İstanbul'un
Fethi, 29 Mayıs 1453'te, şehri günlerdir kuşatan Osmanlı
ordusunun, şimdi İstanbul olarak bilinen, o zamanki adıyla
Konstantinopolis şehrini Sultan II. Mehmed Han'ın
komutanlığında fethetmesidir.Bu fetihten sonra Osmanlı Devleti İmparatorluk olmuş, henüz 21 yaşında olan Sultan II. Mehmed, fatih unvanını da alarak Fatih Sultan Mehmed olarak anılmaya başlanmıştır. Tarihteki en önemli devletlerden olan Doğu Roma İmparatorluğu böylelikle sona ermiştir.
Tarih: 2 Nisan - 29 Mayıs 1453
Yer: İstanbul
Sonuç: Osmanlı'lar İstanbul'u ele geçirdi, Bizans İmparatorluğu yıkıldı.
Bizans İmparatorluğu kumandanı: XI Konstantin
Osmanlı kumandanı: Fatih Sultan Mehmed
Önceki Fetih Denemeleri
Karadeniz ve
Akdeniz'i birbirine bağlayan deniz yolu üzerinde kurulu olan
İstanbul, günümüzde olduğu gibi o zamanlar da oldukça önemli
bir şehirdi. 1453 yılına kadar farklı zamanlarda, Avarlar,
Araplar, Avrupalılar ve Osmanlılar tarafından defalarca
kuşatılmış, fakat gerek Bizans'ın sahip olduğu Rum ateşi (grejuva),
gerekse şehrin o zamanlar için aşılamaz olarak görülen
surları, bu fetih hareketlerini başarısız kılmıştı.
Sayıları 29
olan kuşatmalar sırayla şunlardır:
--M.Ö 340 Makedonya Kralı Phillippe
--M.Ö 194 Roma İmparatoru Septim Severus (Başarılı
olmuştur.Şehir artık Romalılara bağlanmıştır.)
--M.S 616 İran Hükümdarı Keyhüsrev
--M.S 626 İranlılar ve Avar Türkleri ortak
--M.S 665 Emevi Halifesi Muaviye
--M.S 667 Emevi Halifesi Muaviye
--M.S 672 Emevi Halifesi Muaviye
--M.S 712 Emevi Halifesi I.Velid
--M.S 722 Emevi Halifesi I.Velid (Yalnızca Galata Limanı
alınmış,Arap Camii inşa edilmiştir.)
--M.S 782 Abbasiler (Kent haraca bağlanmıştır.)
--M.S 854 Abbasi Halifesi Mütevekkil
--M.S 864 Ruslar
--M.S 869 Abbasi Halifesi Mütevekkil
--M.S 936 Ruslar
--M.S 959 Macarlar
--M.S 970 Abbasiler (Kent haraca bağlanmıştır.)
--M.S 1203 Latinler (Latinler İstanbul'u 1261'e kadar
ellerinde tuttular.)
--M.S 1302 Venedikliler
--M.S 1348 Cenovalılar
--M.S 1391-1396 Osmanlı Padişahı I.Bayazid (Şehir İstanbul'da
bir Türk Mahallesi kurulması isteğine karşı çıkılması üzerine
ablukaya alınmıştır.)
--M.S 1412 Osmanlı Şehzadesi Musa Çelebi
--M.S 1422 Osmanlı Padişahı II.Murat
--M.S 1437 Cenovalılar
--M.S 1453 Osmanlı Padişahı II.Mehmed (Başarılı
olmuştur.Sonrasında şehir Türklerin hakimiyeti haline
girmiştir.)
Bunun yanında Atilla'nın, Vikinglerin, Bulgarın ve Gotların da
kuşatma yaptığı bazı kaynaklarda geçer ama tarihleri
bilinmemektedir.
Yanında herhangi bir açıklama yapılmayan kuşatmalar başarısız
kuşatmalardır.
Kuşatma hazırlıkları
Sultan II. Mehmed,
İstanbul'un fethine karar verdiğinde o zamanki başkent
Edirne'de, İstanbul'un aşılamaz olarak bilinen surlarını yerle
bir edebilmek için o güne kadar görülmemiş büyüklükteki, şahi
olarak bilinen topları döktürmüştü. II: Mehmed ayrıca,
hazırlanmakta olan bu topların yanısıra, Bizans'a denizden
gelebilecek yardımları engellemek için Yıldırım Bayezid
tarafından inşa edilmiş olan Anadolu Hisarı'nın karşısına
Rumeli Hisarı'nı (Boğazkesen Hisarı) yaptırdı.
Yapılan hazırlıkların kendisine yönelik olduğunu anlayan
Bizans İmparatoru Konstantin, Sultan II. Mehmed'i hediyelerle
vazgeçirmeye çalışırken, bir yandan da Avrupa devletlerine
elçiler yollayarak onları durumdan haberdar ediyor ve yardım
istiyordu. Ancak 1054 yılında Hıristiyanlığın Katolik Kilisesi
ve Ortodoks Kilisesi olarak ikiye ayrılması sebebiyle, Papa V.
Nikola Bizans'ı desteklemeyi pek düşünmüyordu. Bazı İtalyan
şehir devletleri askeri birliklerini Bizans'a yardımcı olmak
amacıyla İstanbul'a yollasa da, Avrupa'nın büyük devletleri
Bizans'ı desteklememe kararı almışlardı. Yardımlarla birlikte
Bizans ordusu, 2.000'i paralı olmak üzere 9.000 askerden
oluşuyordu. Şehri savunan duvarlar, 22,5 km.yi bulan
uzunluklarıyla dönemin en güçlü surları olarak biliniyordu.
Sultan II. Mehmed, 20.000 yeniçerinin de dahil olduğu 100.000
kişilik bir kuvveti yönetiyordu. Rumeli Hisarı'nı inşa
ettirmenin yanısıra bir de donanma kurdurmuştu. Ordusunu
İstanbul civarında toplamış; bu arada, yardım göndermelerini
önlemek amacıyla bazı Balkan devletlerine ordular göndererek,
gelebilecek yardımları önleme, yardım yollamayı düşünenlere
ise gözdağı verme yoluna gitmiştir. Durumun giderek
ümitsizleştiğini gören Bizans İmparatoru, surların önüne geniş
hendekler açtırmış, Haliç'in güvenliğini sağlamak amacıyla da
girişine zincir çektirmişti.
Kuşatma
Ordusu ile
İstanbul'un önünde bulunan Sultan II. Mehmed, Bizans
İmparatoru'na elçi göndererek teslim olması çağrısında
bulunmuş, ancak reddedilmişti. Bunun üzerine tarihteki en son
İstanbul kuşatması başladı.
Kuşatma, Türk topçusunun, surları top ateşine tutmasıyla
başladı. Bizans ordusu ise, surlarda açılan gedikleri
kapatmaya çalışıyordu. Osmanlı, donanması ile de Haliç'i
zorluyor fakat zinciri aşamadıkları için gemiler Haliç'e
giremiyordu. Günlerdir süren kuşatmanın henüz başarı
getirememiş olması ve Ceneviz donanmasından gelen yardımın
Boğaz'ı geçerek Haliç'e girmesi Sultan II. Mehmed'i
sinirlendirmiş ve atını boğazın sularına sürerek donanmasına
emirler yağdırmış, komutanlarına da, saldırı için orduyu
hazırlamalarını emretmişti.
Saldırı hazırlıkları
Sultan II. Mehmed,
Theodosius Surları'na ve şehrin su ile çevrili olmayan tek
bölgesini batıdan gelebilecek saldırılardan koruyan hendeklere
saldırmayı tasarladı. Ordu 2 Nisan 1453'te şehrin doğusuna
yerleşti. Toplar haftalarca surları dövdü fakat yeterli gedik
açamadı. Topların yeniden doldurulmaları zaman aldığı için,
her atıştan sonra Bizanslılar hasarın çoğunu tamir
edebiliyorlardı.
Daha sonra, yeraltı tünelleri yapıp surların altını kazarak
yarma yolunu denediler. Kazıcıların çoğu, Sırp Despot'u
tarafından Nvo Brdo'dan gönderilen Sırplardı ve Zağnos
Paşa'nın emri altındaydılar. Lakin Bizanslılar, Johannes Grant
adında, Alman olduğu söylense de muhtemelen İskoç olan bir
mühendisi görevlendirdiler. Johannes karşı tüneller kazdırdı
ve Bizans birlikleri tünellere girip Osmanlı işçileri
öldürdüler. Diğer tüneller de suyla dolduruldu. Son olarak
Bizanslılar önemli bir mühendisi esir alıp işkence yaparak,
sonradan yıkılan tünellerin hepsinin yerini öğrendiler.
Sultan II. Mehmed, şehrin ödemeyeceğini bildiği çok büyük
vergi karşılığında ablukayı kaldırmayı önerdi. Bu da geri
çevrilince, Bizanslı askerlerin kendi birlikleri tükenmeden
önce bitkin düşeceğini bilerek saf güçle duvarları alt etmeyi
tasarladı.
Nihai saldırı
29 Mayıs sabahı
saldırı başladı. Hücumun ilk dalgasını, mümkün olabildiği
kadar çok Bizans askerini öldürmeye niyetli acemi askerler
olan azaplar oluşturuyordu. Ayrıca Haliç'ten de baskı
uygulayabilmek için gece yağlı kütükler üzerinde karadan
Haliç'e taşınan gemiler, o sabah Bizans askerlerine kötü bir
sürpriz olmuştu. Anadolululardan oluşan ikinci dalga, şehrin
kuzeydoğusundaki, topla kısmen hasar almış Blachernae
Surları'nın (okunuşu: blakernai ) bir bölümüne odaklanmıştı.
Uzun süren bu çarpışmalar sonucunda Ulubatlı Hasan adındaki
bir yeniçeri, aldığı kırk ok darbesine1 rağmen hayatta kalarak
Osmanlı sancağını dikmiş, bununla ateşlenen Osmanlı ordusu 29
Mayıs 1453'te İstanbul'un surlarını aşmıştı.
Ancak savaş henüz bitmemişti. Hayatta kalan Bizans askerleri,
Osmanlı askerleriyle sokak aralarında çarpışıyorlardı. Kısa
süren bu çatışmalardan sonra Bizans ordusu yenilmiş ve Sultan
II. Mehmed önderliğindeki Osmanlı ordusu İstanbul'a tamamen
hâkim olmuştu.
O zamana kadar sadece bir devlet olan Osmanlı, artık bir İmparatorluk haline gelmişti.
Anadolu ve Balkanlar arasındaki geçişlerde bir engel olan Bizans yıkılmış, arada engel kalmamıştı.
Birçok kere Osmanlı şehzadelerini ve Avrupa ülkelerini kışkırtan Bizans artık bunu yapamayacaktı.
Müslüman dünyasında Osmanlı Devleti daha saygın bir hale gelmişti.
Müslümanların peygamberi Hz. Muhammed'in hadis-i şerifindeki o kumandan, Fatih Sultan Mehmed olmuş ve peygamberinin övgüsünü almıştı.
Avrupa ve Balkan devletlerinin Osmanlı'yı Balkanlar'dan atma çabaları sonuçsuz kalmıştı.
İstanbul'dan İtalya'ya kaçan sanatkârlar ve bilim adamları, rönesans ve reform hareketlerini hızlandırmışlardı.
Dünyanın en büyük imparatorluklarından olan Doğu Roma İmparatorluğu tamamen yok olmuştu.
Orta Çağ kapanıp Yeni Çağ başlamıştı.
Ticaret yollarının birer birer Türklerin eline geçmesi Avrupalıları yeni ticaret yolları bulmaya zorladı ve coğrafi keşifler ortaya çıktı.
Bu fetih bir nevî Avrupa'nın (İngiltere'nin) Amerika kıtasını keşfinin yolunu açmıştır. Zirâ bu keşifle ticaret yolları kapanan Avrupalılar başka yollar bulmak zorundaydılar. Bu keşif buna bir vesile olmuştur.
İNGİLİZCE
Fall of Constantinople
The
Fall of Constantinople was the conquest of the Byzantine
capital by the Ottoman Empire under the command of Sultan
Mehmed II, on Tuesday, May 29, 1453. This marked not only the
final destruction of the Eastern Roman Empire, and the death
of Constantine XI, the last Byzantine emperor, but also the
strategic conquest crucial for Ottoman rule over the Eastern
Mediterranean and Balkans.
The city remained capital of the Ottoman Empire until the
empire's dissolution in 1922, and was officially renamed
Istanbul by the Turkish Republic in 1930.
Date: April 2–May 29, 1453
Location: Constantinople
Result: Ottoman victory.
Commanders: Constantine XI - Loukas Notaras
Commanders: Mehmed II
In the approximately 1,000 years of the existence of the Byzantine Empire, Constantinople had been besieged many times; it had been captured only twice, during the Fourth Crusade in 1204 and when the Byzantines retook it decades later: the crusaders had not originally set out to conquer the Empire, and the Byzantines re-established themselves in the city in 1261.
In the following two centuries, the much-weakened empire was gradually taken piece by piece by a new threat, the Ottoman Empire.
In 1453 the "empire" consisted of little more than the city of Constantinople itself and a portion of the Peloponnese (centered on the fortress of Mystras); the Empire of Trebizond, a completely independent successor state formed in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade also survived on the coast of the Black Sea.
Mehmed, whose great-grandfather Bayezid I had previously built a fortress on the Asian side of the Bosporus called Anadolu Hisarı, now built a second castle outside the walls of Constantinople on the European side, which would increase Turkish influence on the straits. An especially relevant aspect of this fortress was its ability to prevent help from Genoese colonies on the Black Sea coast from reaching the city. This castle was called Rumeli Hisarı; Rumeli and Anadolu being the names of European and Asian portions of the Ottoman Empire, respectively. The new fortress is also known as Boğazkesen which has a dual meaning in Turkish; strait-blocker or throat-cutter, emphasizing its strategic position. The Greek name of the fortress, Laimokopia, also bears the same double-meaning.
Constantine appealed to Western Europe for help, but his request did not meet the expected attention. Ever since the mutual excommunication of the Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches in 1054, the Roman Catholic west had been trying to re-integrate the east; union had been attempted before at Lyons in 1274 and, indeed, some Paleologan emperors had been received in the Latin Church since. Emperor John VIII Palaeologus had attempted to negotiate Union with Pope Eugene IV, and the Council held in 1439 resulted in the proclamation, in Florence, of a Bull of Union. In the following years, a massive propaganda initiative was undertaken by anti-unionist forces in Constantinople and the population was in fact bitterly divided. Latent ethnic hatred between Greeks and Italians stemming from the stranglehold the Italians had over the Byzantine economy and the sack of Constantinople in 1204 also played a significant role, and finally the Union failed, greatly annoying Pope Nicholas V and the Roman Catholic church.
Map showing Constantinople and its walls.However, even if he had been more eager to help, Pope Nicholas V did not have the influence the Byzantines thought he had over the Western Kings and princes, and these had not the wherewithal to contribute to the effort, especially in light of France and England being weakened from the Hundred Years' War, Iberian Kingdoms being in the final part of the Reconquista, the internecine fighting in the German Principalities, and Hungary and Poland's defeat at the Battle of Varna of 1444. Although some troops did arrive from the city states of what today is the north of Italy, the Western contribution was not adequate to counterbalance the Ottoman strength.
The Byzantine army itself totalled about 7000 men, 2000 of whom were foreign mercenaries. The city also had fourteen miles of walls, probably the strongest set of fortified walls in existence at the time. The Ottomans, on the other hand, had a larger force. It was thought to be numbering around 100,000, including 20,000 Janissaries, but recent estimates cite 80,000 soldiers and 5,000 Janissaries. Mehmed also built a fleet to besiege the city from the sea, comprising mostly Greek soldiers.
The Ottomans employed a Hungarian engineer called Urban who was a specialist in the construction of cannons, which were still relatively new weapons. He built an enormous cannon, nearly twenty-seven feet (more than 8 m) in length and 2.5 feet (about 75 cm) in diameter, which could fire a 1200 lb (544 kg) ball as far as one mile. It was dubbed "the Basilic". Although the Byzantines also had cannons, they were much smaller and their recoil tended to damage their own walls. Urban's cannon had several drawbacks, however. It could hardly hit anything, not even as large as Constantinople; it took three hours to reload; the cannon balls were in very short supply; and the cannon collapsed under its own recoil after six weeks.
Another expert that was employed by the Ottomans was Ciriaco de Pizzicoli, also known as Ciriaco of Ancona, traveller and collector of antiquities.
Siege and final assault of the city
Mehmed planned to
attack the Theodosian Walls, the intricate series of walls and
ditches protecting Constantinople from an attack from the west,
the only part of the city not surrounded by water. His army
encamped outside the city on Easter Monday, April 2, 1453. For
weeks Mehmed's massive cannon fired on the walls, but it was
unable to sufficiently penetrate them, and due to its
extremely slow rate of reloading the Byzantines were able to
repair most of the damage after each shot. Meanwhile, Mehmed's
fleet could not enter the Golden Horn due to the boom the
Byzantines had laid across the entrance. To circumvent this he
built a road of greased logs across Galata on the north side
of the Golden Horn, and rolled his ships across. This
succeeded in stopping the flow of supplies from Genovese ships
and demoralized the Byzantine defenders. Furthermore, the
defenders were forced to disperse part of their forces to the
Golden Horn walls, causing defense in other walls to weaken.
The Turks made numerous frontal assaults on the wall, but were
repelled with heavy losses. They then sought to break through
the walls by constructing underground tunnels in an effort to
sap them. Many of the sappers were Serbians sent from Novo
Brdo by the Serbian Despot. They were placed under the rule of
Zaganos Pasha. However, the Byzantines employed an engineer
named Johannes Grant (who was said to be German but was
probably Scottish), who had countertunnels dug, allowing
Byzantine troops to enter the tunnels and kill the Turkish
workers. Other Turkish tunnels were flooded with water.
Eventually, the Byzantines captured and tortured an important
Turkish engineer, who revealed the location of all the Turkish
tunnels, which were then destroyed.
Mehmet II: at the battle field.Mehmed offered to raise the
siege for an astronomical tribute that he knew the city would
be unable to pay. When this was declined, Mehmed planned to
overpower the walls by sheer force, knowing that the Byzantine
defenders would be worn out before he ran out of troops.
On May 22, 1453, the moon, symbol of Constantinople, rose in
dark eclipse, fulfilling a prophecy on the city's demise. Four
days later, the whole city was blotted out by a thick fog, a
condition unknown in that part of the world in May. When the
fog lifted that evening, "flames engulfed the dome of the
Hagia Sophia, and lights, too, could be seen from the walls,
glimmering in the distant countryside far behind the Turkish
camp (to the west),". This was interpreted as some as the Holy
Spirit departing from the Cathedral. All these phenomeae were
however local effects of the cataclysmic Kuwae volcanic
eruption in the Pacific Ocean. The "fire" seen was an optical
illusion due to the reflection of intensely red twilight glow
by clouds of volcanic ash high in the atmosphere.
On the morning of May 29 the attack began. The first wave of
attackers, the azabs (auxilaries), were poorly trained and
equipped, and were meant only to kill as many Byzantine
defenders as possible. The second assault, consisting largely
of Anatolians, focused on a section of the Blachernae walls in
the northwest part of the city, which had been partially
damaged by the cannon. This section of the walls had been
built much more recently, in the eleventh century, and was
much weaker; the crusaders in 1204 had broken through the
walls there. The Ottoman attackers also managed to break
through, but were just as quickly pushed back out by the
Byzantine defenders. The Byzantines also managed for a time to
hold off the third attack by the Sultan's elite Janissaries,
but a Genovese general in charge of a section of the defense,
Giovanni Giustiniani, was grievously wounded during the attack,
and his evacuation from the ramparts caused a panic in the
ranks of the defenders.
Some historians suggest that the Kerkoporta gate in the
Blachernae section had been left unlocked, and the Ottomans
soon discovered this mistake (there was no question of bribery
or deceit by the Ottomans; the gate had simply been overlooked,
probably because rubble from a cannon attack had obscured or
blocked the door). The Ottomans rushed in. Constantine XI
himself led the last defense of the city, and throwing aside
his purple regalia, dove headfirst into the rushing Ottomans,
dying in the ensuing battle in the streets, like his soldiers.
Mehmed had promised his troops they could loot the city for three days, in accordance with ancient military tradition. Many civilians were slaughtered by the Turks when they first burst through the walls and captured the towers on the land walls, although order was quickly restored. After the initial assault, the Ottoman army fanned out along the main throughfare of the city, the Mese, past the great forums, and past the mammoth church of the Holy Apostles, which Mehmet wanted spared to provide a seat for his newly appointed patriach which would help him better control his Christian subjects. Mehmet had sent an advance guard to protect key buildings such as the Holy Apostles, as he had did not wish to establish his new capital in a thoroughly devastated city.
The Army converged upon the Augusteum, the vast square that fronted the great church of Haghia Sophia whose bronze gates were barred by a huge throng of civilians inside the building, hoping for divine protection at this late hour. After the doors were breached, the troopes separated the congregation according to what price they might bring on the slave markets. A few of the elderly and some infants were summarily slain with a commercial ruthlessness. Soldiers fought over the possession of richly clad senators or for the comely youth or maiden.
There are many legends in Greece surrounding the Fall of Constantinople. One of them holds that two priests saying divine liturgy over the crowd disappeared into the cathedral's walls as the first Turkish soldiers entered. According to the legend, the priests will appear again on the day Constantinople returns to Christian hands. Another legend refers to the Marble King, Constantine XI, holding that, when the Ottomans entered the city, an angel rescued the emperor, turned him into marble and placed him in a cave under the earth near the Golden Gate, where he waits to be brought to life again.
Constantine XI: the last emperor.Although Mehmet II allowed the rape, pillage and looting of the city, as was the custom of all armies during that age, he changed his mind after seeing the great structures of the city being destroyed and stopped the activities after 24 hours; unfortunately at that point a large part of the populace was either raped, despoiled, or enslaved. Of the estimated 50,000 people residing in the city at the time of its capture, approximately half were still free when Mehmet issued his order to cease the pillage of the city.
The reason that so many of the civilian population escaped enslavement was primarily due to the topography of the city at the time. Far from being in its heyday, Constantinople was severely depopulated for years following the depredations from the bubonic plague and especially from the disaster of the Fourth Crusade inflicted on it by the Christian army two centuries before. Therefore, the city in 1453 was a series of walled villages separated by vast fields encircled in whole by the fourth century Theodosian walls. When the Ottoman troops first broke through the defenses, many of the leading citizens of these little townlets submitted their surrender to Mehmet's generals[citation needed], thereby falling within the proscriptions of honored Islamic traditions of voluntary submission.
These villages, specifically along the land walls, were allowed to keep their citizens and churches from molestation by the Ottoman troupes and were protected by Mehmet's special contingents of Jannissaries. It was these people who were to ransom their fellow citizens after Mehmet's general cessation of the looting of the city and who formed what the Ottomans' called a Millet, or self governing community in the multi-national empire of what would become Ottoman Istanbul.
The "Church of the Holy Wisdom", or Hagia Sofia, was converted into a mosque.Mehmed waited until the area was secured and entered the city in a ceremonial procession where the local population brought him flowers in congratulations. His initial impression was that the city had fallen into disrepair, a trend that began after Constantinople was conquered in the Fourth Crusade.
In Mehmed's view, he was the successor to the Roman Emperor. He named himself "Kayzer-i Rum", the Roman Caesar, but he was nicknamed "the Conqueror". Constantinople became the new capital of the Ottoman Empire. Hagia Sophia was converted into a mosque, although the Greek Orthodox Church remained intact, and Gennadius Scholarius was appointed Patriarch of Constantinople.
Many Greeks fled the city and found refuge in the Latin West, bringing with them knowledge and documents from the Greco-Roman tradition that further propelled the Renaissance. This is true to some extent, but the influx of Greek scholars into the West began much earlier, especially in the Northern Italian city-states which had started welcoming scholars in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. The chancellor of Florence Coluccio Salutati began this cultural exchange in 1396 by inviting a Byzantine Scholar to lecture at the University of Florence. It was the Italians' hunger for Latin Classics and a command of the Greek Language that fueled the Renaissance. Those Greeks who stayed behind in Constantinople were mostly confined to the Phanar and Galata districts. The Phanariots, as they were called, provided many capable advisors to the Ottoman sultans, but were seen as traitors by many Greeks.
The Morean (Peloponnesian) fortress of Mystras, where Constantine's brothers Thomas and Demetrius ruled, constantly in conflict with each other and knowing that Mehmed would eventually invade them as well, held out until 1460. Long before the fall of Constantinople, Demetrius had fought for the throne with Thomas, Constantine, and their other brothers John and Theodore. Thomas escaped to Rome when the Ottomans invaded Morea while Demetrius expected to rule a puppet state, but instead was imprisoned and remained there for the rest of his life. In Rome, Thomas and his family received some monetary support from the Pope and other western rulers as Byzantine emperor in exile, until 1503. In 1461 the autonomous Byzantine state in Trebizond fell to Mehmed.
Scholars consider the Fall of Constantinople as a key event ending the Middle Ages and starting the Renaissance because of the end of the old religious order in Europe and the use of cannon and gunpowder. The fall of Constantinople also severed the main overland trade link between Europe and Asia. As a result, more Europeans began to seriously consider the possibility of reaching Asia by sea — this would eventually lead to the European discovery of the New World.
Down to the present day, many Greeks have considered Tuesday (the day of the week that Constantinople fell) to be the unluckiest day of the week.
Runciman, Steven (1965). The Fall of Constantinople: 1453. London: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-39832-0.
Norwich, John Julius (1995). Byzantium: The Decline and Fall. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-679-41650-1.
The Siege of Constantinople (1453), according to the eyewitness Nicolo Barbaro
Franz Babinger: Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Princeton University Press. 1992. ISBN 0-691-01078-1
Andrew Wheatcroft: The Infidels: The Conflict Between Christendom and Islam, 638–2002
Viking Publishing. 2003 ISBN 0-670-86942-2
Richard Fletcher: The Cross and the Crescent Penguin Group. 2005 ISBN 0-14-303481-2
Justin Wintle: The Rough Guide History of Islam Rough Guides. 2003 ISBN 1-84353-018-X
Smith, Michael Llewellyn, "The Fall of Constantinople", in History Makers magazine No. 5 (London, Marshall Cavendish, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1969) p. 192.
The Cross and the Crescent Exhibit: Royal Academy of Arts Magazine Spring 2005
