- kids.kiddle.co ConstantinopleConstantinople was a Christian city, lying in the most Christianised part of the Empire. Constantine laid out anew the square at the centre of old Byzantium...
- individual.utoronto.ca safran/Constantinople/…Brubaker, Leslie. “Topography and the Creation of Public Space in Early Medieval Constantinople,” in Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages, ed.
- Constantinople is a musical ensemble that chose the journey—geographical certainly, but also historical, cultural and inner—as its cornerstone.
- brilliantmaps.com byzantine-constantinople/Interestingly, no one in Constantinople at that time would have thought of themselves as living in the Byzantine Empire.
- http://historicalnovels.info Constantinople.htmlIn 395 the Roman Empire was divided into a Western and an Eastern Empire, and Constantinople became the seat of government of the Eastern Empire.
- britannica.com event/Fall-of-Constantinople-1453The Byzantine Empire came to an end when the Ottomans breached Constantinople’s ancient land wall after besieging the city for 55 days.
- orthodoxwiki.org Church_of_ConstantinopleThe Church of Constantinople is one of the fourteen or fifteen autocephalous churches, also referred to as the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
- wiki2.org en/ConstantinopleConstantinople was famous for its massive and complex fortifications, which ranked among the most sophisticated defensive architecture of antiquity.
- etymonline.com word/ConstantinopleA place of little consequence until 330 C.E., when Constantine the Great re-founded it and made it his capital (see Constantinople).
- commons.wikimedia.org wiki/Category:ConstantinopleThis category holds images pertaining to the history of Constantinople (330–1453). For images of the city until 330, see Category:Byzantium.