
Contents
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Romans, Franks, Greeks, and Turks Romans, Franks, Greeks, and Turks
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‘What dost thou now, ancient glory of Rome?’ ‘What dost thou now, ancient glory of Rome?’
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In the palace of the Caesars In the palace of the Caesars
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The vision of empire The vision of empire
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Cite
Abstract
Constantinople never really recovered from the Latin sack in 1204. Cooperation between popes, emperors, and patriarchs would become nigh on impossible, and differences of practice increasingly hardened into disagreements over theology. Orthodoxy (informed by hostility to Rome) and Byzantine identity were becoming one. The Latin occupation led Byzantium’s educated elite to reconsider the Greek aspect to their identity and to greater intellectual engagement with classical literature and philosophy. Byzantine art also flourished. The fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the Ottoman Turks was soon followed by the Ottoman conquest of most of the remaining outposts of the broader Byzantine world. Constantinople continued to be an imperial city, however, until the abolition of the Ottoman Empire in 1923.
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