Siege of Constantinople (1422)

Siege of Constantinople
Part of the Rise of the Ottoman Empire and Byzantine-Ottoman wars.

Constantinople in 1422; the oldest surviving map of the city.
Date1422
LocationConstantinople
Result Byzantine victory
Belligerents
 Byzantine Empire  Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
John VIII Palaiologos de facto co-emperor with his retired Father Manuel II Palaiologos Murad II

The first full-scale Ottoman Siege of Constantinople took place in 1422 as a result of the Byzantine Emperor Manuel II's attempts to interfere in the succession of Ottoman Sultans, after the death of Mehmed I in 1421. This policy of the Byzantines was often used successfully in weakening their neighbours.

When Murad II emerged as the winning successor to his father, he marched into Byzantine territory. The Turks had acquired their own cannon for the first time by the siege of 1422, "falcons", which were short but wide cannon.[1] The two sides were evenly matched technologically, and the Turks had to build barricades "in order to receive… the stones of the bombards."[1]

The Byzantine defenders won the battle. Contemporary Byzantine tradition ascribed the deliverance of Constantinople to a miraculous intervention by the Theotokos.

Aftermath

In spite of the Byzantine victory, the 'Empire' at this time had in fact been reduced to a few disconnected strips of land besides the city of Constantinople itself. It was also facing grave economic problems and severely lacked soldiers. Pius II promoted the affordable donation of cannon by European monarchs as a means of aid. Any new cannons after the 1422 siege were gifts from European states, and aside from these no other advances were made to the Byzantine arsenal.[1] As such, the next Ottoman leader, Mehmed II, would be successful in 1453.

Traditions

Byzantine accounts attributed the lifting of the siege to an apparition of the Theotokos upon the city walls, which greatly inspired the defenders.[1] John Kananos records that:

Also in the same reference, the Turkish Army notes that they themselves even saw a woman in purple robes walking on the outer ramparts of the city.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Stephen Turnbull, The Walls of Constantinople, AD 324–1453, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-759-X.

Coordinates: 41°01′00″N 28°58′37″E / 41.0167°N 28.9769°E / 41.0167; 28.9769

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