Constantinople to Istanbul: How a City Changed the World — Fexingo History
Hundreds of feet below the bustling streets of modern Istanbul lies a vast underground chamber that could hold over 80,000 tons of water. The Basilica Cistern—built under Emperor Justinian in 532—is the largest surviving Byzantine cistern in the city. But it was more than just a water tank: its forest of 336 marble columns, many recycled from earlier pagan temples, includes two carved with Medusa heads, one upside down and one on its side. Who placed them there, and why? In this episode, Lucas and Luna descend into the Yerebatan Sarnıcı to explore how Constantinople's water supply worked, how the cistern was forgotten and later rediscovered, and what it reveals about the ambition of Byzantine engineering. They trace the city's complex water network—from the Aqueduct of Valens to the Basilica Cistern and its neighbors, the Binbirdirek and the Cistern of Philoxenos—and consider how this underground marvel survived earthquakes, fires, and centuries of neglect. The story of the Basilica Cistern is the story of a city that engineered its own survival. #BasilicaCistern #YerebatanSarnıcı #Constantinople #Istanbul #ByzantineEmpire #Justinian #WaterSupply #AqueductOfValens #BozdoğanKemeri #Medusa #Binbirdirek #CisternOfPhiloxenos #ByzantineEngineering #IstanbulHistory #Underground #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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