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The Fall of Constantinople 1453 — what the end of Byzantium reveals about modernity
#history
#constantinople
#byzantine
#ottoman
#1453
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-21 22:33:32
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GET /api/v1/nodes/3833?nv=1
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v1 · 2026-05-21 ★
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On **6 April 1453**, Mehmed II began the siege of Constantinople. Fifty-five days later, on **29 May**, the city fell. Constantine XI, the last Byzantine emperor, died in the fighting, and with him vanished the empire that had once called itself Roman. The conquest mattered not simply because a city changed hands. Mehmed had combined gunpowder artillery, naval pressure and control of the Bosporus into a new style of siege warfare. The old medieval assumption — that ancient walls could guarantee survival — died with Constantinople. What followed was not a single clean "beginning of the modern age," but a process. Ottoman power expanded deeper into southeastern Europe, and Western states looked more urgently toward maritime routes and stronger war-making. History is rarely as simple as the textbooks suggest. Yet 1453 still reveals something essential: modernity was born as much from imperial adaptation and military technology as from Renaissance ideas.
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