Sometimes I think of that great man (Constantinos Palaiologos) and I cry for him. He was brave and with 10,000 men stood against an invading Ottoman army of more than 90,000 men and did not surrender. May his soul be happy and his memory be cherished...☦️🇬🇷🤍💙💜❤️💔
I love this small details in the flags of the defenders of Constantinople. Especially with the Orhan Prince guard near Seragilo and Venetians near the Blachernae . Good job!!!
@@Proud_Hellenic_Patriot1821 Pretty cool! To make it even better you need to bigger image (like original) and insert the next in the image, maybe smaller, so people can follow. Watch the video as if you were a new viewer and try to imagine how their percieve it. For example I had to read text but when I read it I could not see what was happening in the image.. so that would not work well :)
That's a great tagedy for christian world, from that day Turks were actively converting the Constantine and assimilating the natives, it's incredible how much greeks lost
@@mofrix9363 History of Ottoman:21 Greeks Relationship with Latin and Turk; The Byzantine population( Greek) were memories of a catastrophic event that had taken place some two hundred years before(ie. in 1204, western attack on Constantinople)..... The bitter memories did not fade over the years. Western travellers of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were often shocked at the hostility that they encountered from the Byzantine population. A Dominican monk living in Pera complained that some Byzantines would break a cup out of which a Latin had drunk rather than risk contamination by using it again. One Burgundian traveller, Bertrandon de la Brocquière, experienced that hostility at first hand. When crossing the Bosporus from Skoutari to Pera in 1432, the Byzantines who rowed him accorded him great respect at first because they thought that he was a Turk. When they found out that he was, in fact, a Latin, they decided to put up the fare and became very aggressive when their passenger refused to pay up. There probably would have been a fight, had a Genoese shoemaker who lived near the gate in Pera’s walls not come to Bertrandon’s aid. The aggrieved traveller concluded his tale with this sombre caveat: " I mention this as a warning to travellers who, like me, may have anything to do with the Greeks. All those with whom I have had any concerns have only made me more suspicious, for I have found more probity in the Turks. These people love not the Christians of the Roman persuasion." Book: The End of Byzantium Author: Jonathan Harris Edition: 2010 Page:61-63
@@АлексейДрузин-ш8ю History of Ottoman:19 In reality, whatever the ideological or religious differences between Christian Byzantine Greeks and Muslim Turks, they were not necessarily natural enemies. On the contrary, on an everyday basis Greeks and Turks interacted quite peaceably for much of the first half of the fifteenth century. They were neighbours and trading partners and noticeably adopted aspects of each other’s customs and language. Although they might disagree over whether Jesus Christ was God incarnate or simply a prophet.... What created the conflict were the policies pursued by those in power, whether ambitious Ottoman sultans who sought to promote themselves from leaders of a tribe to rulers of an empire, or meddlesome Byzantine emperors who believed that they could improve their precarious position by ill-judged stratagems. Indeed, political ambition rather than dogma lay behind most late medieval wars. Otherwise there would have been no Hundred Years War (1337-1453) between the Christian English and the equally Christian French and no clash between the Muslim Ottomans and their co-religionists and fellow Turks, the Karamanids. Book: THE End of Byzantium Author: Jonathan Harris Edition: 2010 Page - xxi
@Hellenic_Mapper1821 However, it was also the Greeks who immediately imported the hoplite model and combat strategies to us, while we inherited other things from the Italics. Italy and Greece are the best and everyone envies us.
If they had the same numbers the thing happened to Sassanids would happen to Ottomans, Turks sweating shows strong is the walls of Constantinople and Eastern Roman Army
ruclips.net/video/GF1L7zXk9vA/видео.htmlfeature=shared
" Constantinople, Either I conquer you or You conquer me."
Sultan Fatih Mehmed.
It's wrong. Last days Turks attacked from the sea line as well as crossing ships across the land
@@lyanna518 i know
@@lyanna518 It's hard trying to make these videos
@@Proud_Hellenic_Patriot1821 BRO YOU COPIED THE VIDEO, GUYS GO LOOK MAPSINANUTSHELL HE MADE THE VIDEOQ
Sometimes I think of that great man (Constantinos Palaiologos) and I cry for him. He was brave and with 10,000 men stood against an invading Ottoman army of more than 90,000 men and did not surrender. May his soul be happy and his memory be cherished...☦️🇬🇷🤍💙💜❤️💔
"If my city fall, i fall with here"
One of the best emperor ever
I love this small details in the flags of the defenders of Constantinople. Especially with the Orhan Prince guard near Seragilo and Venetians near the Blachernae . Good job!!!
@@hadeslutifigluslankininkas5625 thx
"The city has fallen and I'm still alive" 😢😢😢
It would have been interesting if there were text explanations, of what is happenign or why, or how you calculate the numbers etc.
@@albert-i2d4r ok👌Thanks for the advice
ruclips.net/video/GF1L7zXk9vA/видео.htmlfeature=shared
Here you are
@@Proud_Hellenic_Patriot1821 Pretty cool! To make it even better you need to bigger image (like original) and insert the next in the image, maybe smaller, so people can follow.
Watch the video as if you were a new viewer and try to imagine how their percieve it. For example I had to read text but when I read it I could not see what was happening in the image.. so that would not work well :)
Ok@@albert-i2d4r
the most catastrophic day in history of ortodox people.... God punished us for our sinns.....
The Turkic tribes literally flooded Byzantium, and then gathered into a state and destroyed it....
Either i conquer you or you conquer me
Mehmed the conquerer
That's a great tagedy for christian world, from that day Turks were actively converting the Constantine and assimilating the natives, it's incredible how much greeks lost
Thank the cowardly Christians who did not send reinforcements to defend the last city left over from the Romans.
@@mofrix9363 there isn't much they could do to be honest, Crusades against Muslims didn't had significant effects, it's just sad at this point
@@mofrix9363
History of Ottoman:21
Greeks Relationship with Latin and Turk;
The Byzantine population( Greek) were memories of a catastrophic event that had taken place some two hundred years before(ie. in 1204, western attack on Constantinople).....
The bitter memories did not fade over the years. Western travellers of the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were often shocked at the hostility
that they encountered from the Byzantine population. A Dominican
monk living in Pera complained that some Byzantines would break a
cup out of which a Latin had drunk rather than risk contamination by
using it again. One Burgundian traveller, Bertrandon de la Brocquière,
experienced that hostility at first hand. When crossing the Bosporus
from Skoutari to Pera in 1432, the Byzantines who rowed him accorded
him great respect at first because they thought that he was a Turk. When
they found out that he was, in fact, a Latin, they decided to put up the
fare and became very aggressive when their passenger refused to pay up. There probably would have been a fight, had a Genoese shoemaker who
lived near the gate in Pera’s walls not come to Bertrandon’s aid. The
aggrieved traveller concluded his tale with this sombre caveat:
" I mention this as a warning to travellers who, like me, may have
anything to do with the Greeks. All those with whom I have had any concerns have only made me more suspicious, for I have found more
probity in the Turks. These people love not the Christians of the
Roman persuasion."
Book: The End of Byzantium
Author: Jonathan Harris
Edition: 2010
Page:61-63
@@АлексейДрузин-ш8ю
History of Ottoman:19
In reality, whatever the ideological or religious differences between
Christian Byzantine Greeks and Muslim Turks, they were not necessarily natural enemies. On the contrary, on an everyday basis Greeks
and Turks interacted quite peaceably for much of the first half of the fifteenth century. They were neighbours and trading partners and
noticeably adopted aspects of each other’s customs and language. Although they might disagree over whether Jesus Christ was God
incarnate or simply a prophet.... What created
the conflict were the policies pursued by those in power, whether ambitious Ottoman sultans who sought to promote themselves from leaders
of a tribe to rulers of an empire, or meddlesome Byzantine emperors
who believed that they could improve their precarious position by ill-judged stratagems. Indeed, political ambition rather than dogma lay behind most late medieval wars. Otherwise there would have been no Hundred Years War (1337-1453) between the Christian
English and the equally Christian French and no clash between the
Muslim Ottomans and their co-religionists and fellow Turks, the Karamanids.
Book: THE End of Byzantium
Author: Jonathan Harris
Edition: 2010
Page - xxi
@mofrix9363 Well , They tried but were defeated at Varna
the fall of an empire is the rise of a greater one
So painful :(
Hey dud can u do the fall of the Western Roman Empire Google earth plz
Οι πολιορκητες ηταν 150.000
Remember the prophecy of Saint Paisios.
@perti888 yeah
The Turks sweated against the Romans, even though they were four times larger. I want to see if the Romans also had the same number.
@@gianvito7875 The Ottomans were little smaller than the Roman Empire
@Hellenic_Mapper1821 However, it was also the Greeks who immediately imported the hoplite model and combat strategies to us, while we inherited other things from the Italics. Italy and Greece are the best and everyone envies us.
I just wanted to say this with respect. Constantine the eleventh was an honorable man
@ikbaldolek3178 a
If they had the same numbers the thing happened to Sassanids would happen to Ottomans, Turks sweating shows strong is the walls of Constantinople and Eastern Roman Army
WHAT SONG IS IT?
PLS TELL ME
@ You will come as a Lighting
Subscribe
So sad
Why didn't you use the Constantinople song?
@@RalofGames Because they are German, and I put a song about the fall of Constantinople in Greek
@@Proud_Hellenic_Patriot1821Thanks for explaining!
Well done 👍
keep it up
Which one is the correct one? This one or ruclips.net/video/XovnndboHAs/видео.htmlsi=UjxWbQu8GfeKSrp8
The number is not the same.
@@wakdoj Mine, because I'm Greek and I know how it went
😢😢
🇪🇸❤️🇬🇷
☪️💪
Islambul ❤
İ-Stan-pol-i (şehre doğru)
عندك مشكلة مع اسلام بول؟@@salih_cn35