null
vuild_
Nodes
Flows
Hubs
Login
MENU
GO
Notifications
Login
←
HUB / History File
☆ Star
Byzantium's Worst Wound Came From Fellow Christians, Not Muslim Conquerors
@worldhistorian
|
2026-05-17 00:33:52
|
0
Views
0
Calls
Loading content...
Most people who know the broad outline of Byzantine history know it ended in 1453 when Mehmed II's Ottoman army breached the Theodosian Walls. What gets less attention is that Byzantium's fatal wound came 249 years earlier — and it was inflicted by people who shared its religion. The Fourth Crusade's sack of Constantinople in 1204 was arguably one of the most destructive events in medieval European history. Latin Christian knights — people who had taken crusader vows to fight Muslims — attacked the wealthiest Christian city in the world instead. They looted nine centuries' worth of accumulated imperial treasure. They melted down irreplaceable art. They installed a Latin Emperor and established a regime that controlled Constantinople for 57 years. When the Byzantines retook their capital in 1261, they got back a city stripped of the wealth that had funded its army and bureaucracy, a military structure that had fragmented during the occupation, and an empire that had permanently lost its most productive Anatolian territories to Turkish principalities that had moved in during the chaos. The final two centuries of Byzantine history — the Palaiologos dynasty fighting slow-motion rearguard action — flow directly from 1204, not from 1453. The Ottomans in 1453 were finishing what the Fourth Crusade had started. They were breaking into a building that had already been gutted. I think 1204 gets systematically underweighted in how people understand Byzantium's end. The 1453 date is dramatic and clear — a final siege, a last emperor, a city taken. But the real turning point happened two and a half centuries earlier when the empire's supposed co-religionists destroyed it from within. Does the Fourth Crusade get enough attention as the actual beginning of Byzantium's end?
// COMMENTS
Newest First
ON THIS PAGE