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Saturday 25 September 2021

Constantinopolis Christiana

It is very natural, when thoughtful men tread the road which skirts these ancient fortifications, that the mind should be profoundly impressed by the vanity of earthly might and greatness. On the one hand, the way is strewn with the wreck and ruin of ramparts once deemed impregnable:


O’er each mouldering tower,


Dim with the mist of years, grey flits the shade of power.


On the other hand, stretch great silent cemeteries, beneath whose dark cypresses lies the dust of a dead multitude more than can be numbered. As one has expressed the feeling awakened by this spectacle of wreckage and mortality, “ It is walking through the valley of the Shadow of Death.” And yet, seeing there must be an end to all things, is it not wiser and more just to dwell rather upon the glory that crowns these bulwarks for their long defence of the civilised life of the world?


For a full account of the Turkish Conquest, see E. Pears’ Tht Destruction of the Greek Empire.


AMONG THE CHURCHES OF THE CITY


Constantinople was a city of churches. Clavijo, the Spanish envoy, who visited the city in 1408, was assured that it was hallowed by the presence of no less than 8000 sanctuaries, counting large and smalL This was obviously an exaggeration, intended to impress the stranger s mind with a due sense of the city’s grandeur and sacredness.


Ducange in his great work, Constantinopolis Christiana, gives the names of some 400 churches mentioned by the Byzantine authors whose works he had examined. But a wider acquaintance with Byzantine literature since the time of that great student of the antiquities of Constantinople has discovered the names of many churches not upon his list It is therefore impossible to reach exact figures here, and we must be content with the vague statement that the number was so large as to form a striking feature of the city’s aspect This was only what might be expected in a city where the number of churches would be determined not only by the ordinary religious needs of a devout population, but also by the demands of the many monasteries which sought security from violence behind the bulwarks of the capital, notwithstanding the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil, encountered there.

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