Constantinople to Istanbul: How a City Changed the World — Fexingo History
On the ancient Hippodrome of Constantinople, alongside the Obelisk of Theodosius and the Walled Obelisk, stands a strange bronze monument: three intertwined serpents, their heads long since gone. This is the Serpent Column, a relic that predates the city itself. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace its journey from Delphi, where it was erected after the Greek victory at Plataea in 479 BCE, to its relocation by Constantine the Great. They explore its original inscription listing 31 Greek city-states, the missing golden tripod it once supported, and the legends surrounding its lost serpent heads—including a 16th-century claim that one was displayed in Istanbul. The column also serves as a rare example of a pagan monument surviving in Christian Constantinople, perhaps because it was seen as a talisman against snakes. Lucas explains how the column was described by the Byzantine historian Nicetas Choniates, who recorded a failed attempt to overthrow it during a riot, and how the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II reportedly smashed one of the serpent heads with his mace. The episode also touches on modern fragments: the lower jaw of one serpent head, now in the Istanbul Archaeology Museums, and a cast of the column in the Delphi Archaeological Museum. A compact story of continuity, plunder, and survival across three empires. #SerpentColumn #Delphi #Constantinople #Hippodrome #Plataea #GreekCityStates #Bronze #ConstantineTheGreat #NicetasChoniates #MehmedII #Ottoman #Byzantine #DelphiArchaeologicalMuseum #IstanbulArchaeologyMuseums #Talisman #AncientGreece #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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