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The History of Constantinople
The History Buff
15 episodes
1 week 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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History
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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 4: The Aegean Bronze Age (3000 BC to 1100 BC) - Pt. 1
The History of Constantinople
39 minutes 24 seconds
3 months ago
Episode 4: The Aegean Bronze Age (3000 BC to 1100 BC) - Pt. 1

Episode 4 - Aegean Bronze Age Part 1


Listeners journey through the flourishing world of early Aegean civilizations—with the enigmatic Cycladic culture of the islands, the palatial sophistication of Minoan Crete with its labyrinthine architecture and far-reaching trade, and culminating in the militarized dominance of Mycenaean Greece. Through captivating archaeological discoveries and vivid storytelling, the episode explores how these societies shaped the cultural tapestry of the region, influencing early settlement patterns along the Thracian coast and in western Anatolia, including Troy and the Hittite frontier. Migration waves and colonization efforts across the Aegean fostered technological exchange and mythological traditions that would echo for millennia. As the story builds toward the dramatic collapse of the Mycenaean palace system around 1200 BC—possibly triggered by systemic instability, foreign incursions, or environmental upheaval—the foundations are laid for the coming Greek Dark Age and, in time, the birth of Byzantion itself.


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

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.