Mehmed the Conqueror: The Sultan Who Took Constantinople — Fexingo History

Mehmed II's Conquest of the Morea: The Last Byzantine Despotate

6 min · 17 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Mehmed II's Conquest of the Morea: The Last Byzantine Despotate

Descripción

In 1460, Sultan Mehmed II turned his attention to the Morea—the Peloponnese peninsula—where the last remnants of the Byzantine Empire lingered under the despots Thomas and Demetrios Palaiologos. This episode explores the complex political dance between the two brothers, their internal feuds, and their appeals to both the Ottoman sultan and Western powers. Lucas and Luna discuss the role of the Hexamilion wall, the Albanian revolts, and the decisive Ottoman campaign that ended Byzantine sovereignty in Greece. They also touch on the fate of Thomas's daughter Zoe, who became a Russian tsarina, and the strange story of Demetrios ending his days as a pensioner of the sultan. This episode continues the story of Mehmed's expansion into the old Byzantine heartland, a topic not covered in previous episodes. #MehmedII #Morea #Peloponnese #ByzantineEmpire #DespotateOfTheMorea #ThomasPalaiologos #DemetriosPalaiologos #HexamilionWall #OttomanEmpire #Mistras #ZoePalaiologina #IvanIII #OttomanConquest #1453 #ByzantineHistory #GreekHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Mehmed the Conqueror: The Sultan Who Took Constantinople — Fexingo History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

140 episodios

episode Mehmed II's Captured Admiral: The Fall of Mahmud Pasha artwork

Mehmed II's Captured Admiral: The Fall of Mahmud Pasha

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the dramatic career and tragic fall of Mahmud Pasha, Mehmed the Conqueror's most powerful grand vizier and a key figure in the empire's expansion. A devşirme-born Greek who rose to command armies and navies, Mahmud Pasha was instrumental in the conquest of Trebizond, the subjugation of Serbia, and the projection of Ottoman power into the Black Sea and the Aegean. But his immense influence made him enemies at court, and in 1474, after a devastating defeat in Wallachia, he was executed on the sultan's orders—or perhaps on a false accusation. The episode examines the fine line between loyalty and ambition in the turbulent world of Ottoman politics, the role of the grand vizier as both servant and rival to the sultan, and the lingering mystery of whether Mahmud Pasha was truly guilty or the victim of a conspiracy. Featuring details of the Battle of Vaslui, the siege of Negroponte, and the shifting alliances of the 15th-century Balkans. #MahmudPasha #MehmedII #OttomanEmpire #GrandVizier #FatihSultanMehmed #Trebizond #Vaslui #Negroponte #devşirme #Janissary #Avni #Kayser-iRum #Kanunname #Balkans #Wallachia #OttomanHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5 de jul de 20268 min
episode Mehmed II's Lost Library: The Sultan Who Collected Knowledge artwork

Mehmed II's Lost Library: The Sultan Who Collected Knowledge

Sultan Mehmed II is remembered as the conqueror of Constantinople and a ruthless warrior, but he was also one of the most voracious readers of the 15th century. This episode explores his personal library—what we know of its contents, from Ptolemy's Geography to Persian poetry and Christian theology. We look at the famous portrait by Gentile Bellini, the sultan's patronage of Greek scholars like George Amiroutzes and the philosopher George Gemistos Plethon, and his attempt to reconcile Aristotle and Islam through a court philosopher. Mehmed commissioned translations of ancient texts, wrote poetry under the pen name Avni, and dreamed of creating a universal library that would rival Alexandria. But after his death, much of his collection was dispersed or destroyed. We examine the physical evidence: surviving manuscripts with his seal, the Catalogue of the Palace Library from 1502, and what they tell us about the mind of a man who saw himself as both Caesar and Caliph. #MehmedII #FatihSultanMehmed #OttomanLibrary #GentileBellini #GeorgeAmiroutzes #Plethon #Avni #Kayser-iRum #ByzantineManuscripts #PalaceLibrary #15thCentury #HistoryOfBooks #ConquestOfConstantinople #OttomanEmpire #Renaissance #IslamicScholarship #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode Mehmed II's Cannon Foundry: The Guns That Broke Constantinople artwork

Mehmed II's Cannon Foundry: The Guns That Broke Constantinople

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the industrial backbone of Mehmed the Conqueror's greatest triumph: the cannon foundries that cast the massive bombards used in the 1453 siege of Constantinople. They trace the story of Urban, the Hungarian master founder who first offered his services to the Byzantines before being hired by the young sultan. Lucas describes the months of work at the foundry near Edirne, the casting of the Great Bombard — nine metres long and weighing 20 tons — and the logistical nightmare of transporting it overland to the walls of Constantinople. The conversation covers the role of the Janissaries in guarding the guns, the foundry's location in a former church complex, and the firing cycle that limited the bombard to just seven shots per day. They also discuss the aftermath: how Mehmed II maintained and expanded his artillery corps, the foundries of the Tophane district in Istanbul, and the legacy of Ottoman cannon design that dominated sieges for centuries. A vivid look at the technology and human effort behind history's most famous wall-breakers. #MehmedTheConqueror #Constantinople1453 #UrbanTheFounder #GreatBombard #OttomanArtillery #Tophane #Edirne #Janissaries #SiegeOfConstantinople #CannonFoundry #MedievalWarfare #GunpowderEmpire #FatihSultanMehmed #OttomanEmpire #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Mehmed II's Law Code: The Sultan Who Codified Empire artwork

Mehmed II's Law Code: The Sultan Who Codified Empire

After conquering Constantinople, Sultan Mehmed II didn't just build palaces and mosques—he wrote a law code. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Kanunname of 1478, the legal framework that transformed a nomadic Turkic state into a centralized imperial bureaucracy. They discuss how Mehmed balanced sharia with secular kanun, his controversial right to execute princes for the good of the realm, and the price controls he set on bread and meat in Istanbul. The conversation touches on the role of the kadi, the devshirme system's legal codification, and how the Kanunname influenced later sultans like Suleiman the Magnificent. Lucas also explains the tensions between the ulema and the sultan's will, the taxation of non-Muslims under the millet system, and the famous clause that allowed the sultan to override Islamic law in matters of state. This is not a dry legal lecture—it's a story of power, justice, and the practical challenges of ruling a multi-ethnic empire. #Kanunname #MehmedII #OttomanLaw #FatihSultanMehmed #KayserIRum #Istanbul #OttomanEmpire #Sharia #Kanun #Devshirme #MilletSystem #Ulema #Sultan #LawCode #15thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 de jul de 20267 min
episode Mehmed II's Secret Weapon: The Janissary Revolt of 1451 artwork

Mehmed II's Secret Weapon: The Janissary Revolt of 1451

Before he conquered Constantinople, Mehmed II faced a crisis that could have ended his reign before it began. In 1451, shortly after ascending the throne for the second time, the Janissaries — the elite slave-soldiers of the Ottoman Empire — revolted, demanding higher pay and bonuses. This episode dives into the details of that revolt, the trigger (Mehmed's initial refusal and his subsequent execution of the popular Janissary agha), the violent outbreak in Edirne, and the brutal suppression that followed. We explore the Janissary corps itself: its origins under Orhan I, the devşirme system of Christian child levy, their transformation from loyal guards to political kingmakers, and how Mehmed's handling of this revolt set the pattern for his entire reign — ruthless, calculating, and unyielding. We also touch on the Janissaries' later role in Ottoman history, including their eventual abolition in 1826. Along the way, we meet figures like the Janissary agha (executed), the chief black eunuch (who negotiated), and the common soldiers who dared to challenge a sultan. A story of power, money, and the sword. #MehmedII #Janissaries #OttomanEmpire #JanissaryRevolt #1451 #Edirne #Devshirme #SlaveSoldiers #SultanMehmed #OttomanHistory #MilitaryHistory #JanissaryAgha #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory #MiddleEastHistory #Constantinople #Kingmaker #EliteGuard Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 de jul de 20268 min