The city of Constantinople (modern Istanbul) was founded by Roman emperor Constantine I in 324 CE and it acted as the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, or Byzantine Empire as it has later become known, for well over 1,000 years. Although the city suffered many attacks, prolonged sieges, internal rebellions, and even a period of occupation in the 13th century CE by the Fourth Crusaders, its legendary defences were the most formidable in both the ancient and medieval worlds. It could not, though, resist the mighty cannons of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II, and Constantinople, jewel and bastion of Christendom, was conquered, smashed, and looted on Tuesday, 29 May 1453 CE.

An Impregnable Fortress

Constantinople had withstood many sieges and attacks over the centuries, notably by the Arabs between 674 and 678 CE and again between 717 and 718 CE. The great Bulgar Khans Krum (r. 802-814 CE) and Symeon (r. 893-927 CE) both attempted to attack the Byzantine capital, as did the Rus (descendants of Vikings based around Kiev) in 860 CE, 941 CE, and 1043 CE, but all failed. Another major siege was instigated by the usurper Thomas the Slav between 821 and 823 CE. All of these attacks were unsuccessful thanks to the city's location by the sea, its naval fleet, and the secret weapon of Greek Fire (a highly inflammable liquid), and, most importantly of all, the protection of the massive Theodosian Walls.

The city's celebrated walls were a triple row of fortifications built during the reign of Theodosius II (408-450 CE) which protected the land side of the peninsula occupied by the city. After 800 years of resisting all comers, the city's defences were finally breached by the knights of the Fourth Crusade in 1204 CE, although the attackers got in through a carelessly left-open door and not because the fortifications themselves had failed in their purpose.

The Ottoman Empire

The Ottoman Empire had begun as a small Turkish emirate founded by Osman in Eskishehir (western Asia Minor) in the late 13th century CE, but by the early 14th century CE, it had already expanded into Thrace. With their capital at Adrianople, further captures included Thessaloniki and Serbia. In 1396 CE, at Nikopolis on the Danube, an Ottoman army defeated a Crusader army.

Another Crusader army was defeated in 1444 CE at Varna near the Black Sea coast. Then the new Sultan, Mehmed II (r. 1451-1481 CE), after extensive preparations such as building, extending, and occupying fortresses along the Bosporus, notably at Rumeli Hisar and Anadolu in 1452 CE, moved to finally sweep away the Byzantines and their capital.

The Defenders

The crushing of the Crusader army at Varna in 1444 CE meant that the Byzantines were now on their own. No significant help could be expected from the West where the Popes were already unimpressed with the Byzantine's unwillingness to form a union of the Church and accept their supremacy. The Byzantines were hopelessly outnumbered in men, ships, and weapons.

There were also ominous tales of impending doom: prophesies that proclaimed the fall of Constantinople when the emperor was called Constantine and there was an eclipse of the moon - which there was in the days before the siege of 1453 CE.

The Attackers

Mehmed II had one thing that previous besiegers of Constantinople had lacked: cannons. These fearsome weapons were put to good use in November 1452 CE when a Venetian ship, disobeying a ban on traffic, was blown out of the water as it sailed down the Bosphorus.

The Ottoman army numbered 200,000 men, but modern historians prefer a more realistic figure of 60-80,000. When the army assembled at the city walls of Constantinople on 2 April 1453 CE, the Byzantines got their first glimpse of Mehmed's cannons. The largest was 9 metres long with a gaping mouth one metre across. Already tested, it could fire a ball weighing 500 kilos over 1.5 km. So mammoth was this cannon that it took an awfully long time to load and cool it so that it could only be fired seven times a day. Still, the Ottomans had plenty of smaller cannon, each capable of firing over 100 times a day.

On 5 April, Mehmed sent a demand for immediate surrender to the Byzantine emperor but received no reply. On 6 April the attack began. The Theodosian Walls were relentlessly blasted, chunk by chunk, into rubble. The resulting rubble piles actually absorbed the cannon shot better than fixed walls but, eventually, one of the infantry assaults would surely get through.

A Fight For Survival

The onslaught went on for six weeks but there was some effective resistance. The Ottoman attack on the boom which blocked the city's harbour was repelled, as were several direct assaults on the Land Walls. On 20 April, miraculously, three Genoese ships sent by the Pope and a ship carrying vital grain sent by Alphonso of Aragon managed to break through the Ottoman naval blockade and reach the defenders. Mehmed, infuriated, then got around the harbour boom by building a railed road via which 70 of his ships, loaded onto carts pulled by oxen, could be launched into the waters of the Golden Horn. The defenders now struggled to station men where they were needed, especially along the structurally weaker sea walls.

Back in Asia Minor, Mehmed faced several revolts as his subjects became unruly while their Sultan and his army were abroad. For this reason, Mehmed offered Constantine a deal: pay tribute and he would withdraw. The emperor refused, and Mehmed gave the news to his men that now, when the city fell, as surely it would, they could plunder whatever they wished from one of the richest cities in the world.

Mehmed launched a massive go-for-broke, throw-everything-at-them assault at dawn on 29 May. First to be sent in after the usual cannon barrage were the second-rate troops, then a second wave was launched with better-armed troops, and, finally, a third wave attacked the walls, this time composed of the Janissaries - the well-trained and highly determined elite of Mehmed's army.

Some fool had left the small Kerkoporta gate in the Land Walls open and the Janissaries did not hesitate in using it. They climbed to the top of the wall and raised the Ottoman flag, then they worked their way around to the main gate and allowed their comrades to flood into the city.

Destruction

Chaos now ensued with some of the defenders maintaining their discipline and meeting the enemy while others rushed back to their homes to defend their own families. The emperor could have fled the city days before but he chose to stay with his people.

Many of the city's inhabitants committed suicide rather than be subject to the horrors of capture and slavery. Perhaps 4,000 were killed outright, and over 50,000 were shipped off as slaves. Many sought refuge in churches and barricaded themselves in, including inside the Hagia Sophia, but these were obvious targets for their treasures, and after they were looted for their gems and precious metals, the buildings and their priceless icons were smashed, the cowering captives butchered.

In the afternoon, Mehmed entered the city himself, called an end to the pillaging and declared that the Hagia Sophia church be immediately converted into a mosque. It was a powerful statement that the city's role as a bastion of Christianity for twelve centuries was now over. Mehmed then rounded up the most important survivors from the city's nobility and executed them.

Aftermath

Constantinople was made the new Ottoman capital, the massive Golden Gate of the Theodosian Walls was made part of the castle treasury of Mehmed, while the Christian community was permitted to survive, guided by the bishop Gennadeios II. What was left of the old Byzantine empire was absorbed into Ottoman territory following the conquest of Mistra in 1460 CE and Trebizond in 1461 CE. Meanwhile, Mehmed, aged only 21 and now known as "the Conqueror", settled in for a long reign and another 28 years as Sultan.

Byzantine culture would survive, especially in the arts and architecture, but the fall of Constantinople was, nevertheless, a momentous episode of world history, the end of the old Roman Empire and the last surviving link between the medieval and ancient worlds.

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    • Dolores [love/loves]
      ·
      1 year ago

      they literally had a hell of a time with those walls anyway because the ancient designers accidentally made features that are good against cannons---i.e. thick earthen berms. between the three levels--a bit thin individually compared to trace italienne--you had a monstrous amount of earth & brick to peck through. and the bastards patched it up every night with dirt & debris

      the other time the city was taken by storm, the crusaders actually used the much thinner & weaker sea walls on the harbour. bit silly Mehmed didn't do that too but the man won anyway so i ain't gonna hate on his style

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        "Victory needs no explanation, defeat allows none. " - Imperium Thought for the Day

    • CliffordBigRedDog [he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      Virgin westoid stone walls crumbling at the mere sight of a cannon

      Vs Chad Chinese Rammed Earth walls impenetrable to cannon until the invention of dynamite

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      I learned how to cast cannons in iron and bronze specifically so if I ever get isekai'd to a fantasy land I'll just learn the local word for "Siege engineer" and secure myself a cushy job for the rest of my natural life.

      • TheSpectreOfGay [he/him, she/her]
        ·
        1 year ago

        when they asked me for my personality type, they didn't like my multi paragraph deconstruction on why personality archetypes are really dumb apparently

        • Sen_Jen [they/them]
          ·
          1 year ago

          That's probably better than my unhinged screed about why do t have any passion for stacking shelves in Aldi, and nobody else who applied is either

      • TheSpectreOfGay [he/him, she/her]
        ·
        1 year ago

        istg the job market is also impossible right now

        i had to pause job hunting for six months cos of health issue, and the amount of postings is down to like a quarter of what it was before

  • thelastaxolotl [he/him]
    hexagon
    M
    ·
    1 year ago

    New Megathread Nerds!!! :biggus-dickus:

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  • Hooray4dolphins [she/her,they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago
    personal music rant

    I always feel like I know people who do cool things and I know people who know people who do cool things, but I'm not one of those people. I for sure got chops in what I do, but what I do is just sit on a laptop alone making half-decent music for maybe like 5 people to ever hear. I think to myself that recognition doesn't matter and that I just care about the quality of my work, but I can't gauge the quality beyond "it still lags behind what I consider good."

    For a time I had a small following on SoundCloud, getting like ~10k plays on each new release, even the turds. One song currently has over 200k plays. The height of this was around 7 years ago, and I hated it at the time. Stressful, did not like the attention, did not like Twitter, did not like the community I was in, did not like the music I was making. I hopped out and I don't regret it. But, part of me now appreciates more the attention I was getting - that my work back then was actually pretty good and worth the recognition. Now, I get very little attention and I have no idea if what I make is worthy of any. I don't even know what I like making.

    I wish I could figure out what I want my music to be, and do that consistently, maybe get a lil recognition from it. Maybe then I'd feel like one of the cool people my friends know, instead of this sort-of musician who's adjacent to "real" artists, but never one of them.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      You are real artists, but you'll never believe it, because you are real artists

      Source: Pretty much only dates tortured artists who are driven by the demons of their own need for perfection

  • Yeat [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    had a get together with some friends for my birthday today and someone got me a bag full of beef jerkey and other meats as a joke because i’m vegan :/

  • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Partner and I have one day off together this week and we get to spend it wading through the soupy nightmare of troubleshooting our internet connection.

    Wouldn't be quite so bad if the unceasing churn that is the exploitation of my labor wasn't endlessly looming on the horizon like a blood red sun, always rising, never allowing me the cool respite of the night.

      • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        1 year ago

        I guess! I didn't think it would be worth asking here.

        Basically, some time last night our dog unplugged our Netgear nighthawk router's power from the wall. Now, none of our device can access the internet through the router's wifi. However, I have a desktop out in my room that CAN still connect to the internet, through an extender working off of that same router, somehow. Sometimes the devices connect to the Internet through the router for like 5 minutes before crapping out again. ISP says everything is as it should be on their end.

        Since I don't know shit about networking really, I kinda gather it has something to do with whatever the DNS server is, or the router's IP address? Or something? Anyway I've restarted the modem, router, and various devices like 5 times each to no avail, and I'm about ready to explode .

        • AHopeOnceMore [he/him]B
          ·
          1 year ago

          Ah, that is super annoying!

          One device working fine while the rest crap out could mean the working one uses a static local IP address (something like 192.168.1.x). That would mean it skips needing the router to assign it an address. That could be one thing to verify: whether that device is set up to get its IP from the router or if it's statically set to the same thing every time.

          The 5 minutes thing is weird, though. If you can fully access the internet for 5 minutes via WiFi, that means all of these things worked at least once:

          • Identify your wifi access point

          • connect to it with your password

          • get assigned a local IP by the routsr

          • route traffic externally to the internet

          • (probably) use the router's DNS forwarding to resolve hosts like www.google.com into IP addresses

          When they crap out after 5 minutes, what seems broken? Does the wifi connection itself drop (no longer associated with the wifi access point at all) or is it still connected but suddenly you can't go anywhere on the internet?

          • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Still connected, but can't access the internet, I think.

            I think that I may have set the desktop that can still access the internet to use a static IP with the WiFi extender when I was setting all this up, though I'm not entirely sure... but if that's the case, does that mean I need to manually set up the IP for every single device that's ever going to connect to the Internet through this router now, suddenly, when it was working fine until yesterday?

            I don't even know how to go about changing IP settings on a dang Nintendo switch...

            • AHopeOnceMore [he/him]B
              ·
              1 year ago

              Setting a manual IP might fix it! And I think the switch can do it.

              If that's the fix, then this is a router software or configuration bug. Unplugging it for 60 seconds and plugging it back in might work, otherwise you'll need to log into the router itself as an admin and futz around. Good news would be that going to the router's ip (probably 192.168.1.1) should get you to the login page. Bad news would be that it's a process that is somewhat specific to your particular router, but falls under the category of DHCP.

              • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]
                ·
                1 year ago

                Alright, cool. I had pretty much settled on the problem being something like this before I went to bed last night, so the fact that you think so too encourages me to sus it out.

                I'll try an extended unplugging, and then if that doesn't work than go for reconfiguring the IP. I'm just wondering, do you think I'll need to be connected directly to the router with ethernet to access the login page? Because the only desktop in the actual house is around a few corners and down some stairs, which would probably take like a 100ft cable at least... so I'd be hauling that thing upstairs just to test out this fix.

                • AHopeOnceMore [he/him]B
                  ·
                  1 year ago

                  Hopefully you don't need to connect w/ a wire!

                  A likely culprit here is DNS stuff, so you can hopefully reach the routwr ip via wifi. You could verify that it's dns by setting your DMS server manually rathee than telling it to use the router. Under your, e.g., laptop's network settings, this will often be set to 192.168 1.1 or "use router", but you can set it yo 1.1.1.1 (clouflare) or 8.8.8.8 (google) to test this idea out.

                  If this is the case, then you can also probabky fix the issue on the router by "fixing" its DNS settings by setting it yo one of these. IMO cloudflare is better but ymmv.

  • Comp4 [she/her]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Damn im early. News from my life. My eyes seem to be recovering nicely. Almost no pain.

  • Cascadia_ [they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Every time I think about the Fall of Constantinople I get sad about the personal tragedy of Constantine XI. He came to power when the empire was already on its last legs, it had been sacked and looted by its fellow Christians in the 4th Crusade, devastated by the Black Death, and then eaten up piecemeal by the Ottomans, Serbs, and Bulgarians. With an "empire" consisting of a few scattered fragments he tried and failed to reach out for allies many times over his short reign, and then died in a doomed battle to hold the city. Imagine lying there, bleeding out, while New Rome burns around you, knowing that nearly 1500 years of continuous empire has come to an end with you.

    AKAB I know, but still.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      That the Roman Empire ended with the emperor and like fifty of his dudes engaging in a completely hopless last stand against a massive, much more powerful and sophisticated army kind of convinces me that I'm not actually the main character.

      Come to think of it the last days of the Byzantines would make a really funny blackadder style comedy.

      • Cascadia_ [they/them]
        ·
        1 year ago

        There's also the poetic symmetry of Rome being founded by a Romulus and falling under a Romulus and Constantinople being founded by a Constantine and falling under a Constantine.

        • HarryLime [any]
          ·
          1 year ago

          Romulus Augustulus is the perfect ironic name for the last Emperor of the Western Empire. Although he actually reigned in Ravenna, not Rome

  • JuryNullification [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Got high, went on :reddit-logo:, found a comment defending :melon-musk: , went to reply

    :stupidpol:

    Only then did I realize what I had done

  • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
    ·
    1 year ago

    You know, I'm getting kinda tired of hearing the word "psyop" used all the damn time.

    Mostly because people shut the fuck up after using it and refuse to elaborate, cause the implication is apparently enough, but I wanna hear specifically what the fuck the government is doing in this psyop, "government doing bad things" is not specific enough.

    Its like hearing that someone "was MKUltra'd", that can mean a bunch of fucking things if you know the extent of MKUltra but no its just like a vague implication of someone being drug brainwashed into being cuhraaaaaaazy.

  • Dolores [love/loves]
    ·
    1 year ago

    i was encouraged by that comedy movies thread to revisit In Bruges

    yeah theres a bitta untoward language but holy shit

    :data-laughing: laughing like a jackal and i hope i dont wake my housemates

    • Dolores [love/loves]
      ·
      1 year ago

      also i am quite certain there was only one genuine american in the cast