Fun fact, the Renaissance most likely wouldn't have started without the fall of Constantinople as all scholars that were in the city when it was conquered fled west to Italy and other Western Europe provinces, reintroducing medieval Europe to the Roman arts and kickstarting the Renaissance
And also the colonization of the new world since the ottomans now controlled the Mediterranean and the spice trade. European countries really had no choice but to sail west.
And yet the Roman Empire lives on in the hearts, minds and souls of millions, unlike any other that ever existed. No other empire can compare. The exception that proves the rule.
@@josephmanno4514 People call the Mongols or the British the greatest empires, but greatness isn't measured in only land despite all three having plenty, it is based on it's legacy, Rome lasted for a thousand years and created the cultures and governmental system of western civilization. No other civilization has had this effect on the world.
Apollo - There’s no doubt that the Romans left a significant impact on the world...but culture, and art and architecture is only one way of measuring an empire’s impact. The Mongols have left a genetic legacy unlike any other. And people from all over the world feared the Mongols and their military prowess.
I remember when I was younger I thought that the Roman Empire fell altogether to the barbarians, so when I was learning about the crusades not long ago I was astonished to find that the eastern half of the Roman Empire continued to thrive through the dark and Middle Ages.
@@mistakurisu5115 Actually, they had many periods of amazing development, then destruction, then amazing development, then destruction, then amazing development... Until after the Komnenian restoration, they finally settled on destruction, and they fell.
It is Constantinople with Turkish accent. the Greeks used to I am going "Is Tin Polin" (to Polis- Constantinople). "Is Tin Polin" was turned to IsTanBul by the Turks.
The Roman Empire franchise was so successful it got a trilogy and several spinoffs and fanfiction. Roman Republic - the great prequel to the series Roman Empire - the zenith of the franchise Western Roman Empire - the disappointing sequel Eastern Roman Empire - restored greatness Ottoman Empire - the awful fanfiction Holy Roman Empire - the ripoff version Russian Empire - the bootleg version
Leonard Marc Ramos You forgot the Etruscan and Roman Kingdom version as prequels and the fact that Rome is a new franchise that belongs to the Humanworld Saga and is a sequel to the Hellenistic period. The Romans, despite thier great might are not as great as people believe, as those guys had little to no scientific influence other than spreading some good architectural stuff, the Islamic chaliphate, HRE(which you also forgot) and the Chinese dynasties did much more for our scientific progress.
Yuwan HRE was never a unified entity, and cannot be credited for the acheivements of its individual parts. Islamic Caliphates had their Golden Age but they worked on the foundations of the Ancient Greeks. They did make progress, not arguing against that, but for some reason they stopped. Out of the Chineese Dynasties, only 4 can be dubbed as real golden ages of progress. Do not forget that Constantinople was the most advanced and stable city during the middle ages in Europe, spread and perserved laws and philosophies that would have been lost with Rome's demise.
@Alexander The Great Yes, but even before medieval times there was Peter the Reader killing Univesity Professor Hypatia because of "Christian" jealousy with thousands of Christian followers.
It's interesting that when you nowadays ask Greeks about what they associate with their land's tradition everyone will immediately answer "ancient Greece!" but they seem to have forgotten the byzantine part of history, which is so important and rich in details!
Well, maybe it's the same way they will not want to associate with the Ottomans. The last time Greece was truly independent was in the times of Ancient Greece and right after Alexander. After that they got captured by the Romans, who were ruling until right before the Ottoman Empire. The East Roman Empire, were still Romans, that were not interested on the greek culture, on the other hand they even destroyed temples, statues etc. Even until 1453, all the state documents were in Latin. So the East Roman Empire was SOMEWHAT Greek in the since that from some point the Greek Language was used more often, and that some Emperors were of greek heritage. But many will argue that the Roman Empire would have more greek elements than the East Roman one. I think this may explain the phenomenon.
To anyone wondering why we Greeks call ourselves "Ρωμιοί" (Romaioi-Romans), it's because when the Western Roman Empire fell, we felt we had the "legitimacy" of continuing the ideals and the spirit of the Empire. But we never abandoned the name "Έλληνες" (Hellenes), but we reserved it for our ancient identity. Also it was because of Roman law, according to which, everyone that was a law-abiding citizen according to Roman morals and ethos, was a "Roman citizen". And this was a political term, as it wasn't referring to any ethnic group as the Roman Empire was consisted of various ethnicities, including Greeks.
It was not a matter of legitimacy (and i don't get why the " " in legitimacy they even receive the imperial insignia when the west part fell) or something legal, it was simply reality, the Roman Empire was divide in two administrations West and East, both were the Roman Empire, both were the wings of the same eagle, it was natural that if West or East part fell, the other part is what is left of the Roman Empire (being the case that the East part was the one that survive more time and preserve the legacy of the Empire to the end), idk why this is even a debate for some people, 2 sides of the same coin, west and east, both Roman Empire.
Rome: Your Country is mine! Greece: No! *4 wars later* Greece: Fine, take it! *many years later* Italy: Your Country is mine! Greece: No! Germany: Yes!
Holy Roman Empire: I will make reborn a German-Roman Empire 1rst French Empire: I will make reborn a Gallo-Roman Empire * Wars of 4 european Coalition against the french, but Napoléon succeeds and HRE is no more. * Europe again 3 times: "i'm gonna end this man's whole career"
Roman's we are and two. You belong to Roman empire and we stayed the Roman empire because the empire broke in two parts the east and the west Roman empire. We were the east and you were in west and the west Roman empire collapsed by barbarian tribes and we collapsed by ottomans
βασιλοπουλος αναστασης Well, It's Istanbul for centuries and for those who claims that it is called "Constantinapole" are just fairy dreamers.. or should we say that they are just the pussiest greeks ? Ha my dear friend ?
oi greeks and arabs both made great advancements in science and philosophy to get us where we are now why are y’all fighting you should be celebrating edit: wanted to say muslims but because greek is a nationality I said arabs but forgot we’re talking about the ottomans •-•
Flavius Belisarius greatest Byzantine General is probably you but Greatest military general ever is probably Alexander, Khalid bin Waleed, Hannibal or Genghis khan, Subatai
@@mojewjewjew4420 When the Ottoman was unable to break through the Golden Bay defense, they carried the ship like a Viking. That was fatal. But in our country, this is what it says. ‘When Constantinople fell, Constantinus XI, who had no intention of living a miserable life, was reportedly killed in action against the surging Turkic army, taking advantage of the collapsing wall with the guards who followed him to the end.’ "The city has fallen, but I am still alive!“ “Is there no Christian who will recover my body?"
@@bigschmill294 "eh, if those greek crazy enough to raise a giant chain on a sea, then I'm definitely crazy enough to walk our ship on Land and Montain" - Mehmed II 1453
I absolutely adore this animation style :D. Also this whole city seems like something out of a story book. Golden lions that roared at you, golden birds that sung, elaborate buildings, emperors and crusaders fighting! Idk it all just it’s so interesting to me :3
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
@@nihil_hd1598 The Illyrians are the ancestors of the current Albanians. The greatest scientific authorities of the world have pronounced themselves on the INDIGENOUS and Illyrian origin of the Albanians. I will quote among others: - 🇩🇪 Gottfried Leibniz - 🇸🇪 Johann Thunmann - 🇩🇪 Ritter von Xilander - 🇩🇪 Franz Bopp - 🇩🇪 Jakob Fallmerayer - 🇩🇪 J, von Hahn - 🇩🇪 Paul Kretschner - 🇦🇹 Norbert Jokl - 🇦🇹Maximilian Lambertz - 🇬🇧 William Leak - 🇬🇧 Stewart Mann - 🇬🇧 Dane Holger Pedersen - 🇮🇹 Angelo Masci - 🇦🇹 G. Mayer, H. Olberg - 🇦🇹 R. Solta - 🇨🇵 A. Ducellier - 🇭🇷 Milan Šufflay - 🇭🇷 Radoslav. Katicic Etc ... From the beginning of the Paleolithic the territory of Illyria (formerly, from the two banks of the Danube to Epirus) was occupied by men as proven by numerous discoveries of which the Karprina caves dating from approximately 160.000 years (currently in Croatia), the Gjatan cave (in Albania near Shkodër), etc. . Eugene Pittard (🇫🇷) affirmed in 1916: "I have already said elsewhere that Albania seems to me to contain the most important archaeological and anthropological documents for what concerns the origins of the MOST ANCIENT POPULATIONS OF THE BALKAN PENINSULA; populations that, at the dawn of history, we see appear under the name of Illyrians! Sources 📜 : (The peoples of the Balkans, antropological sketches, Neuchâtel / Paris)
@@nihil_hd1598 First of all I open a parenthesis about the name of Albania or Albanians quoted by Strabo (around 58-21/25) in the 1st century BC and Claudius Ptolemy (around 100 - 170 AD) in the 2nd century AD. It derives from the name of an Illyrian tribe, the Albanoi, which was located around the city of Albanopolis (now Zgërdhesh located in the region of Krujë). Moreover, even today, a region of Albania, from the north of Tirana (between the rivers Mat and Erzen), is called Albëni (gheg dialect) or Arbëri (tosk dialect). But this name Albanoi with its various variants (Arbanites, Arvanites, Arvanitis, Arvanos, Arban, Arbani, Arbanon, Arnavuts, Arnauts, Arbëri, Arbër, Arbëni, Arbën, Albën, Albanois, or Albanians) really began to spread when the Albanian territories became a field of hostility and a buffer zone between Byzantines and the new Slavic invaders (Serbs, Croats etc.. ...) towards the beginning of the seventh century AD. Several writers of the eleventh century, including Michel Attaliate and Jean Skyltzes, have recounted this kind of confrontation and widely spoken of these Albanian mountain tribes. It is the Angevin chancelleries (Charles I of Anjou, brother of St Louis, proclaimed himself king of Albania in 1272) which, in the 13th century, conveyed the name of Albanian or Albanians, which spread rapidly, like wildfire, throughout Europe. It should be noted that the Albanians never use this name (Albanian) to designate their own ethnic group: they call themselves Shqiptar, that is to say son or child of the eagle. Source 📜 : Albanie: histoire du Moyen Age au XXe s, P.54, Mathieu AREF (Histoire et langue) ou l'incroyable Odyssée d'un peuple préhellénique.
I wish the library of Alexandria never burnt (if you plan on correcting me by saying " um actually The library burnt multiple times" I mean I wish the information in the library was never lost.)
@@elias9746 Funny how people remember Alexandria but just as significant burning of the House of Wisdom (that had many copies of Alexandrian texts) remains obscure...
and we still called ourselves Ρωμιοί (Romans) up until gaining independence from Turkey in the 19th century when we started calling ourselves Έλληνες (Greeks) again. We still use it in certain cases, as when we celebrate the independence heroes like Athanasios Diakos whose last words were "I was born a Roman and I will die a Roman" in 1821.
A tragedy indeed that byzantine fell.. political squabbling, rivalry and scattered divisions of Romans instead of unity against the ottomans. Much like Carthage.. like carthage
Yuwan true.. but other than its leaders. Carthage mostly use mercenaries to fight its wars and supplement it's own military.. and those sellswords has no loyalty to the people or the land, just gold. Heck.. in its final days, it's own citizen held off the Romans for nearly three years before being finally defeated. And it was a bloody victory for Rome. Which is why they didn't show much mercy and chose to commit genocide.
Rome lived into the middle ages. Funny how that worked. They technically survived to almost the discovery of America. Where Rome’s truest successor, The United States of America would be born. Like Rome, America would bring new advanced values to the world and spread them. Like Rome America would hate the idea of kings. Like Rome America would expand.
Nice video, the Byzantine empire was the Eastern Roman empire, the main differences from the ancient and western Roman empire was that the Byzantines spoke Greek, they did had Greek literature and their culture was Greco-Roman not just Roman or just Christian. And they did continued the way of life of late antiquity in the middle ages. They did had bath houses and chariot races, wrestling etc and spectacles.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
@@makadoz yea,also many roman emperors from today spain or illyricum were indeed romans whos family just seatteled/lived in those areas.at least the roman emperors who were part of the aristocracy at birth
Ted-Ed is amazing...I can't even explain it in words. You guys are so informational and make it fun to learn about these things. The art and animation is great, and I watch all your videos and show them to my friends. My social studies teacher is also a BIG fan of your work, so keep up the great work! I hope one day I could be as good as you.
The Eastern Roman Empire had the most professional army and navy ever to date. And the during the Macedonian Dynasty had the Skutatoi which was the best heavy infantry known in the medieval world, and a direct continuation of the roman legion.
Lorddervish212 Quinteros Aranda the Varangian Guard. Then yes. Unfortunately the Skutatoi became disbanded by the early 11th century ad. Being replaced by Varangian Guardsmen, Pronoiars, and Athanatoi.
andres polo How can I. Both the Cataphracts and Clibanarii are the best professional heavy cavalry ever known. Heck even Norman knights are impressed by them.
Most of the British were pushed out of the island long before Constantinople fell. Those that lived on were ruled by the Anglo Saxons and Franks/ French, enemies of Rome.
@@itnotmeitu3896 Oh yes? Was it similar to how Sennacherib surrounded Jerusalem's citadel, and then the king Hezekiah paid tribute and so Sennacherib had his army leave and Hezekiah could not hurt Sennacherib at all, but lied like the religious leadership often do and said (or wrote in his paid royal history book once he died, included in almost all the Christian Bibles) that Yahweh made Sennacherib's army magically disappear?
letsomethingshine maybe? I don’t really know that story but it’s pretty well documented that Attila was burning through the north of the ERE but saw the Constantine walls and knew there was a pretty high likelihood he couldn’t siege the city so demanded that the ERE pay him to leave, which they did and then he went on campaign against the WRE and other factions
Well, jokes on ERE, cause Atilla's great great grandson Mehmet (Huns = Old-Turks) took the challenge and succeeded. If you think about it, we ended both WRE & ERE.
It's hard to miss the resemblance: both the successor state (ERE - Gondor) of a once great nation (SPQR - Numenor) , being the survived part of its former self while the other part collapsed (WRE - Arnor), both being the most advanced state of the region for most of the time despite experiencing a lengthy decline, and both capitals (Constantinople - Minas Tirith) constructed top-tier city defence system which serves as the last resort when facing the everexisting eastern menace (Sassanid/the Caliphates/Ottoman - Mordor)
By the way, Lord of the Rings had many inspirations from Roman Empire. The people from Numenor (inspired by the myth of Atlantis) created the old kingdom that centuries after split in two like old Roman Empire. The western part called Arnor that destroyed similar to the West Roman empire but the Eastern part called Gondor survived exactly like Byzantium. The capital of Gondor was the city of Minas Tirith with huge walls like Constantinople that fought for centuries eastern barbarians from Mordor or in real-world Turkey.
Turkey was part of the Roman Empire for a thousand years what are you talking about. It is the fall of Asia Minor (today's turkey) to the Turks that began the slow death spiral for the Empire.
@@branis96 it's funny how the name "roman" is derived from "rome" yet it's been a long time since the eastern "Romans" lost Rome, and they replaced it with Constantinople, so if we use the logic of the true Romans, eastern "Romans" should be referred to as "Constantinopleans" or "Byzantines" because of the old Athenian colony that was present on the same exact location as Constantinople. so calling them "Romans" is like giving a new country a culture that the country that controlled the area before it had, it's like saying "Kazakhstan is Russian because Russia once ruled it" while Kazakhstan is Kazakh even before Russia invaded it in the 18th century
"It may be said, however, that despite its multi-national character, three forces tended to give it unity. One was Orthodoxy, the other a common language, and the third the imperial tradition. The first and the second were Greek and to the extent that they were Greek the Empire was Greek also. The third was Roman, and to that extent the Empire was also Roman" The Transfer of Population as a Policy in the Byzantine Empire Author(s): Peter Charanis Source: Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 3, No. 2, (Jan., 1961), pp. 140-154 Published by: Cambridge University Press
İm Turkisch. Wè have never called Christians Byzantian. Wè always call them "Rum" meaning Roman. Another intresting fact. Turks call the place across Bosporus the European site and all South of Balkan Rumeli meaning Thé land of Romans. Because in that time when it was taken by Turks the majority of the people living their where Roman people of the Roman Empire .
@@theotn2209 Nah, the Seljuks were slowly wearing the Byzantines down hence the Fourth Crusade. All the Fourth Crusade managed to do was expedite the fall of the Empire. (Which technically did happen with the formation of the Latin Empire and the Nicean Empire from the victorious crusaders and Byzantine nobles respectively) The Turkish nomads were extremely prevalent and powerful well before the Fourth Crusade; the Alexiad is about the legendary Basileus Alexios Komnenos attempting to salvage the remains of the Empire after the massive string of defeats at the hands of the Turks in the latter half of the 11th century leading to his coronation in 1081.
So wait you mean to tell me that in the 2000s, just 20 years ago, there were still people calling themselves "Romans" in Greece and/or it's neighboring countries?
To this day a greek will refer to themselves as a "Hellene" or a "Romios" (never as "greek" btw). It's not like we believe the latin speaking roman empire was greek, ofcourse, but we were roman citizens and the name stuck I guess.
Same answer why some Iranians call themselves Persians; to associate with the rich culture and history than the current one associated with oppressive regime.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
@@samuelskogqvist5565 Except there have been numerous DNA tests and modern Greeks are 95% related to Ancient Greeks. Turkish propaganda is just laughable at this point.
@@samuelskogqvist5565 Have you seen ancient Greeks? Do you imagine them having pure white skin in the scorching sun, just like you imagine Jesus Christ with white skin and blonde hair?
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
In a history exam i had to write an essay about the fall of the Roman Empire. I wrote that The Western Roman Empire collapsed 400 AD and the Byzantine not long after that. We weren't really taught much about Byzantine so i was a bit suprised when my teacher had commented that actually Byzantine existed over 1000 years after that. So i came here to educate myself
It's facinating how much impact the fall of Byzantium had. The scholars and philosophers fled from the turks to their ancient capital of Roma with the old knowledge thus creating the Renaissance. With the Bosburus in muslim hands the connection to the east broke and the silkroad came to an end. But because nobody wanted to give up eastern goods the europeans sailed to the east by themself creating the age of discovery
@@RamanShrikant Reconquered much of the lost territory, including Italy Made the Corpus Juris Civilis, which is still the basis of law in the western world Built Hagia Sophia Improved women's rights Just to name a few.
This might be late but Justinian’s Reconquest led to the massive depletion of Roman Treasury. In fact, it was so bad that many scholars consider it as a fatal mistake as it led to the forces of the Romans being stretched to thin and with no treasury to satisfy the citizenry and the army. While he did allow women’s rights and established basic law. He instrumentally contributed to the Fall of the byzantines by attempting to retake provinces that didn’t pay off themselves. Finally with the depletion of the treasury, it lead to the turbulent times where an emperor had to cut wages to build up treasury and led to his demise and also symbolic treasures being pawned off to build it back up again.
@@ElectricAlect Justinian could've have incorporated the first Italian kingdom into the East Roman empire as it already was a client state for them which would've been much less costly and kept Italy strong to defend.
One of the most thrilling historical novels set in the Greek Byzantine Empire during the last Siege of Constantinople, is “The Dark Angel” (original title Johannes Angelos) by prominent Finnish writer, Mika Waltari. Truly epic.
Its funny how the Western European dark ages where during the "Thriving" of the Greeks/byzantines , while Greek/Byzantine dark ages where during the Renaissance and after
I'm a greek (hellene) and I would like to express my point of view and how we greeks (hellenes) perceive history of byzantium. First of all Byzantine Empire is a post historic term was used by western european scholars of studying greek history of the former eastern part of roman empire. Either one refers to greeks or hellenes, romioi, yunans are the same term of people living in the current land of Greece and all of those people living previously in Minor Asia (Μικρά Ασία) or nowadays land of Anatolia Turkey. The term ''hellene'' ceased to be used almost from the third century because of the fact that this term meant someone to believe in 12 gods and not in christianity. The term ''hellene'' was revived again by greek and western political thinkers and revolutionaries in 17th-18th century. Instead of ''hellene'', the term ''roman'' citizen had started to be used in order to be self-proclaimed by any citizen of the Roman Empire (but in reality Eastern-Roman-Empire). It could be a greek, a former roman and latin citizen or an armenian or a slav or any other nationality to join the empire. Of course the majority of them were greeks, speaking greek and were christian orthodox and were guided in religioun by the patriarch of Constantinople ( the other pole of power along with the emperor). Most of the western powers at the time already called the realm Greek Imperium or Greek Empire but not Roman. In contrary to this, the greek-phone or ellino-phone people called themselves as roman citizen or ''romioi'' in greek language. Of course my predecessors were not roman (the modern italian people do not accept this term - they are right) but they inherited the roman structure, the roman power and roman continuity of an empire. The crucial historical point was the establishment of the new capital in the eastern part of the empire in the old greek town of Byzantion ( founded by ancient greeks in 7th century before Christ) with the name New Rome. This term was never be used for the descpription of the capital but the term (polis of Constantine - city of Constantine ) in other words Constantine-polis or Constantinopolis or Κωνσταντινούπολη in greek language was dominated from then until 1930 when the new-born country Turkey came up as the continuity of the former Ottoman Empire, had changed the name to Istanbul. Finally I would like to add the words of Helene Glykatzi-Ahrweiler born 1926 who is a Greek academic Byzantinologist of what Byzantine Empire was. Byzantium is divided in 3 periods of time, during 1000 years of its existence. The first period approximately (330AD - 680AD) Byzantium was a roman empire with roman structure, christian population under the dominance of the greek language, the second period approximately (680AD -1100AD) was a empire with christian structure, christian population and greek majority population and the third period (1100AD - 1453AD) was a greek empire with greek structure and greek -orthodox population.
“Four thousand years of Greek history have produced four Greek heritages, each of which has had an effect on the life of the Greeks in later stages of their history. The Hellenic Greeks received a heritage from the Mycenean Greeks, the Byzantine Greeks received on from the Hellenic Greeks, the Modern Greeks have received one heritage from the Byzantines and a second from the Hellenes.” From the notable work of Arnold Toynbee, prominent English historian; “The Greeks and Their Heritages”, Oxford University Press.
"Present your shield, swords, arrows, and spears to them, so that they may learn that they are dealing with the descendants of the Greeks and the Romans." ( From the final speech of the last roman emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos)
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
Muhammadens ny sirf loota hai hai. Muhammad aur muslims jaltay aye hain christian emoire say issi loye muhammad k tattay sabotage krnay peechay paray rehtay thay
Monumental works of Warren Treadgold regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire; “A Concise History of Byzantium”, “A History of the Byzantine State and Society”, “Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”, “The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”.
He did not mention Heraclius who made a Herculean effort to beat Persia and recover 50% of the lost empire within 2 decades, the forefather of thematic system which was the backbone of the empire for 500 years. But the narrative is astonishingly vivid and fun and focuses on great points. Justinian was a great legislator that hapenned to have under command a brilliant general, Belisarius.
Greece and Greek people are not a file in a PC you can delete. Greek language has the longest documented history of any Indo-European language, spanning at least 3,400 years of written records. It is the Ancient Greek civilization kept alive with the Byzantine Empire in the Middle Ages, that shaped more than any other the European identity. Standing in these lands for millenniums, always fighting against the odds. Eternal glory to our formidable ancestors 🔥🇬🇷
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
Western medieval sources also referred to the empire as the "Empire of the Greeks" (Latin: Imperium Graecorum) and to its emperor as Imperator Graecorum (Emperor of the Greeks);[20] these terms were used to distinguish it from the Holy Roman Empire that claimed the prestige of the classical Roman Empire in the West
Absolutely. "Byzantine Empire" is a name coined by some German historian after the Fall of Constantinople, and the rest of the world just agreed. Throughout the entirety of the existence of "Eastern" Roman Empire, they called their empire Roman Empire (Imperium Romanum / Basileia Rhomaion) and themselves as Romans. "Byzantine Empire" is fake news.
@@LOLnesssss Did you even watch the video? It was coined to distinguish The Western, pagan, latin-speaking part of the empire from the Eastern, Christian, Greek-speaking part. It is not "fake news," while the term wasn't coined until later it was used to describe differences that very much existed.
Nicholas Kampouris People get confused and think Byzantine Empire is a separate entity from the classical Roman Empire. When the fact is Byzantine Empire / Eastern Roman Empire is the true heir of the classical Roman Empire. Constantine moved the capital from Rome to Byzantium/Constantinople, so Constantinople should have been regarded as the true Roman capital thereafter. Pagan/Christian and Latin/Greek divide shouldnt matter as the eastern Romans always called themselves Rome & Romans. But because Western Europeans wanted to hijack the title of Romans. Oddly no one seems to have a problem with Holy Roman Empire. They were definitely not Romans, and should be called something else if they were to be treated the same as “Byzantine Empire” historiographically.
LOLness I agree with you! They did call themselves Roman. A lot of the reason why they still did though was because they felt like they could continue the Roman Empire (which was Greco-Roman at its foundation) The problem I have is when nationalists and antihellenes try and discredit the Hellenic influence in the eastern empire. They were spoke and wrote in Greek, especially when the western empire fell. They try and say there is no cultural or DNA connection between modern Greece and the ERE or (Byzantium) which just doesn’t make sense lol.
Nicholas Kampouris I didnt know about that. But im sure its common knowledge in the rest of the world that Byzantine Empire / ERE was Greek, hence why the name Byzantine Empire is mainstream. My problem is the name is not historically correct. If they called themselves Rome, we should call them Rome. We dont take it away from them. Just because they are no longer alive.
They also don't like to get into the real reason for the crusades. Normans liked robbing everyone's churches and curbed a army the pope raised. Then conquered Sicily which everyone thought was impossible to take. So distraction time send them to the holy lands.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors). Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱): - Justinian I - Justin I - Anastasius I - Marcianus - Valentinian II - Gratian - Valens - Valentinian I - Jovian - Constantius II - Constantine the Great - Maximianus "Herculius - Diocletian - Probus - Aurelian - Quintillus - Claudius II "Gothicus - Hostilianus - Decius Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)" This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
The video is a little vague on why Constantine moved the capital, so I’d like to explain why. The Roman Empire during the time of Constantine dealt with a lot of issues, but their primary issue was the East. While the West was far from tamed, it was in a far better place than the East. Rival empires began to form in the Middle East and contest with Roman rule. Constantine made the decision to split the empire in 2 and move to the East to better rule against eastern powers. At this point in history, Rome had become somewhat irrelevant to most emperors and only stood as a slowly decaying symbol
I really hope you make a video on the Mesopotamian empire or the Harappa Valley Civilisation. By the way, I just simply luv these videos. Please keep making more. At least it teaches me more things than school.
I wish someone decodes the Harrapan script. That's the main reason why no one trylu has a clue about who these people were and what they actually did. All we know is that they don't seem to have had any Kings, they had well planned cities, a Great Bath and that they traded with the other civilisations of that period. Nothing else really
This is truly beautifully made. Thank you for such an enriching lesson! From the poetic animation to the beautiful narration - I honestly can't get over it!
Έλληνας Εθνικιστής, it wasn't just Greek and by descent turkey is the descendent of Byzantium of caused helenized anatolians always made up a majority of the empire's population followed by Armenians, almost every emperor came from a Anatolian or Armenian family.
MCD's, it depends of you consider all anatolians Greek if yes then yeah most emperors were Greek cause almost all emperors came from central and western Anatolia with a fair share from the eastern part to.
Wow, so there is actually a system of beacons running the width of the Byzantine Empire. I remember in the Lord of the Rings, there is also a system of beacons running from Gondor to Rohan. Is there any chance that Tolkien was inspired by this system of beacons of the Byzantine Empire?
Things like this were relatively common although super expensive to maintain. Its said that under the caliphate from Baghdad, the entirety of North Africa was connected in this way, i.e you could communicate from Egypt to Morocco
@@mortache that is not what he is asking. And the answer is more likely yes, considering how there are also plots in the book that is similar to roman history.
Inaccuracy: the animation @4:04 shows Sultan Mehmet II removing a sign "Welcome to Constantinople" as he conquered the city. In actual fact, the Ottomans continued to use the name Constantinople (in its Arabized version "Costantiniyya"), along with the Istanbul, almost until the end of the empire.
753 BC - Rome was founded by Remus and Romulus 509 BC - Roman Republic was born 4th to 3rd Century BC - Rome expands Italy and beyond 27 BC - Roman Empire was born 330 AD - Emperor Constantine became the first Roman Emperor to legalize Christianity and became the official religion. 395 AD - The Roman Empire has been divided 476 AD - Western Roman Empire fell 5th Century AD - Byzantine Empire became the dominant power in the Middle Ages 1204 - Crusaders sacked Constantinople and divided into four Byzantine kingdoms (Nicaea, Trebizond, Epirus and Morea) 1261 - Nicaea recaptured Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire is now under control 1453 - Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople, ended the Byzantine Empire 1460-61 - Ottomans conquered the remnants of the Byzantine Empire (Despotate of Morea and Empire of Trebizond) From 753 BC to 1453 AD, the Roman Empire had been live for almost two millennia.
Great video and really captures the Roman spirit that permeated the empire.However, it should be noted that the empire improved upon the ancient one in a multitude of ways, particularly in diplomacy and bureaucracy. What the medieval Roman empire lacked in sheer military power in strenuous times, it made up in cunning diplomacy and political manipulation of their enemies.
“With God’s help, we will restore the glory of the Greeks and our beloved homeland, for we are the descendants of the ancient Hellenes”. Excerpt from Heraclius’ speech after the Byzantine victory over the Persians, as recorded by Chronicler Theophanes the Confessor.
Sort of ignoring the whole "Greek empire or still Roman empire?" debate. The empire is a great example of a peoples and empire evolving to fit its current situation. I would definitely say that the empire had evolved because it had lasted so long, while still keeping to its traditions.
How did you forget to mention that the Byzhantine Empire was Orthodox Christian and the rest not. That was probably the biggest and most important cultural and traditional difference, which also had a huge impact on the legacy.
Fun fact, the Renaissance most likely wouldn't have started without the fall of Constantinople as all scholars that were in the city when it was conquered fled west to Italy and other Western Europe provinces, reintroducing medieval Europe to the Roman arts and kickstarting the Renaissance
Oh that is fascinating. That part of the start of the Renaissance was due to Byzantine scholars still connected directly to antiquity.
@@ZoraTheberge it really shows that the best lessons we can learn are from the past, doesn't it
And also the colonization of the new world since the ottomans now controlled the Mediterranean and the spice trade. European countries really had no choice but to sail west.
Italy will become America of its age
to the ancient Greek arts
“The Earth is littered with the ruins of the Empires that believed they were eternal.” - Camille Paglia
Crucial lesson for all: nothing lasts forever
And yet the Roman Empire lives on in the hearts, minds and souls of millions, unlike any other that ever existed. No other empire can compare.
The exception that proves the rule.
@@josephmanno4514 People call the Mongols or the British the greatest empires, but greatness isn't measured in only land despite all three having plenty, it is based on it's legacy, Rome lasted for a thousand years and created the cultures and governmental system of western civilization. No other civilization has had this effect on the world.
Ok emo
Apollo - There’s no doubt that the Romans left a significant impact on the world...but culture, and art and architecture is only one way of measuring an empire’s impact. The Mongols have left a genetic legacy unlike any other. And people from all over the world feared the Mongols and their military prowess.
*Sometimes, I still cry at night over the fall of the Byzantine Empire.*
Tom Bombadil I fell
You should cry when constantinople was sacked by crusading Venetian Banker
even though it was the christians repeatedly sacking it?
Owl Eyes Sack it, sure. But hey, atleast they didn't conquer it and rename it...
Owl Eyes **Catholics. We were Orthodox.
I remember when I was younger I thought that the Roman Empire fell altogether to the barbarians, so when I was learning about the crusades not long ago I was astonished to find that the eastern half of the Roman Empire continued to thrive through the dark and Middle Ages.
I wouldn't call it thriving empire, it was more like a slowly rotting corpse.
@@mistakurisu5115 Actually, they had many periods of amazing development, then destruction, then amazing development, then destruction, then amazing development... Until after the Komnenian restoration, they finally settled on destruction, and they fell.
@@mistakurisu5115 The plague crushed any plan for byzantine to restore itself
@@jpb2366 you mean by the plague when Justinian was the emperor emperor?
@@napolien1310 pick one they had plenty.
Constantinople became Istanbul in 28/03/1930. Ottoman called it as Constantinople too. It's name changed in Turkey's time.(after Ottoman)
It is Constantinople with Turkish accent. the Greeks used to I am going "Is Tin Polin" (to Polis- Constantinople). "Is Tin Polin" was turned to IsTanBul by the Turks.
Not Constantinople, its Constantiniyye
@Cat People documentarys Cry
Aslında Onu ilk Islambul olarak kullandılar ve bunu Fatih Sultan Mehmet öne sürdü.
It was changed after Turkey became a Republic right?
The Roman Empire franchise was so successful it got a trilogy and several spinoffs and fanfiction.
Roman Republic - the great prequel to the series
Roman Empire - the zenith of the franchise
Western Roman Empire - the disappointing sequel
Eastern Roman Empire - restored greatness
Ottoman Empire - the awful fanfiction
Holy Roman Empire - the ripoff version
Russian Empire - the bootleg version
Leonard Marc Ramos You forgot the Etruscan and Roman Kingdom version as prequels and the fact that Rome is a new franchise that belongs to the Humanworld Saga and is a sequel to the Hellenistic period. The Romans, despite thier great might are not as great as people believe, as those guys had little to no scientific influence other than spreading some good architectural stuff, the Islamic chaliphate, HRE(which you also forgot) and the Chinese dynasties did much more for our scientific progress.
Yuwan HRE was never a unified entity, and cannot be credited for the acheivements of its individual parts.
Islamic Caliphates had their Golden Age but they worked on the foundations of the Ancient Greeks. They did make progress, not arguing against that, but for some reason they stopped.
Out of the Chineese Dynasties, only 4 can be dubbed as real golden ages of progress.
Do not forget that Constantinople was the most advanced and stable city during the middle ages in Europe, spread and perserved laws and philosophies that would have been lost with Rome's demise.
Don't forget the spiritual successor: America. Basically just Rome 4.0. But it wants to pretend it's original.
You sir I must shake hands with.
The HRE is a Ripoff version and Russia is truly a bootleg version. I mean I'm gonna use your words. :D
Dominion of Soissons - Scrapped planned sequel to Western Roman Empire
Republic of Venice - Wildly successful spin-off
Expect the "Roman vs. Byzantine" fight in the comments. :-)
Kings and Generals your channel is awesome
Kings and Generals actually everyone knows the ERE is the Roman empire.
Kings and Generals Well by the logic of the people for Byzantines being roman, ALL civilizations are the successor to the Sumerians, ALL.
Actually I would expect the "Roman vs. Ottoman" fight but there will be a flamewar nonetheless.
As is tradition. 😆
@3:37 One of the saddest things that humanity can do is burn/destroy knowledge/history
What do you expect from chatolics?
@Alexander The Great Yes, but even before medieval times there was Peter the Reader killing Univesity Professor Hypatia because of "Christian" jealousy with thousands of Christian followers.
Much of this lost work could have been saved by Arabs, however Bagthdad was also burn to the ground by Mongols.
Samuel Skogqvist like Muslims haven’t don’t that?
@Lord Farquaad Do you know that orthodox christianity is a thing?
It's interesting that when you nowadays ask Greeks about what they associate with their land's tradition everyone will immediately answer "ancient Greece!" but they seem to have forgotten the byzantine part of history, which is so important and rich in details!
We have forgot a lots of things .Our identity ,our tratition ,our faith but,all this will stop being when Erdogan kill as all.
palemoonlight96 true
Well im greek and believe me even if i wanted to forget it i cant.... im studying it in school
I havent
Well, maybe it's the same way they will not want to associate with the Ottomans. The last time Greece was truly independent was in the times of Ancient Greece and right after Alexander. After that they got captured by the Romans, who were ruling until right before the Ottoman Empire. The East Roman Empire, were still Romans, that were not interested on the greek culture, on the other hand they even destroyed temples, statues etc. Even until 1453, all the state documents were in Latin. So the East Roman Empire was SOMEWHAT Greek in the since that from some point the Greek Language was used more often, and that some Emperors were of greek heritage. But many will argue that the Roman Empire would have more greek elements than the East Roman one. I think this may explain the phenomenon.
To anyone wondering why we Greeks call ourselves "Ρωμιοί" (Romaioi-Romans), it's because when the Western Roman Empire fell, we felt we had the "legitimacy" of continuing the ideals and the spirit of the Empire. But we never abandoned the name "Έλληνες" (Hellenes), but we reserved it for our ancient identity.
Also it was because of Roman law, according to which, everyone that was a law-abiding citizen according to Roman morals and ethos, was a "Roman citizen". And this was a political term, as it wasn't referring to any ethnic group as the Roman Empire was consisted of various ethnicities, including Greeks.
Well the Eastern Roman Empire was Greco-Roman. But saying that it was a Greek empire is wrong...
1182
It was not a matter of legitimacy (and i don't get why the " " in legitimacy they even receive the imperial insignia when the west part fell) or something legal, it was simply reality, the Roman Empire was divide in two administrations West and East, both were the Roman Empire, both were the wings of the same eagle, it was natural that if West or East part fell, the other part is what is left of the Roman Empire (being the case that the East part was the one that survive more time and preserve the legacy of the Empire to the end), idk why this is even a debate for some people, 2 sides of the same coin, west and east, both Roman Empire.
@@NinjoTerror not at all whit time it became that
"we"
"Gondor calls for aid!"
Nessie Andrew i've seen another comment just like that, is it a comparison of Constantinople and Minas Tirith?
It's because of the beacons.
Nessie Andrew oh, as a Tolkien fan, I facepalm pretty hard now
IMO Constantinople has more common with Osgiliath than Minas Tirith.
Nessie Andrew And Rohan will answer! Muster the Rohirim!
"Who were the barbarians? Non-Romans said the Romans being invaded by non-Romans."
Chicken north africans
R.I.P Roman Empire, or at least half of it.
The other half is just fine
But it's not in Rome anymore so let's give it a new name.
i always thought they were Huns..maybe i was wrong.
Italy:I will make rome great again.
Greece:No,I will make rome great again.
Greco~Italian war.
Rome: Your Country is mine!
Greece: No!
*4 wars later*
Greece: Fine, take it!
*many years later*
Italy: Your Country is mine!
Greece: No!
Germany: Yes!
Holy Roman Empire: I will make reborn a German-Roman Empire
1rst French Empire: I will make reborn a Gallo-Roman Empire
* Wars of 4 european Coalition against the french, but Napoléon succeeds and HRE is no more. *
Europe again 3 times: "i'm gonna end this man's whole career"
lialiailion I know it’s old and actually a good joke, but ironically Italians played a huge role in the Greek independence.
ooof
Roman's we are and two. You belong to Roman empire and we stayed the Roman empire because the empire broke in two parts the east and the west Roman empire. We were the east and you were in west and the west Roman empire collapsed by barbarian tribes and we collapsed by ottomans
Constantinople is such a beautiful name
But it's Istanbul, not Constantinople
βασιλοπουλος αναστασης Well, It's Istanbul for centuries and for those who claims that it is called "Constantinapole" are just fairy dreamers.. or should we say that they are just the pussiest greeks ? Ha my dear friend ?
Tolunay Baş get rekt
Tolunay Baş it was Constantinople for 11 centuries
oi greeks and arabs both made great advancements in science and philosophy to get us where we are now why are y’all fighting you should be celebrating
edit: wanted to say muslims but because greek is a nationality I said arabs but forgot we’re talking about the ottomans
•-•
So you guys didn't mention Justinian?
And basil II
Alexios I
Justinian and Basil II arguably greatest of Byzantine Emperors
And what of the greatest general of all time?
Flavius Belisarius greatest Byzantine General is probably you but Greatest military general ever is probably Alexander, Khalid bin Waleed, Hannibal or Genghis khan, Subatai
“What do you mean the ships are walking?”
-Last Words of Constantine XI, 1453
Give some context to this.
@@mojewjewjew4420 When the Ottoman was unable to break through the Golden Bay defense, they carried the ship like a Viking.
That was fatal.
But in our country, this is what it says.
‘When Constantinople fell, Constantinus XI, who had no intention of living a miserable life, was reportedly killed in action against the surging Turkic army, taking advantage of the collapsing wall with the guards who followed him to the end.’
"The city has fallen, but I am still alive!“
“Is there no Christian who will recover my body?"
@@Kimpinecone I love the fact that the ottomans just went "hey we should carry our ships on our backs lmao"
@@nerdoroni Lol thats oddly inspirational but like, in the unconventional way. "So you hit a road block. Have you tried just going around it?"
@@bigschmill294 "eh, if those greek crazy enough to raise a giant chain on a sea, then I'm definitely crazy enough to walk our ship on Land and Montain" - Mehmed II 1453
I absolutely adore this animation style :D. Also this whole city seems like something out of a story book. Golden lions that roared at you, golden birds that sung, elaborate buildings, emperors and crusaders fighting! Idk it all just it’s so interesting to me :3
I think the same it is so i interesting.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
@@Universal.. albania never had an empire.sad
@@nihil_hd1598 The Illyrians are the ancestors of the current Albanians.
The greatest scientific authorities of the world have pronounced themselves on the INDIGENOUS and Illyrian origin of the Albanians.
I will quote among others:
- 🇩🇪 Gottfried Leibniz
- 🇸🇪 Johann Thunmann
- 🇩🇪 Ritter von Xilander
- 🇩🇪 Franz Bopp
- 🇩🇪 Jakob Fallmerayer
- 🇩🇪 J, von Hahn
- 🇩🇪 Paul Kretschner
- 🇦🇹 Norbert Jokl
- 🇦🇹Maximilian Lambertz
- 🇬🇧 William Leak
- 🇬🇧 Stewart Mann
- 🇬🇧 Dane Holger Pedersen
- 🇮🇹 Angelo Masci
- 🇦🇹 G. Mayer, H. Olberg
- 🇦🇹 R. Solta
- 🇨🇵 A. Ducellier
- 🇭🇷 Milan Šufflay
- 🇭🇷 Radoslav. Katicic
Etc ...
From the beginning of the Paleolithic the territory of Illyria (formerly, from the two banks of the Danube to Epirus) was occupied by men as proven by numerous discoveries of which the Karprina caves dating from approximately 160.000 years (currently in Croatia), the Gjatan cave (in Albania near Shkodër), etc. .
Eugene Pittard (🇫🇷) affirmed in 1916: "I have already said elsewhere that Albania seems to me to contain the most important archaeological and anthropological documents for what concerns the origins of the MOST ANCIENT POPULATIONS OF THE BALKAN PENINSULA; populations that, at the dawn of history, we see appear under the name of Illyrians!
Sources 📜 : (The peoples of the Balkans, antropological sketches, Neuchâtel / Paris)
@@nihil_hd1598 First of all I open a parenthesis about the name of Albania or Albanians quoted by Strabo (around 58-21/25) in the 1st century BC and Claudius Ptolemy (around 100 - 170 AD) in the 2nd century AD.
It derives from the name of an Illyrian tribe, the Albanoi, which was located around the city of Albanopolis (now Zgërdhesh located in the region of Krujë).
Moreover, even today, a region of Albania, from the north of Tirana (between the rivers Mat and Erzen), is called Albëni (gheg dialect) or Arbëri (tosk dialect).
But this name Albanoi with its various variants (Arbanites, Arvanites, Arvanitis, Arvanos, Arban, Arbani, Arbanon, Arnavuts, Arnauts, Arbëri, Arbër, Arbëni, Arbën, Albën, Albanois, or Albanians) really began to spread when the Albanian territories became a field of hostility and a buffer zone between Byzantines and the new Slavic invaders (Serbs, Croats etc.. ...) towards the beginning of the seventh century AD.
Several writers of the eleventh century, including Michel Attaliate and Jean Skyltzes, have recounted this kind of confrontation and widely spoken of these Albanian mountain tribes.
It is the Angevin chancelleries (Charles I of Anjou, brother of St Louis, proclaimed himself king of Albania in 1272) which, in the 13th century, conveyed the name of Albanian or Albanians, which spread rapidly, like wildfire, throughout Europe.
It should be noted that the Albanians never use this name (Albanian) to designate their own ethnic group: they call themselves Shqiptar, that is to say son or child of the eagle.
Source 📜 : Albanie: histoire du Moyen Age au XXe s, P.54, Mathieu AREF (Histoire et langue) ou l'incroyable Odyssée d'un peuple préhellénique.
really great animation on this one
A T then watch the berlin wall ones
A T yes me too
Remus and Kiki did it.
Yesss I L O V E IT SO MUCH !! 😍
@@thenikhilray99 who are they? the animators?
As someone who took several Roman and "Byzantine" history classes in college, this is a well-done video
Genie: You have three wishes
Me: i wish byzantium never fell
Genie: You have three wishes. That ones on me.
Lmaooo
I wish the library of Alexandria never burnt (if you plan on correcting me by saying " um actually The library burnt multiple times" I mean I wish the information in the library was never lost.)
Elias 676 id wish for that too my friend
@@elias9746 Funny how people remember Alexandria but just as significant burning of the House of Wisdom (that had many copies of Alexandrian texts) remains obscure...
Nope.They were actually very cruel people.The Church hated them thus they are call Byzantines
This is so sad.
"Alexios, play Despacito"
I felt that
Fck odyssey
No but this is a really funny comment
"Alexios, play Despacitus"
@@martindels528 it's not about odyssey you doink
In Turkey we still call Greeks "Roman"
okay we call them "Rum" which comes from the word "Rome".
and we still called ourselves Ρωμιοί (Romans) up until gaining independence from Turkey in the 19th century when we started calling ourselves Έλληνες (Greeks) again. We still use it in certain cases, as when we celebrate the independence heroes like Athanasios Diakos whose last words were "I was born a Roman and I will die a Roman" in 1821.
my family always calls greeks as "yunan" and we call rome as "rum"
Really? I thought you called us Yunan, which comes from the ancient greek word "Ιων" (= Ion)
+Vassiliki Sin
Make Greece Roman again!
gijijijijijijijijijijji we use both. Both are official names
A tragedy indeed that byzantine fell.. political squabbling, rivalry and scattered divisions of Romans instead of unity against the ottomans. Much like Carthage.. like carthage
NorthObsidianG Carthage had just some terrible leaders and luck, we might have had Archimedes's knowledge if it weren't for Rome.
Yuwan true.. but other than its leaders. Carthage mostly use mercenaries to fight its wars and supplement it's own military.. and those sellswords has no loyalty to the people or the land, just gold. Heck.. in its final days, it's own citizen held off the Romans for nearly three years before being finally defeated. And it was a bloody victory for Rome. Which is why they didn't show much mercy and chose to commit genocide.
NorthObsidianG Byzantine is an adjective. Not a noun.
kay jay I dont know what's that got to do with the east romans when I'm pointing out the similarities of byzantine and Carthage
@Saad Rizvi I do not think so.. but it has been disputed by many people. Still I stand by that.
The animation is absolutely top drawer...quite gripping and Addison’s narrations never fail 🙌🏿🙌🏿🙌🏿👍🏿👍🏿
I was surprised at how good this was.
I like to see that my culture has still lived on, thanks to my Byzantine cousins.
Anders ᛖᛚᛁᚨᛋᛖᚾ 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Anders ᛖᛚᛁᚨᛋᛖᚾ actually, it was after his adopting father :P
Rome lived into the middle ages. Funny how that worked. They technically survived to almost the discovery of America. Where Rome’s truest successor, The United States of America would be born. Like Rome, America would bring new advanced values to the world and spread them. Like Rome America would hate the idea of kings. Like Rome America would expand.
@@ReformedSooner24 "america is the successor to rome"
That's even funnier that a german "empire" claiming to be roman
@@Moons-of-Jupiter152 literally every democratic country today has similarities to the roman republic. That doesn't make them successors
1453
The year my heart broke...
Crick1952 mine too friend
You mean 1204. If the great betrayal had not happened, the Byzantine Empire probably could have survived the Ottomans.
Larry Lyons their wouldn't be ottomans without fourth crusade.
The year I love, my golden age
Shana twain
Nice video, the Byzantine empire was the Eastern Roman empire, the main differences from the ancient and western Roman empire was that the Byzantines spoke Greek, they did had Greek literature and their culture was Greco-Roman not just Roman or just Christian. And they did continued the way of life of late antiquity in the middle ages. They did had bath houses and chariot races, wrestling etc and spectacles.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
@@Universal.. Illyricum isn’t Albania
@@makadoz yea,also many roman emperors from today spain or illyricum were indeed romans whos family just seatteled/lived in those areas.at least the roman emperors who were part of the aristocracy at birth
The enemies of Greece refuse to accept that it was a Greek empire.
@@Σοβαρευτείτε αφού αυτό το κανάλι, που εδρεύει στον Κhaναδηα είναι στελεχωμένο με ντηουρκηους προωθει καθαρα αντελινηκι πrophagαντα
Ted-Ed is amazing...I can't even explain it in words. You guys are so informational and make it fun to learn about these things. The art and animation is great, and I watch all your videos and show them to my friends. My social studies teacher is also a BIG fan of your work, so keep up the great work! I hope one day I could be as good as you.
The Eastern Roman Empire had the most professional army and navy ever to date. And the during the Macedonian Dynasty had the Skutatoi which was the best heavy infantry known in the medieval world, and a direct continuation of the roman legion.
LagiNaLangAko23 you mean Greek Fire (aka liquid fire or roman fire). But yes they used a flammable weapon that no one to this day knows its secrets.
they also have Viking warriors in their ranks!
Don't forget their cataphracts.
Lorddervish212 Quinteros Aranda the Varangian Guard. Then yes. Unfortunately the Skutatoi became disbanded by the early 11th century ad. Being replaced by Varangian Guardsmen, Pronoiars, and Athanatoi.
andres polo How can I. Both the Cataphracts and Clibanarii are the best professional heavy cavalry ever known. Heck even Norman knights are impressed by them.
Press 'F' to pay respects to my mans Justinian I. F.
Tom Boerstra F for Justinian, F for Theodora
F :(
F
F
Why F?
The Roman Empire raised the British, French, Italians, Portuguese and Spanish, only for them to come over and stab it the back smh. Rude children.
Most of the British were pushed out of the island long before Constantinople fell. Those that lived on were ruled by the Anglo Saxons and Franks/ French, enemies of Rome.
@@AlexanderDiviFilius Enemies of Rome that tried to copy Rome
@@keyos1955 a sad fact
British raised america and it stabed england
american runs the cover for wahhabis america is a mass of continent, so annoying 😑😩
Apparently, Attila the Hun himself saw the walls of Constantinople, and walked away.
More like he saw the Constantine walls decided it wasn’t worth the siege and demanded money to leave the ERE
@@itnotmeitu3896 Oh yes? Was it similar to how Sennacherib surrounded Jerusalem's citadel, and then the king Hezekiah paid tribute and so Sennacherib had his army leave and Hezekiah could not hurt Sennacherib at all, but lied like the religious leadership often do and said (or wrote in his paid royal history book once he died, included in almost all the Christian Bibles) that Yahweh made Sennacherib's army magically disappear?
letsomethingshine maybe? I don’t really know that story but it’s pretty well documented that Attila was burning through the north of the ERE but saw the Constantine walls and knew there was a pretty high likelihood he couldn’t siege the city so demanded that the ERE pay him to leave, which they did and then he went on campaign against the WRE and other factions
Well, jokes on ERE, cause Atilla's great great grandson Mehmet (Huns = Old-Turks) took the challenge and succeeded. If you think about it, we ended both WRE & ERE.
@@minzblatt Wasnt attila defeated by aeitus?
The story of beacons at 2:48 really reminds me of THAT scene in "Return of the King."
Wouldn't surprise me if that's where Tolkien got the idea.
Roman engineering is the greatest in the world!!
@@pomponion6977 is that a mf jojo reference?
That's because it is precisely where Tolkien got the idea from!
It's hard to miss the resemblance: both the successor state (ERE - Gondor) of a once great nation (SPQR - Numenor) , being the survived part of its former self while the other part collapsed (WRE - Arnor), both being the most advanced state of the region for most of the time despite experiencing a lengthy decline, and both capitals (Constantinople - Minas Tirith) constructed top-tier city defence system which serves as the last resort when facing the everexisting eastern menace (Sassanid/the Caliphates/Ottoman - Mordor)
By the way, Lord of the Rings had many inspirations from Roman Empire. The people from Numenor (inspired by the myth of Atlantis) created the old kingdom that centuries after split in two like old Roman Empire. The western part called Arnor that destroyed similar to the West Roman empire but the Eastern part called Gondor survived exactly like Byzantium. The capital of Gondor was the city of Minas Tirith with huge walls like Constantinople that fought for centuries eastern barbarians from Mordor or in real-world Turkey.
Turkey was part of the Roman Empire for a thousand years what are you talking about. It is the fall of Asia Minor (today's turkey) to the Turks that began the slow death spiral for the Empire.
We can also relate the Corsairs of umbar to the barbary Corsairs of North Africa
Calling the Eastern Romans “Byzantines” is like calling Americans “New Yorkers.”
They were simply “Romans.”
More like calling Americans "New Amsterdamers".
calling eastern Romans "Romans" is like calling Americans "british"
they're greeks
@@branis96 it's funny how the name "roman" is derived from "rome" yet it's been a long time since the eastern "Romans" lost Rome, and they replaced it with Constantinople, so if we use the logic of the true Romans, eastern "Romans" should be referred to as "Constantinopleans" or "Byzantines" because of the old Athenian colony that was present on the same exact location as Constantinople. so calling them "Romans" is like giving a new country a culture that the country that controlled the area before it had, it's like saying "Kazakhstan is Russian because Russia once ruled it" while Kazakhstan is Kazakh even before Russia invaded it in the 18th century
@@branis96 ok Sasha.
*MACEDONIA® IS GREECE*
@@edatercharles5566 "Nova Roma", aka. "New Rome"
"It may be said, however, that despite its multi-national character, three forces tended to give it unity. One was Orthodoxy, the other a common language, and the third the imperial tradition. The first and the second were Greek and to the extent that they were Greek the Empire was Greek also. The third was Roman, and to that extent the Empire was also Roman"
The Transfer of Population as a Policy in the Byzantine Empire Author(s): Peter Charanis Source: Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 3, No. 2, (Jan., 1961), pp. 140-154 Published by: Cambridge University Press
What went up also goes down...same as any empire in those days.
kirby march Barcena, actually it went up then down then up then down then up then down then less down then fully down.
Tyler Ellis And I thought it was up-up-down-down-left-right-left-right-B-A.
kirby march Barcena, lol does that give me unlimited tagmata and political stability?
except when you get escape velocity
Except escape velocity
İm Turkisch. Wè have never called Christians Byzantian. Wè always call them "Rum" meaning Roman.
Another intresting fact. Turks call the place across Bosporus the European site and all South of Balkan Rumeli meaning Thé land of Romans. Because in that time when it was taken by Turks the majority of the people living their where Roman people of the Roman Empire .
When ERE fell there was almost no romans there just slavs and greeks, most of the latins left after the retaking of constantinople in 1260
Let's not forget that one time when some random Seljuk decided to declare his kingdom in the Anatolia area "Rum".
also Anatolian Seljuk state also called him seljuk sultanate of rum
Thanks for the information, knew that if the fourth Crusade did not happen the Turks probably would not exist?
@@theotn2209 Nah, the Seljuks were slowly wearing the Byzantines down hence the Fourth Crusade. All the Fourth Crusade managed to do was expedite the fall of the Empire. (Which technically did happen with the formation of the Latin Empire and the Nicean Empire from the victorious crusaders and Byzantine nobles respectively) The Turkish nomads were extremely prevalent and powerful well before the Fourth Crusade; the Alexiad is about the legendary Basileus Alexios Komnenos attempting to salvage the remains of the Empire after the massive string of defeats at the hands of the Turks in the latter half of the 11th century leading to his coronation in 1081.
Born in purple
gregorius revo Better to Die in Purple than to Live in Rags.
Ayyy ck2
So wait you mean to tell me that in the 2000s, just 20 years ago, there were still people calling themselves "Romans" in Greece and/or it's neighboring countries?
Lots of people do. We take great pride in our golden past. As a Romanian and Greek I gladly call myself Roman and I know brothers who do too.
To this day a greek will refer to themselves as a "Hellene" or a "Romios" (never as "greek" btw). It's not like we believe the latin speaking roman empire was greek, ofcourse, but we were roman citizens and the name stuck I guess.
greeks call themselves Ρωμιοί(=Romans) too, but not that often....until about 1900 they called themselves that way more often
The greek minority in Turkey is still called Rumlar in turkish
Same answer why some Iranians call themselves Persians; to associate with the rich culture and history than the current one associated with oppressive regime.
Even though it has collapsed, it’s legacy remains and would never fade away.
True.
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
love these history lessons! please keep making these, as well as riddles and myths!
Byzantine history is a part of Greek history 330 - 1453
Greek history is part of world history.
Rakshasa No, only europe.
Sad.
@@OsmanOsmanHan Barbaric greedy you.
@@milonydausier4179 You should be more respectful
I love how this is animated, I would watch this show no cap
nO CAp
So interesting and well done as always 💛
You literally watch every video I watch
You are everywhere, from Pewdiepie to TED Ed
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
Woah. You made 5th grade Greek history fun and interesting!
It wasn't hard task to make it interesting.
It’s not really Greek history. It’s Roman and Byzantine.
@@catchgenerics8667 Α big portion is Greek cultured. Roman is a political term and Byzantine is a misleading term
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
@@catchgenerics8667 it's the same
the last time i was this early the Byzantine Empire were still dominating
You're as salty as Carthage
I genuinely appreciate the animation over here. Good job😭
Greece also has contributed so much to the world
@torugita johnson Until you realize that todays greeks are just whiter turks.
@@samuelskogqvist5565 Except there have been numerous DNA tests and modern Greeks are 95% related to Ancient Greeks. Turkish propaganda is just laughable at this point.
@@samuelskogqvist5565 Have you seen ancient Greeks? Do you imagine them having pure white skin in the scorching sun, just like you imagine Jesus Christ with white skin and blonde hair?
Yeah bumming
@@samuelskogqvist5565 until you realise that you extract information from wrong sources.
Assassin’s Creed: Revelations makes so much sense now
Daniel Singery great game
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)...
This is the BEST animation style ever! Especially loved the Rise and Fall of The Berlin Wall video too.
In a history exam i had to write an essay about the fall of the Roman Empire. I wrote that The Western Roman Empire collapsed 400 AD and the Byzantine not long after that.
We weren't really taught much about Byzantine so i was a bit suprised when my teacher had commented that actually Byzantine existed over 1000 years after that.
So i came here to educate myself
It's facinating how much impact the fall of Byzantium had. The scholars and philosophers fled from the turks to their ancient capital of Roma with the old knowledge thus creating the Renaissance. With the Bosburus in muslim hands the connection to the east broke and the silkroad came to an end. But because nobody wanted to give up eastern goods the europeans sailed to the east by themself creating the age of discovery
Talks about the Byzantine Empire but never talks about Justinian and Theodora
What did justinian do?
@@RamanShrikant Reconquered much of the lost territory, including Italy
Made the Corpus Juris Civilis, which is still the basis of law in the western world
Built Hagia Sophia
Improved women's rights
Just to name a few.
@@tezz2698 and took Rome back.
This might be late but Justinian’s Reconquest led to the massive depletion of Roman Treasury. In fact, it was so bad that many scholars consider it as a fatal mistake as it led to the forces of the Romans being stretched to thin and with no treasury to satisfy the citizenry and the army. While he did allow women’s rights and established basic law. He instrumentally contributed to the Fall of the byzantines by attempting to retake provinces that didn’t pay off themselves. Finally with the depletion of the treasury, it lead to the turbulent times where an emperor had to cut wages to build up treasury and led to his demise and also symbolic treasures being pawned off to build it back up again.
@@ElectricAlect Justinian could've have incorporated the first Italian kingdom into the East Roman empire as it already was a client state for them which would've been much less costly and kept Italy strong to defend.
I was especially fascinated by the golden lions, the gold birds, and the throne that could raise itself.
One of the most thrilling historical novels set in the Greek Byzantine Empire during the last Siege of Constantinople, is “The Dark Angel” (original title Johannes Angelos) by prominent Finnish writer, Mika Waltari.
Truly epic.
I waited a long time for these...
Thanks 😊
Its funny how the Western European dark ages where during the "Thriving" of the Greeks/byzantines , while Greek/Byzantine dark ages where during the Renaissance and after
I'm a greek (hellene) and I would like to express my point of view and how we greeks (hellenes) perceive history of byzantium. First of all Byzantine Empire is a post historic term was used by western european scholars of studying greek history of the former eastern part of roman empire. Either one refers to greeks or hellenes, romioi, yunans are the same term of people living in the current land of Greece and all of those people living previously in Minor Asia (Μικρά Ασία) or nowadays land of Anatolia Turkey. The term ''hellene'' ceased to be used almost from the third century because of the fact that this term meant someone to believe in 12 gods and not in christianity. The term ''hellene'' was revived again by greek and western political thinkers and revolutionaries in 17th-18th century. Instead of ''hellene'', the term ''roman'' citizen had started to be used in order to be self-proclaimed by any citizen of the Roman Empire (but in reality Eastern-Roman-Empire). It could be a greek, a former roman and latin citizen or an armenian or a slav or any other nationality to join the empire. Of course the majority of them were greeks, speaking greek and were christian orthodox and were guided in religioun by the patriarch of Constantinople ( the other pole of power along with the emperor). Most of the western powers at the time already called the realm Greek Imperium or Greek Empire but not Roman. In contrary to this, the greek-phone or ellino-phone people called themselves as roman citizen or ''romioi'' in greek language. Of course my predecessors were not roman (the modern italian people do not accept this term - they are right) but they inherited the roman structure, the roman power and roman continuity of an empire. The crucial historical point was the establishment of the new capital in the eastern part of the empire in the old greek town of Byzantion ( founded by ancient greeks in 7th century before Christ) with the name New Rome. This term was never be used for the descpription of the capital but the term (polis of Constantine - city of Constantine ) in other words Constantine-polis or Constantinopolis or Κωνσταντινούπολη in greek language was dominated from then until 1930 when the new-born country Turkey came up as the continuity of the former Ottoman Empire, had changed the name to Istanbul. Finally I would like to add the words of Helene Glykatzi-Ahrweiler born 1926 who is a Greek academic Byzantinologist of what Byzantine Empire was. Byzantium is divided in 3 periods of time, during 1000 years of its existence. The first period approximately (330AD - 680AD) Byzantium was a roman empire with roman structure, christian population under the dominance of the greek language, the second period approximately (680AD -1100AD) was a empire with christian structure, christian population and greek majority population and the third period (1100AD - 1453AD) was a greek empire with greek structure and greek -orthodox population.
Ελληνική αυτοκρατορία ήταν...
“Four thousand years of Greek history have produced four Greek heritages, each of which has had an effect on the life of the Greeks in later stages of their history.
The Hellenic Greeks received a heritage from the Mycenean Greeks, the Byzantine Greeks received on from the Hellenic Greeks, the Modern Greeks have received one heritage from the Byzantines and a second from the Hellenes.”
From the notable work of Arnold Toynbee, prominent English historian; “The Greeks and Their Heritages”, Oxford University Press.
"Present your shield, swords, arrows, and spears to them, so that they may learn that they are dealing with the descendants of the Greeks and the Romans."
( From the final speech of the last roman emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos)
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
4th crusade ended the empire. Rest was just a funeral...
i mean it says something about romans and the bysantines that it lasted centuries even while crippled.
good it was tyrant one
Muhammadens ny sirf loota hai hai.
Muhammad aur muslims jaltay aye hain christian emoire say issi loye muhammad k tattay sabotage krnay peechay paray rehtay thay
I hate alexios IV angelos with all of my being.
The Greek had a legend of the last emperor of Rome, calling him the "marble emperor" who would return one day.
It wasn't Rome. Rome was the west. Here it was Greek
Monumental works of Warren Treadgold regarding the Greek Byzantine Empire;
“A Concise History of Byzantium”,
“A History of the Byzantine State and Society”,
“Byzantium and Its Army, 284-1081”,
“The Byzantine Revival, 780-842”.
**talks about byzantine empire**
**doesn't mention justinian, theodora, and procopius**
???
You've read Sailing to Sarantium haven't you
He did not mention Heraclius who made a Herculean effort to beat Persia and recover 50% of the lost empire within 2 decades, the forefather of thematic system which was the backbone of the empire for 500 years. But the narrative is astonishingly vivid and fun and focuses on great points. Justinian was a great legislator that hapenned to have under command a brilliant general, Belisarius.
@@shaeuwn nah i just really like history
@Name Here yeah, he also didn't say the names of every byzantine citizen, terrible video
It's a five minute UA-cam video, do you honestly expect it to cover anything except the very basics?
Greece and Greek people are not a file in a PC you can delete. Greek language has the longest documented history of any Indo-European language, spanning at least 3,400 years of written records.
It is the Ancient Greek civilization kept alive with the Byzantine Empire in the Middle Ages, that shaped more than any other the European identity.
Standing in these lands for millenniums, always fighting against the odds. Eternal glory to our formidable ancestors 🔥🇬🇷
Sad how people apparently stopped being Roman in the early 2000s. I wonder who they are lol
greeks
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
I wish we still had artifacts and literature was not destroyed and still be with us
Happy Orthodox Easter!
Vajstinu voskres!
Serbian for:He had rison
Konos P Hristos Voskres!
Serbian for:He had risen!
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
Pascha*
Western medieval sources also referred to the empire as the "Empire of the Greeks" (Latin: Imperium Graecorum) and to its emperor as Imperator Graecorum (Emperor of the Greeks);[20] these terms were used to distinguish it from the Holy Roman Empire that claimed the prestige of the classical Roman Empire in the West
The Ottoman Empire taking over the Byzantine Empire is like knocking down a Michelin star restaurant and building a McDonald's. FFS.
Just shut up man The ottomans were one of the greatest empire evet
Yeh that makes so much sense the lesser force beating the bigger force haha more credit to my brothers and sisters of the past
I heard that the Eastern Romans never called themselves Byzantine! Is it correct?
Absolutely. "Byzantine Empire" is a name coined by some German historian after the Fall of Constantinople, and the rest of the world just agreed. Throughout the entirety of the existence of "Eastern" Roman Empire, they called their empire Roman Empire (Imperium Romanum / Basileia Rhomaion) and themselves as Romans.
"Byzantine Empire" is fake news.
@@LOLnesssss Did you even watch the video? It was coined to distinguish The Western, pagan, latin-speaking part of the empire from the Eastern, Christian, Greek-speaking part. It is not "fake news," while the term wasn't coined until later it was used to describe differences that very much existed.
Nicholas Kampouris People get confused and think Byzantine Empire is a separate entity from the classical Roman Empire. When the fact is Byzantine Empire / Eastern Roman Empire is the true heir of the classical Roman Empire. Constantine moved the capital from Rome to Byzantium/Constantinople, so Constantinople should have been regarded as the true Roman capital thereafter. Pagan/Christian and Latin/Greek divide shouldnt matter as the eastern Romans always called themselves Rome & Romans. But because Western Europeans wanted to hijack the title of Romans. Oddly no one seems to have a problem with Holy Roman Empire. They were definitely not Romans, and should be called something else if they were to be treated the same as “Byzantine Empire” historiographically.
LOLness I agree with you! They did call themselves Roman. A lot of the reason why they still did though was because they felt like they could continue the Roman Empire (which was Greco-Roman at its foundation) The problem I have is when nationalists and antihellenes try and discredit the Hellenic influence in the eastern empire. They were spoke and wrote in Greek, especially when the western empire fell. They try and say there is no cultural or DNA connection between modern Greece and the ERE or (Byzantium) which just doesn’t make sense lol.
Nicholas Kampouris I didnt know about that. But im sure its common knowledge in the rest of the world that Byzantine Empire / ERE was Greek, hence why the name Byzantine Empire is mainstream. My problem is the name is not historically correct. If they called themselves Rome, we should call them Rome. We dont take it away from them. Just because they are no longer alive.
Did you ever hear the story of the Byzantine Empire? I thought not. It's not a story the history books would tell you.
They also don't like to get into the real reason for the crusades. Normans liked robbing everyone's churches and curbed a army the pope raised. Then conquered Sicily which everyone thought was impossible to take. So distraction time send them to the holy lands.
It's a Roman Legend
It's not something the germans would tell you*
The Illyrians 🇦🇱 contributed a lot to the Roman/Byzantine Empire 🦅 (Fearsome Warriors).
Here is the list of Roman Emperors 🤴 of Illyrian origin (🇦🇱):
- Justinian I
- Justin I
- Anastasius I
- Marcianus
- Valentinian II
- Gratian
- Valens
- Valentinian I
- Jovian
- Constantius II
- Constantine the Great
- Maximianus "Herculius
- Diocletian
- Probus
- Aurelian
- Quintillus
- Claudius II "Gothicus
- Hostilianus
- Decius
Source: The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire: From the First Century A.D. to the Third by Edward N. Luttwak, page 178, "high-grade cavalry (equites Illyriciani)"
This region was late Romanized. It was famous for its excellent soldiers, frustrated but courageous. In Illyria (in the geographical sense) was indeed the most powerful of the Roman armies, in charge of watching over the Danube (nearly 12 legions, that is to say 130 000 men)....
waaaw great animation can you make video about Hannibal Barca please
The video is a little vague on why Constantine moved the capital, so I’d like to explain why. The Roman Empire during the time of Constantine dealt with a lot of issues, but their primary issue was the East. While the West was far from tamed, it was in a far better place than the East. Rival empires began to form in the Middle East and contest with Roman rule. Constantine made the decision to split the empire in 2 and move to the East to better rule against eastern powers. At this point in history, Rome had become somewhat irrelevant to most emperors and only stood as a slowly decaying symbol
Very informative video. I learned a lot in 5 minutes.
I really hope you make a video on the Mesopotamian empire or the Harappa Valley Civilisation.
By the way, I just simply luv these videos. Please keep making more. At least it teaches me more things than school.
indus valley civilization, Harappa is one of their cities
Ilona Sapel yes but in India we call it the Indus Valley civilisation or Harappan Civilisation
Sutapa Pawar yes good idea
Sutapa Pawar Like it's founding myth.
I wish someone decodes the Harrapan script. That's the main reason why no one trylu has a clue about who these people were and what they actually did.
All we know is that they don't seem to have had any Kings, they had well planned cities, a Great Bath and that they traded with the other civilisations of that period.
Nothing else really
I am greek and i learned all this in history but great video.Too bad greece today is not like then.
Greece finna broke.
This is amazing! So educational and I love the animations that went along with the narration! Thank you for sharing this!
This is truly beautifully made. Thank you for such an enriching lesson! From the poetic animation to the beautiful narration - I honestly can't get over it!
Everybody gangsta til the ships start walking
Lmaoo
Nobody get this joke because they dont know how istanbul fell they just say my heart broke and I want it back
Modern day Greeks have many in common with Byzantium, in fact they are the same.
Birgilios Marmaroglou no, the byzantine were more than just greek
Έλληνας Εθνικιστής byzantium was an empire. An epire that had (as all empires do) many ethnicities and races inside it.
Έλληνας Εθνικιστής, it wasn't just Greek and by descent turkey is the descendent of Byzantium of caused helenized anatolians always made up a majority of the empire's population followed by Armenians, almost every emperor came from a Anatolian or Armenian family.
Tyler Ellis actually, it's true there were many minorities but most emperors were Greek*. Anatolian can also mean Greek (Ionian settlers)
MCD's, it depends of you consider all anatolians Greek if yes then yeah most emperors were Greek cause almost all emperors came from central and western Anatolia with a fair share from the eastern part to.
Wow, so there is actually a system of beacons running the width of the Byzantine Empire. I remember in the Lord of the Rings, there is also a system of beacons running from Gondor to Rohan. Is there any chance that Tolkien was inspired by this system of beacons of the Byzantine Empire?
Things like this were relatively common although super expensive to maintain. Its said that under the caliphate from Baghdad, the entirety of North Africa was connected in this way, i.e you could communicate from Egypt to Morocco
@@mortache that is not what he is asking.
And the answer is more likely yes, considering how there are also plots in the book that is similar to roman history.
Inaccuracy: the animation @4:04 shows Sultan Mehmet II removing a sign "Welcome to Constantinople" as he conquered the city. In actual fact, the Ottomans continued to use the name Constantinople (in its Arabized version "Costantiniyya"), along with the Istanbul, almost until the end of the empire.
753 BC - Rome was founded by Remus and Romulus
509 BC - Roman Republic was born
4th to 3rd Century BC - Rome expands Italy and beyond
27 BC - Roman Empire was born
330 AD - Emperor Constantine became the first Roman Emperor to legalize Christianity and became the official religion.
395 AD - The Roman Empire has been divided
476 AD - Western Roman Empire fell
5th Century AD - Byzantine Empire became the dominant power in the Middle Ages
1204 - Crusaders sacked Constantinople and divided into four Byzantine kingdoms (Nicaea, Trebizond, Epirus and Morea)
1261 - Nicaea recaptured Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire is now under control
1453 - Ottoman Turks conquered Constantinople, ended the Byzantine Empire
1460-61 - Ottomans conquered the remnants of the Byzantine Empire (Despotate of Morea and Empire of Trebizond)
From 753 BC to 1453 AD, the Roman Empire had been live for almost two millennia.
Great video and really captures the Roman spirit that permeated the empire.However, it should be noted that the empire improved upon the ancient one in a multitude of ways, particularly in diplomacy and bureaucracy. What the medieval Roman empire lacked in sheer military power in strenuous times, it made up in cunning diplomacy and political manipulation of their enemies.
respect from China. salute to the Roman empire. our ancient friend
?? Roman empire is nothing but ashes.
@@minzblatt and maybe a few distantly related latin countries
“With God’s help, we will restore the glory of the Greeks and our beloved homeland, for we are the descendants of the ancient Hellenes”.
Excerpt from Heraclius’ speech after the Byzantine victory over the Persians, as recorded by Chronicler Theophanes the Confessor.
I love the short and clear explanations of history
selam olsun türkler from yakutia
Selam olsun kardaşım
Selam olsun kan kardeşim. Bil ki yalnız değilsin bu alemde.
Merhaba!Ve selamlar!
I like how you spend your time watching anything that is greek. I guess that is the fate for the ones with none history books.
im in love with Istanbul...such a great city
constantinopole
Looters
@@dieselgeezer18 No Istanbul 🤍
The change from the Roman empire to byzantine has always confused. This video helped so much!
The animation is top notch like always
Respect *Romans* from *Türkiye*
Sort of ignoring the whole "Greek empire or still Roman empire?" debate. The empire is a great example of a peoples and empire evolving to fit its current situation. I would definitely say that the empire had evolved because it had lasted so long, while still keeping to its traditions.
Greek *or* Roman? Doesnt make sense.
The Way of explaining it's So wonderful and really comprehensible
And therefore I have sailed the seas and come
To the holy city of Byzantium...
How did you forget to mention that the Byzhantine Empire was Orthodox Christian and the rest not. That was probably the biggest and most important cultural and traditional difference, which also had a huge impact on the legacy.
Because it’s not relevant. To the non-Christian enemies of the Byzantine Empire, Christian sect didn’t matter.
Loved the animation style. Remus and Kiki made an already interesting video super entertaining as well. 👏🏼