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From its foundation in the fourth century, to its fall to the
Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth, 'Constantinople' not only
identified a geographical location, but also summoned an idea. On
the one hand, there was the fact of Constantinople, the city of
brick and mortar that rose to preeminence as the capital of the
Roman Empire on a hilly peninsula jutting into the waters at the
confluence of the Sea of Marmora, the Golden Horn, and the
Bosporos. On the other hand, there was the city of the imagination,
the Constantinople that conjured a vision of wealth and splendor
unrivalled by any of the great medieval cities, east or west. This
Companion explores Constantinople from Late Antiquity until the
early modern period. Examining its urban infrastructure and the
administrative, social, religious, and cultural institutions that
gave the city life, it also considers visitors' encounters with
both its urban reality and its place in imagination.
From its foundation in the fourth century to its fall to the
Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth, the city of Constantinople boasted
a collection of antiquities unrivalled by any city of the medieval
world. The Urban Image of Late Antique Constantinople reconstructs
the collection from the time that the city was founded by
Constantine the Great through the sixth-century reign of the
emperor Justinian. Drawing on medieval literary sources and, to a
lesser extent, graphic and archaeological material, it identifies
and describes the antiquities that were known to have stood in the
city's public spaces. Individual displays of statues are analysed
as well as examined in conjunction with one another against the
city's topographical setting, in an effort to understand how
ancient sculpture was used to create a distinct historical identity
for Constantinople.
From its foundation in the fourth century, to its fall to the
Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth, 'Constantinople' not only
identified a geographical location, but also summoned an idea. On
the one hand, there was the fact of Constantinople, the city of
brick and mortar that rose to preeminence as the capital of the
Roman Empire on a hilly peninsula jutting into the waters at the
confluence of the Sea of Marmora, the Golden Horn, and the
Bosporos. On the other hand, there was the city of the imagination,
the Constantinople that conjured a vision of wealth and splendor
unrivalled by any of the great medieval cities, east or west. This
Companion explores Constantinople from Late Antiquity until the
early modern period. Examining its urban infrastructure and the
administrative, social, religious, and cultural institutions that
gave the city life, it also considers visitors' encounters with
both its urban reality and its place in imagination.
Have you ever wondered what it would be like in the middle of
nowhere with only a few basic tools? In this novel by Sarah
Bassett, Melissa and her family make their way across the plains.
Packed full of adventure, history, and fun, this is a good read for
the whole family.
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