Gordon Robertson
 
<http://mailings.vb.cbn.com:80/track?t=c&eas=1&mid=1749&msgid=200&did=115&sn
=16780199&eid=r...@bishko.net&uid=1_15579&fl=&extra=MultivariateId=&&&2006&&&
http://www.cbn.com/700club/features/churchhistory/hagiasophia/?cpid=EU_WW_20
11_154> The Fall of Constantinople 

 

 


http://www.cbn.com/700club/features/EZ30_Constantinople_HagiaSophia.aspx

 


THE 700 CLUB


The Fall of Constantinople


By Gordon Robertson 
The 700 Club 


May 31, 2011


 

 <http://www.cbn.com/> CBN.com - "There is only one thing I want: Give me
Constantinople." -Sultan Mehmet II

In AD 330, the Roman emperor Constantine did the unthinkable:  He moved the
capital of the empire from Rome to Asia Minor, now modern-day Turkey. There,
Constantine built a new Rome: the city of Constantinople. For more than a
thousand years, the city was the capital of the Byzantine Empire and the
center of Eastern Orthodox Christianity.

In Constantinople, Christianity permeated every aspect of life.  Even the
chariot races held in the Hippodrome began with the singing of hymns. The
center of worship was the Hagia Sophia, the Church of Holy Wisdom. The
Byzantine emperor Justinian commissioned the current building in AD 532,
making sure it was the largest in the world.

“On dedication day, Justinian made the remark, ‘O Solomon, I have outdone
thee.’ And in many ways, he certainly had,” says Dr. Paul Maier, the author
of The Constantine Codex, an historical novel that takes place in the Hagia
Sophia. “He provided a structure that has been a major landmark in the
history of the world ever since.”

The Byzantine Empire reached its height in the 11th century; then, like Rome
before it, the empire collapsed slowly from within. In 1204, Crusaders from
Western Europe invaded and left Constantinople in ruins. Then in 1347, the
Black Death killed a third of the population. By 1453, the city was in debt
and disrepair, and the Byzantines, overwhelmed by their own problems,
overlooked the growing threat rising in the East.

For more than a century, the Ottoman Turks had been gaining power and taking
land from the Byzantines. In 1451, a new sultan took the Ottoman throne.
Mehmet II was only 19 years old, a devout Muslim determined to prove
himself.  His goal was to conquer the strategic bridge between Europe and
Asia and make Constantinople his new capital.

“He was a follower of sharia law, very definitely,” says Maier. “It was
ultimately a religious drive that urged him on to conquer the city.”

In the spring of 1453, Mehmet wrote to his rival, the Byzantine emperor,
Constantine XI Palaiologos, and offered him a chance to surrender the city.
Constantine refused. In his letter to the sultan, he wrote, "As it is clear
that you desire war more than peace, I turn now and look alone to God... and
closing the gates of my capital, I will defend my people to the last drop of
blood. " 

On April 6, the Ottomans began to bombard the city walls. The Byzantine army
was outnumbered ten to one, and with each passing day, panic grew inside the
city. The siege of Constantinople had begun.

“Of course when the siege takes place, when the aqueduct water is cut off
and you can’t buy food anymore, then of course a terrible malaise hits the
city,” says Maier.

In spite of the constant attacks, the Byzantines still believed they would
win, until they saw a series of bad omens. An old Byzantine prophecy said
that as long as the moon was in the sky, the city would not fall. But on the
night of May 22, a lunar eclipse darkened the moon over Constantinople.

The next day brought a furious storm with thunder and lightning, and that
night, a strange, ghostly light surrounded the dome of the Hagia Sophia.
Some witnesses said it was a sign of the Holy Spirit departing from the
cathedral.

As the Turks closed in on the city, hundreds of refugees fled to the church
for safety.

On May 28, priests began the last Christian service that would ever be held
there.
Just before midnight, Emperor Constantine arrived at the Hagia Sophia. He
said his final prayer and returned to his post.

While the emperor prayed, the sultan ordered the final attack. By sunrise,
the city's famous double walls had been breached. Advisors urged the emperor
to escape, but Constantine refused, saying, "I cannot leave the great
churches in such a plight.

What would the world say about me? I am resolved to die here with you."

Constantine led his men in a final charge against the Turks, and he was
never seen alive again. A few days later, a headless corpse was found,
wearing boots embroidered with the double eagle, the emblem of the house of
Palaiologos, the Byzantine royal family. By the end of the day, the Ottomans
had taken Constantinople. As a reward, Mehmet gave his soldiers the run of
the city.
            
“Mehmet, as a matter of fact, chivalrously limited the looting of his men to
three days,” says Maier. “So they really had to work hard in terms of their
pillage. And they did. “

The soldiers started in the Hagia Sophia, where hundreds of Christians were
still seeking shelter. With the arrival of the Turks, the church that had
once been a refuge became the scene of unimaginable horror.

The sick and elderly were killed on the spot. Most of the others were tied
or chained together, while soldiers raped both women and young men. Some of
the nuns ran away and jumped down well shafts, preferring martyrdom to rape.
Then without warning, Mehmet called an early end to the looting and entered
the city.

The sultan rode into Constantinople through the Adrianople Gate and
proclaimed himself the new "Caesar of Rome," a reference to Constantinople’s
Roman origins. He changed the city's name to Istanbul, the new capital of
the Ottoman Empire.    
                                        
“The first thing he did after conquering Constantinople was to go to Hagia
Sophia and take an ax and break down the Christian altar there to prove that
another faith had taken over,” says Maier.

Sultan Mehmet declared that the building was now a mosque, and his imam
recited an Islamic oath called the Shahada: "There is no god but Allah, and
Mohammed is his prophet."

The Muslims added four minarets to the church and covered the priceless
mosaics with plaster, erasing nearly a thousand years of Christian history.
The Hagia Sophia remained the religious center of Istanbul for nearly 500
years, until the Ottoman Empire was replaced by the new Republic of Turkey.
In 1935, the mosque was turned into a museum, an order from Turkey’s first
president, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

“He wanted to bring Turkey kicking and screaming into the 20th century, and
for that, he wanted to secularize the state,” says Maier.

New renovations revealed the hidden mosaics under the plaster: the Virgin
and Child, the archangel Gabriel, and the Deësis, a famous image of Christ
designed to show His compassion for humanity. In 2009, the face of one of
the cathedral's four seraphim was unveiled to the public for the first time
in hundreds of years.

However, dozens of Christian mosaics are still hidden by Islamic
calligraphy,
a symbol of the city’s struggle between Christianity and Islam.
 
“Look what happened when Constantinople fell,” says Maier. “This was the
cork in the bottle of Islamic expansion. They wanted to remove the cork
because they’re after conquering Europe.” 

Five hundred years later, the Islamic goal of conquering Europe is still
alive because of a well-known Muslim prophecy.

“There is a passage in the Koran which has Mohammed claiming that indeed
there will be an attack on the two great Christian capitals,” says Maier.
“Constantinople will fall first, and then he hopes that Rome in the west
will also fall.”

Constantinople fell in 1453, and today, some Muslims say it’s time to
fulfill the second half of the prophecy and conquer Rome, not with the
sword, but with conversion.

“Expansionism has always been a part of Islam,” Maier concludes. “They also
want to conquer the world, as witnessed in so many of their flags. Look at
the Turkish flag,  with the crescent moon and the star symbolizing the
universe, meaning Islam will conquer the universe. There you have it
advertised: that is their goal.”



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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