came their way; all those who tried to offer resistance were put to the sword. In many places the ground could not be seen, as it was covered by heaps of corpses.[70]: 130 

    The women of Constantinople suffered from rape at the hands of Ottoman forces.[71] According to historian Philip Mansel, widespread persecution of the city's civilian inhabitants took place, resulting in thousands of murders and rapes.[10] The vast majority of the citizens of Constantinople (30,000-50,000) were forced to become slaves.[10][12][72][11][73]

    “They made the people of the city slaves and killed their emperor, and the gazis embraced their pretty girls", confirm Ottoman Chroniclers.[74]

    According to Nicolas de Nicolay, slaves were displayed naked at the city's slave market, and young girls could be purchased.[75] The elder refugees in the Hagia Sophia were slaughtered and the women raped.[76] George Sphrantzes says that people of both genders were raped inside Hagia Sophia. According to Steven Runciman most of the elderly and the infirm/wounded and sick who were refugees inside the churches were killed, and the remainder were chained up and sold into slavery.[77]

    “Everywhere there was misfortune, everyone was touched by pain” when Mehmet entered the city. “There were lamentations and weeping in every house, screaming in the crossroads, and sorrow in all churches; the groaning of grown men and the shrieking of women accompanied looting, enslavement, separation, and rape.”[78]Mehmet entered the Hagia Sophia, “marveling at the sight” of the grand basilica. Witnessing a Ghazi wildly hammering at the marble floor, he asked what he was doing. "It is for the Faith!” the Ghazi said. Mehmet cut him down with his Kilij: “Be satisfied with the booty and the captives; the buildings of the city belong to me.”[79]

    During the festivities, “and as he had promised his viziers and his other officers,” Mehmed had the “wretched citizens of Constantinople” dragged before them and “ordered many of them to be hacked to pieces, for the sake of entertainment.”[80][81]

    While drunk during his victory banquet, the Sultan ordered the Grand Duke Loukas Notaras to give his youngest son to him for his pleasure. “When the boy’s father heard this, his face turned ashen as though he had been struck dead.” He replied that “it would be far better for me to die than hand over my own child to be despoiled by him.” Mehmed was enraged after hearing this and ordered Loukas to be executed. Before his death, the Grand Duke cited “Him Who was crucified for us, died and arose”’ and urged his horrified sons to reject the advances of Mehmed and not fear the outcome. Their father's words encouraged them, and they were also “were ready to die”. They were also executed.[82] Mehmed stabbed to death another 14 year old Christian boy who “preferred death to infamy."[83]

    Aftermath

    Mehmed II granted his soldiers three days to plunder the city, as he had promised them and in accordance with the custom of the time.[31]: 145 [84] Soldiers fought over the possession of some of the spoils of war.[85]: 283  On the third day of the conquest, Mehmed II ordered all looting to stop and issued a proclamation that all Christians who had avoided capture or who had been ransomed could return to their homes without further molestation, although many had no homes to return to, and many more had been taken captive and not ransomed.[31]: 150–51  Byzantine historian George Sphrantzes, an eyewitness to the fall of Constantinople, described the Sultan's actions:[86][87]

    On the third day after the fall of our city, the Sultan celebrated his victory with a great, joyful triumph. He issued a proclamation: the citizens of all ages who had managed to escape detection were to leave their hiding places throughout the city and come out into the open, as they were to remain free and no question would be asked. He further declared the restoration of houses and property to those who had abandoned our city before the siege. If they returned home, they would be treated according to their rank and religion, as if nothing had changed.

    — George Sphrantzes

    The Hagia Sophia was converted into a mosque, but the Greek Orthodox Church was allowed to remain intact and Gennadius Scholarius was appointed Patriarch of Constantinople. This was once thought to be the origin of the Ottoman millet system; however, it is now considered a myth and no such system existed in the fifteenth century.[88][89]

     
    Following the city's conquest, the Church of the Holy Wisdom (the Hagia Sophia) was converted into a mosque.

    The fall of Constantinople shocked many Europeans, who viewed it as a catastrophic event for their civilization.[90] Many feared other European Christian kingdoms would suffer the same fate as Constantinople. Two possible responses emerged amongst the humanists and churchmen of that era: Crusade or dialogue. Pope Pius II strongly advocated for another Crusade, while the German Nicholas of Cusa supported engaging in a dialogue with the Ottomans.[91]

    In the past we received our wounds in Asia and in Africa—in foreign countries. This time, however, we are being attacked in Europe, in our own land, in our own house. You will protest that the Turks moved from Asia to Greece a long time ago, that the Mongols established themselves in Europe and the Arabs occupied parts of Spain, having approached through the straits of Gibraltar. We have never lost a city or a place comparable to Constantinople

    — Pope Pius II

    [92]

    The Morean (Peloponnesian) fortress of Mystras, where Constantine's brothers Thomas and Demetrius ruled, constantly in conflict with each other and knowing that Mehmed would eventually invade them as well, held out until 1460. Long before the fall of Constantinople, Demetrius had fought for the throne with Thomas, Constantine, and their other brothers John and Theodore.[93]: 446  Thomas escaped to Rome when the Ottomans invaded Morea while Demetrius expected to rule a puppet state, but instead was imprisoned and remained there for the rest of his life. In Rome, Thomas and his family received some monetary support from the Pope and other Western rulers as Byzantine emperor in exile, until 1503. In 1461 the independent Byzantine state in Trebizond fell to Mehmed.[93]: 446 

    Constantine XI had died without producing an heir, and had Constantinople not fallen he likely would have been succeeded by the sons of his deceased elder brother, who were taken into the palace service of Mehmed after the fall of Constantinople. The oldest boy, renamed Murad, became a personal favourite of Mehmed and served as Beylerbey (Governor-General) of Rumeli (the Balkans). The younger son, renamed Mesih Pasha, became Admiral of the Ottoman fleet and Sancak Beg (Governor) of the Province of Gallipoli. He eventually served twice as Grand Vizier under Mehmed's son, Bayezid II.[94]

    With the capture of Constantinople, Mehmed II had acquired the future capital of his kingdom, albeit one in decline due to years of war. The loss of the city was a crippling blow to Christendom, and it exposed the Christian West to a vigorous and aggressive foe in the East. The Christian reconquest of Constantinople remained a goal in Western Europe for many years after its fall to the Ottoman Empire. Rumours of Constantine XI's survival and subsequent rescue by an angel led many to hope that the city would one day return to Christian hands. Pope Nicholas V called for an immediate counter-attack in the form of a crusade,[citation needed] however no European powers wished to participate, and the Pope resorted to sending a small fleet of 10 ships to defend the city. The short lived Crusade immediately came to an end and as Western Europe entered the 16th century, the age of Crusading began to come to an end.

    For some time Greek scholars had gone to Italian city-states, a cultural exchange begun in 1396 by Coluccio Salutati, chancellor of Florence, who had invited Manuel Chrysoloras, to lecture at the University of Florence.[95] After the conquest many Greeks, such as John Argyropoulos and Constantine Lascaris, fled the city and found refuge in the Latin West, bringing with them knowledge and documents from the Greco-Roman tradition to Italy and other regions that further propelled the Renaissance.[96][97] Those Greeks who stayed behind in Constantinople mostly lived in the Phanar and Galata districts of the city. The Phanariotes, as they were called, provided many capable advisers to the Ottoman rulers.

    A severed head that was claimed to belong to Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos was found and presented to Mehmed and nailed onto a column. while Standing before the head, the sultan in his speech said:[98]

    Fellow soldiers, this one thing was lacking to make the glory of such a victory complete. Now, at this happy and joyful moment of time, we have the riches of the Greeks, we have won their empire, and their religion is completely extinguished. Our ancestors eagerly desired to achieve this; rejoice now since it is your bravery which has won this kingdom for us.

    Mehmet then ordered the severed head be skinned, stuffed with bran, and “sent as a symbol of victory to the governors of Persia and Arabia”, in order to remind them that "it was a Turk who did what for centuries they could not."[99]

    The news spread rapidly across the Islamic world. In Egypt “good tidings were proclaimed, and Cairo decorated” to celebrate “this greatest of conquests.” The Sharif of Mecca wrote to Mehmed, calling the Sultan “the one who has aided Islam and the Muslims, the Sultan of all kings and sultans,”. The fact that Constantinople, which was long “known for being indomitable in the eyes of all,” as the Sharif of Mecca said, had fallen and that the Prophet Muhammad's prophecy came true shocked the Islamic world and filled it with a great jubilation and rapture.[100]

    Third Rome

     
    Mehmed II by Gentile Bellini

    Byzantium is a term used by modern historians to refer to the later Roman Empire. In its own time, the Empire ruled from Constantinople (or "New Rome" as some people call it, although this was a laudatory expression that was never an official title) was considered simply as "the Roman Empire." The fall of Constantinople led competing factions to lay claim to being the inheritors of the Imperial mantle. Russian claims to Byzantine heritage clashed with those of the Ottoman Empire's own claim. In Mehmed's view, he was the successor to the Roman Emperor, declaring himself Kayser-i Rum, literally "Caesar of Rome", that is, of the Roman Empire, though he was remembered as "the Conqueror".

    Stefan Dušan, Tsar of Serbia, and Ivan Alexander, Tsar of Bulgaria, both made similar claims, regarding themselves as legitimate heirs to the Roman Empire. Other potential claimants, such as the Republic of Venice and the Holy Roman Empire have disintegrated into history.[101]

    Impact on the Churches

    Pope Pius II believed that the Ottomans would persecute Greek Orthodox Christians and advocated for another crusade at the Council of Mantua in 1459.[90][102]

    Legacy

     
    Siege of Constantinople on a mural at the Moldovița Monastery in Romania, painted in 1537

    Legends

    There are many legends in Greece surrounding the Fall of Constantinople. It was said that the partial lunar eclipse that occurred on 22 May 1453 represented a fulfilment of a prophecy of the city's demise.[103]

    Four days later, the whole city was blotted out by a thick fog, a condition unknown in that part of the world in May. When the fog lifted that evening, a strange light was seen playing about the dome of the Hagia Sophia, which some interpreted as the Holy Spirit departing from the city. "This evidently indicated the departure of the Divine Presence, and its leaving the City in total abandonment and desertion, for the Divinity conceals itself in cloud and appears and again disappears."[29]: 59 

    For others, there was still a distant hope that the lights were the campfires of the troops of John Hunyadi who had come to relieve the city. It is possible that all these phenomena were local effects of the cataclysmic 1452/1453 mystery eruption which occurred around the time of the siege. The "fire" seen may have been an optical illusion due to the reflection of intensely red twilight glow by clouds of volcanic ash high in the atmosphere.[104]

    Another legend holds that two priests saying divine liturgy over the crowd disappeared into the cathedral's walls as the first Turkish soldiers entered. According to the legend, the priests will appear again on the day that Constantinople returns to Christian hands.[31]: 147  Another legend refers to the Marble Emperor (Constantine XI), holding that an angel rescued the emperor when the Ottomans entered the city, turning him into marble and placing him in a cave under the earth near the Golden Gate, where he waits to be brought to life again (a variant of the sleeping hero legend).[105][106] However many of the myths surrounding the disappearance of Constantine were developed later and little evidence can be found to support them even in friendly primary accounts of the siege.

    Cultural impact

     
    Mehmed the Conqueror enters Constantinople, painting by Fausto Zonaro

    Guillaume Dufay composed several songs lamenting the fall of the Eastern church, and the duke of Burgundy, Philip the Good, avowed to take up arms against the Turks. However, as the growing Ottoman power from this date on coincided with the Protestant Reformation and subsequent Counter-Reformation, the recapture of Constantinople became an ever-distant dream. Even France, once a fervent participant in the Crusades, became an ally of the Ottomans.

    Nonetheless, depictions of Christian coalitions taking the city and of the late Emperor's resurrection by Leo the Wise persisted.[23]: 280 

    29 May 1453, the day of the fall of Constantinople, fell on a Tuesday, and since then Tuesday has been considered an unlucky day by Greeks generally.[107]

    Impact on the Renaissance

    The migration waves of Byzantine scholars and émigrés in the period following the sacking of Constantinople and the fall of Constantinople in 1453 is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek and Roman studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism[97][dead link][better source needed] and science. These émigrés were grammarians, humanists, poets, writers, printers, lecturers, musicians, astronomers, architects, academics, artists, scribes, philosophers, scientists, politicians and theologians.[108][better source needed] They brought to Western Europe the far greater preserved and accumulated knowledge of Byzantine civilization. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica: "Many modern scholars also agree that the exodus of Greeks to Italy as a result of this event marked the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance".[65]

    Renaming of the city

    Ottomans used the Arabic transliteration of the city's name "Qosṭanṭīniyye" (القسطنطينية) or "Kostantiniyye", as can be seen in numerous Ottoman documents. Islambol (اسلامبول, Full of Islam) or Islambul (find Islam) or Islam(b)ol (old Turkic: be Islam), both in Turkish, were folk-etymological adaptations of Istanbul created after the Ottoman conquest of 1453 to express the city's new role as the capital of the Islamic Ottoman Empire. It is first attested shortly after the conquest, and its invention was ascribed by some contemporary writers to Mehmed II himself.[109]

    The name of Istanbul is thought to be derived from the Greek phrase īs tīmbolī(n) (Greek: εἰς τὴν πόλιν, translit. eis tēn pólin, "to the City"), and it is claimed that it had already spread among the Turkish populace of the Ottoman Empire before the conquest. However, Istanbul only became the official name of the city in 1930 by the revised Turkish Postal Law.[110][111][112]

    Primary sources

    For the fall of Constantinople, Marios Philippides and Walter Hanak list 15 eyewitness accounts (13 Christian and 2 Turkish) and 20 contemporary non-eyewitness accounts (13 Italian).[113]

    Eyewitness accounts

    1. Mehmed Şems el-Mille ve'd Din, Sufi holy man who gives an account in a letter
    2. Tursun Beg, wrote a history entitled Tarih-i Abu'l Fath
    3. George Sphrantzes, the only Greek eyewitness who wrote about it, but his laconic account is almost entirely lacking in narrative
    4. Leonard of Chios, wrote a report to Pope Nicholas V
    5. Nicolò Barbaro, physician on a Venetian galley who kept a journal
    6. Angelino Giovanni Lomellini, Venetian podestà of Pera who wrote a report dated 24 June 1453
    7. Jacopo Tetaldi, Florentine merchant
    8. Isidore of Kiev, Orthodox churchman who wrote eight letters to Italy
    9. Benvenuto, Anconitan consul in Constantinople
    10. Ubertino Puscolo, Italian poet learning Greek in the city, wrote an epic poem
    11. Eparkhos and Diplovatatzes, two refugees whose accounts has become garbled through multiple translations
    12. Nestor Iskander, youthful eyewitness who wrote a Slavonic account
    13. Samile the Vladik, bishop who, like Eparkhos and Diplovatatzes, fled as a refugee to Wallachia
    14. Konstantin Mihailović, Serbian who fought on the Ottoman side
    15. a report by some Franciscan prisoners of war who later came to Bologna

    Non-eyewitness accounts

    1. Doukas, a Byzantine Greek historian, one of the most important sources for the last decades and eventual fall of the Byzantine Empire to the Ottomans
    2. Laonikos Chalkokondyles, a Byzantine Greek historian
    3. Michael Kritoboulos, a Byzantine Greek historian
    4. Makarios Melissourgos, 16th-century historian who augmented the account of Sphrantzes, not very reliably
    5. Paolo Dotti, Venetian official on Crete whose account is based on oral reports
    6. Fra Girolamo's letter from Crete to Domenico Capranica
    7. Lauro Quirini, wrote a report to Pope Nicholas V from Crete based on oral reports
    8. Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini (Pope Pius II), wrote an account based on written sources
    9. Henry of Soemmern, wrote a letter dated 11 September 1453 in which he cites his sources of information
    10. Niccola della Tuccia, whose Cronaca di Viterbo written in the autumn of 1453 contains unique information
    11. Niccolò Tignosi da Foligno, Expugnatio Constantinopolitana, part of a letter to a friend
    12. Filippo da Rimini, Excidium Constantinopolitanae urbis quae quondam Bizantium ferebatur
    13. Antonio Ivani da Sarzana, Expugnatio Constantinopolitana, part of a letter to the duke of Urbino
    14. Nikolaos Sekoundinos, read a report before the Venetian Senate, the Pope and the Neapolitan court
    15. Giacomo Languschi, whose account is embedded in the Venetian chronicle of Zorzi Dolfin, had access to eyewitnesses
    16. John Moskhos, wrote a poem in honour of Loukas Notaras
    17. Adamo di Montaldo, De Constantinopolitano excidio ad nobilissimum iuvenem Melladucam Cicadam, which contains unique information
    18. Ashikpashazade, included a chapter on the conquest in his Tarih-i al-i Osman[114]
    19. Neshri, included a chapter on the conquest in his universal history[114]
    20. Evliya Çelebi, 17th-century traveller who collected local traditions of the conquest[114]

    Notes

    1. ^ Đurađ Branković, being a vassal of the Ottoman Empire, had to send 1,500 soldiers to help Mehmed II in his siege of Constantinople.[1][2]
    2. ^ Some contemporaneous Western sources gave exaggerated figures ranging from 160,000 to 300,000.[3]
    3. ^ While Mehmed II had been steadily preparing for the siege of Constantinople, he had sent the old general Turakhan and the latter's two sons, Ahmed Beg and Omar Beg, to invade the Morea and to remain there all winter also to prevent the despots Thomas and Demetrius from giving aid to Constantine XI.[28]: 146 
    4. ^ According to Sphrantzes, whom Constantine had ordered to make a census, the Emperor was appalled when the number of native men capable of bearing arms turned out to be only 4,983. Leonardo di Chio gave a number of 6,000 Greeks.[31]: 85 
    5. ^ The Spanish Cristóbal de Villalón claims there were ' 60,000 Turkish households, 40,000 Greek and Armenian, 10,000 Jewish.[31]: 85 
    6. ^ These were the three Genoese ships sent by the Pope, joined by a large Imperial transport ship which had been sent on a foraging mission to Sicily previous to the siege and was on its way back to Constantinople.[31]: 100 
    7. ^ Runciman speculates that he may have been Scottish.[31]: 84 
    8. ^ Original text: Τὸ δὲ τὴν πόλιν σοῖ δοῦναι οὔτ' ἐμὸν ἐστίν οὔτ' ἄλλου τῶν κατοικούντων ἐν ταύτῃ• κοινῇ γὰρ γνώμῃ πάντες αὐτοπροαιρέτως ἀποθανοῦμεν καὶ οὐ φεισόμεθα τῆς ζωῆς ἡμῶν.[61]
    9. ^ Sources hostile towards the Genoese (such as the Venetian Nicolò Barbaro), however, report that Longo was only lightly wounded or not wounded at all, but, overwhelmed by fear, simulated the wound to abandon the battlefield, determining the fall of the city. These charges of cowardice and treason were so widespread that the Republic of Genoa had to deny them by sending diplomatic letters to the Chancelleries of England, France, the Duchy of Burgundy and others.[64]: 296–297  Giustiniani was carried to Chios, where he succumbed to his wounds a few days later.
    10. ^ Barbaro added the description of the emperor's heroic last moments to his diary based on information he received afterward. According to some Ottoman sources Constantine was killed in an accidental encounter with Turkish marines a little further to the south, presumably while making his way to the Sea of Marmara in order to escape by sea.[40]: 81 

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    Bibliography

    • Crowley, Roger (2005). 1453: The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West. Hyperion. ISBN 978-1-4013-0558-1.
    • Crowley, Roger (2013). Constantinople. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-29820-4. Retrieved 2 March 2021.

    Further reading

    • Babinger, Franz (1992): Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01078-1.
    • Fletcher, Richard A.: The Cross and the Crescent (2005) Penguin Group ISBN 0-14-303481-2.
    • Harris, Jonathan (2007): Constantinople: Capital of Byzantium. Hambledon/Continuum. ISBN 978-1-84725-179-4.
    • Harris, Jonathan (2010): The End of Byzantium. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11786-8.
    • Melville-Jones, John R. (1972). The Siege of Constantinople 1453: Seven Contemporary Accounts. Amsterdam: Adolf M. Hakkert. ISBN 90-256-0626-1.
    • Momigliano, Arnaldo; Schiavone, Aldo (1997). Storia di Roma, 1 (in Italian). Turin: Einaudi. ISBN 88-06-11396-8.
    • Murr Nehme, Lina (2003). 1453: The Conquest of Constantinople. Aleph Et Taw. ISBN 2-86839-816-2.
    • Pertusi, Agostino, ed. (1976). La Caduta di Costantinopoli, II: L'eco nel mondo [The Fall of Constantinople, II: The Echo in the World] (in Italian). Vol. II. Verona: Fondazione Lorenzo Valla.
    • Philippides, Marios and Walter K. Hanak, The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453, Ashgate, Farnham and Burlington 2011.
    • Smith, Michael Llewellyn, "The Fall of Constantinople", in History Makers magazine No. 5 (London, Marshall Cavendish, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1969) p. 192.
    • Wheatcroft, Andrew (2003): The Infidels: The Conflict Between Christendom and Islam, 638–2002. Viking Publishing ISBN 0-670-86942-2.
    • Wintle, Justin (2003): The Rough Guide History of Islam. Rough Guides. ISBN 1-84353-018-X.

    External links

    • The Siege of Constantinople As The Islamic World Sees it
    • World History Encyclopedia – 1453: The Fall of Constantinople
    • Constantinople Siege & Fall, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Roger Crowley, Judith Herrin & Colin Imber (In Our Time, 28 Dec. 2006)

    fall, constantinople, other, sieges, city, list, sieges, constantinople, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, december, 2022, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, versio. For other sieges of the city see List of sieges of Constantinople This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in French December 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 301 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Chute de Constantinople see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Chute de Constantinople to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Fall of Constantinople also known as the Conquest of Constantinople was the capture of the capital of the Byzantine Empire by the Ottoman Empire The city was captured on 29 May 1453 13 14 as part of the culmination of a 53 day siege which had begun on 6 April Fall of ConstantinoplePart of the Byzantine Ottoman Wars and the Ottoman wars in EuropeThe siege of Constantinople 1453 French miniature by Jean Le Tavernier after 1455 Date6 April 29 May 1453 1 month 3 weeks and 2 days LocationConstantinople present day Istanbul 41 01 00 N 28 58 37 E 41 0167 N 28 9769 E 41 0167 28 9769 Coordinates 41 01 00 N 28 58 37 E 41 0167 N 28 9769 E 41 0167 28 9769ResultOttoman victory Fall of the Byzantine EmpireTerritorialchangesOttoman Empire annexes the remaining Byzantine territories with some exceptions Constantinople becomes its new capital Morea Trebizond Theodoro and Epirus continue as Byzantine rump states until their conquests in 1460 1461 1475 and 1479 respectivelyBelligerentsOttoman Empire Serbian Despotate note 1 Byzantine Empire Genoese volunteers Venetian volunteers Papal States Catalan retinue Ottoman defectorsCommanders and leadersMehmed II Candarli Halil Zagan Pasha Suleiman Baltoghlu WIA Karaca Pasha Hamza BeyConstantine XI Loukas Notaras Theophilos Palaiologos Demetrios Kantakouzenos Giovanni Giustiniani DOW Gabriele Trevisano POW Alviso Diedo es fr Girolamo Minotto el es fr it Cardinal Isidore POW Catalan consul Pere Julia Orhan Celebi StrengthLand forces 100 000 130 000 in total note 2 45 000 50 000 Janissaries 40 000 Archers 40 000 Infantry Various cannon and bombardsNaval forces 31 galleys 95 large row boatsLand forces 7 000 10 000 600 defectors 4 200 archers 5 unknown number of the Catalan retinue Naval forces 26 ships 10 Byzantine 8 Venetian 5 Genoese 1 Catalan 1 Anconitan 1 ProvencalCasualties and losses200 18 000 first day 6 Heavy at least 15 000 up to 50 000 disputed 4 500 killed in action both military and civilian 7 8 9 30 000 50 000 civilians enslaved 10 11 12 The attacking Ottoman Army which significantly outnumbered Constantinople s defenders was commanded by the 21 year old Sultan Mehmed II later nicknamed the Conqueror while the Byzantine army was led by Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos After conquering the city Mehmed II made Constantinople the new Ottoman capital replacing Adrianople The conquest of Constantinople and the fall of the Byzantine Empire was a watershed of the Late Middle Ages marking the effective end of the last remains of the Roman Empire a state which began in roughly 27 BC and had lasted nearly 1500 years Among many modern historians the Fall of Constantinople is considered the end of the medieval period 15 16 The city s fall also stood as a turning point in military history Since ancient times cities and castles had depended upon ramparts and walls to repel invaders The Walls of Constantinople especially the Theodosian Walls were some of the most advanced defensive systems in the world at the time These fortifications were overcome with the use of gunpowder specifically in the form of large cannons and bombards heralding a change in siege warfare 17 Contents 1 State of the Byzantine Empire 2 Preparations 2 1 European support 2 2 Strength 2 2 1 Ottoman dispositions and strategies 2 2 2 Byzantine dispositions and tactics 3 Siege 3 1 Final assault 4 Atrocities 5 Aftermath 5 1 Third Rome 5 2 Impact on the Churches 6 Legacy 6 1 Legends 6 2 Cultural impact 6 3 Impact on the Renaissance 6 4 Renaming of the city 7 Primary sources 7 1 Eyewitness accounts 7 2 Non eyewitness accounts 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksState of the Byzantine Empire EditConstantinople had been an imperial capital since its consecration in 330 under Roman emperor Constantine the Great In the following eleven centuries the city had been besieged many times but was captured only once before the Sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade in 1204 18 304 The crusaders established an unstable Latin state in and around Constantinople while the remainder of the Byzantine Empire splintered into a number of successor states notably Nicaea Epirus and Trebizond They fought as allies against the Latin establishments but also fought among themselves for the Byzantine throne The Islamic prophet Muhammad once said One day Constantinople will be conquered Great is the commander who will conquer it Great are his soldiers 19 Although this hadith has been debated by many scholars as weak 20 The Nicaeans eventually reconquered Constantinople from the Latins in 1261 reestablishing the Byzantine Empire under the Palaiologos dynasty Thereafter there was little peace for the much weakened empire as it fended off successive attacks by the Latins Serbs Bulgarians and Ottoman Turks 18 page needed 21 22 23 Between 1346 and 1349 the Black Death killed almost half of the inhabitants of Constantinople 24 The city was further depopulated by the general economic and territorial decline of the empire and by 1453 it consisted of a series of walled villages separated by vast fields encircled by the fifth century Theodosian Walls By 1450 the empire was exhausted and had shrunk to a few square kilometers outside the city of Constantinople itself the Princes Islands in the Sea of Marmara and the Peloponnese with its cultural center at Mystras The Empire of Trebizond an independent successor state that formed in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade was also present at the time on the coast of the Black Sea Preparations EditWhen Mehmed II succeeded his father in 1451 he was just nineteen years old Many European courts assumed that the young Ottoman ruler would not seriously challenge Christian hegemony in the Balkans and the Aegean 25 In fact Europe celebrated Mehmed coming to the throne and hoped his inexperience would lead the Ottomans astray 26 This calculation was boosted by Mehmed s friendly overtures to the European envoys at his new court 18 373 But Mehmed s mild words were not matched by his actions By early 1452 work began on the construction of a second fortress Rumeli hisari on the European side of the Bosphorus 27 several miles north of Constantinople The new fortress sat directly across the strait from the Anadolu Hisari fortress built by Mehmed s great grandfather Bayezid I This pair of fortresses ensured complete control of sea traffic on the Bosphorus 18 373 and defended against attack by the Genoese colonies on the Black Sea coast to the north In fact the new fortress was called Bogazkesen which means strait blocker or throat cutter The wordplay emphasizes its strategic position in Turkish bogaz means both strait and throat In October 1452 Mehmed ordered Turakhan Beg to station a large garrison force in the Peloponnese to block Thomas and Demetrios despotes in Southern Greece from providing aid to their brother Constantine XI Palaiologos during the impending siege of Constantinople note 3 Karaca Pasha the beylerbeyi of Rumelia sent men to prepare the roads from Adrianople to Constantinople so that bridges could cope with the massive cannons Fifty carpenters and 200 artisans also strengthened the roads where necessary 8 The Greek historian Michael Critobulus quotes Mehmed II s speech to his soldiers before the siege 29 23 My friends and men of my empire You all know very well that our forefathers secured this kingdom that we now hold at the cost of many struggles and very great dangers and that having passed it along in succession from their fathers from father to son they handed it down to me For some of the oldest of you were sharers in many of the exploits carried through by them those at least of you who are of maturer years and the younger of you have heard of these deeds from your fathers They are not such very ancient events nor of such a sort as to be forgotten through the lapse of time Still the eyewitness of those who have seen testifies better than does the hearing of deeds that happened but yesterday or the day before European support Edit Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI swiftly understood Mehmed s true intentions and turned to Western Europe for help but now the price of centuries of war and enmity between the eastern and western churches had to be paid Since the mutual excommunications of 1054 the Pope in Rome was committed to establishing unity with the eastern church The union was agreed by the Byzantine Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos in 1274 at the Second Council of Lyon and indeed some Palaiologoi emperors had since been received into the Latin Church Emperor John VIII Palaiologos had also recently negotiated union with Pope Eugene IV with the Council of Florence of 1439 proclaiming a Bull of Union The imperial efforts to impose union were met with strong resistance in Constantinople A propaganda initiative was stimulated by anti unionist Orthodox partisans in Constantinople the population as well as the laity and leadership of the Byzantine Church became bitterly divided Latent ethnic hatred between Greeks and Italians stemming from the events of the Massacre of the Latins in 1182 by the Greeks and the Sack of Constantinople in 1204 by the Latins played a significant role Ultimately the attempted union between east and west failed greatly annoying Pope Nicholas V and the hierarchy of the Roman church citation needed In the summer of 1452 when Rumeli Hisari was completed and the threat of the Ottomans had become imminent Constantine wrote to the Pope promising to implement the union which was declared valid by a half hearted imperial court on 12 December 1452 18 373 Although he was eager for an advantage Pope Nicholas V did not have the influence the Byzantines thought he had over the Western kings and princes some of whom were wary of increasing papal control Furthermore these Western rulers did not have the wherewithal to contribute to the effort especially in light of the weakened state of France and England from the Hundred Years War Spain s involvement in the Reconquista the internecine fighting in the Holy Roman Empire and Hungary and Poland s defeat at the Battle of Varna of 1444 Although some troops did arrive from the mercantile city states in northern Italy the Western contribution was not adequate to counterbalance Ottoman strength Some Western individuals however came to help defend the city on their own account Cardinal Isidore funded by the Pope arrived in 1452 with 200 archers 30 An accomplished soldier from Genoa Giovanni Giustiniani arrived in January 1453 with 400 men from Genoa and 300 men from Genoese Chios 31 83 84 As a specialist in defending walled cities Giustiniani was immediately given the overall command of the defence of the land walls by the Emperor The Byzantines knew him by the Latin spelling of his name John Justinian named after the famous 6th century Byzantine emperor Justinian the Great 13 Around the same time the captains of the Venetian ships that happened to be present in the Golden Horn offered their services to the Emperor barring contrary orders from Venice and Pope Nicholas undertook to send three ships laden with provisions which set sail near the end of March 31 81 Meanwhile in Venice deliberations were taking place concerning the kind of assistance the Republic would lend to Constantinople The Senate decided upon sending a fleet in February 1453 but the fleet s departure was delayed until April when it was already too late for ships to assist in battle 32 page needed 31 85 Further undermining Byzantine morale seven Italian ships with around 700 men despite having sworn to defend Constantinople slipped out of the capital the moment Giustiniani arrived At the same time Constantine s attempts to appease the Sultan with gifts ended with the execution of the Emperor s ambassadors 18 373 33 34 35 36 37 38 Restored Walls of Constantinople The chain that closed off the entrance to the Golden Horn in 1453 now on display in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums Fearing a possible naval attack along the shores of the Golden Horn Emperor Constantine XI ordered that a defensive chain be placed at the mouth of the harbour This chain which floated on logs was strong enough to prevent any Turkish ship from entering the harbour This device was one of two that gave the Byzantines some hope of extending the siege until the possible arrival of foreign help 32 380 This strategy was used because in 1204 the armies of the Fourth Crusade successfully circumvented Constantinople s land defences by breaching the Golden Horn Wall which faces the Horn Another strategy employed by the Byzantines was the repair and fortification of the Land Wall Theodosian Walls Emperor Constantine deemed it necessary to ensure that the Blachernae district s wall was the most fortified because that section of the wall protruded northwards The land fortifications consisted of a 60 ft 18 m wide moat fronting inner and outer crenellated walls studded with towers every 45 55 metres 39 Strength Edit Map of Constantinople and the dispositions of the defenders and the besiegers The army defending Constantinople was relatively small totalling about 7 000 men 2 000 of whom were foreigners note 4 At the onset of the siege probably fewer than 50 000 people were living within the walls including the refugees from the surrounding area 40 32 note 5 Turkish commander Dorgano who was in Constantinople working for the Emperor was also guarding one of the quarters of the city on the seaward side with the Turks in his pay These Turks kept loyal to the Emperor and perished in the ensuing battle The defending army s Genoese corps were well trained and equipped while the rest of the army consisted of small numbers of well trained soldiers armed civilians sailors and volunteer forces from foreign communities and finally monks The garrison used a few small calibre artillery pieces which in the end proved ineffective The rest of the citizens repaired walls stood guard on observation posts collected and distributed food provisions and collected gold and silver objects from churches to melt down into coins to pay the foreign soldiers The Ottomans had a much larger force Recent studies and Ottoman archival data state that there were some 50 000 80 000 Ottoman soldiers including between 5 000 and 10 000 Janissaries 3 page needed 70 cannons 41 139 140 40 page needed 42 page needed and an elite infantry corps and thousands of Christian troops notably 1 500 Serbian cavalry that Đurađ Brankovic was forced to supply as part of his obligation to the Ottoman sultan 1 2 just a few months before Brankovic had supplied the money for the reconstruction of the walls of Constantinople 1 2 Contemporaneous Western witnesses of the siege who tend to exaggerate the military power of the Sultan provide disparate and higher numbers ranging from 160 000 to 300 000 3 page needed Niccolo Barbaro 43 160 000 the Florentine merchant Jacopo Tedaldi 44 and the Great Logothete George Sphrantzes 45 page needed 200 000 the Cardinal Isidore of Kiev 46 and the Archbishop of Mytilene Leonardo di Chio 47 300 000 48 Ottoman dispositions and strategies Edit The Dardanelles Gun cast by Munir Ali in 1464 is similar to bombards used by the Ottoman besiegers of Constantinople in 1453 British Royal Armouries collection Mehmed built a fleet crewed partially by Spanish sailors from Gallipoli to besiege the city from the sea 40 page needed Contemporary estimates of the strength of the Ottoman fleet span from 110 ships to 430 Tedaldi 44 110 Barbaro 43 145 Ubertino Pusculo 49 160 Isidore of Kiev 46 and Leonardo di Chio 50 200 250 Sphrantzes 45 page needed 430 A more realistic modern estimate predicts a fleet strength of 110 ships comprising 70 large galleys 5 ordinary galleys 10 smaller galleys 25 large rowing boats and 75 horse transports 40 44 Before the siege of Constantinople it was known that the Ottomans had the ability to cast medium sized cannons but the range of some pieces they were able to field far surpassed the defenders expectations 18 374 The Ottomans deployed a number of cannons anywhere from 12 to 62 cannons They were built at foundries that employed Turkish cannon founders and technicians most notably Saruca in addition to at least one foreign cannon founder Orban also called Urban Most of the cannons at the siege were built by Turkish engineers including a large bombard by Saruca while one cannon was built by Orban who also contributed a large bombard 51 52 Orban a Hungarian though some suggest he was German was a somewhat mysterious figure 18 374 His 27 feet 8 2 m long cannon was named Basilica and was able to hurl a 600 lb 270 kg stone ball over a mile 1 6 km 53 Orban initially tried to sell his services to the Byzantines but they were unable to secure the funds needed to hire him Orban then left Constantinople and approached Mehmed II claiming that his weapon could blast the walls of Babylon itself Given abundant funds and materials the Hungarian engineer built the gun within three months at Edirne 31 77 78 However this was the only cannon that Orban built for the Ottoman forces at Constantinople 51 52 and it had several drawbacks it took three hours to reload cannonballs were in very short supply and the cannon is said to have collapsed under its own recoil after six weeks The account of the cannon s collapse is disputed 3 page needed given that it was only reported in the letter of Archbishop Leonardo di Chio 47 and in the later and often unreliable Russian chronicle of Nestor Iskander Modern painting of Mehmed and the Ottoman Army approaching Constantinople with a giant bombard by Fausto Zonaro Having previously established a large foundry about 150 miles 240 km away Mehmed now had to undertake the painstaking process of transporting his massive artillery pieces In preparation for the final assault Mehmed had an artillery train of 70 large pieces dragged from his headquarters at Edirne in addition to the bombards cast on the spot 54 This train included Orban s enormous cannon which was said to have been dragged from Edirne by a crew of 60 oxen and over 400 men 18 374 31 77 78 There was another large bombard independently built by Turkish engineer Saruca that was also used in the battle 51 52 Mehmed planned to attack the Theodosian Walls the intricate series of walls and ditches protecting Constantinople from an attack from the West and the only part of the city not surrounded by water His army encamped outside the city on 2 April 1453 the Monday after Easter The bulk of the Ottoman army was encamped south of the Golden Horn The regular European troops stretched out along the entire length of the walls were commanded by Karadja Pasha The regular troops from Anatolia under Ishak Pasha were stationed south of the Lycus down to the Sea of Marmara Mehmed himself erected his red and gold tent near the Mesoteichion where the guns and the elite Janissary regiments were positioned The Bashi bazouks were spread out behind the front lines Other troops under Zagan Pasha were employed north of the Golden Horn Communication was maintained by a road that had been destroyed over the marshy head of the Horn 31 94 95 The Ottomans were experts in laying siege to cities They knew that in order to prevent diseases they had to burn corpses sanitarily dispose of excrement and carefully scrutinize their sources of water 30 Byzantine dispositions and tactics Edit Painting of the Fall of Constantinople by Theophilos Hatzimihail The city had about 20 km of walls land walls 5 5 km sea walls along the Golden Horn 7 km sea walls along the Sea of Marmara 7 5 km one of the strongest sets of fortified walls in existence The walls had recently been repaired under John VIII and were in fairly good shape giving the defenders sufficient reason to believe that they could hold out until help from the West arrived 40 39 In addition the defenders were relatively well equipped with a fleet of 26 ships 5 from Genoa 5 from Venice 3 from Venetian Crete 1 from Ancona 1 from Aragon 1 from France and about 10 from the empire itself 40 45 On 5 April the Sultan himself arrived with his last troops and the defenders took up their positions As Byzantine numbers were insufficient to occupy the walls in their entirety it had been decided that only the outer walls would be guarded Constantine and his Greek troops guarded the Mesoteichion the middle section of the land walls where they were crossed by the river Lycus This section was considered the weakest spot in the walls and an attack was feared here most Giustiniani was stationed to the north of the emperor at the Charisian Gate Myriandrion later during the siege he was shifted to the Mesoteichion to join Constantine leaving the Myriandrion to the charge of the Bocchiardi brothers Girolamo Minotto el es fr it and his Venetians were stationed in the Blachernae Palace together with Teodoro Caristo the Langasco brothers and Archbishop Leonardo of Chios 31 92 To the left of the emperor further south were the commanders Cataneo who led Genoese troops and Theophilus Palaeologus who guarded the Pegae Gate with Greek soldiers The section of the land walls from the Pegae Gate to the Golden Gate itself guarded by a Genoese called Manuel was defended by the Venetian Filippo Contarini while Demetrius Cantacuzenus had taken position on the southernmost part of the Theodosian wall 31 92 The sea walls were guarded more sparsely with Jacobo Contarini at Stoudion a makeshift defence force of Greek monks to his left hand and Prince Orhan at the Harbour of Eleutherios Genoese and Catalan troops were stationed at the Great Palace Cardinal Isidore of Kiev guarded the tip of the peninsula near the boom Finally the sea walls at the southern shore of the Golden Horn were defended by Venetian and Genoese sailors under Gabriele Trevisano 31 93 Two tactical reserves were kept behind in the city one in the Petra district just behind the land walls and one near the Church of the Holy Apostles under the command of Loukas Notaras and Nicephorus Palaeologus respectively The Venetian Alviso Diedo es fr commanded the ships in the harbour 31 94 Although the Byzantines also had cannons the weapons were much smaller than those of the Ottomans and the recoil tended to damage their own walls 47 According to David Nicolle despite many odds the idea that Constantinople was inevitably doomed is incorrect and the situation was not as one sided as a simple glance at a map might suggest 40 40 It has also been claimed that Constantinople was the best defended city in Europe at that time 55 Siege Edit Painting by Fausto Zonaro depicting the Ottoman Turks transporting their fleet overland into the Golden Horn At the beginning of the siege Mehmed sent out some of his best troops to reduce the remaining Byzantine strongholds outside the city of Constantinople The fortress of Therapia on the Bosphorus and a smaller castle at the village of Studius near the Sea of Marmara were taken within a few days The Princes Islands in the Sea of Marmara were taken by Admiral Baltoghlu s fleet 31 96 97 Mehmed s massive cannons fired on the walls for weeks but due to their imprecision and extremely slow rate of fire the Byzantines were able to repair most of the damage after each shot mitigating the effect of the Ottoman artillery 18 376 Despite some probing attacks the Ottoman fleet under Baltoghlu could not enter the Golden Horn due to the chain across the entrance Although one of the fleet s main tasks was to prevent any foreign ships from entering the Golden Horn on 20 April a small flotilla of four Christian ships managed to get in after some heavy fighting an event which strengthened the morale of the defenders and caused embarrassment to the Sultan 18 376 note 6 Baltoghlu was most likely injured in the eye during the skirmish Mehmed stripped Baltoghlu of his wealth and property and gave it to the janissaries and ordered him to be whipped 100 times 26 Mehmed ordered the construction of a road of greased logs across Galata on the north side of the Golden Horn and dragged his ships over the hill directly into the Golden Horn on 22 April bypassing the chain barrier 18 376 This action seriously threatened the flow of supplies from Genoese ships from the nominally neutral colony of Pera and it demoralized the Byzantine defenders On the night of 28 April an attempt was made to destroy the Ottoman ships already in the Golden Horn using fire ships but the Ottomans forced the Christians to retreat with many casualties Forty Italians escaped their sinking ships and swam to the northern shore On orders of Mehmed they were impaled on stakes in sight of the city s defenders on the sea walls across the Golden Horn In retaliation the defenders brought their Ottoman prisoners 260 in all to the walls where they were executed one by one before the eyes of the Ottomans 31 108 56 With the failure of their attack on the Ottoman vessels the defenders were forced to disperse part of their forces to defend the sea walls along the Golden Horn The Ottoman army had made several frontal assaults on the land wall of Constantinople but they were costly failures 57 Venetian surgeon Niccolo Barbaro describing in his diary one such land attack by the Janissaries wrote They found the Turks coming right up under the walls and seeking battle particularly the Janissaries and when one or two of them were killed at once more Turks came and took away the dead ones without caring how near they came to the city walls Our men shot at them with guns and crossbows aiming at the Turk who was carrying away his dead countryman and both of them would fall to the ground dead and then there came other Turks and took them away none fearing death but being willing to let ten of themselves be killed rather than suffer the shame of leaving a single Turkish corpse by the walls 43 Siege of Constantinople as depicted between 1453 and 1475 58 After these inconclusive attacks the Ottomans sought to break through the walls by constructing tunnels to mine them from mid May to 25 May Many of the sappers were miners of Serbian origin sent from Novo Brdo under the command of Zagan Pasha 59 An engineer named Johannes Grant a German who came with the Genoese contingent had counter mines dug allowing Byzantine troops to enter the mines and kill the miners note 7 The Byzantines intercepted the first tunnel on the night of 16 May Subsequent tunnels were interrupted on 21 23 and 25 May and destroyed with Greek fire and vigorous combat On 23 May the Byzantines captured and tortured two Turkish officers who revealed the location of all the Turkish tunnels which were destroyed 60 On 21 May Mehmed sent an ambassador to Constantinople and offered to lift the siege if they gave him the city He promised he would allow the Emperor and any other inhabitants to leave with their possessions He would recognize the Emperor as governor of the Peloponnese Lastly he guaranteed the safety of the population that might choose to remain in the city Constantine XI only agreed to pay higher tributes to the sultan and recognized the status of all the conquered castles and lands in the hands of the Turks as Ottoman possessions The Emperor was not willing to leave the city without a fight As to surrendering the city to you it is not for me to decide or for anyone else of its citizens for all of us have reached the mutual decision to die of our own free will without any regard for our lives note 8 Around this time Mehmed had a final council with his senior officers Here he encountered some resistance one of his Viziers the veteran Halil Pasha who had always disapproved of Mehmed s plans to conquer the city now admonished him to abandon the siege in the face of recent adversity Zagan Pasha argued against Halil Pasha and insisted on an immediate attack Believing that the Byzantine defence was already weakened sufficiently Mehmed planned to overpower the walls by sheer force and started preparations for a final all out offensive Final assault Edit Painting by the Greek folk painter Theophilos Hatzimihail showing the battle inside the city Constantine is visible on a white horse Preparations for the final assault began in the evening of 26 May and continued to the next day 18 378 For 36 hours after the war council decided to attack the Ottomans extensively mobilized their manpower for the general offensive 18 378 Prayer and resting was then granted to the soldiers on 28 May before the final assault would be launched On the Byzantine side a small Venetian fleet of 12 ships after having searched the Aegean reached the Capital on 27 May and reported to the Emperor that no large Venetian relief fleet was on its way 18 377 On 28 May as the Ottoman army prepared for the final assault mass religious processions were held in the city In the evening a solemn last ceremony of Vespers before Pentecost was held in the Hagia Sophia in which the Emperor with representatives and nobility of both the Latin and Greek churches partook 62 651 652 Up until this point the Ottomans had fired 5 000 shots from their cannons using 55 000 pounds of gunpowder Criers roamed the camp to the sound of the blasting horns rousing the Ghazis 63 Shortly after midnight on 29 May on the Greek Orthodox feast of Pentecost the offensive began The Christian troops of the Ottoman Empire attacked first followed by successive waves of the irregular azaps who were poorly trained and equipped and Anatolian Turkmen beylik forces who focused on a section of the damaged Blachernae walls in the north west part of the city This section of the walls had been built earlier in the 11th century and was much weaker The Turkmen mercenaries managed to breach this section of walls and entered the city but they were just as quickly pushed back by the defenders Finally the last wave consisting of elite Janissaries attacked the city walls The Genoese general in charge of the defenders on land Giovanni Giustiniani was grievously wounded during the attack and his evacuation from the ramparts caused a panic in the ranks of the defenders 3 page needed 46 47 note 9 With Giustiniani s Genoese troops retreating into the city and towards the harbour Constantine and his men now left to their own devices continued to hold their ground against the Janissaries Constantine s men eventually could not prevent the Ottomans from entering the city and the defenders were overwhelmed at several points along the wall When Turkish flags were seen flying above the Kerkoporta a small postern gate that was left open panic ensued and the defence collapsed Janissaries led by Ulubatli Hasan pressed forward Many Greek soldiers ran back home to protect their families the Venetians retreated to their ships and a few of the Genoese escaped to Galata The rest surrendered or committed suicide by jumping off the city walls 32 388 The Greek houses nearest to the walls were the first to suffer from the Ottomans It is said that Constantine throwing aside his purple imperial regalia led the final charge against the incoming Ottomans perishing in the ensuing battle in the streets alongside his soldiers The Venetian Nicolo Barbaro claimed in his diary that Constantine hanged himself at the moment when the Turks broke in at the San Romano gate Ultimately his fate remains unknown note 10 After the initial assault the Ottoman army fanned out along the main thoroughfare of the city the Mese past the great forums and the Church of the Holy Apostles which Mehmed II wanted to provide as a seat for his newly appointed patriarch to better control his Christian subjects Mehmed II had sent an advance guard to protect these key buildings A few civilians managed to escape When the Venetians retreated over to their ships the Ottomans had already taken the walls of the Golden Horn Luckily for the occupants of the city the Ottomans were not interested in killing potentially valuable slaves but rather in the loot they could get from raiding the city s houses so they decided to attack the city instead The Venetian captain ordered his men to break open the gate of the Golden Horn Having done so the Venetians left in ships filled with soldiers and refugees Shortly after the Venetians left a few Genoese ships and even the Emperor s ships followed them out of the Golden Horn This fleet narrowly escaped prior to the Ottoman navy assuming control over the Golden Horn which was accomplished by midday 32 388 The army converged upon the Augusteum the vast square that fronted the great church of Hagia Sophia whose bronze gates were barred by a huge throng of civilians inside the building hoping for divine protection After the doors were breached the troops separated the congregation according to what price they might bring in the slave markets citation needed Ottoman casualties are unknown but they are believed by most historians to be severe due to several unsuccessful Ottoman attacks made during the siege and final assault citation needed The Venetian Barbaro observed that blood flowed in the city like rainwater in the gutters after a sudden storm and that bodies of Turks and Christians floated in the sea like melons along a canal 43 Atrocities EditAccording to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Mehmed II permitted an initial period of looting that saw the destruction of many Orthodox churches but tried to prevent a complete sack of the city 65 The looting was extremely thorough in certain parts of the city On 2 June the Sultan found the city largely deserted and half in ruins churches had been desecrated and stripped houses were no longer habitable and stores and shops were emptied He is famously reported to have been moved to tears by this saying What a city we have given over to plunder and destruction 31 152 Looting was carried out on a massive scale by sailors and marines who entered the city via other walls before they had been suppressed by regular troops who were beyond the main gate According to David Nicolle the ordinary people were treated better by their Ottoman conquerors than their ancestors had been by Crusaders back in 1204 stating that only about 4 000 Greeks died in the siege while according to a Venetian Senate report 50 Venetian noblemen and over 500 other Venetian civilians died during the siege 66 Many of the riches of the city were already looted in 1204 leaving only limited loot to the Ottomans 67 Other sources claim far more brutal and successful pillaging by the Ottoman invaders Leonard of Chios made accounts of the atrocities that followed the fall of Constantinople stated the Ottoman invaders pillaged the city murdered or enslaved tens of thousands of people and raped nuns women and children All the valuables and other booty were taken to their camp and as many as sixty thousand Christians who had been captured The crosses which had been placed on the roofs or the walls of churches were torn down and trampled Women were raped virgins deflowered and youths forced to take part in shameful obscenities The nuns left behind even those who were obviously such were disgraced with foul debaucheries 68 During three days of pillaging the Ottoman invaders captured children and took them away to their tents and became rich by plundering the imperial palace and the houses of Constantinople The Ottoman official Tursun Beg wrote After having completely overcome the enemy the soldiers began to plunder the city They enslaved boys and girls and took silver and gold vessels precious stones and all sorts of valuable goods and fabrics from the imperial palace and the houses of the rich Every tent was filled with handsome boys and beautiful girls 69 37 If any citizens of Constantinople tried to resist they were slaughtered According to Niccolo Barbaro all through the day the Turks made a great slaughter of Christians through the city According to Makarios Melissenos As soon as the Turks were inside the City they began to seize and enslave every person who came their way all those who tried to offer resistance were put to the sword In many places the ground could not be seen as it was covered by heaps of corpses 70 130 The women of Constantinople suffered from rape at the hands of Ottoman forces 71 According to historian Philip Mansel widespread persecution of the city s civilian inhabitants took place resulting in thousands of murders and rapes 10 The vast majority of the citizens of Constantinople 30 000 50 000 were forced to become slaves 10 12 72 11 73 They made the people of the city slaves and killed their emperor and the gazis embraced their pretty girls confirm Ottoman Chroniclers 74 According to Nicolas de Nicolay slaves were displayed naked at the city s slave market and young girls could be purchased 75 The elder refugees in the Hagia Sophia were slaughtered and the women raped 76 George Sphrantzes says that people of both genders were raped inside Hagia Sophia According to Steven Runciman most of the elderly and the infirm wounded and sick who were refugees inside the churches were killed and the remainder were chained up and sold into slavery 77 Everywhere there was misfortune everyone was touched by pain when Mehmet entered the city There were lamentations and weeping in every house screaming in the crossroads and sorrow in all churches the groaning of grown men and the shrieking of women accompanied looting enslavement separation and rape 78 Mehmet entered the Hagia Sophia marveling at the sight of the grand basilica Witnessing a Ghazi wildly hammering at the marble floor he asked what he was doing It is for the Faith the Ghazi said Mehmet cut him down with his Kilij Be satisfied with the booty and the captives the buildings of the city belong to me 79 During the festivities and as he had promised his viziers and his other officers Mehmed had the wretched citizens of Constantinople dragged before them and ordered many of them to be hacked to pieces for the sake of entertainment 80 81 While drunk during his victory banquet the Sultan ordered the Grand Duke Loukas Notaras to give his youngest son to him for his pleasure When the boy s father heard this his face turned ashen as though he had been struck dead He replied that it would be far better for me to die than hand over my own child to be despoiled by him Mehmed was enraged after hearing this and ordered Loukas to be executed Before his death the Grand Duke cited Him Who was crucified for us died and arose and urged his horrified sons to reject the advances of Mehmed and not fear the outcome Their father s words encouraged them and they were also were ready to die They were also executed 82 Mehmed stabbed to death another 14 year old Christian boy who preferred death to infamy 83 Aftermath EditMehmed II granted his soldiers three days to plunder the city as he had promised them and in accordance with the custom of the time 31 145 84 Soldiers fought over the possession of some of the spoils of war 85 283 On the third day of the conquest Mehmed II ordered all looting to stop and issued a proclamation that all Christians who had avoided capture or who had been ransomed could return to their homes without further molestation although many had no homes to return to and many more had been taken captive and not ransomed 31 150 51 Byzantine historian George Sphrantzes an eyewitness to the fall of Constantinople described the Sultan s actions 86 87 On the third day after the fall of our city the Sultan celebrated his victory with a great joyful triumph He issued a proclamation the citizens of all ages who had managed to escape detection were to leave their hiding places throughout the city and come out into the open as they were to remain free and no question would be asked He further declared the restoration of houses and property to those who had abandoned our city before the siege If they returned home they would be treated according to their rank and religion as if nothing had changed George Sphrantzes The Hagia Sophia was converted into a mosque but the Greek Orthodox Church was allowed to remain intact and Gennadius Scholarius was appointed Patriarch of Constantinople This was once thought to be the origin of the Ottoman millet system however it is now considered a myth and no such system existed in the fifteenth century 88 89 Following the city s conquest the Church of the Holy Wisdom the Hagia Sophia was converted into a mosque The fall of Constantinople shocked many Europeans who viewed it as a catastrophic event for their civilization 90 Many feared other European Christian kingdoms would suffer the same fate as Constantinople Two possible responses emerged amongst the humanists and churchmen of that era Crusade or dialogue Pope Pius II strongly advocated for another Crusade while the German Nicholas of Cusa supported engaging in a dialogue with the Ottomans 91 In the past we received our wounds in Asia and in Africa in foreign countries This time however we are being attacked in Europe in our own land in our own house You will protest that the Turks moved from Asia to Greece a long time ago that the Mongols established themselves in Europe and the Arabs occupied parts of Spain having approached through the straits of Gibraltar We have never lost a city or a place comparable to Constantinople Pope Pius II 92 The Morean Peloponnesian fortress of Mystras where Constantine s brothers Thomas and Demetrius ruled constantly in conflict with each other and knowing that Mehmed would eventually invade them as well held out until 1460 Long before the fall of Constantinople Demetrius had fought for the throne with Thomas Constantine and their other brothers John and Theodore 93 446 Thomas escaped to Rome when the Ottomans invaded Morea while Demetrius expected to rule a puppet state but instead was imprisoned and remained there for the rest of his life In Rome Thomas and his family received some monetary support from the Pope and other Western rulers as Byzantine emperor in exile until 1503 In 1461 the independent Byzantine state in Trebizond fell to Mehmed 93 446 Constantine XI had died without producing an heir and had Constantinople not fallen he likely would have been succeeded by the sons of his deceased elder brother who were taken into the palace service of Mehmed after the fall of Constantinople The oldest boy renamed Murad became a personal favourite of Mehmed and served as Beylerbey Governor General of Rumeli the Balkans The younger son renamed Mesih Pasha became Admiral of the Ottoman fleet and Sancak Beg Governor of the Province of Gallipoli He eventually served twice as Grand Vizier under Mehmed s son Bayezid II 94 With the capture of Constantinople Mehmed II had acquired the future capital of his kingdom albeit one in decline due to years of war The loss of the city was a crippling blow to Christendom and it exposed the Christian West to a vigorous and aggressive foe in the East The Christian reconquest of Constantinople remained a goal in Western Europe for many years after its fall to the Ottoman Empire Rumours of Constantine XI s survival and subsequent rescue by an angel led many to hope that the city would one day return to Christian hands Pope Nicholas V called for an immediate counter attack in the form of a crusade citation needed however no European powers wished to participate and the Pope resorted to sending a small fleet of 10 ships to defend the city The short lived Crusade immediately came to an end and as Western Europe entered the 16th century the age of Crusading began to come to an end For some time Greek scholars had gone to Italian city states a cultural exchange begun in 1396 by Coluccio Salutati chancellor of Florence who had invited Manuel Chrysoloras to lecture at the University of Florence 95 After the conquest many Greeks such as John Argyropoulos and Constantine Lascaris fled the city and found refuge in the Latin West bringing with them knowledge and documents from the Greco Roman tradition to Italy and other regions that further propelled the Renaissance 96 97 Those Greeks who stayed behind in Constantinople mostly lived in the Phanar and Galata districts of the city The Phanariotes as they were called provided many capable advisers to the Ottoman rulers A severed head that was claimed to belong to Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos was found and presented to Mehmed and nailed onto a column while Standing before the head the sultan in his speech said 98 Fellow soldiers this one thing was lacking to make the glory of such a victory complete Now at this happy and joyful moment of time we have the riches of the Greeks we have won their empire and their religion is completely extinguished Our ancestors eagerly desired to achieve this rejoice now since it is your bravery which has won this kingdom for us Mehmet then ordered the severed head be skinned stuffed with bran and sent as a symbol of victory to the governors of Persia and Arabia in order to remind them that it was a Turk who did what for centuries they could not 99 The news spread rapidly across the Islamic world In Egypt good tidings were proclaimed and Cairo decorated to celebrate this greatest of conquests The Sharif of Mecca wrote to Mehmed calling the Sultan the one who has aided Islam and the Muslims the Sultan of all kings and sultans The fact that Constantinople which was long known for being indomitable in the eyes of all as the Sharif of Mecca said had fallen and that the Prophet Muhammad s prophecy came true shocked the Islamic world and filled it with a great jubilation and rapture 100 Third Rome Edit Main article Third Rome Mehmed II by Gentile Bellini Byzantium is a term used by modern historians to refer to the later Roman Empire In its own time the Empire ruled from Constantinople or New Rome as some people call it although this was a laudatory expression that was never an official title was considered simply as the Roman Empire The fall of Constantinople led competing factions to lay claim to being the inheritors of the Imperial mantle Russian claims to Byzantine heritage clashed with those of the Ottoman Empire s own claim In Mehmed s view he was the successor to the Roman Emperor declaring himself Kayser i Rum literally Caesar of Rome that is of the Roman Empire though he was remembered as the Conqueror Stefan Dusan Tsar of Serbia and Ivan Alexander Tsar of Bulgaria both made similar claims regarding themselves as legitimate heirs to the Roman Empire Other potential claimants such as the Republic of Venice and the Holy Roman Empire have disintegrated into history 101 Impact on the Churches Edit Pope Pius II believed that the Ottomans would persecute Greek Orthodox Christians and advocated for another crusade at the Council of Mantua in 1459 90 102 Legacy Edit Siege of Constantinople on a mural at the Moldovița Monastery in Romania painted in 1537 Legends Edit There are many legends in Greece surrounding the Fall of Constantinople It was said that the partial lunar eclipse that occurred on 22 May 1453 represented a fulfilment of a prophecy of the city s demise 103 Four days later the whole city was blotted out by a thick fog a condition unknown in that part of the world in May When the fog lifted that evening a strange light was seen playing about the dome of the Hagia Sophia which some interpreted as the Holy Spirit departing from the city This evidently indicated the departure of the Divine Presence and its leaving the City in total abandonment and desertion for the Divinity conceals itself in cloud and appears and again disappears 29 59 For others there was still a distant hope that the lights were the campfires of the troops of John Hunyadi who had come to relieve the city It is possible that all these phenomena were local effects of the cataclysmic 1452 1453 mystery eruption which occurred around the time of the siege The fire seen may have been an optical illusion due to the reflection of intensely red twilight glow by clouds of volcanic ash high in the atmosphere 104 Another legend holds that two priests saying divine liturgy over the crowd disappeared into the cathedral s walls as the first Turkish soldiers entered According to the legend the priests will appear again on the day that Constantinople returns to Christian hands 31 147 Another legend refers to the Marble Emperor Constantine XI holding that an angel rescued the emperor when the Ottomans entered the city turning him into marble and placing him in a cave under the earth near the Golden Gate where he waits to be brought to life again a variant of the sleeping hero legend 105 106 However many of the myths surrounding the disappearance of Constantine were developed later and little evidence can be found to support them even in friendly primary accounts of the siege Cultural impact Edit Mehmed the Conqueror enters Constantinople painting by Fausto Zonaro Guillaume Dufay composed several songs lamenting the fall of the Eastern church and the duke of Burgundy Philip the Good avowed to take up arms against the Turks However as the growing Ottoman power from this date on coincided with the Protestant Reformation and subsequent Counter Reformation the recapture of Constantinople became an ever distant dream Even France once a fervent participant in the Crusades became an ally of the Ottomans Nonetheless depictions of Christian coalitions taking the city and of the late Emperor s resurrection by Leo the Wise persisted 23 280 29 May 1453 the day of the fall of Constantinople fell on a Tuesday and since then Tuesday has been considered an unlucky day by Greeks generally 107 Impact on the Renaissance Edit Main article Greek scholars in the Renaissance The migration waves of Byzantine scholars and emigres in the period following the sacking of Constantinople and the fall of Constantinople in 1453 is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek and Roman studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism 97 dead link better source needed and science These emigres were grammarians humanists poets writers printers lecturers musicians astronomers architects academics artists scribes philosophers scientists politicians and theologians 108 better source needed They brought to Western Europe the far greater preserved and accumulated knowledge of Byzantine civilization According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Many modern scholars also agree that the exodus of Greeks to Italy as a result of this event marked the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance 65 Renaming of the city Edit Ottomans used the Arabic transliteration of the city s name Qosṭanṭiniyye القسطنطينية or Kostantiniyye as can be seen in numerous Ottoman documents Islambol اسلامبول Full of Islam or Islambul find Islam or Islam b ol old Turkic be Islam both in Turkish were folk etymological adaptations of Istanbul created after the Ottoman conquest of 1453 to express the city s new role as the capital of the Islamic Ottoman Empire It is first attested shortly after the conquest and its invention was ascribed by some contemporary writers to Mehmed II himself 109 The name of Istanbul is thought to be derived from the Greek phrase is timboli n Greek eἰs tὴn polin translit eis ten polin to the City and it is claimed that it had already spread among the Turkish populace of the Ottoman Empire before the conquest However Istanbul only became the official name of the city in 1930 by the revised Turkish Postal Law 110 111 112 Primary sources EditFor the fall of Constantinople Marios Philippides and Walter Hanak list 15 eyewitness accounts 13 Christian and 2 Turkish and 20 contemporary non eyewitness accounts 13 Italian 113 Eyewitness accounts Edit Mehmed Sems el Mille ve d Din Sufi holy man who gives an account in a letter Tursun Beg wrote a history entitled Tarih i Abu l Fath George Sphrantzes the only Greek eyewitness who wrote about it but his laconic account is almost entirely lacking in narrative Leonard of Chios wrote a report to Pope Nicholas V Nicolo Barbaro physician on a Venetian galley who kept a journal Angelino Giovanni Lomellini Venetian podesta of Pera who wrote a report dated 24 June 1453 Jacopo Tetaldi Florentine merchant Isidore of Kiev Orthodox churchman who wrote eight letters to Italy Benvenuto Anconitan consul in Constantinople Ubertino Puscolo Italian poet learning Greek in the city wrote an epic poem Eparkhos and Diplovatatzes two refugees whose accounts has become garbled through multiple translations Nestor Iskander youthful eyewitness who wrote a Slavonic account Samile the Vladik bishop who like Eparkhos and Diplovatatzes fled as a refugee to Wallachia Konstantin Mihailovic Serbian who fought on the Ottoman side a report by some Franciscan prisoners of war who later came to BolognaNon eyewitness accounts Edit Doukas a Byzantine Greek historian one of the most important sources for the last decades and eventual fall of the Byzantine Empire to the Ottomans Laonikos Chalkokondyles a Byzantine Greek historian Michael Kritoboulos a Byzantine Greek historian Makarios Melissourgos 16th century historian who augmented the account of Sphrantzes not very reliably Paolo Dotti Venetian official on Crete whose account is based on oral reports Fra Girolamo s letter from Crete to Domenico Capranica Lauro Quirini wrote a report to Pope Nicholas V from Crete based on oral reports Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini Pope Pius II wrote an account based on written sources Henry of Soemmern wrote a letter dated 11 September 1453 in which he cites his sources of information Niccola della Tuccia whose Cronaca di Viterbo written in the autumn of 1453 contains unique information Niccolo Tignosi da Foligno Expugnatio Constantinopolitana part of a letter to a friend Filippo da Rimini Excidium Constantinopolitanae urbis quae quondam Bizantium ferebatur Antonio Ivani da Sarzana Expugnatio Constantinopolitana part of a letter to the duke of Urbino Nikolaos Sekoundinos read a report before the Venetian Senate the Pope and the Neapolitan court Giacomo Languschi whose account is embedded in the Venetian chronicle of Zorzi Dolfin had access to eyewitnesses John Moskhos wrote a poem in honour of Loukas Notaras Adamo di Montaldo De Constantinopolitano excidio ad nobilissimum iuvenem Melladucam Cicadam which contains unique information Ashikpashazade included a chapter on the conquest in his Tarih i al i Osman 114 Neshri included a chapter on the conquest in his universal history 114 Evliya Celebi 17th century traveller who collected local traditions of the conquest 114 Notes Edit Đurađ Brankovic being a vassal of the Ottoman Empire had to send 1 500 soldiers to help Mehmed II in his siege of Constantinople 1 2 Some contemporaneous Western sources gave exaggerated figures ranging from 160 000 to 300 000 3 While Mehmed II had been steadily preparing for the siege of Constantinople he had sent the old general Turakhan and the latter s two sons Ahmed Beg and Omar Beg to invade the Morea and to remain there all winter also to prevent the despots Thomas and Demetrius from giving aid to Constantine XI 28 146 According to Sphrantzes whom Constantine had ordered to make a census the Emperor was appalled when the number of native men capable of bearing arms turned out to be only 4 983 Leonardo di Chio gave a number of 6 000 Greeks 31 85 The Spanish Cristobal de Villalon claims there were 60 000 Turkish households 40 000 Greek and Armenian 10 000 Jewish 31 85 These were the three Genoese ships sent by the Pope joined by a large Imperial transport ship which had been sent on a foraging mission to Sicily previous to the siege and was on its way back to Constantinople 31 100 Runciman speculates that he may have been Scottish 31 84 Original text Tὸ dὲ tὴn polin soῖ doῦnai oὔt ἐmὸn ἐstin oὔt ἄlloy tῶn katoikoyntwn ἐn taytῃ koinῇ gὰr gnwmῃ pantes aὐtoproairetws ἀpo8anoῦmen kaὶ oὐ feisome8a tῆs zwῆs ἡmῶn 61 Sources hostile towards the Genoese such as the Venetian Nicolo Barbaro however report that Longo was only lightly wounded or not wounded at all but overwhelmed by fear simulated the wound to abandon the battlefield determining the fall of the city These charges of cowardice and treason were so widespread that the Republic of Genoa had to deny them by sending diplomatic letters to the Chancelleries of England France the Duchy of Burgundy and others 64 296 297 Giustiniani was carried to Chios where he succumbed to his wounds a few days later Barbaro added the description of the emperor s heroic last moments to his diary based on information he received afterward According to some Ottoman sources Constantine was killed in an accidental encounter with Turkish marines a little further to the south presumably while making his way to the Sea of Marmara in order to escape by sea 40 81 References Edit a b c Buc Philippe 14 March 2020 One among many renegades the Serb janissary Konstantin Mihailovic and the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans Journal of Medieval History 46 2 217 230 doi 10 1080 03044181 2020 1719188 ISSN 0304 4181 S2CID 214527543 a b c Ivanovic Milos 2019 Militarization of the Serbian State under Ottoman Pressure The Hungarian Historical Review 8 2 390 410 ISSN 2063 8647 JSTOR 26902328 Retrieved 19 January 2021 a b c d e Pertusi Agostino ed 1976 La Caduta di Costantinopoli I Le testimonianze dei contemporanei Scrittori greci e latini The Fall of Constantinople I The Testimony of the Contemporary Greek and Latin Writers in Italian Vol I Verona Fondazione Lorenzo Valla Istanbul un fethinde 600 Turk askeri Fatih e karsi savasti In the Conquest of Istanbul 600 Turkish Military Fought Against the Conqueror Osmanli Araustirmalarli in Turkish Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 Retrieved 29 April 2015 Nicol Donald M 2002 The Immortal Emperor The Life and Legend of Constantine Palaiologos Last Emperor of the Romans Cambridge University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 521 89409 8 Archived from the original on 2 July 2019 Retrieved 9 January 2018 Crowley Roger 12 February 2013 1453 The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West Hachette Books ISBN 978 1 4013 0558 1 As always casualty figures varied widely Neskor Iskander gave the number of Ottoman dead at 18 000 Barbaro a more realistic 200 Geographical Record Geographical Review 11 4 611 629 1921 ISSN 0016 7428 JSTOR 208254 via JSTOR Less excusable still is the treatment accorded to the statements of Kritopoulos that 4 500 were killed at the fall of Constantinople a b Nicolle 2000 p 41 Labatt Annie October 2004 Constantinople after 1261 a b c Mansel Philip Constantinople City of the World s Desire 1453 1924 Washington Post Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 7 August 2020 a b M J Akbar 3 May 2002 The Shade of Swords Jihad and the Conflict Between Islam and Christianity Routledge p 86 ISBN 978 1 134 45259 0 Archived from the original on 12 October 2020 Retrieved 6 August 2020 Some 30 000 Christians were either enslaved or sold a b Davis Paul K 2003 Besieged 100 Great Sieges from Jericho to Sarajevo Oxford University Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 19 521930 2 a b San shmera epese h Kwstantinoypolh NewsIT 29 May 2011 Durant Will 1300 The story of civilisation Volume VI The Reformation p 227 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 457 975 Frantzes Georgios Melisseidis Melisseides Ioannis Ioannes A Zavolea Melissidi Pulcheria 2004 Ealw h PolisT o xroniko ths alwshs ths Kwnstantinoypolhs Synoptikh istoria twn gegonotwn sthn Kwnstantinoypolh kata thn periodo 1440 1453 The City has Fallen Chronicle of the Fall of Constantinople Concise History of Events in Constantinople in the Period 1440 1453 in Greek 5 ed Athens Vergina Asimakopouli Bros ISBN 9607171918 Foster Charles 22 September 2006 The Conquest of Constantinople and the end of empire Contemporary Review Archived from the original on 11 June 2009 It is the end of the Middle Ages The fall of Constantinople The Economist 23 December 1999 Archived from the original on 18 June 2017 Retrieved 7 June 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Norwich John Julius 1997 A Short History of Byzantium New York Vintage Books In 1453 this Ottoman sultan ended Christian rule in Constantinople But was he a good Muslim Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2 August 2022 Is the hadith of Constantinople istanbul authentic Shaikh Assim Al Hakeem retrieved 2 August 2022 Madden Thomas 2005 Crusades The Illustrated History Ann Arbor University of Michigan ISBN 9780472114634 Haldon John 2000 Byzantium at War 600 1453 New York Osprey a b Mango Cyril 2002 The Oxford History of Byzantium New York Oxford University Press The Black Death Archived from the original on 25 June 2008 Retrieved 13 August 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Channel 4 History Runciman Fall p 60 a b Crowley 2005 Bosphorus i e Bosporus View from Kuleli Constantinople Turkey World Digital Library 1890 1900 Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 Retrieved 20 October 2013 Setton Kenneth M 1978 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 The Fifteenth Century Vol 2 DJane Publishing ISBN 0 87169 127 2 a b Kritovoulos Michael 1954 History of Mehmed the Conqueror Translated by Riggs C T Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691197906 Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Retrieved 29 May 2020 a b Crowley 2005 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Runciman Steven 1965 The Fall of Constantinople 1453 Canto ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521398329 a b c d Nicol Donald M 1993 The Last Centuries of Byzantium 1261 1453 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521439916 Frank W Thackeray John E Findling 31 May 2012 Events That Formed the Modern World ABC CLIO p 213 ISBN 978 1 59884 901 1 Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2020 John Julius Norwich 29 October 1998 A Short History of Byzantium Penguin Books Limited p 453 ISBN 978 0 14 192859 3 Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2020 Constantine made one last effort his ambassadors were executed on the spot Kathie Somerwil Ayrton 2007 The Train that Disappeared into History The Berlin to Bagdad Railway and how it Led to the Great War Uitgeverij Aspekt p 117 ISBN 978 90 5911 573 6 Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2020 The Byzantine emperor then Constantine XI sent his ambassadors in an attempt to conciliate they were executed on John Roberts 1973 Civilization The emergence of man in society CRM Books p 391 ISBN 9780876651568 It became obvious that Mehmed s messages of peace were false when he had the Byzantine ambassador executed Lars Brownworth 15 September 2009 Lost to the West The Forgotten Byzantine Empire That Rescued Western Civilization Crown p 291 ISBN 978 0 307 46241 1 When Constantine sent emissaries to remind Mehmed that he was breaking his oath and to implore him to at least spare the neighboring villages Mehmed had the ambassadors executed Norwich John Julius 1995 Byzantium The Decline and Fall v 3 First ed Penguin Books Ltd p 415 ISBN 9780670823772 Michael Spilling ed Battles That Changed History Key Battles That Decided the Fate of Nations London Amber Books Ltd 2010 p 187 a b c d e f g h Nicolle David 2000 Constantinople 1453 The End of Byzantium Campaign Vol 78 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 091 9 Lanning Michael Lee 2005 The Battle 100 The Stories Behind History s Most Influential Battles Sourcebooks Inc ISBN 1 4022 2475 3 Inalcikt Halil 2001 Osmanli Imparatorlugu Klasik Cag 1300 1600 The Ottoman Empire The Classical Age 1300 1600 Translated by Itzkouritz Norman Imber Colin London Orion a b c d Nicolo Barbaro Giornale dell Assedio di Costantinopoli 1453 The autograph copy is conserved in the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice Barbaro s diary has been translated into English by John Melville Jones New York Exposition Press 1969 a b in French Concasty M L Les Informations de Jacques Tedaldi sur le siege et la prise de Constantinople a b Sphrantzes George Oiktros Gewrgios o Frantzhs o kai Prwtobesiariths Grhgorios taxa monaxos tayta egrapsen yper twn ka8 aytwn kai tinwn merikwn gegonotwn en tw ths a8lias zwhs ayte xronw The Pitiful George Frantzes Who was Protovestiaros Now a Monk Wrote This for the Betterment of Others and as Recompense for Some Deeds in His Miserable Life This Chronicle in Greek a b c Rutheniae Isidorus 6 July 1453 Epistola reverendissimi patris domini Isidori cardinalis Ruteni scripta ad reverendissimum dominum Bisarionem episcopum Tusculanum ac cardinalem Nicenum Bononiaeque legatum Letter of the Most Reverend Lord Father Isidore of Ruthenia Cardinal Written to the Most Reverend Lord Bessarion Bishop of Tusculum and Cardinal of Nicaea and Bologna in Latin Letter to Bisarion a b c d in Latin Leonardo di Chio Letter to Pope Nicholas V dated 16 August 1453 edited by J P Migne Patrologia Graeca 159 923A 944B Leonardo di Chio Letter 927B three hundred thousand and more Ubertino Pusculo Constantinopolis 1464 Leonardo di Chio Letter 930C a b c Steele Brett D 2005 The Heirs of Archimedes Science and the Art of War Through the Age of Enlightenment MIT Press p 106 ISBN 9780262195164 Archived from the original on 22 December 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 a b c Hammer Paul E J 2017 Warfare in Early Modern Europe 1450 1660 Routledge p 511 ISBN 9781351873765 Archived from the original on 29 December 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Davis Paul 1999 100 Decisive Battles Oxford p 166 ISBN 978 0 19 514366 9 Arnold 2001 p 111 The fall of Constantinople The Economist 23 December 1999 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 11 December 2010 Crowley 2005 pp 150 154 Marios Philippides and Walter K Hanak The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 Ashgate Publishing 2011 520 From Jean Chartier Chronicle of Charles VII king of France MS Bnf Francais 2691 f 246v 1 Archived 17 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Marios Philippides Mehmed II the Conqueror and the Fall of the Franco Byzantine Levant to the Ottoman Turks Some Western Views and Testimonies ACMRS Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies 2007 83 Crowley 2005 pp 168 171 29 Maioy 1453 Otan h Polis ealw 29 May 1453 When the City Fell iefemerida com in Greek 29 May 2012 Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2017 Vasiliev Alexander 1928 A History of the Byzantine Empire Vol II Vol II Translated by Ragozin S Madison University of Wisconsin Press https www google com books edition 1453 9QiZAAAAQBAJ hl en Desimoni C 1874 Adamo di Montaldo Atti della Societa Ligure di Storia Patria Proceedings of the Ligurian Society for Homeland History in Italian Vol X Genoa a b Fall of Constantinople Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 19 August 2020 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Nicolle 2000 pp 81 84 Crowley 2013 p 191 Melville Jones John R 1972 The Siege of Constantinople 1453 Seven Contemporary Accounts Amsterdam Adolf M Hakkert p 39 ISBN 90 256 0626 1 Beg Tursun 1978 The History of Mehmed the Conqueror Translated by Inalcik Halil Murphey Rhoads Chicago Biblioteca Islamica Melissenos Melissourgos Makarios 1980 The Chronicle of the Siege of Constantinople April 2 to May 29 1453 In Philippides Marios ed The Fall of the Byzantine Empire A Chronicle by George Sphrantzes 1401 1477 Amherst University of Massachusetts Press Smith Cyril J 1974 History of Rape and Rape Laws Women Law Journal No 60 p 188 Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 12 October 2020 Roger Crowley 6 August 2009 Constantinople The Last Great Siege 1453 Faber amp Faber p 226 ISBN 978 0 571 25079 0 The vast majority of the ordinary citizens about 30 000 were marched off to the slave markets of Edirne Bursa and Ankara Jim Bradbury 1992 The Medieval Siege Boydell amp Brewer p 322 ISBN 978 0 85115 312 4 https www google com books edition Islam from the Prophet Muhammad to the C qFBtAAAAMAAJ hl en Fisher Alan 2010 The Sale of Slaves in the Ottoman Empire Markets and State Taxes on Slave Sales Some Preliminary Considerations A Precarious Balance Piscataway NJ USA Gorgias Press p 151 Calian Florin George 25 March 2021 The Hagia Sophia and Turkey s Neo Ottomanism The Armenian Weekly a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Runciman Steven 1965 The Fall of Constantinople 1453 Cambridge University Press p 147 ISBN 978 0 521 39832 9 Archived from the original on 3 September 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 https www google com books edition The Fall of the Byzantine Empire QgAdAAAAYAAJ hl en https www google com books edition The Siege of Constantinople 1453 Seven C SoUJAQAAIAAJ hl en https search library uq edu au primo explore fulldisplay vid 61UQ amp docid 61UQ ALMA21108137210003131 amp lang en US amp context L Diary of the Siege of Constantinople 1453 Exposition Press 1969 ISBN 9780682469722 https books google com books about Decline and Fall of Byzantium to the Ott html id rPkcAAAAYAAJ amp redir esc y https www google com books edition The History of the Decline and Fall of t Myg AAAAcAAJ hl en Smith Michael Llewellyn The Fall of Constantinople History Makers magazine No 5 Marshall Cavendish Sidgwick amp Jackson London Reinert Stephen 2002 The Oxford History of Byzantium New York Oxford UP George Sphrantzes The Fall of the Byzantine Empire A Chronicle by George Sphrantzes 1401 1477 Translated by Marios Philippides University of Massachusetts Press 1980 ISBN 978 0 87023 290 9 Kritovoulos or Kritoboulos History of Mehmed the Conqueror Translated by Charles T Riggs Greenwood Press Reprint 1970 ISBN 978 0 8371 3119 1 Braude Benjamin 1982 Foundation Myths of the Millet System In Braude Benjamin Lewis Bernard eds Christians and Jews in the Ottoman Empire Vol 1 New York Holmes amp Meier pp 69 90 ISBN 0841905193 Masters Bruce 2009 Millet In Agoston Gabor Bruce Masters eds Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire pp 383 384 ISBN 9780816062591 a b Hyslop Stephen Garrison Daniels Patricia Society U S National Geographic 2011 Great Empires An Illustrated Atlas National Geographic Books p 284 ISBN 978 1 4262 0829 4 Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 Volf Miroslav 2010 Body counts the dark side of Christian history The Christian Century 127 Journal Article 11 ISSN 0009 5281 Archived from the original on 27 July 2020 Retrieved 27 July 2020 https www google com books edition Europe and Islam o3JUDwAAQBAJ hl en a b Norwich John Julius 1995 Byzantium The Decline and Fall New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 679 41650 1 Lowry Heath W 2003 The Nature of the Early Ottoman State Albany NY SUNY Press pp 115 116 N G Wilson From Byzantium to Italy Greek Studies in the Italian Renaissance London 1992 ISBN 0 7156 2418 0 John Argyropoulos britannica com Archived from the original on 26 April 2008 Retrieved 2 October 2009 a b Byzantines in Renaissance Italy Archived from the original on 30 September 2003 Retrieved 10 April 2007 https books google com books about The Siege of Constantinople 1453 Seven C html id SoUJAQAAIAAJ amp redir esc y https books google com books about The Siege of Constantinople 1453 Seven C html id SoUJAQAAIAAJ amp redir esc y https www google com books edition Byzantium Viewed by the Arabs QC03pKNpfaoC hl en Saving the Third Rome Fall of the Empire Byzantium and Putin s Russia IWM 9 November 2009 Archived from the original on 27 July 2014 Retrieved 13 February 2016 Florescu McNally Dracula p 129 Guillermier Pierre Koutchmy Serge 1999 Total Eclipses Science Observations Myths and Legends Springer p 85 ISBN 1 85233 160 7 Retrieved 27 February 2008 1543 Press release Pasadena California Public Information Office Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology National Aeronautics amp Space Administration NASA 1993 Archived from the original on 14 December 2016 Retrieved 5 June 2017 The Marble King Archived from the original on 13 December 2012 Hatzopoulos Dionysios Fall of Constantinople 1453 Hellenic Electronic Center Archived from the original on 4 March 2009 Retrieved 25 July 2014 The fall of Constantinople The Economist 23 December 1999 Archived from the original on 6 March 2019 Retrieved 27 January 2019 Greeks in Italy how to learn any language com Archived from the original on 7 June 2013 Sakaoglu Necdet 1993 94 Istanbul un adlari The names of Istanbul Dunden bugune Istanbul ansiklopedisi in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Kultur Bakanligi Robinson Richard D 1965 The First Turkish Republic A Case Study in National Development Cambridge Cambridge University Press Room Adrian 1993 Place Name changes 1900 1991 Metuchen N J amp London The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 0 8108 2600 3 pp 46 86 Timeline Turkey BBC News 10 December 2009 Archived from the original on 4 June 2010 Retrieved 18 January 2010 Marios Philippides and Walter K Hanak The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 Historiography Topography and Military Studies Ashgate 2011 pp 10 46 eyewitnesses 46 Greeks and 88 91 Turks a b c Michael Angold The Fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans Context and Consequences Routledge 2012 pp 150 152 163 Bibliography Edit Crowley Roger 2005 1453 The Holy War for Constantinople and the Clash of Islam and the West Hyperion ISBN 978 1 4013 0558 1 Crowley Roger 2013 Constantinople Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 29820 4 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Further reading EditBabinger Franz 1992 Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01078 1 Fletcher Richard A The Cross and the Crescent 2005 Penguin Group ISBN 0 14 303481 2 Harris Jonathan 2007 Constantinople Capital of Byzantium Hambledon Continuum ISBN 978 1 84725 179 4 Harris Jonathan 2010 The End of Byzantium Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11786 8 Melville Jones John R 1972 The Siege of Constantinople 1453 Seven Contemporary Accounts Amsterdam Adolf M Hakkert ISBN 90 256 0626 1 Momigliano Arnaldo Schiavone Aldo 1997 Storia di Roma 1 in Italian Turin Einaudi ISBN 88 06 11396 8 Murr Nehme Lina 2003 1453 The Conquest of Constantinople Aleph Et Taw ISBN 2 86839 816 2 Pertusi Agostino ed 1976 La Caduta di Costantinopoli II L eco nel mondo The Fall of Constantinople II The Echo in the World in Italian Vol II Verona Fondazione Lorenzo Valla Philippides Marios and Walter K Hanak The Siege and the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 Ashgate Farnham and Burlington 2011 Smith Michael Llewellyn The Fall of Constantinople in History Makers magazine No 5 London Marshall Cavendish Sidgwick amp Jackson 1969 p 192 Wheatcroft Andrew 2003 The Infidels The Conflict Between Christendom and Islam 638 2002 Viking Publishing ISBN 0 670 86942 2 Wintle Justin 2003 The Rough Guide History of Islam Rough Guides ISBN 1 84353 018 X External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fall of Constantinople 1453 The Siege of Constantinople As The Islamic World Sees it World History Encyclopedia 1453 The Fall of Constantinople Constantinople Siege amp Fall BBC Radio 4 discussion with Roger Crowley Judith Herrin amp Colin Imber In Our Time 28 Dec 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fall of Constantinople amp oldid 1133501804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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