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| - Constantinople was the capital city of the Byzantine Empire, that was reinaugurated from ancient Byzantium as the new capital of the Roman Empire by Emperor Constantine the Great, after whom it was named, and dedicated to. It is a major city found as a team in the Barbarossa and Attila the Hun campaigns in Age of Empires II and Age of Empires II: The Conquerors respectively.
- The Great Court or Magnaura or Magna Aula is a temple there.
- Constantinople is the Byzantine capital in the Civilization games. It was officially renamed "Istanbul" (derived from the Greek words "eis tin polin," meaning "to the city") after the Asia Minor catastrophe in 1923. Constantinople is home to a wonder known as the Hagia Sophia.
- Constantinople is a city founded by, and named after, Constantine the Great as a second capital of the Roman Empire. After the division of the Roman Empire, Constantinople became the capital of the Byzantine Empire and later served as the cap[ital of the Ottoman Empire. The city is currently known as Istanbul, Turkey.
- The city of Constantinople, formerly the Greek city of Byzantium, became the capital of the Roman Empire under the reign of Constantine The Great. When the Empire went through it's final divide in 395AD, Constantinople became the capitol of the Eastern Roman Empire.
- Constantinople was the capital of the Byzantine Empire. This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
- Album: Duck Stab, Kettles Of Fish On The Outskirts Of Town Song Notes: Another one of the songs from Duck Stab, another live version and another song with "Constantinople" in the title. This one's from the 4-disc box Kettles Of Fish On The Outskirts Of Town, and it's taken from a one-off show performed in 1997 for Adobe. To be honest, it's not that great a version, but those bastards didn't put the Icky Flix version on the soundtrack CD. And for that, I hate them. (See also "This Is A Man Man Man's World".) -Rev. Syung Myung Me
- Constantinople is a city founded, and named after, Constantine the Great as a second capital of the Roman Empire. After the division of the Roman Empire, Constantinople became the capital of the Byzantine Empire. The city is currently known as Istanbul, Turkey.
- Constantinople (Byzantine Greek: Konstantinoupolis; Latin: Constantinopolis or Byzantium; Turkish: Kostantiniyye or İstanbul), presently known as Istanbul, was the capital of the Byzantine Empire and, following the city's conquest in 1453, became the Ottoman Empire's capital in 1458. The only major transcontinental city in the world, during the Renaissance, it was Europe's largest and wealthiest city, consisting of four distinct districts: Constantine, Bayezid, Imperial, and Galata.
- Costantilope was a thriving town near the end of the common silk roadside == Image:Exclamation mark.png This article is a stub. You can help the My English Wiki by [ expanding it]. Image:Exclamation mark.png Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Indian Empire and known as the "West Sun". It is located in the western end of the Silk Roadside and takes advantage of this geographical benefit to accumulate huge wealth, boasting of splendid scenery. Based on the huge wealth from the overseas trade connecting to the SilkRoad, the city develops various harbours and boasts of threefold castle walls strong enough to protect from any kind of enemy attack. And Christianity prevails in the city where there are a lot of Christianity-related buildings such as Hagia Sophia.==
- Constantinople didn't always have such a long name. It was, for many many centuries, known as "Byzantium" and was a small Greek fishing village where heavily-built, oiled-up greek men could spend all day out in the Mediterranean and Black seas in boats with other men, naked as the day they were born "catching fish". They never caught any fish. Then the Romans came along and built a garrison there and, lo, it was a Roman fishing village where people spoke Greek. Nobody really cared about it much until the fourth century when Constantine decided that Rome was too old, boring and Goddam pagan to be capital of his new improved Roman Empire and decided to hold a contest with major cities of the empire putting their names forward. Byzantium, by then a bustling town, put itself forward as a sort
- The city has had many names throughout history. Depending on the background of people, and their language and ethnicity, it often had several different names at any given time; among the most common were Byzantium, New Rome, Constantinople and Stamboul. Usually, the name Constantinople refers to the period from its founding by Constantine I to the Muslim conquest.
- Constantinopolis, anglicized to Constantinople, Konstantinoúpolis (Πόλις hē Pólis) in Greek, is the imperial capital (Greek Basileúousa) of the Roman Empire. Strategically located between the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmara at the point where Europe meets Asia, Byzantine Constantinople is the capital of a Christian empire, successor to ancient Greece and Rome. Throughout the Middle Ages Constantinople is Europe's largest and wealthiest city. File:Wcimage1.jpg
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