The Entire History of Constantinople // Istanbul Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • In October 2019 I took a trip to one of the greatest cities in the world. Here is what happened.
    6:42 - Part I - Old City (Ancient Era)
    25:15 - Part II - City of God (Medieval Era)
    46:44 - Part III - City Of War (Ottoman Era)
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Комментарии • 728

  • @PeteKellyHistory
    @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +185

    In October 2019 I took a trip to one of the greatest cities in the world. It only took me over 3 years to make the video. Let me know what you think in the comments and where you'd like to see me visit next. Cheers all & happy new year!

    • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
      @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Год назад +8

      He's baaaack. Hello Pete. I can't wait to sit back and enjoy.

    • @Paeoniarosa
      @Paeoniarosa Год назад +3

      This is a nebulous idea, as I obviously don't know much about it, but perhaps a history of north Africa?

    • @scotishjohn
      @scotishjohn Год назад +1

      Ffs 3 years

    • @VMAN00ful
      @VMAN00ful Год назад +1

      Just subbed. Hello from Winnipeg. Love your work.

    • @missourimongoose8858
      @missourimongoose8858 Год назад +3

      If you could go back in time would you rather watch a gladiator match or a chariot race? Just curious

  • @tyronemagnus6450
    @tyronemagnus6450 Год назад +236

    Incredible in todays age I can sit down for an hour and learn about a city thousands of miles away and thousands of years old while getting a tour of it.

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +27

      In many ways it is an amazing time to be alive

    • @CJHBC
      @CJHBC Год назад +5

      Pete is a true legend in his field, have been following him years - outstanding content, so glad to see he’s getting the views he deserves! Check out his other page ,history time’ it’s amazing

    • @josephsmith6777
      @josephsmith6777 Год назад +1

      Those walls kept the huns and others out for suck a long time it took the invention of gun powder before they got breached

    • @colly7963
      @colly7963 Год назад +3

      We used to have books, have you forgotten already?

    • @ALLAHwithdaughterALLAT
      @ALLAHwithdaughterALLAT Год назад +1

      good cult
      It was narrated that Ibn 'Abbas said:
      "The Messenger of Allah [SAW] said: 'Whoever changes his religion, kill him.'"
      Grade: Sahih (Darussalam)
      Reference : Sunan an-Nasa'i 4061

  • @mkphilly
    @mkphilly 10 месяцев назад +33

    Just spent a week in Istanbul: there are no words to describe how this city enveloped me. Amazing, amazing place and people.

  • @MuhammadAsif-ir5eq
    @MuhammadAsif-ir5eq 10 месяцев назад +12

    One of the best documentaries of Pete Kelly, condensing thousands of years of history, narrated in his captivating voice, with sound effects, and pictures. So mesmerising that one wishes not to move ears and eyes away from it till the video ends.
    I'm not sure whether it is the mystique of Istanbul, the style of the narrator, or both that keep one so engaged.

  • @mikexstad1121
    @mikexstad1121 Год назад +11

    I went here in 2015. I tell everyone it is somewhere they must go before they die. Most hospitable and kindest people. You MUST go to the top of Galata Tower

  • @Louis-ji3sn
    @Louis-ji3sn Год назад +30

    I (American) walked from the north harbor chain to Haya Sophia. I continued past Constantine's column to the Theodosian II walls first walking all the way to the north until it began to drop to the sea and then backtracked walking south along the walls inside a couple gates climbing up a few stairways to the top and then in a couple of towers down to the Golden Gate (I happen to be from SF ironically) fulfilling one of my dreams!

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 7 месяцев назад +1

      A very good and informative historical presentation of Turkey! Thank you!

  • @Vitagirl
    @Vitagirl Год назад +15

    I am truly blessed to be a Turk I grew up in the states and I am an American but my roots run deep!!
    I have loads of family in Turkey!
    Beautiful, historic, world class!!!
    This was an amazing documentary!! Thank you very much!!

    • @AKRITAS365
      @AKRITAS365 Год назад +12

      It will always be Constantinople with a Hellenic identity in the minds of people.
      It's also a matter of time before the Holy Cross will stand on top of Αγία Σοφία.The way it was meant to be.

    • @oguztoprak9721
      @oguztoprak9721 Год назад

      ​@@AKRITAS365LISTEN TO ME, YOU POOR VILLAINOUS GREEK CHAUVINIST ;
      KONSTANTINOPOLIS HAS BEEN LIVING AS ISTANBUL SINCE 1453 FOR A 570 YEARS , AND SHALL REMAIN AS ISTANBUL TO ETERNITY AS OUR BIGGEST MEGAPOLIS.
      IT SEEMS YOU ARE A DAYDREAMER. BUT ITS SO FUNNY. I'D LIKE TO RECOMMEND YOU NOT TO BE RIDICULOUS. YOU ARE NOT COMPARE TO US. AND, JUST TELL ME WHEN YOU'RE GONNA STOP HAVING INFERIORITY COMPLEX AGAINST WE TURKS ? BE SURE THAT, WE TURKS HAVE BEEN MASTERS, LORDS OF GREEKS ALMOST A THOUSAND YEARS. DO NOT FORGET MIKRASIATIKI KATASTROFI(1922) AND 1974.
      SO, ISTANBUL SHALL NOT BE TURNED TO CONSTANTINOPLE AGAIN.
      Ain't you heard the old American song "ISTANBUL(Not Constantinople) ? What a pitty ?
      The story and lyrics goes like this :
      STORY :
      "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" is a 1953 novelty song, with lyrics by Jimmy Kennedy and music by Nat Simon. It was written on the 500th anniversary of the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks. The lyrics humorously refer to the official renaming of the city of Constantinople to Istanbul. The song's original release, performed by The Four Lads, was certified as a gold record. Numerous cover versions have been recorded over the years, most famously a 1990 rock version by They Might Be Giants.
      THE LYRICS :
      Istanbul was Constantinople
      Now it's Istanbul, not Constantinople
      Been a long time gone, Constantinople
      Now it's Turkish delight on a moonlit night
      Every gal in Constantinople
      Lives in Istanbul, not Constantinople
      So if you've a date in Constantinople
      She'll be waiting in Istanbul
      Even old New York was once New Amsterdam
      Why they changed it I can't say
      People just liked it better that way
      So, take me back to Constantinople
      No, you can't go back to Constantinople
      Been a long time gone, Constantinople
      Why did Constantinople get the works?
      That's nobody's business but the Turks
      Istanbul, Istanbul, Istanbul, Istanbul...

    • @pyrusheliosmk2204
      @pyrusheliosmk2204 Год назад +10

      ​@@AKRITAS365 which "people" are they?
      Nobody outside of Greece calls it Constantinople. Deal with it!

    • @SA41959
      @SA41959 Год назад +2

      @@AKRITAS365 Except Christianity is dead. Good luck with your fantasy.

    • @EwrimBilgen
      @EwrimBilgen Год назад +2

      @@AKRITAS365 you guys 😅😂

  • @kjfletcher3
    @kjfletcher3 Год назад +5

    I can’t believe you missed the history of Tokapi Palace.....but you’ll return to Turkey for Capadocia, Ephesus, etc etc LOVE the fresh taste of the food.!!

  • @brettmuir5679
    @brettmuir5679 3 месяца назад +3

    Revisiting your channel. You have it right on in your narrative. I love that. I walked 100 miles in Istanbul in 5 days awaiting my visa to Syria. The city teams with life and its energetic drone continues unabated since the time of mythology. The smell, the sights, the sounds, the feel and the tastes there are unforgettable.
    Thank you for taking me back

  • @arpigracetarkhanian9684
    @arpigracetarkhanian9684 Год назад +9

    The Balyan family was one of the most well-known Armenian families during the Ottoman era. Coming from Central Anatolia, family members served as imperial architects for years and are remembered as the masterminds behind many palaces, mosques and barracks like the Dolmabahçe Mosque and the Beylerbeyi Palace--

    • @TUNC66
      @TUNC66 5 месяцев назад +2

      The architects of the Dolmabahce palace are Abdulhalim Bey, (Turkish) Karabet Balyan (Armenian), Ohannes Serveryan (Armenian), Nikogos Balyan (Armenian) and James William Smith, that's all.

    • @thomastevelde8547
      @thomastevelde8547 4 месяца назад

      I’m from Friesia, we just built ships

  • @ΡωμαϊκόνΠύρ
    @ΡωμαϊκόνΠύρ Год назад +13

    Constantinople, the "New Rome" of Roman Emperor Constantine I, was established with the goal of transferring the Roman culture, political nexus and economic and military headquarters to the eastern side of the Roman Empire. Constantine's legacy survived for another 1000 years after his decease. Astounding just to think about the weight of it all.

  • @TheRealAsahi
    @TheRealAsahi Год назад +6

    Excellent documentary.
    I was in Istanbul in early 2019 for the first time. An absolutely amazing place. I can’t wait to visit again.

  • @MrNas42
    @MrNas42 Год назад +20

    I love Istanbul/Constantinople/Byzantium and been lucky enough to visit there twice. I hope to go back someday soon. Thanks for bringing back old memories.

  • @sofiaalexandiridi7139
    @sofiaalexandiridi7139 Год назад +22

    I loved it thankyou I was born in Constandinople I am Greek but leaving in Canada the circumstances brood us here but still I miss my birth place so much 🇨🇦🇨🇦👏👏

    • @roryhierzer563
      @roryhierzer563 Год назад +4

      *İstanbul

    • @turboplazz
      @turboplazz Год назад +7

      @@roryhierzer563 Konstantinopole

    • @Niktricity_II
      @Niktricity_II 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@roryhierzer563in greek it's Constantinople but in Turkish and most other languages istanbul

    • @Nahrin_Assyrian
      @Nahrin_Assyrian 5 месяцев назад +2

      These circumstances brought Greeks and Assyrians in diaspora having no way to live there , they had to leave their birth places and immigrate 😢

    • @Nahrin_Assyrian
      @Nahrin_Assyrian 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@roryhierzer563
      Istanbul is not Turkish name ,it's derived from it's Greek origin STIM POLI
      SO ITS STILL GREEK
      BECAUSE THIS WAS NEVER THE LAND OF TURCIK PEOPLE THE INVADERS WHO CAME FROM THE EAST
      Most of you are not of Turkic origin either

  • @martinczernatowicz2164
    @martinczernatowicz2164 Год назад +43

    I've visited Turkey 7 times, starting in 1989, visiting everywhere except the Northeast area. I must say my favourite city has got to be Istanbul. So much history and interesting architecture. The food of course is incredible. Pete, you mentioned that Europe meets Asia on the Golden Horn (Palic), perhaps you meant to say the Bosphorus. The Golden Horn is the river which feeds into the Bosphorus and separates the old city from the new. In Ottoman times Europeans were not allowed to live in the old section and had to live in the new city where the Galata tower and Taksim are located. Thanks for the video.

    • @MarkDarnell-cq2wy
      @MarkDarnell-cq2wy Год назад +1

      it's HALIC...Not Palic.

    • @mynameisraylights
      @mynameisraylights Год назад +1

      Golden Horn is a bay, it is also called Halic. You are wrong about permits. It is just the way communities settled.

    • @mynameisraylights
      @mynameisraylights Год назад

      @user-cq3gt7uw2f at the era of GOOGLE it must be hard to be an IGNORANT. Congratulations to you but stop talking without any knowledge.

    • @jiensuyang3915
      @jiensuyang3915 Год назад

      Is turkey easy to live in ? What is crime rate like? Usa n canada have devolved. Canada is just a large ghetto.

    • @JoseAntonio-oy9ll
      @JoseAntonio-oy9ll 11 месяцев назад +3

      Bizantio last 1000 years

  • @hiddenhist
    @hiddenhist Год назад +12

    first impression: I didn't expect the religious buildings (and hagia Sophia) to so beautifully highlight the "constantinopilan/istanbulian" skyline. Some well done shots here.

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +4

      The architecture is absolutely stunning there

    • @zahirhussain5913
      @zahirhussain5913 Год назад +1

      Not Hagia Sophia but Aya Sofia

    • @gilpaubelid3780
      @gilpaubelid3780 Год назад +2

      @@zahirhussain5913 What's the difference? The church's name is Αγία Σοφία οr Αγιά Σοφιά. Both are the same thing. I suppose what you said is the second one.

    • @zahirhussain5913
      @zahirhussain5913 Год назад

      @@gilpaubelid3780
      Aya Sofia is Greek. Am l right?

  • @hype00091
    @hype00091 Год назад +13

    It would really be helpful for us history buffs/enthusiasts that haven’t visited Istanbul if you could just list down all the places you have visited in this video so we can too. It would be much appreciated- thank you

  • @voulaspiros5847
    @voulaspiros5847 Год назад +7

    Excellent Excellent video thank you so much love the History as I’m. Greek Australian love being part of this world thank you again 🇬🇷🇬🇷🇦🇺💒👍

  • @dukecity7688
    @dukecity7688 Год назад +11

    This was inspiring. Over fifty years ago i quit highschool in ninth grade. Over the last two years i have been watching your videos and reading as much as i can about ancient history. I loved your video on the Mayans. After watching this i made decision, for the first time i will leave usa and visit Istanbul while still secular. Thank you sir.

  • @mchave71
    @mchave71 Год назад +3

    Thanks Peter for this video. I absorbed the content from beginning to end. Having visited Istanbul recently it brought back many memories and like yourself it’s given me a strong desire to return and explore some more. Please keep,your content flowing.

  • @michawierszyo2783
    @michawierszyo2783 Год назад +7

    I freakin love your documentaries. Can't wait for more. All the best Pete.

  • @joshpratt0310
    @joshpratt0310 Год назад +26

    Outstanding video again Pete. Thanks for all your hard work. I truly love devouring your content. Hope you had a good Christmas and a very happy new year to you. Very excited for the next installment.

  • @Fogaata
    @Fogaata Год назад +2

    Awesome video, inspired me for my next family trip.
    Madrid, Rome and Istanbul!

  • @JamieAsareZiegler
    @JamieAsareZiegler Год назад +3

    I'm positively giddy over this!

  • @HistoryFirst
    @HistoryFirst Год назад +24

    Dear Pete Kelly,
    Would you want to make a video together on the Elamite people? I found out that the Elam society, people and state is one of the oldest societies that had ever existed, and lasted well into the late antiquity era. Ive been doing as much research as I can into it. Its incredibly fascinating and reads like a storybook.
    Best,
    GH

  • @joycepetrina2791
    @joycepetrina2791 Год назад +2

    Thank you for taking us along with you. Fabulous.

  • @coenvanpoelje5498
    @coenvanpoelje5498 Год назад +1

    For a few years I've now watched many videos about ancient history, always hearing either about Byzantium or Constantinople. Slowly realizing it was modern Istanbul. Ever since that realization this trip is on my bucket list too, thank you for the great video!

  • @kaarlimakela3413
    @kaarlimakela3413 Год назад +1

    My friend went to Turkey, and all I got was wonderful wonderful history travel videos!

  • @toffthe
    @toffthe Год назад +2

    Istanbul is amazing. I've been on that ferry up the bosphorus, just fantastic. Great to hear from you and what a treat, thank you.

  • @bethwilliams4903
    @bethwilliams4903 Год назад +2

    A new podcast! What a way to start 2023, you never cease to amaze me Mr Kelly, what a treat!

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +1

      Happy new year!

    • @bethwilliams4903
      @bethwilliams4903 Год назад

      And Happiest of New Years to you as well! You got me through the pandemic lockdown! I suspect I’ve listened to your podcasts - each one - many many times!
      I used to teach Art History and you weave authentic architectural sites and details into the history so beautifully I wish I had had your podcasts for my classes! (Once we went to all online classes I ‘retired’ - I need face to face classes - but that’s another story!) again, if you had done two hours just in the astonishing Hagia Sophia it wouldn’t have been enough - architecture that dissolves in Light - time to go back Pete! 😘

  • @dimezrecon
    @dimezrecon Год назад +6

    Would love to visit the Walls and sights of Constantinople. It was so important for so long.

  • @Zaeyrus
    @Zaeyrus Год назад +3

    Always a great joy when your video pops up!

  • @Fathima_Shaik786
    @Fathima_Shaik786 2 месяца назад +3

    I'm surprised that Sultan Suleiman was not mentioned in this video given his impact on the ottoman empire.

  • @jeandalmatos610
    @jeandalmatos610 Год назад +6

    ..after seeing that the situation at Kerkoporta could not be controlled by the outnumbered Genoese men of the Bocchiardi brothers, the Emperor reined in and galloped towards the Valley of the Wolf (where the Roman Gate was located). With him was the fearless Theophilus Palaiologos, the Emperor's cousin, the brave Spanish Don Francis of Toledo, who admired Constantine Palaiologos Dragasis, and his loyal Comrade John the Dalmatian. Many Greeks tried to gather around these four men, but in vain, the carnage was great! they were trying to secure the entrances of the Roman Gate but already the defenses had been breached. Theophilus Palaiologos shouted that he would rather die than live the dishonor and rushed against the wave of Janissaries!! The Emperor now knew that the empire was lost and so was he. he wanted to die fighting to the end. He removed the imperial symbols and together with his fellow warriors Don Francisco and John the Dalmatian followed Theophilus towards the barbarian lines with swords held high! No one ever saw the brave Emperor again!!!!.
    Sir Steven Runciman (From his Book, The Fall of Constantinople)

  • @Blalack77
    @Blalack77 Год назад +5

    I freaking love the history of Constantinople/The Eastern Roman/Byzantine empire. Years ago, before I had learned much about it, I always thought it would have been cool for Romans and Vikings to have met - so I was pleased to learn of the Varangian Guard. The Fourth Crusade is one of the most unfortunate historic events in my opinion... Just utter nonsense. Like, I know times were different and you've got to pay up when you promise an entire crusader army a bunch of gold, but I'm an Evangelical Protestant Christian and I would never dream of defiling/destroying anyone else's holy cities, relics, churches, etc. regardless of their faith - much less a religion that's basically a different denomination of my own - I don't see how one justifies that and still claims to be a member of that faith..
    But I always cheer for the Byzantines. I cheer for the Franks sometimes too but they sure knew how to destroy stuff. The Byzantines had a good thing going and even though both sides were Christian, the Franks were jealous. I've always thought that was weird how Constantinople was so advanced when Western Europe had basically reverted back in time. I kind of wish the original Roman Empire could have been restored and like Irene would have married Charlemagne or something - just to see what it would have looked like. Constantine XI's final/death charge gives me chills. He had so much history riding on him that he either had to save the city or die a valiant death trying. And that was the cool thing about Mehmet II - how he kind of set the stage for the history to be preserved. It seems like he had pretty massive respect for the place - at least by the standards of the day.

    • @AKRITAS365
      @AKRITAS365 9 месяцев назад

      The siege and invasion of Constantinople was premeditated between the Ottomans and the Vaticans pope.
      It was the Pope's mafia who ordered the crusaders to ransack Constantinople in 1203 ad completely destroying it committing unspeakable attrocities and killings on the Byzantine citizens unable to recover to its original glory.
      The same scenario occurred in 1453 where the east Roman Empire refused
      to provide military aid to Constantinople allowing 100,000 jannissarys savages against 7000 Byzantine defenders under the spartan born Constantine Paleologos who fought bravely and died like a Spartan like Leonidas of Sparta did 3000 years ago.
      Again it was the Pope's refusal to provide military aid which could've easily attack the Ottoman savages from behind and estroy them.
      But instead he allowed them to destroy Constantinople so that he can be the head of Christianity.
      When in fact it was the western Roman Empire who crucified Christians and Jessus, while Constantine and Hellen promoted Christianity.
      The main reason why today the Catholic crusaders refuse to celebrate Constantine and Hellen.

  • @mareebrazier878
    @mareebrazier878 Год назад +4

    What an absolutely enormous city and so beautiful, thank you 🙏❤️🇦🇺

  • @ΡωμαϊκόνΠύρ
    @ΡωμαϊκόνΠύρ Год назад +6

    I am a Roman whose heritage stretches back to dawn of Roman Asia Minor. We still call ourselves Romans whenever we refer to our ethnicity. We speak Romaeica, the special "Greek" Imperial vernacular of the Roman upper-class. Constantinople, New Rome, is our capital city. We are not Greeks, we are the descendants of Constantine's dream. We are Romans, or Romaeoi in our language.

  • @れきぞーの歴史教科書読み聞

    Very nice video. Istanbul/Constantinople/Byzantium is the only city that is packed with all history, from ancient times to modern times.

  • @maxl5657
    @maxl5657 Год назад +2

    An incredible travel, historical and intellectual documentary!
    Bravo!!!
    I’d suggest following Alexander and what he witnessed and viewed in his journeys.

  • @johngosling1
    @johngosling1 Год назад +2

    A great documentary. One of the best I have seen.

  • @Paeoniarosa
    @Paeoniarosa Год назад +8

    This was fantastic, Thank you. Really appreciate seeing so much of the city, landscape, and the interesting museums you visited. Seems like really nice editing. My favorite of your shows so far. I hope to visit there someday.

  • @WK-47
    @WK-47 Год назад +4

    Great stuff as always, Pete. What an incredible city, region and history.

  • @mariafarrugia1192
    @mariafarrugia1192 Год назад +1

    THANKYOU PETE KELLY ANOTHER BRILLIANT TRIP INTO HISTORY...THE SIMPLICITY MAKES YOU A GREAT DOCUMENTARY MAKER... THUMBS UP AS ALWAYS...

  • @papazataklaattiranimam
    @papazataklaattiranimam Год назад +8

    Like the Mongols the Turks were a fierce warrior race
    whose skill with the bow gave them considerable military prowess.

    • @Kouroshyousefi
      @Kouroshyousefi 11 месяцев назад

      آنها همه که در ترکیه هستند ترک نیستند فقط همان از مغول و التای ایغوری هستند و چهره آنها هم مثل نسخه چینی آن است چشم های بادامی و و لپ نوک تیز ولی خیلی. ها این چهره رو ندارند یا. رومی و یونانی هستند یا چهرهای ایرانی و اریایی دا ند که در 2500 سال پیش با هم در جنگ بودند در آن سرزمین یعنی آناتولی و الان چهرهای مغول یا همان ترک خیلی کم هستند بیشتر از گشورهای اطراف آن در انجا بودند از قبل هیتی ها و قفقازی و اریایی(ایرانی) و یونانی و جهت اطلاع گفتم

  • @wildjamjam1794
    @wildjamjam1794 2 месяца назад

    heya Pete I love listening to your histories , all the things that amaze you , likewise to me , its just rivetting , even your soundtracks are perfect .. Keep historing .. thankyou Kate

  • @TheJuanruiz777
    @TheJuanruiz777 Год назад +1

    Thank you! I visited Istanbul in December of 2022. I watched many videos about tours unfortunately I didn’t watch your video. It looks like miss a few important places, I’ll your video a few times and go back to Istanbul. I did subscribe to your Chanel excellent video congratulations!

  • @andersliljevall2946
    @andersliljevall2946 Год назад +4

    Interesting. Being swedish I am interested in The long relationshìp between the scandinavian world and " Miklagård", (Istambul) mentioned on so many runestones in my area ( north of Stockholm). Must have been a popular place among my ancestors. It was one of the places where they behaved without too much scandal,I am glad to say

  • @henryc199
    @henryc199 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for helping me undertanding this part of history

  • @ThomasGazis
    @ThomasGazis Год назад +19

    I am of Byzantine descent. I am married to a Greek Constantinopolitan lady whose parental family was living in Constantinople - probably ever since the city was founded by Constantine. Her ancestors were NOT some kind of "immigrants" in Constantinople. They were Greek - Byzantines, the predominant ethnicity in Byzantium (and especially in Constantinople)! In 1964 my wife's family was expelled by the Turks from Constantinople (the city that the Turks call Istanbul - paraphrasing its Greek name. Till a century ago Constantinople had a thriving population of almost 300.000 Greeks!).
    My wife and I are preserving in our house centuries old family heirlooms, books, ikons etc. from Constantinople, which are Greek in every sense! Me and my Constantinopolitan wife feel 100% Greek and we perceive our centuries old Byzantine/Constantinopolitan ancestors as Greeks (that's what history and our centuries old heirlooms are telling us)! That's why I am surprised by the comment you make in the beginning of the video that "Constantinople was a Roman capital for over thousand years"! We don't feel "Romans" dear Pete Kelly! Neither we feel that our Byzantine ancestors were "Romans"! They were Greek - Byzantines in every sense!
    You don't mention at all though the fact that Byzantium was predominantly Greek! You rather allude to it being either "Roman" or Turkish (or something else)! Nor you particularly mention the impressive fact that the Turks are not indigenous to Asia Minor/ Anatolia but they arrived in this niche of the world coming over as a marauding people from their homeland, the "Altay Plateau" in Mongolia!

    • @etruscanlord
      @etruscanlord Год назад +1

      This Area Our Trojan Etruscan Ancestors
      1071 Final Time
      Don’t forget

    • @NickZaharakisChiefOfficer
      @NickZaharakisChiefOfficer Год назад +3

      Very true!

    • @ThomasGazis
      @ThomasGazis Год назад

      ​@@etruscanlord I certainly don't forget that the Turks have usurped other peoples' lands and properties...

    • @ThomasGazis
      @ThomasGazis Год назад +8

      ​@@BlueSky-wp5ic your post might perfectly serve your Albanian or Turkish nationalistic (and obviously anti-Greek) "atzzenntaa" but it doesn't serve the historical truth.
      First of all, you claim that the modern Greeks are in large part "macedonians". And I am sure that you imply the false "macedonians" of Skopje. I would like to inform you that - even according to a statement of their ex Prime Minister Grigorov - those people are Slavo-Bulgarians and have nothing to do with the ancient Greek macedonians!
      You are almost right when you are saying that many Greek fighters (in the 1821 revolution against the Turkish occupation of Greece. You are calling them "insurrectionists", usually the Turks call them that way) were of Arvanite origin (having a very distant "Albanian" origin, that is). Actually, these fighters were not just of Arvanite descent, they were Arvanites themselves! Many of them did not even speak good Greek. But they were Christians and they had a perception that they were inhabitants of Greece - and not of Albania, which did not even exist politically, back then!
      Today, the people who have the most negative attitude versus the Albanian immigrants in Greece are the Arvanites! They often share the same surnames with the Albanians that i.e. are delivering them food, the elder Arvanites can almost fluently communicate with the Albanians, by speaking the Arvanite idiom, but still the Greek Arvanites consider themselves now ultra-Greeks and they don't want to be related - in any shape or form - to the Albanians.
      You are claiming that the inhabitants of the Greek Aegean islands and of Cyprus are "Romans" and not Greeks! That's a totally false and somehow "nasty" claim. Why don't you ask the millions of tourists that visit each year the Greek islands of the Aegean and Cyprus, did they ultimately interact with "Romans" or with Greeks? And your claim that the inhabitants of the Aegean islands and of Cyprus are "Romans" and not Greeks is "nasty" because that's exactly the claim of the Turkish nationalists who want to militarily invade and usurp the millennia old Greek islands of the Aegean and Cyprus!

    • @ThomasGazis
      @ThomasGazis Год назад

      ​@@BlueSky-wp5ic your narrative is not only totally false but quite illogical and somehow "schizophrenic" too! You claim that the modern Greeks are not pure Greeks but either "Romans", Arvanites/albanians or Slavo-bulgarians (which you deliberately call "macedonians", although they have nothing to do with the ancient Greek Macedonians at all)! But if the inhabitants of modern Greece are mostly "Romans", Arvanites/albanians and Slavo-Bulgarians (that's what you mean by the term "macedonians"), how comes they accept their "enslavement" by the Greeks and they do not revolt against the Greeks?
      Wait a moment though! You claim that there are no pure Greeks in modern Greece! Then, these "Romans", "Albanians" and Slavo-Bulgarians have nobody to revolt against! They are free to do as they like and the first obvious thing for them should be to declare to the international community that they are not Greeks but "Romans", "Albanians" and Slavo-Bulgarians! Have you ever witnessed anybody doing this in modern Greece? No! Then, your arguments hold no water at all! Try harder next time!
      I know that the Turkish nationalists fervently seek a pretext, in order to militarily invade Greece, usurp its millennia old Greek islands (or even Greek mainland, which they claim it was "theirs") and turn them into Turkish. But at least try to invent some less lame arguments...

  • @mattstakeontheancients7594
    @mattstakeontheancients7594 Год назад +6

    A place on my bucket list to visit in my life. The amount of history and events that took place in this city is amazing. Walls still up that are almost 1700 years old. The shear amount of ancient history found in Anatolia/Turkey is amazing. So many empires that claimed either parts or all of present Turkey.

    • @yvzycl2654
      @yvzycl2654 Год назад

      siz buradayız...BEKLERİZ....TALEP EDENLERİ BEKLİYORUZ...

  • @baihongliang
    @baihongliang Год назад +4

    "A replica of the first kebab maker in history, truly those ottomans were an advance people"
    I liked this one 🤣

  • @cathym4321
    @cathym4321 Год назад +2

    Cued to play right now and totally psyched to watch it! Always excellent work Pete, thank you, your efforts are appreciated and enjoyed! Now, it’s off to the show!

  • @BenSHammonds
    @BenSHammonds Год назад +1

    sure do enjoy your programs, the one on Troy, just re-watched it btw, is very good as is all of your efforts, much appreciated !

  • @nancydixon684
    @nancydixon684 Год назад +3

    So very excited to see a new release from you Pete! Happy New Year and please keep them coming.

  • @barryb90
    @barryb90 Год назад +5

    I wish I could have seen it at the Height of the Eastern Roman Empire, or just the Roman Empire as the Greeks call it.

  • @alicefabia11
    @alicefabia11 Год назад +1

    Excellent vlog,always interested in Istanbul and Ottoman history Sophia Aya thanks so much for this

  • @fatos3605
    @fatos3605 Год назад +1

    Since 1453 OTTOMAN EMPİRE that Turkey belonged to Turkish people, actually most of Europe had bellonged to OTTOMAN EMPIRE. Early 1900's, Many countries came to to Turkey to take the land. But, couldn't because of MUSTAFA KEMAL ATATÜRK with his greatest army and wives of the soldiers fought hard. The soldiers were teenagers with older too. But, just Turkey alone fought with 4,5 different countries and with ATATÜRK and his soldiers and their wives won the war to take Turkey. After, the war, Winston Churchill said ATATÜRK was a Greatest leader alive. Which I admired him and never fight in a war. I would've shaken his hand. RIP ATATÜRK. NO ONE HAS FORGOTTEN YOU.❤😢

  • @thekuchchannel
    @thekuchchannel Год назад +1

    Fantastic, thank you, I've been there twice now but yet to visit the museums and landmarks. Very informative!

  • @silviapio6122
    @silviapio6122 3 месяца назад

    Just watched this amazing video. Very plesant and well done. Thanks.

  • @colincampbell4261
    @colincampbell4261 Год назад +1

    Love the sound tracks on your videos.

  • @marrickvillian
    @marrickvillian Год назад +8

    Great work Pete. If you ever get the chance to come to Australia, you should try and cover some of the indigenous cultures/nations.

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +10

      Thanks. I spent 3 months in Oz a few years back, just before I started History Time. Had an incredible time and looked into the history quite a bit. I would love to go back and do a video one day.

  • @trantorcapitalofthegalacti3173
    @trantorcapitalofthegalacti3173 Год назад +3

    The whole history of this city is one that strongly underscores the notion of "Fortune Favors the Bold". So many conquerors have waded through those parts. Illyrians, Thracians, Greeks, Romans. The Arabs and Bulgarians tried their hand at fate, but their efforts flopped. So did the Entente powers during WWI. The Turks are the current keepers of this great city, who knows will be the next.

    • @SofiaSilver333
      @SofiaSilver333 9 месяцев назад +1

      The Greeks didn't conquer the city, they built it, they made it.

  • @DontWant2LoseControlByEpilepsy
    @DontWant2LoseControlByEpilepsy 11 месяцев назад +3

    The presentation of the Rise and Fall of present-day Istanbul (Constantinople), Turkey. The town/city is named after the ancient city (once named after Constantine the Great) on the border of Turkey. The former name of Istanbul. It comes from the Greek word Kōnstantinoupolis, which means "Constantine's city."

  • @marikami9
    @marikami9 7 месяцев назад

    So far the best documentary I've seen, full of the soul of the centuries ❤

  • @scottzema3103
    @scottzema3103 4 месяца назад

    Well, you're three years were well spent! Superb.

  • @marleenneil7542
    @marleenneil7542 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this incredible trip; I’ve always wanted to travel there; I may this summer.🙏

  • @bbsrawat5414
    @bbsrawat5414 Год назад +3

    बआईजएनटम कओन्सटनटआइनपओल कुस्तुनतुनिया ओर अब इस्तानबुल पहला दो महाद्वीप में विस्तार वाला शहर जानकारी के लिए धन्यवाद

  • @audree70
    @audree70 Год назад

    You're so awesome Pete. .
    All the way from Houston Texas!
    I listen to ALL your docs. Gotta find some more to do. Iv re listened to all about 3 times each!

  • @zulkarneyn3822
    @zulkarneyn3822 Год назад +2

    If the world would be a country.
    ISTANBUL would be it s CAPITAL.
    what a great city......love it.....

  • @bretnielsen5502
    @bretnielsen5502 Год назад +4

    I loved my stay in Constantinople on my way to Egypt! The food and city were outstanding. The peop[le mpost friendly and helpful. You video refreshed my fondest memories of the city.

  • @kellyting7674
    @kellyting7674 3 месяца назад

    I never get tired of visiting Turkey/ amazing country and people¡!!!!💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @nikolaljubisavljevic697
    @nikolaljubisavljevic697 Год назад

    Thank you Pete. This was so inspired and inspiring. I'm visiting Istanbul next month. Cheers!

  • @AlGeoadis
    @AlGeoadis 11 месяцев назад +4

    I have to note though that the period between 1200 and 1923 DOES NOT cover the entire history of Constantinople. The city was founded in 330 AD by Emperor Constantine. Since we are missing 900 years… would you agree that the ‘Th Entire History of….’ part of the title could be renamed as ‘40% of the history of…’?

  • @jone6635
    @jone6635 Год назад +1

    Excellent documentary. Thank you so much Mr. Kelly.

  • @Caligulashorse1453
    @Caligulashorse1453 Год назад +6

    I’ve really been studying Eastern Roman history this really adds to my study’s

    • @theearlofmarch
      @theearlofmarch Год назад

      Have you *really* been studying it mate? Lmao 🤡

    • @Caligulashorse1453
      @Caligulashorse1453 Год назад

      @@theearlofmarch I mean yeah why not

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад +1

      Its a fascinating subject to study

    • @AKRITAS365
      @AKRITAS365 Год назад +4

      I
      The Byzantine Empire was a Greek speaking Empire with a Hellenic identity.
      The name Byzantium was also of Helleenic origin.Way before the Roman invaders. The reason why all artifacts are of Hellenic origin with Greek names and letters.

    • @PterarchosAeroporias525
      @PterarchosAeroporias525 4 месяца назад

      @@AKRITAS365 You are denying the Roman identity of the "Byzantines" and this is not good. Their primary identity was Roman, and that should not be forgotten nor forbidden to them for the sake of modern chauvinism.

  • @burrellbikes4969
    @burrellbikes4969 Год назад +1

    Really think a big playlist series could be made of this city. So many little hits you made that I was begging fo remote detail.

  • @sevastos2168
    @sevastos2168 Год назад

    Showing Venice and Ragusa to help us make the comparison with the old city of Constantinople was very clever. Kudos, i am following you channel.

  • @chronics3311
    @chronics3311 Год назад +1

    thank you for yet another incredible video , already looking forward to the next ;)

  • @XxTheAwokenOnexX
    @XxTheAwokenOnexX Год назад +1

    Happy New Year Pete, and the beat of goodluck for 2023 👍

  • @garyfrancis6193
    @garyfrancis6193 Год назад

    The GoldenHorn is also the biggest sewer in Istanbul. The stench is so overwhelming that you can’t get near without feeling like wretching. I have been there three times in summer and the dead of winter when it was - 20C. Just to get some perspective. Don’t be surprised at this if you go there.

  • @mynameisraylights
    @mynameisraylights Год назад

    6 years between Los Angeles and San Diego, finally going back to home this Fall! 🥳

  • @DerHammerSpricht
    @DerHammerSpricht Год назад

    22:14 You are so skilled at speaking your mind diplomatically about emotionally/politically charged issues, without either ruffling feathers needlessly or walking on eggshells. Your brother too, on Voices Of The Past, shows an understanding of this excellent skill. My hat's off to you both.

  • @kirkjones9639
    @kirkjones9639 Год назад +1

    Outstanding Pete, just outstanding. Thank you.

  • @Jackenapes86
    @Jackenapes86 Год назад

    Outstanding work on one of my favorite subjects. Love ur docs and the passion u put into them. I’ve learned so much from ur channels. Keep it up.

  • @benimtelefoncaliyor1dk
    @benimtelefoncaliyor1dk Год назад +8

    Characteristics of the Byzantine Empire
    After its capital was established in the east, the empire became, in scholarly parlance, the Eastern Roman Empire. Furthermore, because Constantine and all of his successors (except Julian the Apostate, 361 63) were Christians, the empire from here on can also be called the Christian Roman Empire. As a consequence of these two changes the Roman Empire had become the Byzantine. However, though used by scholars, none of these three names was used at the time. Though the empire had its center in a Greek cultural and linguistic area, as a result of which there followed a gradual hellenization of its institutions and culture, the emperors recognized no change. The empire remained the Roman Empire and the citizens (even though Greeks came to domi nate it) still called themselves Romans. The term Hellene (Greek) connoted a pagan. The term Byzantine was an invention of Renais sance scholars after the fall of the Byzantine Empire and was never used by its contemporaries. By the middle of the seventh century Greek had become the official language of all spheres of government and the army; nevertheless the empire remained "Roman" and despite divisions of its territory at times it was always seen as a single unit. Essentially the Byzantine Empire was a combination of three major cultural components: (1) Roman in political concepts, administration. law, and military organization. (2) Greek in language and culture, and (3) Christian in religion.
    Fine, J., 1991. The early medieval Balkans. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, p.16.

    • @Evagelopoulos862
      @Evagelopoulos862 Год назад +4

      Byzantin historians knew the term Byzantion ,Michaḗl Psellós 1018AD imperial courtier, and Michael Choniates 1138AD author, refer Byzantion and Byzantine empire, but it was never employed by the people.

    • @user-be4nm1fq5w
      @user-be4nm1fq5w Год назад

      @@Evagelopoulos862 The term used by Romans is done so only sparingly at best. We can think of it more like a classicizing term for the well educated. When it was employed in written document, it often referred to the suburbs and surrounding areas around Constantinople itself. It is actually pretty captivating that the Latin-writing and Greek-writing Roman historians of those times retained the ancient place names of the ancient civilizations long lost to them. Thrace was still Thracia, Phrygia Phrygia, Bithynia and Pisidia and it goes on. It is regrettable in my opinion that when the Turks set up permanent shop in Anatolia, these terms of geographic reference were by and large abolished.

  • @RZ350NC
    @RZ350NC Год назад +2

    I have a friend who grew up in Istanbul. He's a big soccer fan and said when he emigrated to the US as a teen decades ago, he had to learn Spanish to follow soccer, as the Spanish-language TV stations were the only ones covering the sport. He said he played soccer in a league here, and the league finally forbade the Greek and Turkish teams from playing each other as the players and fans got into too many fights. It must have been amazing growing up in an ancient city. Where to go next? How about Copenhagen or another city on the Baltic? Take care. Cheers!

    • @PeteKellyHistory
      @PeteKellyHistory  Год назад

      I often wonder what it would be like to grow up in an ancient city.. Cheers! happy new year . Copenhagen I have been briefly and loved it

  • @shafaatoo9328
    @shafaatoo9328 Год назад +2

    I'm visiting in June. Your video is absolutely amazing. Wow! Any books you recommend for reading on the cities history?

  • @rogerjefford3223
    @rogerjefford3223 Год назад +1

    Wonderful documentary, Thanks for sharing your passion for a unique and historic city. You have obviousy done your homework. Having an opportunity to experience living history with all its sites and sounds and smells is quite an experience. By imersing oneself self in a culture is much more meaningful and rewarding and certainly trumps reading a history book.
    Thank you.
    Roger jefford
    Roger Jefford

  • @haroldshull6848
    @haroldshull6848 Год назад

    The views of the old maps through the changing of the empires helped the understanding of how people understood their territorial relationships. The areas between the Black and Caspian seas are drawn larger than they really are, but in power they had earned that representation. The huge cannon that Mehmet II used to breech the wall of Constantinople was cast in Bulgaria. Alliances were, indeed, crossing the lines.

  • @kaisersozajunior8650
    @kaisersozajunior8650 Год назад

    I was hooked from the start
    You really brought out all the history along with a touch of humour here and there

  • @Meaocb
    @Meaocb 8 месяцев назад

    Pete your channels are absolutely brilliant keep it up Mo chara

  • @fivizzano
    @fivizzano 10 месяцев назад

    EXCELLENT, BROADCAST LEVEL QUALITY

  • @Onora619
    @Onora619 Год назад

    Been waiting a long time for another one of these! Epic job!

  • @littlevicwidowmaker4755
    @littlevicwidowmaker4755 Год назад +7

    Can’t get enough of the Byzantines. ⚔️⚔️⚔️

  • @AA-pk3do
    @AA-pk3do Год назад

    listening to the history of this marvellous city whilst seeing the modern day imagery is just great! great doc

  • @Soundslikealpi
    @Soundslikealpi Год назад +1

    Kebap and doner was my brakfast for years mate I feel you

  • @gintaginta5027
    @gintaginta5027 11 месяцев назад

    Incredible document film. Thank you for your deep inside.

  • @ishastrega6851
    @ishastrega6851 Год назад +1

    Great video. i love Istanbul and I love Turkish food.

  • @leticiareyes2796
    @leticiareyes2796 День назад

    Thank you; I want to go back!😊

  • @stanislavbonev9771
    @stanislavbonev9771 Год назад +3

    Well done for the work. But you should read a lot more starting with Homer. He and the other Greek authors, and if you wish, Persian ones, and last but not least, the finds will tell you about the city. Enjoy 😉