- hellenicaworld.com Byzantium/LX/en/…Names. The name of Constantinople is an honorific eponym referencing its founder, the Roman emperor Constantine the Great.
- about-history.com Historical Period Ancient HistoryMay 11, 330, Constantine officially transfers the capital of the Roman Empire to the city on the Bosphorus and names it New Rome, Constantinople.
- eksisozluk.com constantinople--135832all the leaves are off of the oak and all of the sheep have followed the spoken word. i'm coming constantinople here i come.
- history.com topics/middle-east/constantinopleConstantinople is an ancient city in modern-day Turkey that’s now known as Istanbul. First settled in the seventh century B.C., Constantinople developed into a...
- newworldencyclopedia.org entry/ConstantinopleEurope continued to mourn the loss of Constantinople, yet Europeans had not been consistent friends of the city they claimed to hold in such high esteem.
- newadvent.org cathen/04301a.htmConstantinople forms a special district (sanitary cordon) divided into three principal sections, two in Europe and one in Asia.
- wiki.phantis.com index.php/ConstantinopleYet initially Constantinople did not have all the dignities of Rome, possessing a proconsul, rather than a prefect of the city.
- historycooperative.org constantinople-byzantium-…Constantinople was the largest and wealthiest city of the Middle Ages and one of the few remnants of the once all-encompassing Roman Empire.
- encyclopedia.com religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-…A new source of difficulty between Constantinople and Rome arose over the use of the title "ecumenical patriarch" by the patriarchs of Constantinople.
- reformation.org fall-of-constantinople.htmlAs well as preserving the manuscripts of the New Testament, Constantinople gave the world a stable currency for about 800 years (400-1200).