Constantinople to Istanbul: How a City Changed the World — Fexingo History
Istanbul is a city of layers, and few places show that more clearly than the Eyüp district, just outside the Theodosian Walls on the Golden Horn. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the sacred topography of Eyüp, named for Eyüp el-Ensari, the companion of the Prophet Muhammad who fell during the first Arab siege of Constantinople in 674–678. We trace how his rediscovered tomb in the 1450s became a founding myth for Mehmed the Conqueror's Ottoman capital, spawning a vast necropolis where sultans, grand viziers, and ordinary Muslims sought to be buried close to a saint. We discuss the Eyüp Sultan Mosque, the tradition of girding sultans with the Sword of Osman at Eyüp, the role of the cemetery in Ottoman funerary culture, and how the district evolved from a holy suburb into a vibrant quarter. We also touch on the Greek Orthodox shrine of the Life-Giving Spring at Balıklı, another pilgrimage site just outside the walls, to contrast Christian and Muslim sacred landscapes. Along the way, we consider the politics of burial, the economics of tomb visitation, and the layered meaning of holy ground in a city that has been Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman. #Eyüp #EyüpSultanMosque #MehmedtheConqueror #SwordofOsman #OttomanEmpire #Constantinople #Istanbul #Byzantine #IslamicHistory #Pilgrimage #Necropolis #GoldenHorn #Balıklı #LifeGivingSpring #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast #Sultan Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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