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Constantinople After 1261
In 1261, the Greeks regained control of Constantinople from the Crusaders, who
had assaulted the city in 1204. Michael VIII Palaiologos (r. 1259–82), hailed as
the New Constantine, devoted much of his efforts to rebuilding the capital,
restoring damaged churches, monasteries, and public buildings. But however
concerted the effort to rebuild, the city was struggling: the expense of
reconstruction devalued the Byzantine currency, the territorial base of the
empire steadily contracted, and the population dwindled considerably. The
Byzantine aristocracy failed to compete with the Genoese and the Venetians, who
oversaw increasingly profitable trade routes. Moreover, Constantinople was one
of the first cities to lose many of its citizens to the Black Death in 1347. In
the fourth to fifth centuries, the population is estimated to have been between
250,000 and 1,000,000. By 1453, when the Turks invaded the city, it had declined
to 50,000.
Ottoman rule brought new prosperity to the city, renamed Istanbul by the
Ottomans. Under the conqueror Mehmed II (r. 1444–81), the harbor once again
became an important center of trade and the population increased. Although a
large percentage of the population was Muslim, an estimated three-fifths in
1477, Byzantine and European communities also resided in Istanbul. Mehmed made
particular commercial concessions to the Europeans, while the people of
Byzantine descent preserved their traditions by transferring manuscripts to
prominent citizens and ecclesiastical figures, an example being a late
twelfth-century Byzantine psalter (2001.730). Mehmed and his successors were
particularly important for supporting major construction campaigns such as the
building of the fortress Yediküle, the Süleymaniye Mosque, and repairs to the
major aqueduct system.
Manuscripts from this period reveal much about ideology and attitudes in the
changed city. An inscription on folio 83 (recto) of the twelfth-century
Byzantine psalter (2001.730) describes the execution of a Christian in the
Hippodrome, implying tensions between the new inhabitants and those whose
ancestors presided in Istanbul before 1453. According to tradition, the
Hippodrome was built by Septimius Severus shortly after 196 and completed by
Constantine. This was the locus of public life such as sports competitions and
the celebration of imperial triumphs. The Hippodrome is also an important
element of another manuscript from the mid-sixteenth century showing the
procession of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent (28.85.7a,b). The artist, Pieter
Coecke van Aelst (1502–1550), depicts the magnificent entourage of the sultan
amidst the ruins of the once magnificent Roman circus. Van Aelst's view
indicates a romantic interest in the monuments of the city and highlights the
ancient remains, including Hagia Sophia in the distance. Interestingly, van
Aelst does not make note of any contemporary artistic contributions. Nor does
Pierre Gilles (1490–1555) in his description of Constantinople found in De
topographia Constantinopoleos (551.3 G41). Gilles does not describe the art and
architecture of Istanbul, choosing instead to take measurements and make
records, as though dissecting a mysterious and archaic relic, not a living city.
Annie Labatt
Research Assistant
Medieval Art and The Cloisters
The works of art represented here relate to the Metropolitan Museum of Art
exhibition Byzantium: Faith and Power, 1261–1557.