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The History of Constantinople
The History Buff
15 episodes
6 days ago
A biography of the Queen of Cities in its many incarnations. Today, it is Istanbul, which is a Turkish rendering of the Greek phrase εἰς τὴν πόλιν (eis ten polin), meaning "in/to the city." That simply saying, "The City," was enough for the hearer to understand Constantinople, speaks volumes. Its history stretches back well before the Megarian Greeks arrived in the 7th Century BC . Later, in 330 AD, Constantine the Great proclaimed it the new Roman capital, or Nova Roma. It remained the Imperial capital of the Roman Empire for over a millennium until the Ottoman conquest of 1453 AD.
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A biography of the Queen of Cities in its many incarnations. Today, it is Istanbul, which is a Turkish rendering of the Greek phrase εἰς τὴν πόλιν (eis ten polin), meaning "in/to the city." That simply saying, "The City," was enough for the hearer to understand Constantinople, speaks volumes. Its history stretches back well before the Megarian Greeks arrived in the 7th Century BC . Later, in 330 AD, Constantine the Great proclaimed it the new Roman capital, or Nova Roma. It remained the Imperial capital of the Roman Empire for over a millennium until the Ottoman conquest of 1453 AD.
Show more...
History
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Episode 11: Founding & Early Years of Byzantion (667 BC) - Pt. 2
The History of Constantinople
58 minutes 19 seconds
1 month ago
Episode 11: Founding & Early Years of Byzantion (667 BC) - Pt. 2

Episode 11 - Founding of Byzantion (Later Constantinople) Part 2


In this episode, we turn from the act of Byzantion’s founding to the way that founding was remembered. Herodotus gives us the first glimpse, a passing mention that anchors the city in the wider story of Greek colonization. Later writers would add layers of detail—some sober, some fanciful—until the tale of Megarian settlers and Delphic oracles became part of a larger myth about destiny on the Bosphorus. Byzantine chroniclers, looking back from the vantage point of empire, recast the city’s origins as a providential beginning, while Renaissance scholars like Petrus Gyllius sifted through ruins and fragments to preserve what remained of the earliest traditions. By following this chain of memory, we’ll see how Byzantion’s birth was never just a single event, but a story retold and reshaped across the centuries.


Franz Gordon, Hanna Ekström, Anna Dager / Boxes of Memories / courtesy of www.epidemicsound.com.


Gavin Luke / Crucial Calculations / courtesy of www.epidemicsound.com.


CHAPTERS:


Introduction (0:00)


Herodotus (3:45)


Polybius (9:04)


Diodorus Siculus (17:17)


Strabo (20:48)


Pliny the Elder (24:03)


Tacitus (27:16)


Dionysius of Byzantium (30:34)


Paulus Orosius (33:58)


John Malalas (36:23)


Stephanus of Byzantium (38:25)


Hesychius of Miletus (41:11)


Petrus Gyllius (47:47)


Recap (52:43)


Conclusion (56:30)

The History of Constantinople
A biography of the Queen of Cities in its many incarnations. Today, it is Istanbul, which is a Turkish rendering of the Greek phrase εἰς τὴν πόλιν (eis ten polin), meaning "in/to the city." That simply saying, "The City," was enough for the hearer to understand Constantinople, speaks volumes. Its history stretches back well before the Megarian Greeks arrived in the 7th Century BC . Later, in 330 AD, Constantine the Great proclaimed it the new Roman capital, or Nova Roma. It remained the Imperial capital of the Roman Empire for over a millennium until the Ottoman conquest of 1453 AD.