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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. The fall of any civilization marks a watershed moment in its historical commentary; when Constantinople fell at the hands of Mehmed II, those who were standing on the very ground upon which the weeks' long battle was fought reveal minutiae unlike any historian ever could. The value of eye-witness accounts navigates through gaping voids and embellished accounts of those who, while valuable in their own rights, can only surmise the truer points of Constantinople's ultimate collapse. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCConstant.rtf
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battle was fought reveal minutiae unlike any historian ever could. The value of eye-witness accounts navigates through gaping voids and embellished accounts of those who, while valuable in their
own rights, can only surmise the truer points of Constantinoples ultimate collapse. Virtually from the moment he occupied the throne, Mehmed II set his sights upon one of the most
heavily fortified locations in existence: Constantinople. Nonplussed by such an otherwise daunting reality, Mehmed II weaved his way into the Byzantine capital by signing treaties he knew would only
grant him a limited amount of accessibility; only through the definitive action of battle could he be sure to retrieve exactly what he sought. The conquest soon consumed his
every waking moment until he was able to set the plan in motion. Draftsmen were enlisted more than a dozen months before the date of attack in order for
Mehmed II to establish the Bosphoros with a sturdy bastion (Nicol, 2002); construction commenced approximately one year prior to battle. "It was a huge complex of strong fortifications whose
task was to shut completely, by its artillery, to Western and Byzantine vessels the route to and from the Black Sea. The new fortress complemented the one that had
been built on the Anatolian shore...The presence of the two fortresses made clear to everyone that the Sultan was the real master of the straits...However, despite all the indications and
the realization that a new siege of Constantinople was to begin at any moment, the two Italian Republics, under political and economic pressures at home, reacted without much enthusiasm" (Hatzopoulos,
2001). From the perspective of those like Nicolo Barbaro - an eye-witness whose account is chronicled in Diary of the Siege of Constantinople, 1453 by translator John Melville-Jones
...