The conquest of Constantinople, which Europe has never forgotten

History books
History books
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May 29, 1453: It is half past midnight. From the walls and domes of one of the oldest and greatest cities in the world, the yellow moon of the 19th lunar history is rushing towards the west as if it is facing some serious danger. 

In the dim light of the setting moon, viewers can see the armies gathering outside the city walls in an orderly manner. 

There is a sense in their hearts that they are at a turning point in history.

The city is Constantinople (current name: Istanbul) and the Ottoman army is preparing to make a final attack outside the walls. 

47 days have passed since the Ottoman artillery shelled the city. The commanders inflicted heavy damage on the wall, focusing on three areas in particular. 

The 21-year-old Ottoman Sultan Muhammad Sani has unexpectedly reached the front lines of his army. 

They have decided that the final invasion will be from the middle part of the wall called 'Meso Tequin', which has at least nine cracks and a large part of the trench has been dug.

Wearing a heavy turban and a golden cloak, the Sultan addressed his soldiers in Turkish: 'My friends and children, go ahead, it is time to prove yourself!'

At the same time the noise of bells, horns, drums and seagulls silenced the silence of the night, but even in this ear-splitting noise could be clearly heard the slogans of the Ottoman troops who attacked the weak parts of the wall. spoken. 

Cannons mounted on ships, both on land and at sea, began to fire. 

Byzantine soldiers were standing on the walls ready for the attack. But the siege of the last month and a half had demoralized him and broken his nerves. 

Many civilians rushed to the ramparts for help, picking up stones and hurling stones at the assailants. Others run to their nearest church and start chanting.

The clergy began ringing the bells of various churches in the city with all their might, whose tinkling woke up those who were still asleep. 

Christians from all denominations came together, forgetting their centuries-old differences, and a large number of them gathered at the city's largest and holiest church, the Hagia Sophia. 

The defense forces desperately tried to stop the Ottoman invasion. But the Italian physician Niccolo Barbero, who was in town that day, wrote that the attackers, dressed in white turbans, were attacking the Janissaries like "liverless lions" and that their slogans and drums sounded as if they had no connection with this world. Yes. ' 

By the time the lights went out, the Turkish soldiers had reached the top of the wall. 

Most of the defense forces had been killed and their commander, Giovanni Justiniani, had been seriously wounded and left the field.

When the first rays of the sun appeared from the east, he saw a Turkish soldier unfurling a Byzantine flag over the Karkoporta Gate and waving an Ottoman flag in its place. 

Sultan Muhammad arrived in Hajia Sofia on a white horse with his ministers and elders. As the president approached the door, he dismounted and took a handful of dust from the street and put it on his turban. Tears welled up in the eyes of his colleagues.

After seven hundred years of struggle, the Muslims finally succeeded in conquering Constantinople.

The conquest of Constantinople was not merely the overthrow of one king over another and the beginning of another. With this event, one chapter of world history ended and another began.

On the one hand, the Roman Empire, founded in 27 BC, came to an end after remaining in one form or another for 1480 years. He ruled over parts of Europe and Africa with great pride. 

1453 is the year that is considered the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the modern age. 

Not only that, but the conquest of Constantinople is considered a milestone in military history because it has since proved that walls are now insufficient to protect a city after the use of explosives and the shelling of large cannons.

After the Turkish occupation of the city, thousands of Greek-speaking citizens fled from here and settled in various cities in Europe and especially in Italy.

At that time Europe was going through a 'dark age' and was cut off from the ancient Greek civilization. But throughout this period the Greek language and culture remained largely intact in Constantinople. 

The immigrants who arrived here had a treasure trove of diamonds and jewels. Original Greek versions of Aristotle, Plato, Ptolemy, Galen, and other scholars. 

All of these played a significant role in the revival of the ancient Greek sciences in Europe, and according to historians, they led to the Renaissance in Europe, which helped Europe to overtake the rest of the world in the centuries to come. Is.


However, the city that the young Sultan Muhammad, now known to the world as Sultan Muhammad the Conqueror, saw on the morning of May 29, was not the city he had heard of since childhood. 

After a long decline, the Byzantine Empire was dying, and Constantinople, which for centuries had been the largest and wealthiest city in the world, had now shrunk to a few thousand and many parts of the city were deserted. They were cut off from each other and turned into separate villages. 

It is said that the young Sultan, seeing the plight of the city, recited this poem attributed to Sheikh Saadi: 

Boom Turn Mezand on Tarim Afrasiab ... They cover the castle of the spider

(Owl turns on the minarets of Afrasiab ... spiders have become webs on Caesar's palace) 

The ancient name of Constantinople was Byzantium. But when the Roman Emperor Constantine I moved his capital from Rome to here in 330 AD, the city was renamed Constantinople after his name (which became 'Constantinople' when it reached the Arabs).

After the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, the empire remained in Constantinople, and from the 4th to the 13th century, the city developed to the point where no other city in the world could claim its equality.

That is why Muslims have been dreaming of conquering this city from the very beginning.

So, after some unsuccessful initial attempts to achieve this goal, in 674 he prepared a large navy and sailed for Constantinople. 

The fleet encamped outside the city and continued to cross the walls for the next four years. 

Finally, in 678, Byzantine ships sailed out of the city and attacked the invading Arabs. This time they had a powerful weapon, called the Greek Fire.

Its exact formula is still unknown, but it was a flammable substance that was thrown by arrows and stuck to boats and ships. In addition, pouring water would make the fire worse. 

The Arabs were not prepared for this catastrophe. So as soon as he saw it, the whole navy began to look like a volcano. 

The soldiers jumped into the water and tried to save their lives, but they did not find refuge here because the fire of Greece kept burning even after falling on the surface of the water and it seemed as if the whole Sea of ​​Marmara had caught fire. 

The Arabs had no choice but to retreat. On the way back, a terrible hurricane made up for the shortfall, and only half of the hundreds of boats survived.


During the same siege, the famous Sahabi Abu Ayub Ansari also surrendered his life. His tomb is still outside the city walls. 

Sultan Muhammad the Conqueror built a mosque here which the Turks consider sacred. 

Then, in 717, Sulayman ibn Abdul Malik, the Emir of the Umayyads, besieged Constantinople again with much better preparation, but it did not end well, and only five of the nearly two thousand boats survived. Be successful

Perhaps this was the reason why the Muslims did not return to Constantinople for six centuries after that, until Sultan Muhammad the Conqueror finally hoisted his flag over the city and exchanged all the old ones. 

After capturing the city, the sultan moved his capital from Adrana to Constantinople and chose for himself the title of Caesar of Rome.

In the decades to come, the city saw the rise that once again brought back memories of the greatness of the past. 


The sultan sent a decree to his kingdom: 'Whoever wants to come, he will find a house and a garden in the city.' Not only that, he also invited people from Europe to come to Constantinople so that the city could be repopulated. 

He also rebuilt the city's dilapidated infrastructure, repaired old canals and installed drainage systems. 

It also started a series of large-scale new constructions, the biggest examples being the Cannon Copy Palace and the Grand mall/markets.

Soon all kinds of artisans, craftsmen, merchants, calligraphers, painters, goldsmiths, and other craftsmen began to flock to the city.

Sultan Fatih converted the Hagia Sophia from a church to a mosque, but he left the city's second largest church, the Apostolic Church, to the Greek Orthodox sect, and this sect still exists today as an institution. 

During the reign of Saleem, the son of Sultan the Conqueror, the Ottoman Empire became a caliphate, with Constantinople as its capital, and the center of all Sunni Muslims.

Constantinople reached new heights during the reign of Sultan Fatih's grandson Suleiman the Magnificent. 

This is the same Suleiman who is portrayed in the famous Turkish drama 'My Sultan'. Queen Khurram Sultan of Suleiman the Magnificent hired the famous architect Sinan who built a magnificent palace for the queen.

Other famous buildings of Sinan include Sulaymaniyah Mosque, Khurram Sultan Hammam, Khosrow Pasha Mosque, Shahzada Mosque and other buildings. 

The fall of Constantinople had a profound effect on Europe, where books and poems were written and numerous paintings were made, and this event became part of their collective consciousness.

That is why Europe has never forgotten it. Despite being an important part of NATO, the European Union has been reluctant to accept Turkey for centuries.

In Greece, Thursday is still considered a bad day. May 29, 1453 was a Thursday.


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