When the Ottomans took the city, Greek scholars fled west to Italy with their trunk-loads of Plato and Aristotle. Those refugees triggered the . Without Byzantium, there would have been no Leonardo da Vinci, no Shakespeare, no Age of Enlightenment. Why It Matters Today We use the word "byzantine" to mean overly complex or devious. That’s a disservice to a people who kept the light of classical knowledge burning while Western Europe stumbled through the Dark Ages.
Let’s set the record straight. It started with Emperor Constantine the Great. In 330 AD, he looked at the small Greek town of Byzantium, perched on the Bosporus Strait, and saw a goldmine. He renamed it Nova Roma (New Rome), but everyone called it Constantinople . byzantium
But the real tragedy came in 1204.
When the Ottomans took the city, Greek scholars fled west to Italy with their trunk-loads of Plato and Aristotle. Those refugees triggered the . Without Byzantium, there would have been no Leonardo da Vinci, no Shakespeare, no Age of Enlightenment. Why It Matters Today We use the word "byzantine" to mean overly complex or devious. That’s a disservice to a people who kept the light of classical knowledge burning while Western Europe stumbled through the Dark Ages.
Let’s set the record straight. It started with Emperor Constantine the Great. In 330 AD, he looked at the small Greek town of Byzantium, perched on the Bosporus Strait, and saw a goldmine. He renamed it Nova Roma (New Rome), but everyone called it Constantinople .
But the real tragedy came in 1204.