The Fall of Constantinople: The Day the Medieval World Ended — Fexingo History

The Ottoman Janissaries Who Stormed Constantinople

8 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Ottoman Janissaries Who Stormed Constantinople

Descripción

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the role of the Janissaries in the fall of Constantinople in 1453. Who were these elite Ottoman soldiers, and how did they come to be the shock troops that breached the Theodosian Walls? We trace their origins from the devshirme system—the 'child levy' that recruited Christian boys from the Balkans—to their training, discipline, and fanatical loyalty to the sultan. We discuss their military tactics, the famous quote about living in the sultan's shadow, and their final assault on May 29. The episode also touches on the leadership of Mehmed II, the role of agha Hasan, and the legendary story of the giant Janissary who allegedly killed Emperor Constantine XI. Along the way, we consider the human cost of the devshirme and the complex legacy of an institution that was both a path to power and a form of enslavement. #Janissaries #Devshirme #MehmedII #Constantinople1453 #OttomanEmpire #ByzantineEmpire #FallOfConstantinople #TheodosianWalls #AghaHasan #ConstantineXI #OttomanMilitary #SiegeOfConstantinople #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalHistory #MiddleEast #Balkans #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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158 episodios

episode The Ships That Climbed a Mountain: Ottoman Fleet Transport artwork

The Ships That Climbed a Mountain: Ottoman Fleet Transport

In April 1453, Mehmed II pulled off one of the most audacious logistical feats in military history: dragging dozens of Ottoman warships overland, across a steep hillside, to bypass the massive chain blocking the Golden Horn. This episode dives into the mechanics, the manpower, and the strategic brilliance behind the operation. We explore how hundreds of oxen, thousands of laborers, greased wooden rollers, and a single night of effort reshaped the siege of Constantinople. Lucas and Luna discuss the eyewitness accounts of Nicolò Barbaro and Doukas, the role of Galata's neutrality, the failed Byzantine counterattack, and the psychological blow that sealed the city's fate. No prior episode has focused solely on this extraordinary event—the ships that climbed a mountain. #OttomanFleetTransport #MehmedII #Constantinople1453 #GoldenHorn #ShipsOverland #NicolòBarbaro #Doukas #Galata #ByzantineSiege #Logistics #MilitaryHistory #OttomanNavy #April1453 #SiegeOfConstantinople #MedievalWarfare #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20268 min
episode The Last Mass at Hagia Sophia: Christianity's Final Hours in Byzantium artwork

The Last Mass at Hagia Sophia: Christianity's Final Hours in Byzantium

On the night of May 28, 1453, as Ottoman armies camped outside the walls, the last Christian liturgy was celebrated in Hagia Sophia. This episode follows the final Mass through the eyes of the witnesses who recorded it: the Venetian surgeon Nicolò Barbaro, the Greek historian Doukas, and the Ottoman chronicler Tursun Beg. We explore the solemn procession of Emperor Constantine XI, the emotional congregation that included Latins and Orthodox who had been bitterly divided over the Union of Florence, and the moment when Cardinal Isidore of Kiev, a Catholic prelate, read the names of the fallen in both rites. Luna asks why the union of churches mattered in that desperate hour, and Lucas explains how theological divisions weakened Byzantine resistance. The episode also examines the fate of the worshippers who took refuge in the church during the final assault, and the conflicting accounts of whether the doors of Hagia Sophia were barred or broken. We close with the mosque conversion under Mehmed II and the enduring silence that replaced the chant. #HagiaSophia #Constantinople1453 #LastMass #ByzantineEmpire #OttomanEmpire #MehmedII #ConstantineXI #CardinalIsidore #NicolòBarbaro #Doukas #TursunBeg #UnionOfFlorence #GreekOrthodox #LatinRite #FallOfConstantinople #LateByzantium #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20265 min
episode The Ottoman Janissaries Who Stormed Constantinople artwork

The Ottoman Janissaries Who Stormed Constantinople

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the role of the Janissaries in the fall of Constantinople in 1453. Who were these elite Ottoman soldiers, and how did they come to be the shock troops that breached the Theodosian Walls? We trace their origins from the devshirme system—the 'child levy' that recruited Christian boys from the Balkans—to their training, discipline, and fanatical loyalty to the sultan. We discuss their military tactics, the famous quote about living in the sultan's shadow, and their final assault on May 29. The episode also touches on the leadership of Mehmed II, the role of agha Hasan, and the legendary story of the giant Janissary who allegedly killed Emperor Constantine XI. Along the way, we consider the human cost of the devshirme and the complex legacy of an institution that was both a path to power and a form of enslavement. #Janissaries #Devshirme #MehmedII #Constantinople1453 #OttomanEmpire #ByzantineEmpire #FallOfConstantinople #TheodosianWalls #AghaHasan #ConstantineXI #OttomanMilitary #SiegeOfConstantinople #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalHistory #MiddleEast #Balkans #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode The Greek Fire That Saved Constantinople (for a Night) artwork

The Greek Fire That Saved Constantinople (for a Night)

In April 1453, as Mehmed II's fleet choked the Bosphorus and his army pounded the Theodosian Walls, the defenders of Constantinople unleashed a terrifying secret weapon: Greek fire. Lucas and Luna dive into the night of April 20, when three Genoese relief ships and a Byzantine transport ran the Ottoman blockade. Using siphon-mounted flamethrowers and incendiary pots, the small Christian fleet incinerated Baltaoğlu Süleyman Bey's galleys in a desperate naval battle. They explore the chemistry of the Byzantine flame — a petroleum-based mixture that burned on water — and the tactical genius of using it against the Ottoman armada. But the victory was fleeting: the Ottoman fleet regrouped, and the massive bombard soon turned the walls to rubble. This episode examines one of the last successful uses of Greek fire, the heroism of the Genoese sailors, and how a single night's triumph ultimately could not save the city. Featuring accounts from Nicolò Barbaro, Doukas, and Kritovoulos, plus the controversial role of the Genoese colony of Galata. #GreekFire #Constantinople1453 #ByzantineEmpire #OttomanEmpire #MehmedII #NicolòBarbaro #Doukas #Kritovoulos #BaltaoğluSüleymanBey #Genoese #Galata #GoldenHorn #NavalWarfare #SiegeOfConstantinople #ByzantineNavy #FexingoHistory #History #MiddleEast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Theodore of Tyana: The Ottoman Spy Who Opened Constantinople artwork

Theodore of Tyana: The Ottoman Spy Who Opened Constantinople

For months, the walls of Constantinople held. Then, on the night of May 28, 1453, a Byzantine official named Theodore of Tyana slipped past the defenders at the Kerkoporta gate and made contact with Mehmed II's camp. This episode pieces together the fragmentary accounts of Theodore—a man who appears in only two sources, Doukas and a brief Ottoman chronicle—and traces his path from disgruntled bureaucrat to the spy who gave the Ottomans the key to the city. We examine the internal Byzantine divisions that made treason possible, the role of the Union of Florence in alienating Orthodox officials, and the fateful decision to leave the Kerkoporta unsealed. Why did Theodore betray his own people? What did he tell Mehmed? And what happened to him after the fall? The answers challenge the clean narratives of heroism and villainy that have long dominated the story of 1453. #TheodoreOfTyana #Kerkoporta #Betrayal #MehmedII #Constantinople #ByzantineEmpire #OttomanEmpire #Spy #Siege #1453 #Doukas #UnionOfFlorence #Orthodox #Treason #May29 #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 de jul de 20269 min