Tag Archives: Eastern Roman Empire

Cursed Constantinople – Istanbul. Part I: the Burden of the Past, the Ominous Location, and the Original Name as Explicit Imprecation

In an 8-page article, which was initially published in a Greek monthly magazine back in 1988 and more recently republished online (in Greek) in several sites as both, text and video, I unequivocally described Constantinople – Istanbul as ‘the Lunar City’ (https://www.academia.edu/23392671/Κωνσταντινούπολη_η_Σεληνιακή_Πολιτεία_του_καθ_Μουχάμαντ_Σαμσαντίν_πρώην_Κοσμά_Μεγαλομμάτη). And in article published last year (29 May 2021), I determined that Sultan Mehmet II Fatih’s conquest of Constantinople (29 May 1453) was the most useless Ottoman victory, extensively analyzing the reasons, which should imperatively make the brainless and easily suggestible sultan abstain from such meaningless attempt at the time.

Quite unfortunately for him and his ignorant and unsuspicious successors, they made their capital of a city that was bearing an enormous historical burden, also involving a very perplex and extremely conflicting relationship with Rome, the real capital of Western European Christianity. Inanely enough the Ottoman sultans thought at the time that it would be possible to exorcize an unknown (to them) past with some incomprehensible (to them) verses of the Quran, and they therefore fell victims of few Satanic theologians (currently named ‘Sunni’, although the term is a neologism lacking any historicity), who falsely represented, viciously introduced, and abjectly misinterpreted Islam as a task of conquering, thus drawing Prophet Muhammad’s curse on them, their evil deeds and unfathomable idiocy. Here: https://www.academia.edu/43199538/29_May_1453_The_most_Useless_Ottoman_Victory

This article was translated into Greek and then republished in several Greek sites and blogs due to the interest that many Greeks showed for a very unusual, non-sectarian, non-conventional, and genuinely objective, historical scholarly analysis that did not start from an idiotically preconceived standpoint in order to try to defend a Christian thesis if the author is Christian, a Muslim thesis if the author is Muslim or an atheist thesis if the author is an atheist. Such a stance is genuinely ludicrous and quasi-automatically self-discredited – anytime anywhere and under any circumstances whatsoever. The Greek translation was also republished here:

https://www.academia.edu/43346356/29_Μαΐου_1453_Η_πιο_Άχρηστη_Οθωμανική_Νίκη

Contents

I. Today’s Fake Religions and Fake Sciences: Obstacles on our Way to find the Truth

II. No Imperial Capital can be located on the Seaside

III. Troy: Constantinople’s Real Predecessor

IV. Hittite-Achaean Alliance against Accursed Troy

V. Sea Peoples’ Invasions: Reaction to the Hittite-Achaean Alliance and the Trojan War

VI. Constantinople: as Troy’s Descendants, the Romans return …

VII. Iranians and Macedonians in the Turkish Straits, and the pro-Roman Stance of the Attalids 

VIII. Constitutio Antoniniana: Death Certificate of the Ancient Greeks

IX. The Rise of Sassanid Iran, Roman Defeats in the East, and the Roman Administrative Divisions

X. Praefectus Urbi; at the very Origin of the World’s most Perverse Theocracy: Papoceasarism

XI. Constantine I, the Slow Rise of Christianity, and the Events Preceding the Construction of Constantinople

XII. Constantine I, New Rome (Constantinople), and the Reasons for it

XIII. New Rome (Constantinople): a Disadvantaged Location as per the Principles of Geographical Determinism

XIV. New Rome (Constantinople): a Christian Empire’s Capital lacking Christian Credentials  

I. Today’s Fake Religions and Fake Sciences: Obstacles on our Way to find the Truth

Historical truth does not ‘justify’ any sectarianism and does not comply with the silly religious pseudo-beliefs of modern times. Today, there are no religions left, except for few systems of spirituality and faith shared by the indigenous inhabitants of remote societies in Africa, Asia, and Latin America that live far from the modern technological world and the political regimes that tyrannize the Mankind. Today’s so-called official dogmas of the world’s major religions have been monstrously distorted and their spiritual – metaphysical essence disfigured. Their cosmogonic, cosmological, eschatological and soteriological dimensions were forged, and their moral doctrine was corrupted and conditioned on the modern world’s inhuman evilness. Their terms have been altered, the connotation of their key words and codes perverted, their cults falsified (‘reformed’ is the anodyne description of the fact), and their practice reduced to ludicrous and meaningless caricatures. That’s why today’s fake religions function as political ideological systems and ignorant, uneducated, uncultured and thoughtless ‘believers’ accept the monstrous lies that today’s pseudo-religious ‘leaders’ shamelessly propagate before joining Satan, their god, at the bottom of the Hell.

On the other hand, the modern historical science, as part of the wider circle of Humanities, has been founded on biased Renaissance times’ aberrations and peremptory assumptions, on the racist myths and arbitrary maxims of Classicism, on the inhuman aphorism of the Enlightenment, and on all useless and paranoid axioms of modern Western colonial political ideological systems (the infinite contamination of Jacobinism, Marxism-Leninism, parliamentarianism, conservatism, liberalism, Leftism, socialism, communism, Euro-centrism, neo-liberalism, neo-conservatism, evolutionism, rationalism, Hegelianism, modernism, materialism, postmodernism,  de-constructivism, etc.). Any scholarly research, which is parameterized on any of the aforementioned and other minor systems, represents a deliberate distortion and an ignominious fallacy.

To discover the historical truth in any field of research one must go beyond all fake religions of our times, all philosophical systems, all political ideologies, all academic schools, all preconceived aberrations, all sorts of subjectivism and ego-centrism, and every inherent inclination to project today’s ‘values’, ‘principles’, criteria and measures on the historical times that one may wish to examine.

II. No Imperial Capital can be located on the Seaside

I am afraid that, for Christians and Muslims alike, for Turks and Greeks equally, historical truth is far bitterer, far direr, and far darker than they can even imagine. And when it comes to the Mediterranean Sea’s incomparably greater city today, quite unfortunately, its true greatness is specified in terms of sinister failure, ominous calamity, and obnoxious destruction.

In brief, Constantinople – Istanbul should have never existed. And, if by an erratic coincidence and abominable misfortune, few demented people constructed a town in that location, this agglomeration of edifices should always remain a sly passageway, a furtive station, and a basis for further expeditions or eventually a fated porthmus (strait; https://logeion.uchicago.edu/porthmos).

Either in the Mediterranean or worldwide, there was never a coastal city that became the capital of an empire in historical, pre-Renaissance times, except that city was the metropolis of a maritime realm (like Carthage) or the headquarters of a commercial network (like Alexandria). It is quite indicative: Alexandria’s importance in the trade routes between East and West (i.e. the silk, spice and frankincense trade routes across lands, deserts and seas) increased when Octavian invaded the Ptolemaic capital (30 BCE) and Alexandria ceased to be the capital of a kingdom; even then, Alexandria ad Aegyptum was somewhat eclipsed by the arch-rival city of Gerrha in the Persian Gulf, at least until the end of the Arsacid Parthian times (250 BCE – 224 CE). About: https://www.academia.edu/23214313/Meluhha_Gerrha_and_the_Emirates_by_Muhammad_Shamsaddin_Megalommatis

Quite contrarily, Rome, which lies on the Italian Peninsula, is located at a distance of no less than 34 km from Coccia di Morto, which is the nearest coastal point (https://www.tripadvisor.it/Attraction_Review-g656615-d15755215-Reviews-Spiaggia_Coccia_di_Morto-Fiumicino_Province_of_Rome_Lazio.html).

III. Troy: Constantinople’s Real Predecessor

There had however been -long before Constantinople, long before Byzantium (the 1st millennium BCE city which was located on the same geographical spot, being first called ‘Lygos’: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Istanbul#Lygos / https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantium)- another, very ancient, coastal city in the wider region, which comprises the Bosporus (İstanbul Boğazı), the Marmara Sea (Marmara Denizi), and the Dardanelles (Çanakkale Boğazı); this very ancient city was an exceptionally wealthy commercial center and the capital of a confederation, but not an imperial capital: Troy.

If we carefully observe and effectively contemplate the outline of the wider region, which separates the Black Sea from the Mediterranean Sea, we understand very well that 3rd–2nd millennium BCE Troy (Taruisha or Wilusa in Hittite; Truva or Troya in Turkish) was Constantinople’s real predecessor in a broader sense. As a wealthy rival of the Hittite Empire, Taruisha had the power to mobilize the Lukka (also known as Assuwa) Confederacy and generate serious troubles to the imperial capital Hattusha (Boğazköy), particularly when the Hittite army was fighting against the Babylonians, the Mitanni Hurrians, and the Egyptians in the vast empire’s S-SE borders.

From the highly informative Hittite archives, we learn that the Hittite Empire’s western confines were constantly in turmoil; the reason for this was the fact that the Balkan Peninsula was not part of the then civilized world, which involved Mesopotamia, SW Iran (Elam), Anatolia, Canaan (Phoenicia and Syro-Palestine), Egypt and Cush (Ancient Ethiopia, i.e. today’s Sudan). Crete, the Aegean Sea, the Balkan Peninsula and the rest of 2nd millennium BCE Europe were an unimportant, barbaric and consequently chaotic fringe that did not matter at all for the then centers of World Civilization.

In Western Anatolia, even now and then, disorderly elements among the Lukka, the Arzawa, the Hapalla, the Mira, the Wilusa, and the Assuwa (which stretch across the north-western confines of Anatolia) forced the Hittite army to forthwith cancel military operations in Mesopotamia and Canaan (then known as Amurru) and undertake expeditions to the West in order to pacify the chaotic periphery.

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Download Joachim Latacz’s interesting viewpoint on Wilusa (Wilios/Troia) as Center of Hittite Confederate in North-West Asia Minor:

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IV. Hittite-Achaean Alliance against Accursed Troy

At a certain moment, the Hittites found it proper to strike a formal alliance with their relatives and subordinates in the Balkan Peninsula’s southernmost extremities, namely the Ahhijawa, who are identified by all Hittitologists with the tribe of the Achaeans (later considered as the earliest tribe of the Ancient Greeks). Hittite sources reveal that the tiny and marginal Achaean kingdoms were duly utilized by the imperial court at Hattusha in order to ensure safety in the empire’s western confines, when the bulk of the Hittite military force was engaged against the other great empires of the then known world in the S-SE borders, i.e. in territories of today’s Northern Iraq, Northern Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine.

One cannot have any doubt about the force, the wealth and the size of the rivals:

– Hattusha, the imperial Hittite capital, stretched over an area of ca. 270 ha, without counting the Hittite sacred land and religious capital at nearby Yazilikaya.

– However, the 13th c. BCE walled city of Troy (so, at its culminating point) did not cover an area larger than 74 acres (: 30 ha).

– And the tiny Achaean kingdom’s capital Mycenae had an area of 32 ha (including however the citadel and the lower town). Details and bibliography:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hattusa

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaz%C4%B1l%C4%B1kaya

https://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaz%C4%B1l%C4%B1kaya

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_language#Luwian_theory

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assuwa

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hapalla

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arzawa

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Mira

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_the_Homeric_epics

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycenae

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achaeans_(Homer)#Hittite_documents

What was later mythologized in Homer’s epics as Trojan War was nothing more than an expedition in support of the Hittite Empire and an attack of the South Balkans’ Achaeans, the relatives and allies of the Hittites, against the wealthy commercial center (Taruisha) that instigated all the anti-Hittite activities in Western Anatolia. The Achaean success, which satisfied the imperial Hittite needs in the empire’s western confines, proved however to be short-lived and ultimately calamitous for both allies, the Hittites and the Achaeans.

V. Sea Peoples’ Invasions: Reaction to the Hittite-Achaean Alliance and the Trojan War

Exasperated with the destruction of Troy, all elements of the anti-Hittite and anti-Achaean alliance, known as ‘Sea Peoples’ in the Ancient Egyptian historical sources, fomented a rebellion in South Balkans, Western Anatolia, the Aegean Sea, and Crete, destroyed the Mycenaean and other friendly kingdoms, burned all Achaean citadels, attacked and destroyed the Hittite capital Hattusa, spread throughout Canaan and Amurru (today’s Syria), and attacked Egypt where only after three land and sea battles was Ramses III able at last to disperse and annihilate them. The Annals of Ramses III, inscribed amongst others on the walls of his mortuary temple at Madinat Habu in Thebes West (today’s Luxor) describe in extreme details the events.

General background:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medinet_Habu_(location)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medinet_Habu_(temple)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramesses_III

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Peoples

Scholarly publications:

https://www.jstor.org/stable/986225?seq=1

https://www.academia.edu/26287366/Η_Ευρύτερη_Περιοχή_της_Ανατολικής_Μεσογείου_κατά_τον_13ο_και_τον_12ο_Αιώνα_και_οι_Λαοί_της_Θάλασσας_κείμενο_και_σημειώσεις_

https://www.academia.edu/22842873/LES_PEUPLES_DE_LA_MER_ET_LA_FIN_DU_MONDE_MYCENIEN

The conclusion that we can safely draw from this briefly mentioned major event of the History of Ancient Orient during the 2nd millennium BCE is that

a) the Turkish straits (the Bosporus, the Marmara Sea, and the Dardanelles) region cannot be the region of a major imperial capital; and

b) the Turkish straits region stands instinctively in opposition to Anatolia, and more particularly, the central Anatolian plateau can be the region of a major imperial capital.

In other words, the Pre-History of Constantinople-Istanbul proved to be nefarious, already 1500 years before Constantinople was first built in 324-330 CE (solemnly inaugurated on 11th May 330) and 2650 years before the Ottoman sultan Mehmet II invaded it on 29th May 1453.

Ramesses III’s mortuary temple at Medinet Habu, Thebes of Egypt (Luxor West): on the temple’s walls the most accurate depictions of the Sea Peoples and the longest narratives of the Egyptian victory over them can be found.

VI. Constantinople: as Troy’s Descendants, the Romans return …

It goes without saying that for no less than one and half millennia after Troy’s siege and destruction (1200 BCE – 330 CE) the Turkish straits region remained a largely unimportant periphery in the History of the Mankind; to be exact, the region was good enough for the role that the geomorphological environment determined it, namely that of a passageway – not that of an imperial center. No major city or state was developed in this region between the fall of Troy and the exquisite, monumental construction of the city that Constantine I wanted to function as an Eastern Rome or New Rome.

It is however noteworthy that it took 100 years for the new city to be endowed with an official description of its parts and monuments, namely the illustrious and lengthy Notitia Urbis Constantinopolitanae. Today’s stupid Greeks and idiotic Turks, who –both- so much claim that the accursed city is “theirs”, have failed to come up with a Modern Turkish or a Modern Greek translation of the fundamental text, which was elaborated in Latin, the then official language of the Eastern Roman Empire (the old Roman Empire was divided into two parts after Theodosius I’s death in 395 CE).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinople

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Istanbul

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notitia_Urbis_Constantinopolitanae

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Roman_Empire#Further_divisions

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrarchy

This fact concludes the case of the two peoples, who incessantly prefer to live in darkness, ignorance, disbelief and falsehood, choosing the fallacy of their elites instead of the truth of their common historical documentation. This situation can only herald an ominous destruction for both peoples.

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Download the Notitia Urbis Constantinopolitanae in Latin:

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The historical reality that Romans (and not Phrygians, Assyrians, Iranians or Macedonians) were the first to imagine it possible for a major imperial city to be constructed and function in that location only confirms Rome’s greatest poet Virgil and all the ancient Roman traditions, as per which the Romans were the descendants of the legendary Aeneas, one of the few Trojans who escaped the destruction of Troy, being of noble origin, since his father was the first cousin of Troy’s last king Priam.

These legends reflect a historical connection between the Romans and the NW confines of Anatolia and the wider region of the Turkish straits. Of course, the Ancient Greek and Romans myths are unreliable and we cannot afford to take them as historical texts, but the decipherment of Luwian hieroglyphic script and the study of contemporaneous, 2nd millennium BCE historical sources help us reveal the Luwian origin of that name: Pa-ri-a-mu-a (‘unusually brave). This name has been historically attested in several cases. In any case, the language of the Trojans was a Luwian dialect. About:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Founding_of_Rome#Aeneas

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Rome#Legend_of_Rome_origin

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_civilization#Origins

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_origins

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgil

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeneid

The Phaistos Disk Seems to Be Trojan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romulus_and_Remus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeneas

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priam#Etymology

Colosseum, Rome
The Hippodrome of New Rome – Constantinople (now transformed into Sultan Ahmet Square / Sultanahmet Meydanı)

VII. Iranians and Macedonians in the Turkish Straits, and the pro-Roman Stance of the Attalids 

As one can easily surmise, many great historical developments took place worldwide during the period that starts with the departure of the last Trojans from their ill-fated and destroyed capital and ends with the construction of Constantinople. As a matter of fact, after many centuries of migrations, instability, divisions, and constant wars, in the late 5th and early 4th c. BCE, the wider region of the Turkish straits and almost the entire Balkan Peninsula became integral part and administrative units (‘satrapies’: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achaemenid_Empire) of the Achaemenid Empire of Iran (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Districts_of_the_Achaemenid_Empire: 550-330 BCE).

The worldwide unprecedentedly immense empire controlled all lands, seas, gulfs and lakes between the mountains of Transylvania beyond the northernmost confines of the Balkan Peninsula (https://www.livius.org/articles/person/darius-the-great/sources/the-gherla-inscription/), Macedonia and the eastern coast land of the Black Sea (https://kpfu.ru/staff_files/F_1398648344/IA54004.pdf), and further beyond, to the Old Suez Canal (Darius the Great’s Suez Inscriptions: Birth Certificate of the Silk Roads / https://silkroadtexts.wordpress.com/), the Red Sea and the empire’s eastern borders, which stretched from the Indus River Delta to Central Asia. Darius I’s Royal Road (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Road) linked Susa to Sardis (the former capital of Lydia), thus greatly minimizing the distance between the Turkish straits and the Persian Gulf.  

Both, Xerxes I the Great (in 480 BCE) and Alexander the Great (in 334 BCE) passed by the re-inhabited city of Troy and made sacrifices in the local temples’ altars. The latter invaded the chaotic periphery of the Ancient Greek cities and used Greek soldiers to prevail over the Iranian armies at a particular conjuncture: the imperial Achaemenid force was in decline and the Egyptians had revolted against Iran. As Alexander felt no enmity but admiration for the magnificence of the Iranian (not ‘Persian’) Empire, his otherwise misinterpreted campaigns’ sole result was the continuation of the Iranian Empire with another capital, namely Babylon. One must however add that it is very interesting that, although Alexander the Great founded many cities named after him, he did not find it opportune to found one city in the wider region of the Turkish straits. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_founded_by_Alexander_the_Great

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria_(disambiguation)

His divided successors’ inability to maintain unity and stability in the vast empire led to the so-called Partition of Babylon (323 BCE), which in fact was the partition of the Iranian Empire among the numerous and incompetent pretenders to the throne. With the Asiatic and European coastlands of the Turkish straits divided between the remnant of the Macedonian kingdoms and the Attalids of Pergamon, it was only a matter of time for the Romans to secure a successful return to Anatolia. Quite revelatory of several intriguing trends, the Pergamon-based Attalid dynasty, which controlled the old territory of Troy, became the best ally of the Romans against the Macedonians, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies. And Augustus rebuilt Troy to its past glory, naming the city Ilium.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diadochi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attalid_dynasty

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pergamon

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(ancient_kingdom)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_Wars

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troy#Classical_and_Hellenistic_Troy_(Troy_VIII)

Achaemenid Empire of Iran
The Royal Road from Susa to Sardis
Xerxes I the Great
The magnificence of Parsa (Persepolis): an unprecedented grandeur that never existed in the Mediterranean world.
Reliefs from the Achaemenid palace at Susa
The state of Alexander the Great divided among his quarrelling successors – 300 BCE
Res Publica Romana 146 BCE
Res Publica Romana ca. 85 BCE

VIII. Constitutio Antoniniana: Death Certificate of the Ancient Greeks

A major development that preceded the construction of Constantinople was the disappearance of the various ‘ethnicities’ (: nations) within the Roman Empire. Due to the groundbreaking Constitutio Antoniniana (which is also known as the Edict of Caracalla; 212 CE), every free inhabitant of the empire was given full Roman citizenship. About: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutio_Antoniniana

Because of the edict of Caracalla, the Greeks, the Cappadocians, the Phoenicians, the Syrians (Aramaeans), the Egyptians, the Gauls, and all the other nations of the vast empire were reduced to mere linguistic particularities around an overwhelming Orientalization – Latinization process of nation building. Following the extensive diffusion of Oriental religions, cults, mysticisms, worldviews, trends and ways of life throughout the empire, the old and obsolete pantheons of the Greeks, the Romans, the Celts and the other European nations were erased, and all the nations of the Roman Empire shared one common, typically Oriental, culture encompassing various religions, spiritual initiations, wisdom, cosmologies, cosmogonies, eschatology, soteriology, cults, and mysticisms of Iranian, Egyptian, Anatolian, Aramaean and Phoenician origin.

Progressively, the traditional cultural identities of the Greeks, the Romans and the other Europeans were thus totally altered and fully Orientalized. And when all the old nations that had been conquered by the Romans became Roman citizens within the Roman Empire, they were all amalgamated and transformed into a genuinely Oriental nation, the Roman nation, thus reducing their linguistic particularities and their literary narratives about the past into meaningless reminiscences. It was an unprecedented overwhelming victory of the people over the elite, of the collectivity over the individuality, and of the spiritual over the material.

Thus, when Constantinople was constructed, there were no more ‘Greeks’ (Achaeans, Ionians, Aeolians and Dorians) throughout the South Balkans and Western Anatolia; following the Roman occupation (146 BCE), the Greeks, like many other nations, namely the Illyrians, the Macedonians, the Thracians, the Phrygians, the Lydians, the Carians, the Lycians, the Cappadocians, became a subject nation of the Roman Republic. With the progressive cultural Orientalization (1st c. CE – 3rd c. CE), the Greeks became a culturally Oriental nation worshipping Mithra and Isis, while obliterating Athena and Zeus. Accepting the edict of Caracalla (212 CE), the Greeks admitted that there was no genuine Greek nation anymore, because they had no royal or other concept and system of governance that they would eventually prefer, cherish and opt for. With the imposition of the Roman imperial ideology, the Ancient Greek politics were irrevocably dead.

Caracalla
Caracalla’s public baths in Rome – Terme di Caracalla

This means that, before the descendants of the Ancient Greeks went physically extinct in South Balkans, following a) the extensive and merciless persecution of the pagans in the Christianized Roman Empire (4th – 6th c. CE) and b) the excessive depopulation process that followed the so-called ‘Barbarian invasions’ (4th – 7th c. CE), there were no descendants of Ancient Greeks, who valued their ancestry and defunct traditions.

Not one Greek-speaking inhabitant of Roman Greece (during the 1st – 3rd c. CE), let alone a local authority, bothered to

1- commemorate the ridiculous factoids and insignificant events of the so-called ‘victories’ of Marathon and Salamis (the 5th c. BCE fights against the invading Iranian armies, which became however of paramount importance only in the 19th c. (!!??) for the ludicrous modern pseudo-Greek state, which is merely an Anglo-French colonial fabrication),

2- pay tribute to the various worthless Ancient Greek kings, tyrants, authors or statesmen of the past (the likes of Agis, Cleomenes, Peisistratus, Pericles, Thucydides, Sophocles Aristotle, Euripides, Demosthenes, etc.), and

3- honor the memory of the otherwise disreputable Delian League.

That ludicrous past was not anymore theirs; so trivial it was that they left it in oblivion.

Anatolian Greeks survived however in Ionia and Pontus, being spiritually Iranized and Egyptianized (after adopting Mithraism and Isidism), culturally Orientalized, nationally Romanized, and linguistically Latinized. Still today, they represent a historical continuity of three millennia after having been Christianized (Eastern Romans, Ρωμιοί/Romii, Rumlar) and Islamized (Turks, Τούρκοι, Türkler). Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_pagans_in_the_late_Roman_Empire

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migration_Period

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavic_migrations_to_the_Balkans

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sclaveni

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakob_Philipp_Fallmerayer

Analysis:

https://www.academia.edu/44758297/The_Fabrication_of_the_Fake_Greek_History_the_Nonexistent_Fallacy_of_Hellenism_the_19th_c_ailing_Ottoman_Empire_and_todays_Turkey

https://www.academia.edu/45050255/China_Turkey_Orientalism_and_Black_Athena

https://www.academia.edu/45121050/Turkey_China_and_the_Diverse_Forms_of_Colonial_Forgery_of_History_Fake_Muslims_and_the_Fake_States_of_Greece_Russia_Iran_India_Israel_and_Ethiopia_text_pictures_legends_intros_to_pictorial_sections_

Gothic invasions of the 3rd c. CE
3rd c. Invasions
A priest of Jupiter Dolichenus (Aramaean hypostasis of Mithra in Roman Syria) makes a dedication to Mithra for the Salvation of the Roman Emperors
Ceiling mosaic from the necropolis under St. Peter’s Cathedral in Vatican (Grotte Vaticane/vault mosaic in the Mausoleum of the Julii): Jesus identified with Mithra. Date: middle of the 3rd century

When it comes to the various Greek-speaking nations (i.e. the various descendants of the Phrygians, the Lydians, the Carians, the Lycians, the Cappadocians, the Thracians, the Macedonians, the Illyrians and the Pelasgians), during the first centuries of the Christian era they were not ethnically Greek, they were not culturally Greek, and they were heavily Latinized. About: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civis_romanus_sum

IX. The Rise of Sassanid Iran, Roman Defeats in the East, and the Roman Administrative Divisions

It is on this historical background that Constantine I decided to construct the new city. It was a period of upheaval for the entire empire; in the eastern borders, the wars with Iran, which started with the rise of the Sassanid dynasty (224 CE), caused disastrous defeats at the hands of Shapur I (240-270), one of the World History’s greatest conquerors and harsher combatants. Between 242 and 252, despite many wars in almost all of his frontiers, Shapur I defeated Timesitheus, Gordian III, and Philip the Arab, who had to sign a humiliating peace treaty after the Battle of Meshik (Mesiche/Μεσιχή; 244).

Following the subjugation of Armenia and Georgia, Shapur I won over Roman armies at the battle of Barbalissos (today’s Qala’at Balis) near Euphrates in 252, invaded Syria and Antioch, forcing the Romans to focus on the Eastern front. Valerian recaptured Antioch only to be defeated in 260 CE at the Battle of Urhoy (Edessa of Osrhoene, today’s Urfa in SE Turkey), which is the permanent nadir of Roman History, because Valerian was also held captive and grossly humiliated by the Iranians.

Cameo with representation of the victory of Shapur I (right) over Valerian (left) at Urhoy / Urfa (Edessa of Osrhoene) in 260 CE
Naqsh-e Rustam (7 km west of Persepolis): Bas-relief representing the victory of Shapur I over the Roman Emperors Philip the Arabe and Valerian (who was held captive in 260 CE). Behind Shapur I, stands Kartir, the high priest and religious reformer, who formulated Mazdeism, i.e. the Sassanid times’ version of Zoroastrianism.
Shapur I using the defeated and captive Roman emperor Valerian as a foot-stool to mount his horse
The colossal statue of Shapur I in the cave of Bishapur, near Kazerun (Fars, Iran)

The serious challenges in the East were not the Roman Empire’s sole problem in the middle of the 3rd c. CE; in the northern borders, the wars with the Germans, the Goths and the various invaders produced an alarming situation too. Furthermore, financial difficulties caused because of various irregularities in the internal and external trade, the ensuing internal unrest, various natural disasters, the problems related to the succession, and the difficulty to efficiently rule the vast empire ended up in a system of administrative division as per which the empire would be governed by two senior emperors (titled ‘augusti’) and their deputies (named ‘caesar’), so four distinct rulers, each controlling one part of the empire.

The administrative novelty lasted for four decades from Diocletian to Constantine I (284-324). As system, it was effective because it helped the imperial class of Rome to reinstate public order, military discipline, urban safety, institutional functionality and operability. However, this development generated four operational capitals, thus reducing Rome to merely a nominal capital under a praefectus urbanus (or praefectus urbi), who was not anymore under the direct supervision of the emperor.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crisis_of_the_Third_Century

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrarchy#Detailed_timeline

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Praefectus_urbi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_urban_prefects_of_Rome#4th_century

During this period, the four capitals of the respective administrative divisions were:

– Mediolanum (today’s Milan) for Italy, the Iberian Peninsula, and Northern Africa west of Cyrenaica;

– Augusta Treverorum (today’s Trier) for the territories of today’s France, England, Western Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands;

– Sirmium (today’s  Sremska Mitrovica in Serbia’s Voivodina) for the empire’s Balkan territories; and

– Nicomedia (today’s Ismit in Turkey), for the Roman territories in Anatolia, North Mesopotamia, Syro-Palestine, Egypt, and Cyrenaica.  

The aforementioned system is now called ‘Tetrarchy’, but this is a modern scholarly term, and it does not have any historicity; the analogies with the Judean Tetrarchy (after the death of Herod I) and the infamous persons involved in the coinage of the term (notably the Social Darwinist German historian Otto Karl Seeck) render its use absolutely unnecessary.

However, Diocletian’s administrative reform was a must; to some extent, it reflected a Roman reaction to another earlier and very obnoxious development, which did not last long, but rang a warning bell for the imperial Roman elite; in 271 CE, the imperial territory was dramatically shrunk due to the secession of the Palmyrene (Tadmur) kingdom (270-273 CE) in the East and the Gallic state (260-274 CE) in the West. Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palmyrene_Empire

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallic_Empire

The Roman Empire in extreme danger, as the Aramaean kingdom of Tadmur (Palmyra) and the Gallic kingdom seceded around 270 CE.
Diocletian’s administrative reform and division of the Roman Empire into four parts (284 CE)

X. Praefectus Urbi; at the very Origin of the World’s most Perverse Theocracy: Papoceasarism

It is however noteworthy that Diocletian’s reform

a) familiarized Romans with operational capitals located far from Rome and at times on the very borderlines (notably Augusta Treverorum and Sirmium);

b) revealed that the empire’s main weakness was in the East, and this was due to the rise of the powerful Sassanid dynasty in Iran. The eastern Roman capital was located in the wider region of the Turkish straits and not in one of the two major cities in the East, namely Antioch and Alexandria, which were evidently viewed as very exposed to the Iranian armies and to other unpredictable challenges, notably various wealthy Aramaean ‘buffer kingdoms’ and caravan cities located between the Romans and the Iranians, such as Tadmur (Palmyra), Osrhoene (Edessa/Urhoy/Urfa), Adiabene, Hatra, Characene); and

c) generated as side-effect the concept of Rome being self-ruled and preserved in peace, while the operational capitals are far.

This reality, embodied in the status and the tenure of praefectus urbi, is the earliest form of Papocaesarism, i.e. the concept and practice of the Anti-Constantinopolitan popes of Rome. This concept stands at the antipodes of Caesaropapism, which was practiced in Constantinople and was imposed on Rome by Justinian I.

However, the opposition between Palace and Temple was the real historical background out of which the both, Caesaropapism and Papocaesarism, emanated as forms of spiritual, religious, theological and imperial juxtaposition and polarization; and this enormous background antedates the appearance of Constantinopolitan Caesaropapism and Roman Papocaesarism by at least 3500 years, as it is first attested in Sumer (South Mesopotamia) at the very middle of the 4th millennium BCE, even in period when no writing system had been introduced, but the archaeological material record is quite revelatory.

Without further expanding on the topic, which is vast and vastly documented either in the History of the Ancient Oriental empires or in the case of the ill-fated Roman Empire, I have however to admit that this contrasting issue (Caesaropapism vs. Papocaesarism) has played a determinant role in the permanent, fierce opposition between Rome and New Rome (Constantinople), extensively interacting also with the equally vast topic of the Sibylline Oracles and Books. The fact that the ominous contrast was carefully and systematically forsworn during no less than 3.5 centuries of pre-Christian imperial Roman rule demonstrates and confirms the absolutely sinister nature of Rome’s Christianization, which is something that very few people today are able to dissociate (as one always should) from the widespread diffusion of the early Christian faith and the rise of the Christian theology, namely the schools of Antioch, Alexandria, Caesarea of Cappadocia, Nisibis, Edessa of Osrhoene, and Seleucia-Ctesiphon (the Fathers of the Christian Church). Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesaropapism

N. R. Khan, Papocaesarism and Caesaropapism as Action Mechanisms of Christian Theocracy

http://vestnik.krsu.edu.kg/en/archive/39/1726

Download the PDF: / Скачать PDF:

It is quite interesting that the last holder of the title of praefectus urbi, after Rome’s fall (476 CE) and evidently much after the term had lost its entire importance, was none other than Pope Gregory I (590-604), one of the most anti-Constantinopolitan popes of the fallen Rome.

Texts, translations and further readings about the Sbylline Oracles and Books:

https://el.wikisource.org/wiki/Χρησμοί_Σιβυλλιακοί

https://el.wikisource.org/wiki/Χρησμοί_Σιβυλλιακοί/Βιβλίο_Γ

https://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/sib/sib15.htm

https://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/sib/

https://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/sib/sib05.htm

Download this PDF with list of resources (iconography and bibliography):

https://www.encyclopedia.com/philosophy-and-religion/bible/bible-pseudepigrapha/sibylline-oracles

https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/future-of-rome/sibylline-oracles-and-resistance-to-rome/9DBB01548C7A221001B53F597298B44E (biased)

https://www.judaism-and-rome.org/sibylline-oracles-iii46-62 (biased)

https://www.skarlakidis.gr/el/books/proaggeloi/25-2012-09-08-10-52-58.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibylline_Oracles

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibylline_Books

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibyl

Roman Empire 316 CE

XI. Constantine I, the Slow Rise of Christianity, and the Events Preceding the Construction of Constantinople

Constantine I advanced through the ranks during the times of Diocletian’s reform, which means that he understood the functionality of the system, its strengths and its weaknesses. His father, Constantius (also known as Constantius I; in later periods, he was usually called Chlorus), served as Caesar under Maximian. His capital was Augusta Treverorum (Trier, Germany). In 305, he was proclaimed Augustus with Mediolanum (Milan) as capital, while Galerius became Augustus in the East with capital at Laodicea (Izmit, Turkey). However, campaigning against the Picts in Scotland, he died in 306, thus opening the way for his son, Constantine (Flavius Valerius Constantinus), to be proclaimed Augustus by the Roman armies at Eboracum (York, North England). Constantine had spent many years in the courts first of Diocletian and then of Galerius, and during that period, he fought against barbarian invaders in the Balkan North and against the Iranians in Syria and Mesopotamia. Having asked permission to leave, Constantine joined his father in England few months before Constantius died.

Constantine’s territory comprised Gaul, Spain and England, but he was soon (end 306) challenged by Maxentius, who rebelled against him; a compromise was achieved between Maxentius’ father Maximian and Constantine, involving an imperial marriage between the latter and Maximian’s daughter Fausta. However, this solution did not last long, and the western half of the Roman Empire lived in absolute instability during 307-308. Since Galerius’ effort to pacify the rivals did not endure, Maximian revolted against Constantine in 310, but was defeated and forced to commit suicide. Constantine’s position was however very weak in the empire, as he was lacking a significant support; he therefore tried to get some religious backing, by replacing Ancient Roman gods with Sol Invictus Mithra as the supreme imperial deity and his own patron.

The period 310-324 CE represents a time of unrest and upheaval, not only at the administrative but also at the spiritual, cultural, and religious levels. The rivalry, fights, compromises, alliances and plots of several pretenders to the four imperial positions of the administratively divided empire produced a total chaos, which is not properly and impartially known to us, because many historical sources were deliberately destroyed (example: Constantine imposed damnatio memoriae on Maximian), various authors contradict one another, and even worse, the main Christian sources are highly untrustworthy, due to the extensively distortive effort, which was involved in writing a revisionist, pro-Constantine, biased narrative and a highly subjective and partial version of the facts.

A typical example of the degree of event falsification, which is commonly attested in these sources, is what we now call the Edict of Milan (Edictum Mediolanense; 313 CE). This was not a proper, solemn ‘edict’, but just an imperial letter dispatched by Licinius to the Roman administrative heads of his domain, namely the East; and it was sent from Nicomedia (only the meeting between Licinius and Constantine took place in Milan). This is how Lactantius, writing in Latin, describes it in his De Mortibus Persecutorum (On the Deaths of the Persecutors); however, Eusebius of Caesarea (Caesarea Maritima in Palestine), in his Ἐκκλησιαστικὴ ἱστορία (Latin: Historia Ecclesiastica/ English: Church History), presents the fact in a most solemn manner. About:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damnatio_memoriae

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edict_of_Milan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactantius

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_mortibus_persecutorum

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eusebius

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_History_(Eusebius)

https://www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu/03d/0265-0339,_Eusebius_Caesariensis,_Historia_Ecclesiastica,_GR.pdf (page 174/180 of the PDF)

https://www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu/03d/0265-0339,_Eusebius_Caesariensis,_Historia_ecclesiastica_%5BSchaff%5D,_EN.pdf (page 793/838 of the PDF)

https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/lactantius/demort.shtml (scroll down: chapter 48)

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0705.htm (scroll down: chapter 48)

Tyche-New Rome-Constantinople and Constantine in the 330s; the slow progress of Christianization is evident.

Of course, preposterous accusations of Eusebius for anti-Semitism are baseless and nonsensical, but one must admit that the Father of the Christian Church History presented his topics in very contrasting manner on a black and white background, eulogizing Constantine and vilifying Licinius in very subjective and peremptory way.

Following Galerius’ death, Constantine and Licinius had to strike an alliance to oppose their respective contenders, who made a strong bond against the two augusti. Constantine won Maxentius in the battle of Turin (Augusta Taurinorum) in 312 and little time later, in the battle of the Milvian Bridge (28 October 312), which has been highly mythologized by contemporaneous and posterior Christian historiographers, involving narratives about epiphany, dream revelations, supernatural phenomena, and spectacular solar halos. Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Turin_(312)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Milvian_Bridge

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great_and_Christianity

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staurogram

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christogram

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi_Rho

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stauros

Following Maxentius’ death and post-mortem dismemberment, systematic elimination of his public monuments and dismantlement of his guards, a real anti-Roman purge took place in Rome; the army of the imperial capital was totally disbanded. The Constantinian pogrom bore typical characteristics of a military coup. Numerous edifices were demolished and new structures built, while an enormous imperial propaganda was orchestrated to depict Constantine as ‘liberator’ in an effort to evidently break ground and depart from earlier Roman practices and traditions. Few people understand correctly what happened at those days; as a matter of fact, it had nothing to do with the rise of Christianity, as many erroneously assume, but it was rather the installation of an Anti-Christian regime in the semi-destroyed capital of the Roman Empire.

The disastrous developments brought Licinius back to the West, and it is on this background that the critical meeting between Licinius and Constantine took place in Milan (313). This event was later popularized as the beginning of the acceptance of Christianity in the Roman Empire, whereas in reality the then established force was determined to break down the imperial cult of Ancient Rome, i.e. the quintessence of the Roman identity, while progressively introducing doctrinal elements that had nothing in common with what the great theological schools of Christianity could ever accept (notably the temporal power of the so-called ‘holy see’).

Of course, as a military man with elementary education and insubstantial intellectual faculties, Constantine had absolutely no idea of what was going on around him. His supporters’, allies’ and advisers’ back thoughts, evil ideas, and sophisticated schemes would outlive him by millennia. That is why he unintentionally but easily fell victim of the flattering descriptions and comments, which still today constitute the major elements of what is called ‘Constantinian shift’ or ‘Constantinianism’. Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_cult_of_ancient_Rome#The_Imperial_cult_and_Christianity

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auctoritas

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporal_power_of_the_Holy_See

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinianism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinian_shift

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syllabus_of_Errors

However, the aforementioned developments did not ensure peace in the divided Roman Empire; Licinius had to fight against Maximinus Daza in the battle of Tzirallum (in today’s Tekirdağ province of Turkey near the shore of the Sea of Marmara) and then to chase him up to Cilicia (Tarsus) where the unfortunate pretender died. Centrifugal forces were pulling the two augusti apart from one another, and the first battle between Licinius and Constantine took place in Cibalae (currently Vinkovci in Croatia) in late 316. Licinius lost also the battle in Mardia (presently Harmanli in Bulgaria’s Haskovo province), but Constantine’s subsequent miscalculations exposed him to risks and obliged him to make a peace deal at Serdica (Sofia) in early 317. It was clear that this would not last long and finally, after an early naval battle in 323, the battle of Adrianople (Edirne) in July 324, the naval battle of Hellespont (Dardanelles) in July 324, and the battle of Chrysopolis {Üsküdar on Istanbul’s Asiatic seaside, near Chalcedon ( Kadıköy)}, Licinius was finally defeated, imprisoned and then killed.

New Rome as it may have looked in the middle of the 4th c. CE

XII. Constantine I, New Rome (Constantinople), and the Reasons for it

Taking into consideration the fact that, few years before his final defeat, Licinius had restarted the persecutions against the Christians, Constantine I’s victory did not have only a personal but also an imperial dimension, underscoring the slow but solid process of Christianization that was already underway. There were several reasons that imposed the selection or construction of a new imperial capital. The Roman Quadrumvirate (or ‘tetrarchy’), which was initiated by Diocletian, proved to be as troublesome as the Roman Triumvirates, 400 years earlier, because it generated an inevitable antagonism. However, it also showed that critical changes had to be implemented and more importantly, there was an evident need of at least another capital closer to the northern and eastern borders. On the other hand, Diocletian’s capital (Nicomedia/Ismit), ca. 100 km east of the Bosporus straits, was known as the headquarters of the worst persecution against the Christians. Subsequently, the numerous, unprecedented developments that had taken place during the previous 40 years ruled out the selection of that city as new capital.

The apparent reasons that led Constantine I to the decision of founding a new capital in the location of today’s Istanbul are:

A- the need to better defend the eastern and the northern borders of the empire;

B- the urgency to often dispatch armies and fleets to the east within shorter time;

C- the demand for an impregnable capital;

In this regard, it is essential to note that the Bosporus and the Dardanelles constitute superb natural defenses against attacking fleets sailing from either the Black Sea or the Mediterranean. Furthermore, the Bosporus constitutes a formidable defense line against attacking armies coming from the East (Iran). In such occasions, Nicomedia would be far more exposed to the enemy.

D- the necessity to rupture with the earlier forms of spirituality, mysticism, religious traditions, eschatology, soteriology, and initiation rites that existed throughout the empire;

E- the exigency to strengthen the region (Roman civil diocese) of Macedonia where Christians were fewer than in the Italian Peninsula; here it has to be clarified that the Roman civil diocese of Macedonia encompassed all the southern confines of the Balkans, because the geographical / administrative term ‘Greece’ had already been abolished (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_diocese); and

F- the requirement to accommodate the desire to progressively transform Rome into a distant, yet authoritarian, religious capital for the entire Oecumene, which meant that either no emperor would have the city as capital or every local ruler would be subordinated to Rome’s urban and worldwide religious authority.

The comprehensive construction of the new city leaves no doubt that the earlier settlement (Byzantium) was -to its greatest extent- leveled to the ground and the entire site expanded after a new, entirely genuine and rather grandiose plan. The term ‘Byzantium’ was then obliterated and the city was proclaimed as capital on 11th May 330 CE under the name Nova Roma (‘New Rome’). Other names were also used, namely ‘Second Rome’ and ‘Eastern Rome’. We know that Constantine I did not name the city after himself; contrarily, he named a city in Palestine after his mother. This is actually the city’s worst point in its almost 1700-year long history. New Rome was also named Κωνσταντίνου Πόλις (‘Constantinou Polis’; Latin: Constantinopolis, i.e. Constantine’s city) later, but this was rather an adjectival use or a descriptive reference – and not an official name (Nova Roma Constantinopolitana).

This means that ‘Constantinople’ was not a name given to the city by its founder. It is therefore very wrong to make a parallelism between Alexander the Great and Constantine I, and imagine that ‘Constantinople’ is a name similar to ‘Alexandria’. The difference is not just the fact that the former is a composite name with two components, namely the emperor’s name and the Greek word for ‘city’ (polis); if Constantine I named after him the city that he founded, the name would be ‘Constantinia’. If that were the case, then most probably, Constantine I would also found other cities after him; but we know quite well that he did not do anything of the sort, although his architectural work is enormous in terms of urban expansion, military fortification, and sacral architectonics.

Several historical sources are missing due to successive destructions and at times because of premeditated acts; that is why our information is based on slightly later and often conflicting sources as per which in the official decree the city was called ‘Roma secunda’/’secunda Roma’ (Second Rome) or ‘Nova Roma’ (New Rome). The latter appellation is confirmed by Socrates of Constantinople, a 5th c. historian who is also known as Σωκράτης Σχολαστικός/Socrates Scholasticus; the former name is mentioned by Cassiodorus, a mainly 6th c. historian, who amongst others translated excerpts from Socrates Scholasticus’ works into Latin.

New Rome, the Forum of Constantine

This is what Socrates of Constantinople states:

he enlarged, surrounded with massive walls, and adorned  with various edifices; and having rendered it equal to imperial Rome, he named it Constantinople, establishing by law that it should be designated New Rome. This law was engraven on a pillar of stone erected in public view in the Strategium, near the emperor’s equestrian statue“.

(edited and revised with notes by the Rev. A. C. Zenos, D.D.), book I, chapter XVI, p. 53/325

Basics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socrates_of_Constantinople

This is what Cassiodorus relates, translating Socrates Scholasticus’ text into Latin:

Quae cum primitus Byzantium vocaretur, auxit, et maximo eam muro circumdedit, et diversis ornatum fabricis aequam Imperiali Romae constituit; et denominatam Constantinopolim appellari secundam Romam lege firmavit, sicut lex ipsa in marmoreal platona noscitur esse conscripta, et in Strategio juxta equestrem statuam eius est constituta“.

https://books.google.ru/books?id=qzs_AAAAcAAJ&pg=PP5&hl=bg&source=gbs_selected_pages&cad=3#v=onepage&q&f=false (p. 113)

Basics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassiodorus

Constantine I presenting New Rome and Justinian I presenting Sancta Sophia church to Virgin Mary and the Infant Jesus as depicted on Ayasofya Museum mosaics.

XIII. New Rome (Constantinople): a Disadvantaged Location as per the Principles of Geographical Determinism

The imperial capital name issue was indeed a time bomb, which played a critically determinant role in the History of Christianity, in the History of the Roman Empire, in the History of the Mediterranean, in the History of Europe, and consequently in the History of the World. However, few people today know, let alone understand, the nature of this ferocious rivalry, which was due to many different factors.  

A very crucial factor was the location of the new capital, if viewed through the viewpoint and the perspective of the ancient science of Geographical Determinism, which was greatly elaborated, continually studied, and effectively relied upon in Ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, Hittite Anatolia, Canaan-Phoenicia, Iran, Turan and China, before being further diffused among other nations and further developed down to Renaissance, when the rise of modern sciences overshadowed it. As per the principles of Geographical Determinism, the geomorphological location of New Rome (Constantinople) has several privileges, but in no way does it endow the city with traits of imperial capital. There cannot be capital of an empire that is located on the seashore, except for the case this empire is a counterfeit, devilish and ominous or eventually a cursed and maledicted state.

Successful capitals of empires can only be located nearby (or crossed by) rivers, at the confluence of two rivers, by the shores of a lake, at the foothills of mountains, and in vast plains or high plateaus. In other words, New Rome (Constantinople) would never make a Nineveh, a Babylon, an Assyria, a Hattusha, a Persepolis, an Istakhr or a Baghdad. Constantine’s city would never be the equivalent of Thebes of Egypt, Susa (the Ancient Elamite capital that the Achaemenids and Alexander made also theirs), Afrasiab – Samarqand, Xi’an {西安, i.e. the historical capital Chang’an (長安) of China} and Delhi. And it could not be a match for Rome.

Even worse, and despite its several undoubted privileges, New Rome was located in the maritime passageway between the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea (namely the region of the Dardanelles, the Sea of Marmara, and the Bosporus strait), which is not a recommendable location for cities, let alone capitals. It is interesting to note that, throughout World History and with the sole exception of Troy, there have not been major cities built in the maritime passageways. This concerns the Red Sea straits, the Persian Gulf straits, the Gibraltar straits, which are the most notable maritime passageways that have been historically documented and described.

To add insult to injury, New Rome (or Second Rome or Constantinople), constructed on European soil, contrarily to Diocletian’s capital Nicomedia, was the first imperial capital ever built in the Balkan Peninsula. This unprecedented fact highlights the urgency with which Constantine I was forced to act after his victory over Licinius. Back in the beginning of the 4th c. CE, it was very well known that no empire had ever existed on the Balkans. Alexander the Great abandoned his insignificant capital of Pella, and after conquering the Iranian Empire, selected the millennia long, holy Mesopotamian city of Babylon as his imperial capital.

When the Macedonian king arrived at the legendary city as a suppliant, the ‘Gate of God’ (this is the real name of Babylon: Bab-ili in Assyrian-Babylonian and KA-DINGIR-RAKI in Sumerian) had already a two millennia long historicity. No other city in the world, not even Thebes of Egypt, could at that time raise such a claim. As a pious and faithful emperor, Alexander zestfully renovated and resolutely rebuilt temples, altars, walls and palaces, therefore embellishing and expanding the only city in the History of the Mankind that was believed to be the center of the universe. This concept was later copied and reproduced by the Ancient Hebrews, the Jews, and the Muslims but in a rather trivial and extraneous manner.

As a matter of fact, the Balkan Peninsula was never home to great empires, even if we take into consideration the small kingdom of Macedonia, which was enormously despised and hated by the Greeks of the Balkans’ southern regions, if we are not ignorant, oblivious or mendacious enough to forget Demosthenes and his incessant diatribes and insults against the non-Greek Macedonians. When the empire of Alexander the Great was divided among the Epigones, the island of Crete was considered as Egyptian (not Macedonian) territory and it was ruled by the Ptolemaic dynasty. Only the Eastern Roman and the Ottoman Empires were significant realms that controlled the Balkans, but the real center, the heart and the ‘soul’ of both states was Anatolia, not the Balkan Peninsula. Everything started in Anatolia and was then diffused in the Balkans; this has been the typical trait of History for more than 5000 years.  

The above truthful remarks do not however mean that New Rome (Constantinople) was doomed since Day 1; no, not at all! But, on the basis of ancient sciences, wisdom, and geomorphological analysis, it would be very difficult for an empire to effectively endure, advance, and focus on an expanding line of imperial order, while having its capital located there. Perhaps, Constantine’s capital would be good enough for two or three centuries. Then, the imperial capital should eventually be transferred to another location, and more specifically in the central plateau of Anatolia, which had already been the high place of a remarkably successful empire.

For the case of Constantine’s capital, the earlier negative impression that was left out of the experience of four imperial capitals (Diocletian’s administrative reform and division) only prevented the sole ruler of the Roman Empire from reconsidering the option – under totally different terms of course. Yet, there were many empires known for having more than one capital at a time; Achaemenid Iran is the perfect example in this case. Parsa (Persepolis) was the main capital of Darius I the Great; Pasargad (Pasargadae) was the old capital of Cyrus II the Great; and Hegmat-ane (Ecbatana, today’s Hamedan), the old Median capital, was their summer capital. Furthermore, Susa (Shushin, today’s Shush), known as major urban center of civilization since the 4th millennium BCE and capital of the kingdom of Elam, was also made capital. Last but not the least, Babylon, one of Mesopotamia’s holiest and most ancient sites, capital of the Nabonid dynasty (625-539 BCE), which was overthrown by Cyrus, and one of the pre-Islamic world’s most advanced scientific, academic, spiritual and religious centers, was also an Achaemenid capital. But the eventuality of multiple Roman capitals was ruled out, at least for the rest of Constantine’s lifetime.

However, in addition to the improper location of the new capital, the name itself produced a major problem, which functioned, as I already said, like a real time bomb. If Antioch or Alexandria was then proclaimed as imperial capital, it would be eventually risky from a military/geostrategic viewpoint, but the entire trouble with the name would be avoided.

Gradually, the appearance of Constantine changed in Eastern Roman Christian Art: Constantine’s vision and the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in a 9th-century Eastern Roman manuscript.
Constantine’s dream as depicted in a 9th century Eastern Roman manuscript

XIV. New Rome (Constantinople): a Christian Empire’s Capital lacking Christian Credentials  

Founding a new capital in a disadvantaged location for imperial capitals and naming it after the earlier imperial capital, which was in the process of becoming the empire’s religious capital (at least this was then in the minds of Rome’s ‘Christian’ authorities) were not the sole ominous parameters of the foundation of New Rome. Although badly needed (the First Council of Christian Churches had to be held in Nicaea, today’s Iznik/Turkey, in May 325 CE), the new capital was quite prematurely constructed for a Christian Empire. Most of the people forget that, when New Rome was inaugurated in 330, the appearance of the newly-built capital had nothing in common with what one could describe 100 years later (around 430 CE) as a ‘Christian city’.

Although the gradual transformation of New Rome into a fully-fledged, ostensibly Christian urban center would not be, and proved not to be, a problem (and the new capital became an apparently Christian city after 380 CE, when the famous Edict of Thessalonica was promulgated), the real issue in 330 CE was a totally different issue. In reality, New Rome – Constantinople definitely lacked any Christian credentials, and -even worse- it was not located in a region known for its significant contribution to the then under formation Christian theology. Already, Rome was not a significant center of Christian theology and the local theologians were not doctrinally self-luminous; on the contrary, they extensively relied on the major schools of Christian theology, which were located in the East. This fact concerned New Rome even more markedly.

It is certain that Constantine I did his best to rapidly build great palaces, public buildings and temples; the famous Church of the Holy Apostles (after 1463-1470 it was rebuilt as Fatih Camii/Mosque) was constructed with the intention to transfer and accommodate the relics of all the twelve apostles of Jesus. Other objects deemed holy were also brought to the city in order to consecrate and protect the new capital: part of the Christian True Cross, the Rod of Moses, etc.; in this regard, it is essential to always bear in mind that most of these traditions may be part of the later need to build stronger testimonies justifying the position of New Rome as the imperial capital par excellence and as the leading Christian Church in the Orient. Basics:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_the_Holy_Apostles

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Cross

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staff_of_Moses

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nehushtan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boukoleon_Palace

The Church of the Holy Apostles as depicted in 12th c. Eastern Roman manuscript (Vatican Codex Vat.gr.1162)

Despite the aforementioned effort and the evident magnificence of the new capital, which featured impressive squares like the Augustaeum, monumental gates like the Chalke and the Golden Gate, great palaces like the Great Palace and the Palace of Daphne, a Praetorium, a Curia, an hippodrome, impressive colonnades along the main streets, majestic edifices like the Milion, several fora (forums), and the walls, New Rome’s imperial propaganda could not match that of Rome, which had already been firmly propagated as the main religious center of Christianity on the basis of systematic myths and unsubstantiated legends.  

A major point of the Roman propaganda about Rome’s credentials of Christianity is the narrative as per which apostles Peter and Paul founded the ‘Church of Rome’, before being supposedly martyred there at the time of Emperor Nero. The fable about Linus being ‘reportedly’ appointed as first bishop of Rome originates out of thin air; the entire story was fabricated by Irenaeus at a most crucial moment, when he was fighting against the Gnostic onslaught on the Christian faith in the middle of the 2nd c. CE. Irenaeus’ nonsensical comment about Tatian (the 2nd century’s leading theologian, author and exegete) being a follower of the Christian Gnostic theologian is quite enough to fully and irreversibly discredit the author of ‘Against Heresies’ (Adversus haereses/Κατά αιρέσεων).

Irrespective of Irenaeus’ veracity or prevarication, the fact is that Rome’s ‘Christian’ establishment had already produced its legends and propaganda tales, when New Rome was under construction. This situation, as it could be expected, produced its own dynamics which functioned in favor of Rome’s primacy (i.e. papal primacy). While building the new capital, Constantine also started and executed two major Christian architectural projects, namely the construction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem and the erection of the old Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome. This is a good example of how the Roman primacy propaganda functioned at the time; the church was built on the hill where St. Peter had been supposedly buried and in this manner, an unsubstantiated narrative was ‘expected’ to be confirmed by a totally unfounded endeavor. All these aberrations would later be held as ‘proofs’ of Roman primacy. About:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_primacy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_primacy#First_Council_of_Constantinople_and_its_context

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_papal_primacy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_papal_primacy#Bishop_of_Rome_becomes_Rector_of_the_whole_Church

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Rome

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great#Religious_policy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinople#324%E2%80%93337:_The_refoundation_as_Constantinople

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_the_Holy_Sepulchre#Construction_(4th_century)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_St._Peter%27s_Basilica

The elements of religious forgery usually intermingle with the various components of theological life, therefore creating tensions; all accounts made, the down-to-earth reality of the Early Christian Church was that of incessant theological polarizations, debates, interpretations, doctrines, disputes and treatises. In that level, neither Rome nor New Rome really mattered; in an era of ferocious Christological controversies, which started in the East, none of the two cities was known for its erudite scholars, knowledgeable exegetes, and wise Fathers of the Christian Church.

In this regard, the Alexandrian school of Christian theology had already greatly advanced in the 2nd c. CE; the main rival schools of Christian hermeneutics were the School of Antioch and the School of Urhoy (Edessa of Osrhoene). Later, in the middle of the 4th c. CE, great theological schools appeared also in Caesarea of Cappadocia, Nisibis (Northeastern Mesopotamia) and Seleucia-Ctesiphon (Central Mesopotamia). However, neither Rome nor New Rome had formed until the middle of the 4th c. CE similar centers of Christian Patristic literature. Almost all major Fathers of the Christian Church belonged to the schools of Alexandria, Antioch, Edessa, Caesarea, Nisibis and Seleucia-Ctesiphon. About:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catechetical_School_of_Alexandria

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catechetical_School_of_Antioch.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_Edessa

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_centers_of_Christianity

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_Nisibis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cappadocian_Fathers

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_Seleucia-Ctesiphon

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_the_East

John Chrysostom, Father of the Christian Church and the most famous theologian of the School of Antioch (mosaic from the Ayasofya Museum)
Athanasius of Alexandria, the most famous theologian of the School of Alexandria (11th c. fresco from Hosios Loukas monastery, Athens)
St. Ephrem the Aramaean (Syriac), one of the leading Fathers of the Christian Church and the most famous theologian of the School of Urhoy/Urfa (Edessa of Osrhoene)

While victorious Constantine attempted to create an entirely new, Christian Roman Empire with capital in the East, the forces that had earlier supported him applied a wrong treatment on him; for these forces that dwelled in Rome, Constantine’s construction of a new capital far from Rome was conform to their interests, but his appellation of the new capital (New Rome) was unacceptable. Even worse, the great respect and love that the emperor felt and expressed toward Eusebius of Caesarea and Constantine’s tendency towards Arianism were intolerable and incalculably disastrous for them and their elaborately concealed version of counterfeit Christianity.

Today most of the people believe that Constantine was against Arius, but this is very wrong indeed; this is only the interpretation given to the facts by the systematic forgers, who many centuries later turned so openly and so vociferously against New Rome – Constantinople. In reality, in the beginning, Constantine I was rather neutral between the ardent theologian Arius and bishop Alexander of Alexandria; but he could not afford to oppose the majority of the participants of the First Council of Nicaea. However, one must remark that this theological dispute, which was in fact an internal affair of the Church of Alexandria (and had therefore to be solved within the limits of that Church), skillfully became a key topic for all Christian bishops and theologians only to subtly promote Rome’s position among the other Christian churches, already at a moment when the new capital, New Rome, was under construction (325).

The First Council of Nicaea as depicted in the Eastern Roman Christian Art
Posterior propaganda and falsification: Arius depicted as defeated and fallen down (!!) in the First Council of Nicaea. From a painting of the 14th c. Great Monastery of Meteora, Greece
Raffaello’s viciously fallacious version of the First Council of Nicaea in Vatican’s Capella Sistina

This helps us also understand why the fervently built new capital did not have all the highest level dignitaries of Rome; there would not be and finally there were not ‘quaestors’ to supervise the public treasury, elected ‘tribunes’ to protect the people’s interests or ‘praetors’ to administer justice. The ‘senators’ of New Rome did not have the superlative title ‘clarissimus’, but the simple adjectival form (positive degree) of ‘clarus’. And atop of the new capital, there was a proconsul and not a praefectus urbanus (or praefectus urbi). This situation tells us clearly that, while New Rome was still under construction, there was already an opposite force at work.

For the forces that wanted to turn Rome into a religious capital of the entire empire, the new capital’s name New Rome was a permanent source of destabilization and discredit.

These are the forces that propagated the use of the name ‘Constantinople’ instead of ‘New Rome’ throughout the Roman Empire and kept pressurizing on this issue until the middle of the 15th c.

These are the same forces, which did not accept the New Roman/Constantinopolitan selection of the Roman popes, as Justinian I stipulated (a practice that lasted from 537 until 752).

These are the forces that opposed the Quinisext Ecumenical Council (Πενθέκτη Σύνοδος – Concilium Quinisextum), which was held in 692.

These are the forces that coined the nickname ‘Graeci’ (Greeks) for the Romans of the Eastern Roman Empire as early as the 8th c. CE.

These are the forces that triggered the Schism (first in 863-867 and finally in 1054) between Rome and New Rome – Constantinople.

– How can we identify them?

– The easiest and commonest way would be to call them ‘the anti-Constantinopolitan party of Rome’; they also had their fifth column in New Rome – Constantinople, i.e. the ‘pro-Roman party of Constantinople’.

However, this way of identification is external, confusing, and clearly misleading. This is so because for the forces that wanted to turn Rome into a religious capital of the entire empire (and later of the world/’Ecumene’), the imperial capital name issue was in reality only the smokescreen. As such, it was used by them to conceal a calamitous reality, which concerns the entire world today.

This reality was however known to the anonymous author of the illustrious Chronicon Paschale – only too well. That is why he denounced the calamitous reality, by naming New Rome – Constantinople simply, briefly and strictly ‘Rome’.

By so doing, the author of the Chronicon Paschale, who lived at the time of Emperor Heraclius (610-641), simply rejected flatly the Christian identity of Rome. If New Rome – Constantinople is the only Rome, then the old Rome is not ‘Rome’ anymore. This automatically means that the old Rome is not Christian at all.

How the centuries-long confrontation with the non-Christian (or pseudo-Christian or Anti-Christian) Rome dragged New Rome – Constantinople to several unnecessary compromises that brought about the collapse of the Eastern Roman Empire, I will explain in the forthcoming second part of the present series of articles.

And how the confrontation between Rome and New Rome – Constantinople or, to put it correctly, between the Counterfeit Anti-Christian Rome and the True Rome (which is New Rome – Constantinople) continued during the Ottoman times (1453-1923), because Mehmet II’s ignorance, foolishness and idiocy led him to uselessly and calamitously invade New Rome – Constantinople, claim Roman continuity, and  even proclaim himself as Roman Emperor (without having a clue of what it takes to be a Roman Emperor), I will explain in the forthcoming third part of the present series of articles.

One point can be surely deduced from the aforementioned presentation: the forces that wanted to turn Rome into a religious capital of the entire empire would have surely been satisfied, if in 476 CE both parts of the Roman Empire had collapsed and disintegrated at the same time. Then, they would not have needed to keep an ace up their sleeve for longer; they would have revealed their ominous intentions quite sooner. And the final deception, i.e. the anti-human, anti-Christian, and anti-Godly Renaissance, would have taken place almost 1000 years earlier.

And this is the Satanic fallacy that Raffaello, the Benedictines-Jesuits, and the Anti-Christian Rome (Vatican) dare to diffuse as Constantine I the Great’s ‘baptism’ by Eusebius of Nicomedia!

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‘Ethiopian Ocean’: a 16th c. Colonial Term, the Treaties of Alcáçovas (1479), Tordesillas (1494) and Zaragoza (1529), and the Ottoman Stiffness and Incompetence

How can a new geographical term, first used by a late 15th c. Catholic pope, help us evaluate the incompetence, misery and absolute failure of the Ottoman sultans who, after being idiotic enough to invade a small city (Constantinople, 1453) that would only plague them with many troubles, after being pathetic enough not to make the most of an illustrious victory (Chaldiran, 1514), and after being demented enough to make of the sands of Arabia, Egypt and Libya part of their sultanate (1517), thought it possible for them to be the driving force of the Islamic world only to allow Spain and Portugal to rule the waves and prepare the demolition of Islam in just 400 years?

Contents

I. Misinterpretation of a 15th c. Unhistorical Term by 21st c. Crooks

II. No ‘Ethiopian Ocean’ (or Sea) in ‘Classical Geographical Works’

III. Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Iranians, the Circumnavigation of Africa, and the Geographical Terms Used 

IV. Libya (: ‘Africa’), the Periplus of Hanno, and the Early Use of the Term ‘Atlantic Sea’

V. The Terms ‘Ocean’ and ‘Sea’, and the leading Ancient Egyptian Scholar Ptolemy the Geographer

VI. The Treaties of Alcáçovas (1479), Tordesillas (1494) and Zaragoza (1529), and the Use of the Terms ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ and ‘Sea of India’

VII. The Treaties of Alcáçovas, Tordesillas and Zaragoza, Portuguese-Spanish Colonial Conquests, Ottoman Ignorance and Stiffness, and the Collapse of the Islamic World

I. Misinterpretation of a 15th c. Unhistorical Term by 21st c. Crooks

It sounds strange that the misuse of an Ancient Greek and Latin term by a 15th c. pope relates to the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the destruction of the entire Islamic world, but the whole world is nothing more than an enormous field of semiotics whereby all signs exert impact on one another. At this point, it would suffice to state that the term “Ethiopian Ocean’ was first used in a Treaty signed by Portugal and Spain under the auspices of the Catholic pope in 1494; that treaty actually was the death warrant of the Ottoman Sultanate (not yet Caliphate at that time) and of the Islamic world.

I should rather narrate things in the correct order; few days ago, a friend of mine based in the Arabian Peninsula sent me a link to an article published in a South African site under the title “Mapmakers once referred to the southern Atlantic Ocean as the Ethiopian Ocean” (see after the end of the present article: Addendum I). I realized immediately what it all was about, but I visited the web page, only to realize that the nonsensical and confusing article was the mere reproduction of an earlier report, which was initially published in another site; at the bottom of the article, you can read the following: “This report was written by Africa Check, a non-partisan fact-checking organization. View the original piece on their website”. I subsequently visited that site, which is an outfit of the French secret services {I am sorry, I meant ‘of the Agence France-Presse (AFP) Foundation’}. Details about the Africa Check non-profit fact checking organization (including their finances and controversial sponsors) you can find here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Africa_Check

If you need to spare your time, yes! You guessed correctly! Among the sponsors of that self-styled organization, you can find the disreputable and fraudulent financier George Soros’ Open Society Foundation for South Africa (OSF-SA; get the basics here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Society_Foundation_for_South_Africa) and the notorious Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (now that they will get divorced, the name will have to change). Next time you want to learn more about African History, set up your own ‘non-partisan fact-checking kiosk’ and get some money from the lottery (it will not be as dirty as that coming from the aforementioned crooks)! But I am digressing.

The Africa Check report (see after the end of the present article: Addendum II) was titled “The Atlantic Ocean was known as Ethiopian Ocean until the 19th century”, which is a monstrous lie. I am sure that the present article will help many people understand that this world’s fraudulent ‘fact-checking’ institutes and other similar associations are set up by criminals intending to tyrannically impose their forgery systematization and their pseudo-historical dogma which is situated at the antipodes of the real History of the Mankind, but this is not the intention with which I write now.

Both publications refer to an earlier post on Instagram (a site belonging to the notorious Facebook) in which part of a historical map is featured, whereas the caption reads: “Today’s southern half of the Atlantic Ocean in classical geographical works was known as Aethiopian or Ethiopian Sea or Ocean”. This is a lie. Where does the historical truth lie?

II. No ‘Ethiopian Ocean’ (or Sea) in ‘Classical Geographical Works’

It is clear that 15th century maps and more recent cartography do not constitute “classical geographical works”. This term denotes Ancient Greek and Roman authors, geographers, historians, scholars, captains, merchants and sailors, who wrote texts of geographical contents.

Ancient Babylonian map of the world, first half of the first millennium BCE

Geography and cartography were highly developed in Egypt, Babylonia, Assyria, Hittite Anatolia, Phoenicia and Carthage, as early as the 2nd millennium BCE (on the basis of documentation hitherto excavated). Pharaoh Nechao II (610-595 BCE) hired Phoenicians, who were the then world’s most skillful navigators and therefore cartographers, and tasked them (around 600 CE) with the circumnavigation of Africa, which they completed in two years, sailing clockwise around Africa. This fact was not saved in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic records, but in the part of Ancient Greek Herodotus’ Histories in which he narrates his sojourn and studies in Egypt (ca. 453-450 BCE).

Typical Phoenician boats
Phoenician boats after Assyrian bas-reliefs of the first half of the first millennium BCE

Narrating the circumnavigation of Africa, which was undertaken by the Phoenicians commissioned by Pharaoh Nechao, Herodotus names South Atlantic ‘southern sea’ (Histories, book IV, 42):

42. I wonder, then, at those who have mapped out and divided the world into Libya, Asia, and Europe; for the difference between them is great, seeing that in length Europe stretches along both the others together, and it appears to me to be beyond all comparison broader. For Libya shows clearly that it is encompassed by the sea, save only where it borders on Asia; and this was proved first (as far as we know) by Necos king of Egypt. He, when he had made an end of digging the canal which leads from the Nile to the Arabian Gulf, sent Phoenicians in ships, charging them to sail on their return voyage past the Pillars of Heracles till they should come into the northern sea and so to Egypt. So the Phoenicians set out from the Red Sea and sailed the southern sea; whenever autumn came they would put in and sow the land, to whatever part of Libya they might come, and there await the harvest; then, having gathered in the crop, they sailed on, so that after two years had passed, it was in the third that they rounded the Pillars of Heracles and came to Egypt. There they said (what some may believe, though I do not) that in sailing round Libya they had the sun on their right hand.

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Herodotus_The_Persian_Wars_(Godley)/Book_IV

Assyrian representation of Phoenician boats

In Ancient Greek the text reads:

θωμάζω ν τν διουρισάντων κα διελόντων Λιβύην τε κα σίην κα Ερώπην· ο γρ σμικρ τ διαφέροντα ατέων στί· μήκεϊ μν γρ παρʼ μφοτέρας παρήκει Ερώπη, ερεος δ πέρι οδ συμβάλλειν ξίη φαίνεταί μοι εναι. Λιβύη μν γρ δηλο ωυτν note οσα περίρρυτος, πλν σον ατς πρς τν σίην ορίζει, Νεκ το Αγυπτίων βασιλέος πρώτου τν μες δμεν καταδέξαντος· ς πείτε τν διώρυχα παύσατο ρύσσων τν κ το Νείλου διέχουσαν ς τν ράβιον κόλπον, πέπεμψε Φοίνικας νδρας πλοίοισι, ντειλάμενος ς τ πίσω διʼ ρακλέων στηλέων κπλέειν ως ς τν βορηίην θάλασσαν κα οτω ς Αγυπτον πικνέεσθαι. ρμηθέντες ν ο Φοίνικες κ τς ρυθρς θαλάσσης πλεον τν νοτίην θάλασσαν· κως δ γίνοιτο φθινόπωρον προσσχόντες ν σπείρεσκον τν γν, να κάστοτε τς Λιβύης πλέοντες γινοίατο, κα μένεσκον τν μητον· θερίσαντες δʼ ν τν στον πλεον, στε δύο τέων διεξελθόντων τρίτ τεϊ κάμψαντες ρακλέας στήλας πίκοντο ς Αγυπτον. κα λεγον μο μν ο πιστά, λλ δ δή τε, ς περιπλώοντες τν Λιβύην τν λιον σχον ς τ δεξιά.

http://artflsrv02.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/perseus/citequery3.pl?dbname=GreekApr19&getid=0&query=Hdt.%204

Further bibliography on the topic, you can find here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necho_II#Ambitious_projects

Phoenician battle ship

III. Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Iranians, the Circumnavigation of Africa, and the Geographical Terms Used 

Herodotus mentions also other efforts of circumnavigation of Africa that were undertaken but not completed successfully; the story of Sataspes, who was the nephew of the Achaemenid Iranian Emperor Darius I the Great (522-486 BCE), is quite informative. Sataspes was forced to undertake the circumnavigation of Africa to save his life. He was dispatched to Egypt (then an Iranian province named Mudraya in Old Achaemenid Iranian), thence fully equipped, and assisted to sail. He moved counterclockwise, which seems to have been a matter of bad planning or unfortunate decision; he sailed out of the Mediterranean, advanced southwards, and reached a coastland inhabited by African Pygmies probably in the area of today’s Congo. There, for undefined reasons, he decided to discontinue his voyage and returned back to Egypt and Iran; he later justified his decision as due to inability to further proceed. 

In this narrative, Herodotus uses the name ‘Libya’ (Ancient Greek for ‘Africa’) for the Black Continent’s southernmost confines (Histories, book IV, 43):

43. Thus the first knowledge of Libya was gained. The next story is that of the Carchedonians: for as for Sataspes son of Teaspes, an Achaemenid, he did not sail round Libya, though he was sent for that end; but he feared the length and the loneliness of the voyage and so returned back without accomplishing the task laid upon him by his mother. For he had raped the virgin daughter of Zopyrus son of Megabyzus; and when on this charge he was to be impaled by King Xerxes, Sataspes’ mother, who was Darius’ sister, begged for his life, saying that she would lay a heavier punishment on him than did Xerxes; for he should be compelled to sail round Libya, till he completed his voyage and came to the Arabian Gulf. Xerxes agreeing to this, Sataspes went to Egypt, where he received a ship and a crew from the Egyptians, and sailed past the Pillars of Heracles. Having sailed out beyond them, and rounded the Libyan promontory called Solois, he sailed southward; but when he had been many months sailing far over the sea, and ever there was more before him, he turned back and made sail for Egypt. Thence coming to Xerxes, he told in his story how when he was farthest distant he sailed by a country of little men, who wore palm-leaf raiment; these, whenever he and his men put in to land with their ship, would ever leave their towns and flee to the hills; he and his men did no wrong when they landed, and took naught from the people but what they needed for eating. As to his not sailing wholly round Libya, the reason (he said) was that the ship could move no farther, but was stayed. But Xerxes did not believe that Sataspes spoke truth, and as the task appointed was unfulfilled he impaled him, punishing him on the charge first brought against him. This Sataspes had an eunuch, who as soon as he heard of his master’s death escaped to Samos, with a great store of wealth, of which a man of Samos possessed himself. I know the man’s name but of set purpose forget it.

Phoenician colonization across the Mediterranean

In Ancient Greek the text reads:

οτω μν ατη γνώσθη τ πρτον, μετ δ Καρχηδόνιοι εσ ο λέγοντες· πε Σατάσπης γε Τεάσπιος νρ χαιμενίδης ο περιέπλωσε Λιβύην, πʼ ατ τοτο πεμφθείς, λλ δείσας τό τε μκος το πλόου κα τν ρημίην πλθε πίσω, οδʼ πετέλεσε τν πέταξέ ο μήτηρ εθλον. θυγατέρα γρ Ζωπύρου το Μεγαβύζου βιήσατο παρθένον· πειτα μέλλοντος ατο δι ταύτην τν ατίην νασκολοπιεσθαι π Ξέρξεω βασιλέος, μήτηρ το Σατάσπεος οσα Δαρείου δελφε παραιτήσατο, φσά ο ατ μέζω ζημίην πιθήσειν περ κενον· Λιβύην γάρ ο νάγκην σεσθαι περιπλώειν, ς ν πίκηται περιπλέων ατν ς τν ράβιον κόλπον. συγχωρήσαντος δ Ξέρξεω π τούτοισι, Σατάσπης πικόμενος ς Αγυπτον κα λαβν νέα τε κα ναύτας παρ τούτων πλεε π ρακλέας στήλας· διεκπλώσας δ κα κάμψας τ κρωτήριον τς Λιβύης τ ονομα Σολόεις στί, πλεε πρς μεσαμβρίην· περήσας δ θάλασσαν πολλν ν πολλοσι μησί, πείτε το πλενος αε δεε, ποστρέψας πίσω πέπλεε ς Αγυπτον. κ δ ταύτης πικόμενος παρ βασιλέα Ξέρξεα λεγε φς τ προσωτάτω νθρώπους μικρος παραπλέειν σθτι φοινικηί διαχρεωμένους, ο κως σφες καταγοίατο τ νη φεύγεσκον πρς τ ρεα λείποντες τς πόλιας· ατο δ δικέειν οδν σιόντες, βρωτ δ μονα ξ ατέων λαμβάνειν. το δ μ περιπλσαι Λιβύην παντελέως ατιον τόδε λεγε, τ πλοον τ πρόσω ο δυνατν τι εναι προβαίνειν λλʼ νίσχεσθαι. Ξέρξης δ ο ο συγγινώσκων λέγειν ληθέα οκ πιτελέσαντά τε τν προκείμενον εθλον νεσκολόπισε, τν ρχαίην δίκην πιτιμν. τούτου δ το Σατάσπεος ενοχος πέδρη ς Σάμον, πείτε πύθετο τάχιστα τν δεσπότεα τετελευτηκότα, χων χρήματα μεγάλα, τ Σάμιος νρ κατέσχε, το πιστάμενος τ ονομα κν πιλήθομαι.

Carthage and its hinterland

IV. Libya (: ‘Africa’), the Periplus of Hanno, and the Early Use of the Term ‘Atlantic Sea’

Early in his Histories, Herodotus names the entire sea west of Europe and Africa “Atlantic Sea” (Histories, book I, 203):

203. The Caspian is a sea by itself, having no connection with any other. The sea frequented by the Greeks, that beyond the Pillars of Hercules, which is called the Atlantic, and also the Erythraean, are all one and the same sea. But the Caspian is a distinct sea, lying by itself, in length fifteen days’ voyage with a row-boat, in breadth, at the broadest part, eight days’ voyage.

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_History_of_Herodotus_(Rawlinson)/Book_1

In Ancient Greek, the text reads:

δ Κασπίη θάλασσά στι πʼ ωυτς, ο συμμίσγουσα τ τέρ θαλάσσ. τν μν γρ λληνες ναυτίλλονται πσα κα ξω στηλέων θάλασσα τλαντς καλεομένη κα ρυθρ μία οσα τυγχάνει. δ Κασπίη στ τέρη πʼ ωυτς, οσα μκος μν πλόου ερεσί χρεωμέν πεντεκαίδεκα μερέων, ερος δέ, τ ερυτάτη στ ατ ωυτς, κτ μερέων. κα τ μν πρς τν σπέρην φέροντα τς θαλάσσης ταύτης Καύκασος παρατείνει, ἐὸν ρέων κα πλήθεϊ μέγιστον κα μεγάθεϊ ψηλότατον. θνεα δ νθρώπων πολλ κα παντοα ν ωυτ χει Καύκασος, τ πολλ πάντα πʼ λης γρίης ζώοντα·

http://artflsrv02.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/perseus/citequery3.pl?query=Hdt.+1.202.4&dbname=GreekApr19

Further bibliography about the topic can be found here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herodotus#Early_travels

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histories_(Herodotus)

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_History_of_Herodotus_(Rawlinson)

https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Herodotus_The_Persian_Wars_(Godley)

Carthage: a diagram of the city and the harbor

In the middle of the 5th c. BCE, the Carthaginian king Hanno undertook an enormous expedition to colonize the Western coast of Africa; 60 penteconter (50-oared) ships sailed with 30000 colons and the necessary provisions in order either to repopulate earlier Carthaginian settlements or to found new colonies. The deeds of the expedition, which sailed across the West African coast down to today’s Sierra Leone (or to Gabon according others), were narrated in an inscription dedicated to the temple of Baal Hammon (equated to Saturn by the Ancient Romans and to Cronos by the Ancient Greeks) in Carthage. You can find further bibliography here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baal_Hammon

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/penteconter

The inscription was destroyed during the Roman conquest of Carthage (146 BCE), but it was however saved in a rather abridged Ancient Greek translation, which is certainly the product of translators working in the Library of Alexandria during the 3rd or 2nd c. BCE. The Ancient Greek translation uses terms like ‘Liby-Phoenicians’ for the ‘Carthaginians’ (i.e. Phoenicians of Africa), ‘Libya’ for Africa, and ‘Ethiopians’ (i.e. people with burned faces) for various Hamitic peoples inhabiting NW Africa. Related bibliography, further analysis, and the Ancient Greek text you can find here:

https://www.academia.edu/23363041/The_Periplus_of_Hanno_King_of_the_Carthaginians_and_explorations_of_West_Africa_before_2450_years

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanno_the_Navigator

https://el.wikisource.org/wiki/Άννωνος_Περίπλους

One of the earlier Ancient Greek uses of the term ‘Atlantic’ is noticed in the lyrical mythical poem ‘Geryoneis’ of Stesichorus (630-555 BCE); it dates back to the beginning of the 5th c. BCE. This is saved in fragmentary condition, and it was mentioned by later poets. The verse reads:

Carthaginian sites in NW Africa

Stesichorus in his Geryoneis calls an island in the Atlantic sea Sarpedonian.

S 86=183 P.M.G. Scholiast on Apollonius of Rhodes

In Ancient Greek, the text reads:

Στησίχορος δ ν τ Γηρυονίδι κα νσόν τινα ν τ τλαντικ πελάγει Σαρπηδονίαν φησί.

S 86 = 183 P.M.G. Schol. Ap. Rhod. 1. 211 (p. 26 Wendel)  

https://www.loebclassics.com/view/stesichorus_i-fragments/1991/pb_LCL476.89.xml

In this verse, the Ancient Greek poet (who was born in Calabria and lived in Sicily) refers to a location off the coast of South Thrace in the Balkan Peninsula. In Greek the term used is ‘Atlantic archipelago’ (not ‘sea’); it clearly corresponds to the sea that we now call ‘Aegean Sea’. The name relates to the mythical Atlantean generation, i.e. the people of the mythical continent of Atlantis. About:

https://www.greeklegendsandmyths.com/orithyia.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stesichorus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geryoneis

The Ancient Greek use of the term referred to the Atlas Mountains of NW Africa, which were associated with Atlas, the mythical king of Mauritania, a homonymous king of Atlantis (which means ‘island of Atlas’), and ultimately with the archetypal, legendary figure of a Titan named Atlas. As a matter of fact, the location of the mythical Atlantis in the sea beyond the ‘Pillars of Hercules’ (i.e. Gibraltar) is the very reason for which that sea was later named ‘Atlantic’.

The Phoenician-Carthaginian god Baal Hammon
Melqart stela from Amrit
Votive statue from the Temple of Melqart in Cadiz

At this point I must clarify that the Ancient Greek appellation of Gibraltar is due to the Ancient Greek association of the Phoenician-Carthaginian god Melqart with Hercules. In reality, the two bronze pillars of the Carthaginian temple of Melqart in Gibraltar are at the origin of the Ancient Greek appellation. It would therefore be more accurate to use the expression the ‘Pillars of Melqart’.

Clarification of terms and bibliography:  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_(mythology)#King_of_Mauretania

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mauretania

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_Ocean#Etymology

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantean

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_(disambiguation)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pillars_of_Hercules#Phoenician_connection

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melqart#Cult

Santi Petri island, Cadiz: Temple of Melqart

V. The Terms ‘Ocean’ and ‘Sea’, and the leading Ancient Egyptian Scholar Ptolemy the Geographer

I have to highlight now a last point, namely the fact that, for all ancient nations, the large expanse of sea west of the western confines of Africa and Europe was a ‘sea’, not an ‘ocean’. This is so because the sea was identified as salted waters, whereas the ‘ocean’ was thought to be an enormous stream of ‘soft waters’ that surrounded all lands and all seas. As term, the ocean of ‘soft waters’ was extensively mythologized within the context of the Ancient Sumerian, Assyrian-Babylonian, Egyptian, Hittite, and Canaanite-Phoenician cosmogonies and cosmologies, notably as Apsu or Nun. Basics and bibliography can be found here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abzu

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nu_(mythology)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_ocean

The greatest of all geographers of Late Antiquity was Ptolemy the Geographer who was also a mathematician, an natural scientist, and an astronomer/astrologer; his venerated masterpiece, ‘Geography’ (Γεωγραφική Υφήγησις / Geographiki Hyphigisis / Geographical Instruction), is at the same time an atlas, a gazetteer (geographical directory) and an elaborate treatise on cartography. He describes the limits of regions, he identifies the location of mountains, rivers, promontories, islands, cities, towns and villages, and he names the races of inhabitants of all known regions of the then known world. He is the first to have used the word ‘ocean’ in the (non-mythical) sense of large expanse of sea (as we use it in Modern Times).

All maps attributed to Ptolemy the Geographer are fake, for a very simple reason: they are not his maps. They are maps designed by erudite Christian monks in the Eastern Roman Empire or in Western Europe 800 to 1300 years after Ptolemy. They only reflect the understanding of Ptolemy’s text that those monks had. These maps do not constitute therefore an authoritative documentation.

1- FIRST EXCERPT

Ptolemy the Geographer never used the term ‘Ethiopian sea’ (or ‘ocean’). He used various terms to define the sea that we now call ‘Atlantic Ocean’. In his book IV, ch. 6 (associated with the 4th table of Africa), Ptolemy described the location of the limits of Inner Libya (Central Africa); in § 3, the text reads:

Από δε μεσημβρίας τη εντός Αιθιοπία, εν η Αγίσυμβα χώρα κατά γραμμήν την από του ειρημένου πέρατος έως του κατά τον Εσπέριον και Μέγαν καλούμενον κόλπον της εκτός θαλάσσης

(edidit Carolud Fridericus Augustus Nobbe, tom. I, Lipsiae 1843; p. 266 – LIB. IV. Cap.6)

In this sentence, there is no verb; this is due to the fact that the verb is stated before two paragraphs, at the very beginning of the chapter: ‘περιορίζεται’ (‘is demarcated’). 

An English translation reads as:

In its southern side, (Central Africa is demarcated) from Inner Ethiopia, where there is the land of Agisymba, by means of a line from that point up to the Hesperian Gulf, which is also called Great Gulf, of the Outer Sea.

This excerpt makes clear the following points:

i- Northern Africa from the western confines of today’s Egypt and Sudan to the Atlantic Ocean was called ‘Libya’.

ii- Ptolemy the Geographer used the traditional name of Cush (Ethiopia), i.e. Ancient Sudan, in a wider sense, referring (not only to the kingdom of Meroe but) to all lands beyond Sudan down to today’s South Africa.

iii- Ptolemy the Geographer mentions a location, namely Agisymba, which is also known to have been the end of a Roman military and commercial expedition under Julius Maternus at the time of Domitian (ca. 90 CE). Bibliography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agisymba and https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/brill-s-new-pauly/agisymba-e108180

iv- Ptolemy the Geographer demarcates the limits between ‘Libya’ (North Africa west of Egypt and Sudan) and ‘Ethiopia’ (viewed in a broader sense as the entire region of today’s Sudan and the southern half of Africa) through a line, which starts in the area of today’s borders between South Sudan and Central African Republic and ends in the coastlands of Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, and Cameroon, i.e. the Gulf of Guinea.

v- The Gulf of Guinea is called by Ptolemy the Geographer ‘Hesperian (: Western) Gulf’ or ‘Great Gulf)

vi- The Atlantic Ocean is called ‘the Outer Sea’.

2- SECOND EXCERPT

In the next paragraph of his text (§ 4), Ptolemy the Geographer states that “in its western side, (‘Inner Libya’ is demarcated) from the Western Ocean (τω δυτικώ ωκεανώ)”, therefore mentioning the then most commonly used term for the sea that we call nowadays ‘Atlantic Ocean’.

3- THIRD EXCERPT

In his book IV, ch. 9 (associated with the 4th table of Africa), Ptolemy described the location and the limits of ‘Inner Ethiopia’ (Της εντός Αιθιοπίας θέσις: the location of Inner Ethiopia); the term ‘Inner Ethiopia’ clearly refers to the part of Eastern Africa that is located south of today’s South Sudan, Central African Republic, Uganda and North Kenya. In § 1 (p. 283 as per the above link), the text reads:

Η δε υποκειμένη ταύτη τη χώρα και τη όλη Λιβύη Αιθιοπία περιορίζεται, από μεν άρκτων ταις εκτεθειμέναις μεσημβριναίς γραμμαίς των ειρημένων χωρών, διηκούσαις τε από του Μεγάλου κόλπου της εκτός θαλάσσης, μέχρι του ειρημένου Ραπτού ακρωτηρίου, …

και έτι τω κατά τον Μέγαν κόλπον μέρει του δυτικού ωκεανού,

από δε δυσμών και μεσηβρίας αγνώστω γη,

από δε ανατολών τω από του Ραπτού ακρωτηρίου Βαρβαρικώ κόλπω, ος καλείται (Βα)τραχεία θάλασσα διά τα βράχη, μέχρι του Πράσου ακρωτηρίου, και τη εντεύθεν αγνώστω γη.

An English translation reads as:

Being located beyond that land and the entire ‘Libya’, (‘Inner’) Ethiopia is demarcated from the north by the above mentioned southern limits of the said lands; these limits (lit. lines) stretch from the Great Gulf of the Outer Sea up to the aforesaid Rhapton promontory, …

… and still to the part of the Western Ocean that is inside the Great Gulf.

(Furthermore, ‘Inner’ Ethiopia is demarcated) from the west and the south by an unknown land,

and from the east by the Gulf of Berberia, which stretches from the Rhapton promontory, which is also named ‘Harsh Sea’ because of the rocks, up to Prason promontory and the unknown land beyond.

This excerpt makes clear the following points:

i- The appellations ‘Outer Sea’ and ‘Western Ocean’ are interchangeable across Ptolemy the Geographer’s texts.

ii- South of the line going from today’s Gabon, North Congo, and the Great Lakes region to the coast of Tanzania around Daresalaam, the southern third of the Black Continent was totally unknown to Late Antiquity Egyptian and Mediterranean explorers and scholars – with the exception of the East African coast down to today’s North Mozambique.

iii- The distance from today’s Gabon to the central coastland of Mozambique was not only unknown to Ptolemy, but also incalculable.  

iv- However, it was clear to Ptolemy that those confines constituted the southernmost part of the world.

v- In fact, ‘Inner Ethiopia’ is located south of the demarcation line with ‘Inner Libya’ (see point ii), and consequently, the Black Continent’s southern part is called either ‘Inner Ethiopia’ or ‘unknown land’.

4- FOURTH EXCERPT

In his book VIII, ch. 13 {which contains the first table (map) of Africa (‘Libya’)}, Ptolemy described the contents and the limits of the map. Specifying how the map is delimited (§ 2), he defines the western limit of the map as per below:

Περιορίζεται δε ο πίναξ …. από δε δύσεως τω δυτικώ Ωκεανώ, …

(Ptolemy Kart Friedrich August Nobbe, Claudii Ptolemaei Geographia, tom. II, Lipsiae 1845; p. 215 – Libyae Tabula I)

An English translation reads as:

And the map is delimited …. from the west by the Western Ocean, …

This shows that the two most ordinary terms used by Ptolemy the Geographer to denote the Atlantic Ocean are ‘outer sea’ and ‘Western Ocean’. Ptolemy never used the term ‘Ethiopian Sea’ (or ocean).

A list of Ancient Greek and Roman geographers and related bibliography can be found here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Graeco-Roman_geographers

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_geography#Roman_period

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_geography#Hellenistic_period

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_(Ptolemy)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_(Ptolemy)

https://el.wikipedia.org/wiki/Κλαύδιος_Πτολεμαίος

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aromata

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhapta

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azania

VI. The Treaties of Alcáçovas (1479), Tordesillas (1494) and Zaragoza (1529), and the Use of the Terms ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ and ‘Sea of India’

During the Christian/Islamic Times in Western Europe, Ptolemy the Geographer’s works constituted the most authoritative source of information about faraway lands where Western Europeans could not travel because they were in war with the Muslims, who organized in different empires and kingdoms, sultanates, emirates and khanates controlled progressively 2/3 of Asia, 2/3 of Africa, and 1/3 of Europe.  

During the Crusades, many knights belonging to several Christian religious orders encountered and secretively cooperated with various members and leaders of Muslim mystical orders, thus taking with them back to Europe a plethora of valuable documentation of either scientific-scholarly or spiritual contents. The Crusaders mainly targeted the Eastern Roman Empire, which managed to withstand the attacks of Muslim armies for several hundreds of years and after the middle of the 10th c. started recovering territories from the Islamic Caliphate, notably Antioch (Antakya) in 969. The real intention of the Crusades launched by the pope of Rome was not the recapture of Jerusalem and the Christian Holy Lands, but the obstruction of the Eastern Roman Reconquista; in other words, the schismatic papal authorities of Rome wanted to prevent the Orthodox Eastern Roman Emperors from conquering Jerusalem, which was located at a distance of less than 700 km from the borders of the re-strengthened ‘Romania’ (Ρωμανία: this was the official name of the Eastern Roman Empire).  

The Crusaders failed to consolidate their early victories and, as they united Eastern Christians, Jews and Muslims against them, returned home, defeated. The only tangible and permanent result was the debilitation of the Eastern Roman Empire, which was temporarily invaded by the Crusaders of the Fourth Crusade (1204-1261). Following the collapse of the Eastern Roman Empire at 1453, the path of the Western European pseudo-Christian kingdoms had opened for the colonial conquest of the West and the diffusion of the Roman Anti-Christ. The supreme master of the colonial expansion overseas was the pope of Rome; when the overseas criminality of the Portuguese and the Spaniards started at the very end of the 15th c., he had already got rid of the sole Christian opponent, who could denounce and reject the deeply anti-Christian activities of the conquistadors worldwide: the Eastern Roman Empire.

The detailed study of Ptolemy the Geographer’s text, the deep knowledge of all the terms and the names that he recorded, and the meticulous investigation of the associated cartography occupied a high position among the tasks of the papal scholars, who advised and guided the various navigators, naval officers, and colonial gangsters of Portugal and Spain. It was clear to them that Africa could certainly be circumnavigated and they were fully aware of the scrupulous division of the Black Continent that Ptolemy systematically made in his masterpiece (as per above).

It can therefore be easily understood -on the basis of the aforementioned- that every 15th c. Italian, Spanish or Portuguese geographer, cartographer and adviser to a colonial expedition, who had a strong background in Ptolemy’s Geography, would easily extend the use of Ptolemy’s term ‘Inner Ethiopia’ (or simply ‘Ethiopia’) to various parts of Ptolemy’s ‘unknown lands’ where he may have sailed in the last years of the 15th c. and afterwards. Examples: the coasts of today’s Angola, Namibia, South Africa and South Mozambique and their inlands may have been expansively called ‘Ethiopia’ (see above Unit V, 3- THIRD EXCERPT, v-).

This would be a reason to also name the surrounding seas ‘Ethiopian Sea’ or ‘Ethiopian Ocean’. However, the need for new names would arise very soon after Bartolomeu Dias reached the ‘ Cabo das Tormentas’ (Cape of Storms), which was later renamed as Cape of Good Hope, in May 1488, and Vasco da Gama effectuated the first voyage from Western Europe to India (1497-1499). Why the need for new names would arise it is easy to grasp. The old terms used by Ptolemy the Geographer could not stand anymore; the term ‘Western Ocean’ would be meaningless, because if the Atlantic Ocean was named ‘Western Ocean’, the Pacific Ocean {crossed by Magellan (1480-1521) and his fleet during the period 1519-1522} could be viewed as further located in the West. The same is also valid for Ptolemy the Geographer’s term ‘Outer Sea’, which reflects only world perceptions and worldviews of people grown and educated in the Mediterranean.  

The fierce antagonism between the Portuguese and the Spaniards risked jeopardizing the papal plans for Roman predominance worldwide though colonial conquests, forced Christianization, and mass killings of the various indigenous peoples in Africa, Asia and the Americas. Who had the right to colonize a land or island became a major and most thorny problem; that’s why the 15th c. and 16th c. Catholic popes

– issued many documents (namely ‘papal bulls’, like Æterni regis, which was issued in 1481, Inter caetera, which was published in 1493, and Dudum siquidem, which was communicated also in 1493),

– convened many conferences (like the Badajoz Junta in 1524) for royal delegates to negotiate, and

– signed many treaties (notably the Treaty of Alcáçovas in 1479, the Treaty of Tordesillas in1494, the treaty of Vitoria in 1524, and the Treaty of Zaragoza in1529) with the two royal houses (of Castile/Spain and Portugal).

It was essential for the Catholic popes to prevent wars between Portugal and Castile, like the Battle of Toro (1476), the Battle of Guinea (1478), and the War of the Castilian Succession (1475-1479).

Perhaps the Treaty of Alcáçovas is the most important, when it comes to the conceptualization and the contextualization of the New World Order, which was tantamount to the colonization and brought about the elimination of three great Islamic Empires and of a plethora of sultanates, emirates and khanates. It introduced a new approach to the world affairs, by totally denying any native people the right to be self-administered / self-ruled, if they did not belong to one Christian European monarch – puppet of the Catholic pope. This treaty (1479) generated a precedent, because it implemented the concept that indigenous nations do not have the right to even be asked about their colonization by ‘Christian’ killers, gangsters, and genocide perpetrators; more critically, this concept applied for all lands – worldwide. In fact, it triggered the colonial race, which ensued and lasted for more than five centuries, down to our days.

However, the Treaty of Tordesillas, which was only complemented by the Treaty of Zaragoza, was more important because technically it meant that the entire Muslim world was deprived from the right to sail anywhere. By introducing the concept of papal lines of demarcation between the Portuguese and the Spanish maritime / colonial zones of colonial rule and commercial exploitation, the Treaty of Tordesillas prohibited any other nation’s boats from sailing anywhere and consequently from colonizing overseas territories. In fact, the papal lines of demarcation appeared first in the papal bull Inter caetera (1493) in which it was stipulated that all the lands located west of a vertical, north-south line passing 100 leagues west of the Azores should belong to Castile (Spain). In the Treaty of Tordesillas, the papal line only moved 270 leagues west to generate a balance between the two Catholic colonial nations.

The treaty of Tordesillas turned the Spaniards toward the Americas and the Portuguese to the South (i.e. today’s Brazil and Western/Southwestern Africa) and the East (i.e. the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and further up to today’s Indonesia). In 25 years, the future of the Islamic world was mortgaged to the hilt. All the same, the spectrum of another Portuguese-Spanish war came back in force, after the Portuguese, having sailed through the Indian Ocean, landed in the Moluccas (Maluku) islands of today’s Indonesia, and few years later, the Spaniards arrived there too, sailing the other way round through the Pacific Ocean, while effectuating the circumnavigation of the Earth (the famous Magellan–Elcano expedition, 1519–1522). A provisory agreement was concluded with the Treaty of Vitoria (1524), which called for a bilateral conference; however the dispute was not solved in the Badajoz–Elvas conference (1524), and it was only with the Treaty of Zaragoza (1529) that a second papal line of demarcation was drawn, this time 297.5 leagues east of the Moluccas.

With the second papal demarcation line, the entire world was divided into two zones (later called hemispheres): Portuguese and Spanish. In fact, almost all the seas of the world were declared “mare clausum” (Latin for ‘closed sea’). The only exceptions were the North Atlantic (north of the Tropic of Cancer; involving also the North Sea and the Baltic Sea) and the Mediterranean Sea (including the Black Sea).

The two papal demarcation lines, i.e. the Meridian (in the Atlantic) and the Anti-Meridian (in the Pacific)

1. ‘NORTH SEA’ (West Atlantic) & ‘SOUTH SEA’ (most of the Pacific) for Spain

It was then that the need for new names appeared, so that the papal cartographers immortalize their New World Order, which trapped the Islamic World in an impasse that heralded the end of every Islamic empire, kingdom or independent state. The western part of the Atlantic was viewed as their ‘North Sea’ and the largest part of the Pacific (until the demarcation line east of the Moluccas) was named ‘South Sea’.

2. ‘SEA OF INDIA’ (Indian Ocean and West Pacific) & ‘ SEA OF ETHIOPIA’ (Portuguese Sector in South Atlantic) for Portugal

Similarly, the Portuguese introduced the term ‘ Sea of India’ for all the seas between the Cape of Good Hope and the second papal demarcation line east of the Moluccas. This large expanse of sea corresponded almost to what the Ancient Greeks and Romans called ‘Red Sea’ (‘Erythraean Sea’) during the Antiquity; but it also included South China Sea and the Sea of Japan (as per the papal demarcation line). Then, for the Portuguese sector in Central and South Atlantic (south of the Tropic of Cancer) the term ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ was invented and used on the aforementioned grounds, namely the fact that Ptolemy the Geographer named the lands from Gabon to Tanzania ‘Inner Ethiopia’.

It is however technically wrong to imagine that 16th–19th c. cartographers called the entire South Atlantic ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ or ‘Ethiopian Ocean’ or ‘Ethiopic Sea’. This name concerned only the Portuguese sector in South Atlantic, namely east of the first papal demarcation line (stipulated in the Treaty Tordesillas, 1494). This means that the sea off the coast of Uruguay and Argentina, which belonged to Spain, was not named ‘Sea of Ethiopia’.

Note that in this map the detail is clearly shown: the sea off the coasts of Uruguay and Argentina is not part of the ‘Sea of Ethiopia’; it is colored as ‘Sea of the North’ because it belongs to Spain and not to Portugal.

The two papal demarcation lines were called Meridian (1494) and Anti-Meridian (1529). However, the two sectors were not exactly equal, although the kings of Spain insisted on this; the Portuguese got a slightly larger portion, namely 191 degrees of the Earth circumference, and the Spaniards had to be satisfied with about 169 degrees. It is however clear that the two major colonial treaties and the demarcation lines were not respected scrupulously.

These were the circumstances under which Ptolemy the Geographer’s use of the term ‘Inner Ethiopia’ for the northern part of Africa’s southern half exerted a so posterior impact as regards a sea where the Ancient Cushitic Qore (kings) of Napata and Meroe in today’s Sudan would have never imagined to sail. Their heirs, namely today’s Arabic-speaking Sudanese and the Cushitic nations of the Oromos, the Sidamas and others, must find it strange that the name by which the Ancient Greeks and Romans named their ancestors had a so long history and ramifications – to which the Amhara and Tigray Abyssinian tribes and the modern colonial state of Abyssinia (Fake Ethiopia) are totally unrelated, except for ludicrously and shamelessly usurping names that are not theirs. Sic transit gloria mundi!

James Rennell’s map 1799

However, this posterior impact of Ptolemy’s use of the term ‘Inner Ethiopia’ took gradually an end; this happened, when the mare clausum of the two Catholic colonial kingdoms started being challenged by several rising rival European kingdoms and states, namely the Dutch Republic (1588-1795), France, and England, which advanced the principle of ‘mare liberum’ (free sea). At the forefront of this effort was a very remarkable Dutch thinker and scholar Hugo Grotius, who wrote a homonymous book to defend the interests of the corporation for which he worked: the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie; VOC). With ‘mare liberum’ and VOC, the entire world entered the second stage of European colonialism, the colonial empires of Spain and Portugal started shrinking, and gradually the term ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ was forgotten.

Spanish colonial empire
Portuguese colonial empire

For further research about this topics, go through the bibliography and the historical sources that you can find here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Alc%C3%A1%C3%A7ovas

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeterni_regis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter_caetera

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dudum_siquidem

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartolomeu_Dias

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasco_da_Gama

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Magellan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Magellan%E2%80%93Elcano_circumnavigation

https://avalon.law.yale.edu/15th_century/mod001.asp

https://avalon.law.yale.edu/16th_century/mod003.asp

https://ehne.fr/en/encyclopedia/themes/treaty-tordesillas-june-7-1494

http://www.enciclopedia-aragonesa.com/voz.asp?voz_id=13214

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Tordesillas

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Iberian_mare_clausum_claims.svg

Cantino planisphere 1502

https://www.nationalgeographic.org/thisday/jun7/treaty-tordesillas/

http://ddfv.ufv.es/bitstream/handle/10641/780/La%20Casa%20de%20Contrataci%C3%B3n%20de%20La%20Coru%C3%B1a.pdf?sequence=1

http://historiasdebadajoz.blogspot.com/2008/11/la-junta-de-badajoz-elvas-de-1524-sobre.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maluku_Islands

https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junta_de_Badajoz-Elvas

https://avalon.law.yale.edu/16th_century/mod003.asp

Click to access 12.ICSevilla2019_Tratado-de-Zaragoza-a15.pdf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Zaragoza

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tratado_de_Zaragoza

http://pares.mcu.es/ParesBusquedas20/catalogo/description/122513

http://www.self.gutenberg.org/articles/eng/Treaty_of_Zaragoza_(1529)#The_treaty

https://press-files.anu.edu.au/downloads/press/p66561/mobile/ch04s04.html

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/13255/13255.txt

https://www.upf.edu/documents/88317877/91074250/6.1.1_EN.pdf/64d20a90-e6c5-2033-16c1-afd8d4a267c1

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantino_planisphere

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03085694.2012.673762?journalCode=rimu20

https://www.jstor.org/stable/3350700?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mare_clausum

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erythraean_Sea

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_Nagasaki

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mare_Liberum

Portuguese and Spanish trade lines

Attention: the following two links contain numerous mistakes, distortions and nonsensical sentences probably written by some ignorant idiots hired or bribed by the illegitimate and felonious embassies of Abiy Ahmed’s criminal, tyrannical government, which has no right and no authority to represent the numerous oppressed and persecuted nations that have been subjugated and imprisoned in the colonial state of Abyssinia (Fake Ethiopia):  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aethiopian_Sea

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aethiopia

South America in 1650

VII. The Treaties of Alcáçovas, Tordesillas and Zaragoza, Portuguese-Spanish Colonial Conquests, Ottoman Ignorance and Stiffness, and the Collapse of the Islamic World

Going beyond the simple ‘Sea of Ethiopia’ name issue, the associated cartography, and the earlier colonial conquests, I must underscore the fact that few people today understand how dramatically World History was reversed in the late 15th and early 16th c. The shock caused in the 40-year period (1492-1532) was incommensurately greater than that triggered in the early 7th c. because of Islam (622-662) and stronger than the one prompted in the early 4th c. due to the Christianization of the Roman Empire (313-353).

As material conquests, the new territories conquered by the conquistadores for the benefit of the crowns of Spain and Portugal during this 40-year period, although significant, really pale if compared with the territorial advances made and the wealth accumulated by Timur (Tamerlane) and Genghis Khan or by the early caliphs during the 7th c. Islamic conquests. Other, earlier rulers and conquerors invaded larger territories in shorter time: Alexander the Great or Darius the Great. Even Selim I, who was contemporary with the events that founded the Portuguese and Spanish colonial empires, conquered more lands in eight (8) years of reign (1512-1520) than the Iberian conquistadores in 40 years (the territories of today’s Eastern Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Emirates, Yemen and Egypt).

Why was the shock caused by the conquistadores far greater and lasted longer?

Many would respond to this question, saying that overseas expansion brings (due to various reasons) greater wealth to a colonial metropolis than continental land conquest does.

Others would focus on the dramatic material and military superiority of the conquistadores over the invaded empires or tribes.

Several historians would explain the phenomenon by pointing out that, due to the 15th c. – 16th c. Iberian maritime expansions, the entire world trade was remodeled after very different plans, patterns, methods and processes terminating the continental empires’ prevalence across the trade routes.

Various historians of religion would underscore the fact that the widespread, forced evangelization of numerous nations and vast populations across the world by the Iberian Catholic missionaries was an unprecedented event in the History of the Mankind, which is tantamount to spiritual and physical genocide and to perpetuation of ceaseless series of crimes against the Mankind.

This is true; neither the early Islamic conquests nor Genghis Khan’s thunderous invasions led to such criminal acts of religion enforcement and mass killings.

However, the aforementioned approaches (and numerous other interpretations) are not erroneous, but they reveal only aspects of the phenomenon herewith described. I believe that the 5-century long irreversibility of this phenomenon has more to do with the core nature of the acts that were then perpetrated however one may narrate or present them. Undoubtedly, these acts and events were totally evil and inhuman, and, if one needs a religious definition, they were inherently Anti-Christian. The core nature of the Spanish and Portuguese colonial conquests reflected a totally different notion, ethos, mindset, mentality, approach, attitude and conviction that had not been hitherto attested throughout the History of the Mankind.

This notion was first revealed in the Treaty of Alcáçovas (1479) whereby no indigenous nation (in either known or unknown lands or islands) was thought of as capable of self-rule, self-administration, and self-determination. It is in that treaty, which basically concerned bilateral Portuguese-Spanish relations, that the concept of Catholic world dominance was explicitly evoked, conceding to all the other humans, either inhabitants of major empires or members of minor tribes, no right to be asked about their opinion, choice and will. 

This ultra-totalitarian concept certainly threatened all the nations of the world, and it is due to this notion that Spain and Portugal first and several other European nations (Holland, France and England) later colonized the entire world, but what matters most for us to study (and what determined the world developments over the past 500 years) is the reaction of the other major empires and states of the then world.

Evaluating all aspects and repercussions of the phenomenon of the early 16th c. Portuguese and Spanish thalassocracy and colonial hegemony, we can easily identify the major empires and states that were targeted by the two crowns and impacted by the aforementioned notion and concept, which epitomized the acts and deeds of the Iberian conquistadors.

Genoa and Venice

Genoa and Venice were formidable Mediterranean maritime forces and very wealthy republics, thanks to their historical trade with the East; they were in constant wars with the Ottoman Empire and they could not be involved in the colonial conquests at an early level, but the flourishing and powerful Genoese and Venetian bankers and magnates, who were also present in the Iberian Peninsula and interconnected with numerous institutions there, would certainly be able to extract great benefit from Spain’s and Portugal’s colonial acquisitions – which they did.

Genoa around 1400
Venice in the 15th-16th c.

France, Holland and England

Due to the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza, France, Holland and England were left with the North Atlantic, which would only offer them meager benefits compared with those of Spain and Portugal; however, these Western European states accepted the aforementioned notion and concept, which are the quintessence of colonialism, and prepared themselves to contravene the arbitrary papal presumption of ‘mare clausum’ (closed sea). It took them some time to be ready and when they were, they counter-attacked, advancing their own presumption of ‘mare liberum’ (free sea), at the very antipodes of the peremptory papal nonsense.

Map of Asia around 1600

China

Throughout their very long History, the Chinese were constituted as a great continental empire with significant maritime activity alongside the eastern coastlands of Asia and with strong commercial connections with all the other Asiatic kingdoms and empires. More particularly in the early 16th c., China had ordinary and close commercial relations with the Kazakh and Uzbek khanates, and the three major Islamic empires, namely the Mughal Empire of South Asia, the Safavid Empire of Iran, and the Ottoman Empire.

However, China was never a colonial empire, and every Chinese activity beyond China’s borders was always undertaken for two reasons only, namely to damage a dangerous invader and to ensure peace across the trade routes west of China. The notion and concept contained in the treaties of Alcáçovas, Tordesillas and Zaragoza were absolutely alien and inhuman to the peaceful and serene Chinese worldview and world conceptualization. That mindset and attitude was opposite to Chinese culture and faiths as attested throughout millennia. Similarly, the papal demarcation lines were meaningless to the Chinese as fully contradictory to the traditional Chinese humanism. About Chinese humanism:

https://science.jrank.org/pages/7762/Humanism-Chinese-Conception.html

Ottoman Empire, Safavid Empire of Iran, and Mughal Empire

The three major Islamic empires were arguably in the first half of the 16th c. the world’s three largest and most powerful states, with Ming China being the fourth. Contrarily to China, they had a certain ‘colonial’ tradition (although the term ‘colonial’ here is used with a totally different meaning, rather related to historical colonialism during the Antiquity and the Christian/Islamic times). All three empires emerged as continuation of earlier empires with a great past, an outstanding historical heritage, and therefore continuous presence across the trade routes between East and West, namely the historical commercial network that we now call “silk, spice and frankincense trade routes across lands, deserts and seas”.

The Mughal Empire and other Kingdoms of South-Southeast Asia
The Mughal Empire in its greatest expansion

The Mughal Empire’s (and the earlier Delhi sultanates’) sphere of influence, cultural radiation, and commercial contacts stretched from China and Southeast Asia to Central Asia, the Arabian Peninsula, and the coastland of Eastern Africa. However, the Mughal Empire (and its predecessors) never had an involvement in the Mediterranean.

The Iranian sphere of influence, cultural radiation, and commercial contacts stretched from the Balkans, the Black Sea, and the Mediterranean to the coastland of Eastern Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, Central Asia, South-Southeast Asia, and China. However, any Iranian kingdom or empire and any state based in Iran anytime during the Islamic Ages never had an involvement in the Mediterranean.

The Safavid Empire of Iran

The Ottoman Empire was the continuation of the Eastern Roman Empire with another official religion and another official language. Long before becoming the caliph of the Islamic Caliphate, the Ottoman Sultan willingly became Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire and he was therefore styled ‘Qaysar-i Rum’, i.e. ‘Caesar of Rome’ (قیصر روم/Kayser-i Rûm). Idiotically invading in 1453 a rather insignificant remnant of the erstwhile formidable Eastern Roman Empire, i.e. Constantinople, Mehmet II was inevitably burdened with an enormously heavy past of incessant Roman-Constantinopolitan clashes, disputes, intrigues, wars, plots and hatred that had already lasted for almost 1000 years. Either Mehmet II knew or did not know what he was doing, as soon as he became real successor to the Eastern Roman Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos (29 May 1453), Mehmet II drew upon him the unequalled rage and the vicious rancor of the scheming Catholic popes. About:

https://www.academia.edu/43199538/29_May_1453_The_most_Useless_Ottoman_Victory

Mehmet II’s successors did not have a clue about what the Catholic pope was about to prepare against them; that’s why they inanely thought they had to fight for their faith, whereas in reality they had to fight for bearing the title of Eastern Roman Emperor – something that all the Catholic popes after the First Schism (869 – and even earlier) wanted to deprive the monarchs of the Eastern Roman Empire of. The entire worldview, the world conceptualization, and the perception of targets, tasks and expansion perspectives that all Ottoman sultans had in mind were disastrously erroneous, puerile and nonsensical. Even more catastrophically, victims of their pseudo-Sunni and bogus-Islamic theologians, sheikhulislams, qadis, muftis and imams, the Ottoman sultans hated their own Turkish people; they repeatedly persecuted, butchered, and exiled their Anatolian Turkmen subjects – not to mention other ethnic groups. The Anti-Turkmen hysteria of the Ottoman family became very clear 60 years after the useless conquest of Constantinople, namely at the time of the Shahqulu Revival of Anatolian Mysticism (شاه قولو‎ / Şāh ḳulu) in 1511-1512.  

The Ottoman Empire wasted its strength to preserve worthless deserts.

To please and satisfy the heretic, pseudo-Muslim and anti-Islamic theologians of Constantinople, Selim I suppressed the freedom of the Anatolian Turkmen population, persecuted and massacred dozens of thousands of people, thus implementing a sectarian and self-destructive policy, which turned the outright majority of his sultanate’s Muslim inhabitants against him. Thousands of Qizilbash Muslims when then exiled in Mora (today’s Peloponnesus in South Greece). This meant that the criminal and disreputable sultan was the enemy of his own nation, being merely a puppet at the hands of the idiotic religious sect that controlled his state. Bibliography and historical sources can be found here, although the events are poorly described:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%9Eahkulu

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%9Eahkulu_rebellion

So blind Selim I was that he could not even understand the reason why most of his Janissaries rebelled when he advanced to the East in order to declare war against another Islamic state, namely the Safavid Empire of Iran. This concludes the case of the Ottoman Empire, which was a failed state already in the early 16th c., although this reality became evident to all only 400 years later. Look now at it in its real dimensions:

When the Catholic popes spent time and effort to solve the differences between two Christian monarchs, the pseudo-Muslim theologians of Constantinople incited Selim I to undertake a war against another Islamic Empire!

When the Catholic monarchs used to incite their subjects to check their chances by exploring and exploiting new lands overseas, Selim I oppressed, killed and deported his own state’s unfortunate inhabitants.

Who were truly the worse rulers for the Muslims?

The Catholic kings of Castile/Spain, who simply expelled from their land those who did not have their own faith (in 1492)…

… or Selim I, who exiled far from Anatolia those who had the same faith with him (in 1511-1512)?

The weakness of the Ottoman Empire is characteristically underscored thanks to similar comparisons that every person, thinking out-of-the-box, can easily make, without being a specialized Turcologist.

Then, what can one say about the Ottoman ignorance and stiffness?

The second half of the 15th c. and the 16th c. are considered, very correctly, as the peak of the Ottoman civilization and power. From 1413 until 1595 (from Mehmed I to Murad III), namely for 182 years, in reality and despite several other pretenders, only eight (8) monarchs reigned the Ottoman Empire. This shows an impressive stability with an average reign period of ca. 23 years! However, there was no knowledge, no intelligence, and no vision. There were only a) a permanent, lascivious interest for voluptuous moments in the harem and b) a recurring passion for harsh moments in the battlefield, especially if the looting would end up with the arrival of many new virgin girls in the harem of the Constantinopolitan palace of the Ottoman ‘caliphs’.

The Ottoman sultans failed to have intelligence and insight into their enemies’ realms; they knew nothing about the treaties of Alcáçovas, Tordesillas and Zaragoza, let alone the extremely alarming notions and concepts involved (as per above). Then, it is their own mistake that they underestimated the real dangers, which existed for their state. In this regard, during the 16th and the early 17th c., the Ottoman Empire failed to react at least in the manner the European rivals of Spain and Portugal did. After that moment, everything was lost for the stubborn Ottoman family that wanted to rule a universal empire as a tribal enclosure. But very few were then smart enough to realize that the Sick Man of Europe had been contaminated already in the 15th c.

The stupidity of the Ottoman dynasty and administration made many millions of Europeans laugh to death during the 19th and the early 20th c.

Even worse, there was no vision, and this is so, because never an Ottoman felt as universal Islamic Emperor and Caliph. There was no real interest in uniting all Muslims (to say the least) in a centralized caliphate, because there had never been any properly centralized form of governance in any Islamic state (with only few exceptions which only confirm the rule). And at this point, I don’t mean modern states’ centralization, but at least Roman Empire-level centralization.

When Selim I managed to win over Ismail I Safavid in Chaldiran (1514), he had an absolutely unique opportunity to unite in one realm all the lands between the Balkans and the Indus River. In fact, only an empire this big could possibly mobilize the resources needed to oppose the Spaniards and the Portuguese in the open seas. But to unite populations in the first place, you have to be anyone else except an Ottoman. They were a highly sectarian family and therefore an early failed state with a pathetic administration, which preferred to control the useless sands of Arabia and Egypt, instead of really rebuilding the world after the illustrious and unsurpassed example of Timur (Tamerlane) whose conquests regenerated the Islamic World and brought about what scholars worldwide rightfully call nowadays ‘Timurid Renaissance’ (https://es.unesco.org/silkroad/node/467).

However, Timur disdained terribly the miserable Ottomans whom he vanquished in 1402; unfortunately for them, the descendants of Bayazit I did not take the lesson and did not make of Timur their own supreme prototype. That’s why the Ottomans were repeatedly humiliated, constantly defeated, and finally dissolved by Kemal Ataturk; their last reigning offspring, Mehmed VI Vahdettin, was expelled from the Yildiz Palace in Istanbul, and he had to sail on an English warship to Malta and then San Remo before he died in 1926. This nefarious misfortune will also befall on any idiots who use the brainless Ottomans as a possible model for their own dirty politics. But this will be the topic of another article.

———————————————————————

ADDENDUM I

Mapmakers once referred to the southern Atlantic Ocean as the Ethiopian Ocean

https://qz.com/africa/2004131/the-southern-atlantic-ocean-was-once-known-as-the-ethiopian-ocean/

REUTERS/ALEX GRIMM

An ostrich walks next to the Atlantic Ocean at South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.. Few people know that the southern Atlantic Ocean was once referred by mapmakers as the Ethiopian ocean.

By Mary Alexander

Chief copy editor and Facebook program coordinator, Africa Check

May 2, 2021

“The Atlantic Ocean was known as Ethiopian Ocean until the 19th century,” reads text on a graphic posted on Instagram last month.

It includes what looks like a part of an old map showing the western coastline of Africa, the ocean labelled “Aethiopian Ocean.”

The graphic’s caption adds: “Today’s southern half of the Atlantic Ocean in classical geographical works was known as Aethiopian or Ethiopian Sea or Ocean. The name remained in maps from ancient times until 19th century.” But a comment on the post points out: “Totally great, except Ethiopia is on the other side of the continent!”

And Facebook’s fact-checking system (Instagram belongs to Facebook) has flagged the post as possibly false.

Ethiopia is a country in the Horn of Africa, on the eastern side of the continent. Is it true that the Atlantic Ocean, on Africa’s west coast, was once called the Ethiopian Ocean?

An ancient name

Ethiopia is one of the oldest countries in the world. Its name derives from the ancient Greek “Aethiopia”, which Europeans used to describe various parts of Africa. It is mentioned several times in both the Iliad and the Odyssey, ancient sagas said to be written by Homer more than 2,000 years ago.

In 2014, Princeton University in the US held an exhibition of its library collection of old maps of Africa produced by European mapmakers from 1541 to 1880. The exhibition remains online.

A misshapen 1554 map from the collection doesn’t name any of Africa’s oceans, and roughly labels the western region of today’s Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon as “Aethiopia.” (It also says “monoculi”—one-eyed people—live there.)

Related: Why is Central Africa missing from so many maps?

But a map dated 1584, 30 years later, names the ocean to the west of Africa and south of the equator as “Oceanus Aethiopicus”—Latin for “Ethiopian Ocean.” This is today’s South Atlantic Ocean. On the map, the ocean north of the equator is labelled “Oceanus Atlanticus,” the Atlantic Ocean.

The next map in the online Princeton collection is from 1644. Again, the Ethiopian Ocean is west of Africa and south of the equator. The waters north of the equator are named “Mare Atlanticum”—the Atlantic Sea. A sea is generally understood to be smaller than an ocean.

The Ethiopian Ocean starts to disappear in a map dated 1710. Here, the coastal region from Africa’s western bulge to its southern tip is the “Ethiopian Sea.” Everything west of that, north and south of the equator to a coastline identified as “part of Brasil,” is the Atlantic Ocean.

Related: Africa as you’ve probably never seen it before, courtesy of NASA

On the map, almost all of central Africa—but not today’s Ethiopia—is labeled: “ETHIOPIA this Country is wholly Unknown to the EUROPEANS”.

The Ethiopian Ocean does not appear in any of the later maps in the Princeton collection, which date from 1737 to 1880. A slight exception is a French map from 1787, which labels the ocean south of Africa as “Ocean Meridion ou Ethiopien” – the Meridian or Ethiopian Ocean.

The collection is just a sample of the many old European maps of Africa, so it’s not evidence that the name did not persist on other maps until the 19th century, or 1800s. But it does show that at least the southern part of the Atlantic Ocean was once known as the Ethiopian Ocean.

This report was written by Africa Check, a non-partisan fact-checking organization. View the original piece on their website.

————————————————

ADDENDUM II

Yes, the southern Atlantic Ocean was once known as the Ethiopian Ocean

The Atlantic Ocean was known as Ethiopian Ocean until the 19th century,

https://africacheck.org/fact-checks/fbchecks/yes-southern-atlantic-ocean-was-once-known-ethiopian-ocean-0

The Atlantic Ocean was known as Ethiopian Ocean until the 19th century,” reads text on a graphic posted on Instagram in April 2021.

It includes what looks like a part of an old map showing the western coastline of Africa, the ocean labelled “Aethiopian Ocean”.

The graphic’s caption adds: “Today’s southern half of the Atlantic Ocean in classical geographical works was known as Aethiopian or Ethiopian Sea or Ocean. The name remained in maps from ancient times until 19th century.”

But a comment on the post points out: “Totally great, except Ethiopia is on the other side of the continent!”

And Facebook’s fact-checking system (Instagram belongs to Facebook) has flagged the post as possibly false.

Ethiopia is a country in the Horn of Africa, on the eastern side of the continent. Is it true that the Atlantic Ocean, on Africa’s west coast, was once called the Ethiopian Ocean?

An ancient name

Ethiopia is one of the oldest countries in the world. Its name derives from the ancient Greek “Aethiopia”, which Europeans used to describe various parts of Africa. It is mentioned several times in both the Iliad and the Odyssey, ancient sagas said to be written by Homer more than 2,000 years ago.

In 2014, Princeton University in the US held an exhibition of its library collection of old maps of Africa produced by European mapmakers from 1541 to 1880. The exhibition remains online.

A misshapen 1554 map from the collection doesn’t name any of Africa’s oceans, and roughly labels the western region of today’s Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon as “Aethiopia”. (It also says “monoculi” – one-eyed people – live there.)

The next map in the online Princeton collection is from 1644. Again, the Ethiopian Ocean is west of Africa and south of the equator. The waters north of the equator are named “Mare Atlanticum” – the Atlantic Sea. A sea is generally understood to be smaller than an ocean.

The Ethiopian Ocean starts to disappear in a map dated 1710. Here, the coastal region from Africa’s western bulge to its southern tip is the “Ethiopian Sea”. Everything west of that, north and south of the equator to a coastline identified as “part of Brasil”, is the Atlantic Ocean.

On the map, almost all of central Africa – but not today’s Ethiopia – is labelled: “ETHIOPIA this Country is wholly Unknown to the EUROPEANS”

The Ethiopian Ocean does not appear in any of the later maps in the Princeton collection, which date from 1737 to 1880. A slight exception is a French map from 1787, which labels the ocean south of Africa as “Ocean Meridion ou Ethiopien” – the Meridian or Ethiopian Ocean.

The collection is just a sample of the many old European maps of Africa, so it’s not evidence that the name did not persist on other maps until the 19th century, or 1800s. But it does show that at least the southern part of the Atlantic Ocean was once known as the Ethiopian Ocean.

———————————-

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29 May 1453: The most Useless Ottoman Victory

The following comments are the result of recent discussions that I had with several friends about the world known historical event, of which academics -in either the Western World or the Islamic World- make a celebrated landmark; this is wrong.

Attributing an extraordinary importance to the victorious siege of Constantinople by Mehmet II is a major historical mistake. And it is an even worse mistake to consider the date as that of the real end of the Eastern Roman Empire, which is fallaciously called “Byzantine Empire’ by Western academic and intellectual gangsters and by Modern Greece’s miserable pseudo-professors and bogus-‘Byzantinists’. In fact, Romania (with the accent on the penultimate syllable – Ρωμανία) or Eoon Kratos (Εώον Κράτος – Oriental State) was terminated in 1204, long before the Ottomans established their initially tiny sultanate.

As I don’t intend to expand much in this merely thought-provoking comment, I will point out first that I never considered Mehmet II as a major Ottoman; by definition he was not a Suleyman Kanuni (the ‘Magnificent’). And surely Mehmet II was not a Selim I, by far the greatest Ottoman of all times. And the victory over a fallen, decayed, depopulated, impotent and historically worthless city can hardly be truly a significant victory for any mighty conqueror – despite the presence of a remarkable Genoese ‘Konstantinopel Korps’!

 

 

Constantinople / Istanbul, Popular Imagination, and the Modern Disruption

 

It is however a fact that in the modern – so: sick – popular imagination of both, the Turks and the Greeks, the event is extremely colored, outsized and mystified, as it represents a ‘remarkable victory to be permanently solidified’ for the Turks, whereas for the Greeks it constitutes ‘an ominous defeat to be ultimately amended’.

Modern popular imagination is a corrupt, distorted fantasy aptly and subtly maneuvered by the villainous, heinous, inhuman and criminal Anglo-French diplomats, agents, academics and politicians, who ceaselessly manipulate the feelings of targeted nations, stage-maneuver factoids, and impose fake versions of History that are different enough to pull either nation to calamitous impasse.

Modern popular imagination has nothing in common with the legends, the traditions, the epics, the imaginative folklore, and the genuine cultural identity of pre-colonial peoples and nations. There is no continuity in this regard, but disruption. This shock was produced by the colonial engineering, the introduction of the evil, inhuman and alien notion of ‘politics’, and the diffusion of modern theories, ideas, ideologies, concepts, philosophies and political ideologies – which are all monstrous and disastrous inventions of the  Western World.

This means very simply that the 16th c. Roman (: pseudo-Greek) legend of the Marbled King (Μαρμαρωμένος Βασιλιάς) was the result of a true, genuine, popular imagination of the Romioi (Ρωμιοί – Rumlar – Romans – pseudo-Greeks), whereas in the 19th c. this legend lost totally its authenticity among the Romioi (Ρωμιοί – Rumlar – Romans), who became pseudo-Greeks (or bogus-Hellenes) for the needs of the Anti-Ottoman Anglo-French evilness. Within the context of the modern pseudo-Greek state, which was entirely fabricated by the English and the French colonials, the legend of the Marbled King was politicized and distorted in order to fit the Anti-Ottoman policies (‘Megali Idea’ – the Great Idea) that the Anglo-French diplomats dictated to their shoeshine boys, i.e. the bogus-statesmen, the pseudo-politicians, and the demented academics of the fabricated state.

The total disruption in popular imagination is very evident indeed at the level of the state name:

On 29th May 1453, in Constantinople, the state that collapsed was named “Romania”.

In 1828, the detached South Balkan Ottoman provinces were called “Hellas” (Greece).

In World History before 1828, there was never a state named “Hellas” (Greece). The term is purely geographical in Ancient Greek, and it is valid only for lands south of Macedonia.

These are in fact the true deeds of the evil Anglo-French gangsters, and of their permanent stooges in South Balkans, i.e. the duly besotted (through studies in Paris and London), corrupt, bribed and ultimately inane Modern ‘Greek’ statesmen, politicians and academics:

– they ‘took’ a state (Romania) in 1453 and they turned it to a ‘space’ (Hellas) in 1828.

On 29th May 1453, the last fighters of Constantinople were “Romioi”.

And so they were called among themselves the descendants of the Eastern Roman Orthodox Christians for the period 1453-1821.

But the vicious Anglo-French gangsters, who were searching for idiots in the South Balkans at the end of the 18th c. and at the beginning of the 19th c., by means of bribe, flatter and incitement, gradually persuaded a small number of local “Romioi” that they were the descendants of a most fake ancient race named “Hellenes”. By means of corruption, the Anglo-French gangsters, posturing as ‘Philhellenes’ (friendly to “Hellenes”), offered scholarships to selected children of the innocent and benevolent local people, sent them to French and English universities, and there, they taught them a bogus-historical dogma, which was not only a totally deceptive anti-historical scheme, but also a grave distortion of the corpus of the Ancient Greek Literature. Then, by means of fraudulent promises (that their future state would be as great as that of Alexander the Great!!), they induced them to mutiny and rebellion.

Then, contrarily to 29th May 1453 “Romioi”, in 1828 “Hellenes” (Greeks) appeared to be the inhabitants of the Paris-made pseudo-state; this is called the Art of Black Magic.

But the simple name “Hellenes” was an insult for the “Romioi”, who defended Constantinople on 29th May 1453; and it was so ever since the Eastern Roman Empire was incepted, following the division of the Imperium Romanum. “Hellenes” were indeed the race of institutionalized homosexuality, prostitution, debauchery, and blasphemous orgies in the Satanic temples of demons named Athena, Dionysos, Hephaestus, Aphrodite, Artemis, and other abominations.

The aforementioned is enough to conclude how fake the present-day legend of the Marbled King is among the so-called Modern Greeks and how unrelated it is to its original version. As an orphaned bogus-nation that lost its true national identity, its authentic historicity, and its traditional culture, today’s so-called Modern Greeks cannot lay claim to the right of recapturing Istanbul (ex-Constantinople); this would be tantamount to a hypothetical right of Brazil to invade Portugal!

 

1

Istanbul, the Wrong Capital of Two Empires, and Kemal Ataturk

 

Who went beyond plots and schemes?

Surely only one! But he was great enough to do so: Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

He terminated the otherwise useless status of the ominous city as a capital of two long lasted empires that were both defunct long before their respective death certificate’s issuance dates.

Kemal Ataturk proved also to be the greater historian of his time, because he convincingly concluded what Eastern Roman ‘basileis’ and Ottoman sultans / caliphs failed to ever understand:

– either Constantinople or Istanbul, this city failed the two empires.

In other words, the capital city and the therein prevailing theological circles were the main reason the Eastern Roman Empire and the Ottoman Empire / Caliphate failed.

In both cases, the administration of the capital city was caught in conflict with overwhelming movements in Anatolia (Icon-fighters / Iconomachy and Paulicianism at the times of the Eastern Roman Empire; Qizilbash and Bektashi at the times of the Ottoman Empire / Caliphate).

In all of the aforementioned four cases, the ominous Constantinopolitan / Istanbulite administration acted as a heinous, heretic and lunatic, extremist group that brought about short term prevalence and long term disaster.

In all four cases, the imperial administration used the army to squelch the opponents, thus alienating the bulk of the Anatolian population which constituted for 1600 years the vertebral column of the imperial state.

Constantinople / Istanbul was unfit to become a capital city for empires controlling Anatolia and the Balkans to say the least. The capital had to be located in Anatolia, in Cappadocia; and Kemal Ataturk draw a correct conclusion that historians and academics had failed and still fail to conclude.

With capital at Caesarea, the Eastern Roman Empire would have lasted longer.

With capital at Kayseri, the Ottoman Empire / Caliphate would have lasted longer.

 

A

Aghia Sophia / Ayasofya, Kemal Ataturk and beyond

 

Furthermore, Kemal Ataturk proved to be the greater theologian and historian of religions of his time, because he convincingly concluded what Eastern Roman Christian Orthodox patriarchs and Ottoman sheikhulislams failed to ever understand:

– Aghia Sophia (‘Αγία Σοφία / Sancta Sapientia) or Ayasofya may well have been a Christian Church and an Islamic Mosque, but in reality the extraordinary, sophisticated and majestic edifice was conceived by Justinian’s advisers and constructed by his architects in order to be exactly what its name suggests: the token of the Divine Wisdom.

Much more than just a church or imperial church, much more than just a mosque or an imperial mosque, the magnificent temple erected by Justinian bears witness to the manifestation of the Divine Wisdom in the Creation of the Universe; pretty much like all Ancient Assyrian – Babylonian and Egyptian temples were built to be, Justinian’s architectural representation of the Divine Wisdom is a miniature of the Universe.

As such, it plays a prominent role in heralding what people will be taught to survive at the End of Times, in revealing the real form and dimensions of the Universe, and in untangling the knots of deception that brought today’s world close to eradication.

As a conscious spiritual being and consummate mystic, Kemal Ataturk, the great disciple of Rudolf von Sebottendorf, knew that Aghia Sophia / Ayasofya was a human construction incommensurably more important than just a place to pray.

If he turned it to a museum, it was because he knew that in the future this edifice will fulfill a far more significant role.

 

 

Present Divisive Imaginations

 

So, my real conclusion about the modern perception of the 29th May 1453 event is the following confirmation:

when I see Turks viewing the event as a ‘remarkable victory to be permanently solidified’,

and when I see Greeks considering the event as ‘an ominous defeat to be ultimately amended’,

I also see the Anglo-French strings pulling the former and the latter apart from one another and targeting to throw either populations to the bottomless pit of permanent self-hatred, self-ignorance, and self-destruction.

If the externally imposed division that brings so calamitous results is removed, what can both Turks and Greeks see, when evoking the 29th May 1453 event? What is it that they did not see until now?

 

11

The Tragic Historical Reality: the Catastrophic Ignorance of Mehmet II

 

The answer to this question involves many points; before enumerating them below, I will immediately point out that they all testify to detrimental ignorance of Mehmet II about what Ρωμανία / Romania truly was and whom this reality disturbed.

It is in fact very impressive that Mehmet II – whose acquaintance with leading figures of the Eastern Roman Christian Orthodox Church (Gennadius Scholarius, George of Trebizond) and with the Palaiologos imperial family is beyond any doubt – knew so little about the state that he conquered.

Even more so, because Gennadius Scholarius recognized Mehmet II as successor to the Eastern Roman throne, and George of Trebizond supported the Ottoman Sultan’s claim to the title of ‘basileus’, which automatically means continuity of the Eastern Roman Empire or, if you prefer, transfiguration of the still small and relatively ‘recent’ Ottoman Kingdom (: Sultanate) into a 15-century lasting Empire.

Despite his acquaintance with Anti-Union (Anthenotikoi) Orthodox theologians (who vehemently rejected every contact with the heretic Catholic Church of Rome) and notwithstanding the excellent education and the spiritual formation that he must have got from his mentor, the leading mystic, erudite scholar, and medical doctor Ak Shamsaddin, Mehmet II did not probably realize what he was about to do and what it meant to become the ‘basileus’ of the Ρωμανία / Eastern Roman Empire; eventually, he was too young to possibly fathom the burden of millennia.

Mehmet II failed to learn, understand, and duly assess that

1- by conquering Constantinople and appearing as successor to a long line of Eastern Roman ‘basileis’, he inherited an enormous confrontation with various Western European kingdoms and principalities that were all controlled by the papal state at Rome.

2- the terrible division between Constantinople (basically named Nova Roma, i.e. New Rome) and Rome was neither a secondary theological polarization nor a Christological dispute; it was an abysmal schism and a detrimental chasm whose true dimensions exceeded by far the possibilities of an average human to comprehend.

3- the evident Eastern Roman Christian Orthodox division into Anti-Union (Anthenotikoi) and Unionists (Enotikoi) factions was not a normal and natural phenomenon, but the result of papal (or Western European) bribery and machination. This means that the Unionists among the Eastern Roman priests were real renegades and evil traitors of their own state.

4- the papal, Catholic policy toward the Eastern Roman Empire for the entire period 1261-1453 consisted in deliberate weakening of the Constantinopolitan basileis whose title (Βασιλεύς Ρωμαίων / Imperator Romanorum), capital city name (Roma vs. Nova Roma),  heritage (Βασιλεία Ρωμαίων / Imperium Romanum), and faith (Christianity) the felonious and lawless Roman popes had tried hard to usurp for many long centuries.

5- all major historical events occurred between Euphrates river and the Atlantic Ocean over the previous 700 years (exactly: 752-1453) were due to the pitiless confrontation between Nova Roma (also known as Constantinople) and Roma (Rome).

6- the bogus-Christian, Satanic Crusades (1095-1291) were NOT undertaken against the Islamic Caliphate, which was merely the pretext; they were mainly addressed against the Eastern Roman Empire and its Reconquista of Syria (969: re-conquest of Antioch). The fact that the Crusaders’ raids in the Red Sea region were scarce and inadequately prepared testifies to the fact that the Crusades were NOT carried out in order to eliminate Islam and destroy Medina and Mecca.

7- The main targets of the papal, Anti-Christian Crusades of the Western Europeans were two: first, to prevent the basileis Eastern Roman from recapturing Jerusalem (and thus obtaining the foremost testimonies to primacy among Christian churches) and second, to conquer Constantinople (as it happened with the Fourth Crusade in 1204) and thus destroy the Eastern Roman Empire, damage Orthodox Christianity, and disperse or corrupt the populations of the Eastern Roman Empire, so that they never again become able to re-launch their state as supreme challenge to fake Roman, papal supremacy.

8- The ferocious rivalry between New Rome (Constantinople) and Rome – or to put it better, between Eastern Christian Rome and papal Anti-Christian Pseudo-Rome – took the form of an all-out assault after 1054 and the definite Schism, which occurred then between the Patriarch of Constantinople and the pope of Rome. It is quite telling that the Crusades started only 41 years after the mutual excommunication of the two religious heads; this was the time needed by the papal administration to mobilize the puppet ‘kings’ of Western Europe and to organize the first military expeditions and attacks.

9- For two consecutive centuries between the first (Photian) schism and the definite Schism (869-1054), the papal control in Western Europe (extended mainly over central and northern Italy, Germany, France and England, because the Iberian Peninsula was almost entirely Islamic) mobilized hysterically all local sources against the Eastern Roman Empire; the papal, Anti-Christian, pseudo-Roman policy against Constantinople involved all types of barbarians on whom the popes of Rome would confer all possible titles (that of Imperator Romanorum included) to turn them against the only true Rome, i.e. New Rome – Constantinople.

111

 

Mehmet II should know that

1- his claim to the title of ‘basileus’ (Qaysar-i Rum) was in fact denied to his Palaiologus predecessor by the Anti-Christian pope of fake Rome, and this was the case for all his earlier precursors on the Constantinopolitan throne for no less than 653 years – ever since the Anti-Christian pope Leo III rejected to recognize Roman Constantinopolitan Empress Irene and crowned the incestuous Frankish barbarian Charles I (known as Charlemagne by Western propagandists) as “Imperator Romanorum” on 25th December 800.

2- during his reign as Ottoman Sultan and as Qaysar-i Rum, his main opponents would not be armies, kings and soldiers, but the bogus concept of translatio imperii (“transfer of rule”), as per which the anti-Roman pope Leo III of fake Rome had ‘possibly’ the right to transfer the imperial rule from Constantinople, i.e. the sole true Rome, to the Frankish barbarians whom he selected as puppets for his schemes and plots against the Eastern Roman Empire, which was the sole Roman Empire, after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire (476 CE) and the dispatch of the imperial insignia to Constantinople.

3- 69 years (800-869) sufficed to the Anti-Christian popes of fake Rome before they demonstrated their ulcerous enmity against the Eastern Roman Empire with the first schism. Strengthened with their alliance with the barbarian Franks, the popes of fake Rome embarked on a very long-term scheme to gradually impair and finally destroy the only Roman Empire, which was also the main Christian kingdom of the world. By progressively eroding the imperial power and by undermining the authority of the Constantinopolitan Patriarchate, the Anti-Christian popes of the Counterfeit Rome intended to prepare the ground for the diffusion of their pseudo-Christian, heliocentric, Mithraist theology, for the worldwide imposition of their evil deception, and for the monstrous colonial conquests that their slaves carried out starting in 1492.

4- his claim to the title of ‘basileus’ (Qaysar-i Rum) would be possibly valid only if he were ready to assert his power and to do all that it would take to impose on the popes of fake Rome the form of Caesaropapism, which was imposed by Justinian I and lasted until 752 CE. As per Justinian’s orders, for the popes of Rome to be truly Roman Christian popes, they had to be appointed and approved by the Roman Emperor at Constantinople – New Rome. In the extensively biased, Western bibliography, the Constantinopolitan popes of Rome are denigrated as ‘Byzantine Papacy’; the practice lasted from 537 to 752.

5- without knowing the ceaseless plots of the Anti-Constantinopolitan party of Rome during the period 537 to 752, he (Mehmet II) – 700 years later – would certainly be an inexperienced ‘basileus’ with minimal chances to outmaneuver the plots of his worst enemies. It is this party that managed – at a time the Eastern Roman Empire was facing internal and external adversities – to achieve independence from the Christian rule (752) and expand its plots until striking an alliance with the barbarian Frankish realm (800).

6- the entire issue did not hinge on a balance of power, but mainly concerned disastrous developments that took place in the western part of the Roman Empire during the last decades of its existence and before Justinian’s Reconquista opened the way for Constantinople-appointed, truly Christian, Roman popes. These developments were of spiritual, theological and esoteric nature; they culminated with the establishment of the secretive, pseudo-Christian Order of the Benedictines (529) whose activities constituted the main pole of the Anti-Constantinopolitan side of Rome. This religious order functions on the basis of the Rule of Saint Benedict, which is a corpus of instructions that can be described as non-Christian, if not Anti-Christian. This is not strange if one takes into consideration the Manichaean influences on Benedict of Nursia (via St. Augustine / Augustine of Hippo) and the absolute Origenist impact that John Cassian exercised on Benedict of Nursia. This strikingly anti-Christian background was at the origin of all theological clashes between Constantinople and the Anti-Constantinopolitan party of Rome before and after 752 CE.

It is from this Origenist – Benedictine – Anti-Christian and Anti-Constantinopolitan background that emanated later the intellectual, cultural, artistic, religious, theological, academic monster which is called Renaissance; this monster would threaten with extinction, as it finally did, both religions, Christianity and Islam.

The inhuman monster would automatically turn against the states which would constitute the most imminent threat for it: the Eastern Roman Empire and the Ottoman Sultanate.

The aforementioned points do not constitute recently drawn conclusions among modern scholars; we know very well that they were widely known and believed, shared and discussed among Anti-Union (Anthenotikoi) Eastern Roman Orthodox theologians, who were allied with Mehmet II. Having this in mind, one can wonder what would be the best possible option for Mehmet II. The present article’s title consists in an insinuation that it would be better for him not to conquer Constantinople. It is therefore time to ask what Mehmet II should do, if not conquering the capital of the then tiny and impotent Eastern Roman Empire, and how this would be more beneficial for Muslims and Christian Orthodox alike or how it would best serve the interests of the two states, the Ottoman Sultanate and the Eastern Roman Empire.

 

MM

His Education and Culture could lead Mehmet II to a Better Option

 

What should be the substitute to the unnecessary Ottoman attack against Constantinople?

I understand that Christians would not be expected to have this type of resourcefulness because they are unfamiliar with the History of Islamic Caliphates. And quite unfortunately, few Muslims today have a fair knowledge of their own historical past. Most of them know uselessly low level stories about the time of Prophet Muhammad’s life; but this is only a minimal part of Islamic History.

What I am going to suggest depends on accurate knowledge of Islamic History, and we know very well that around Ak Shamsaddin and Mehmet II there were many erudite scholars well versed in Islamic Historiography, notably Tabari’s History of the Prophets and Kings (تاريخ الرسل والملوك‎ / Tarikh al Rusul wa al Muluk); this voluminous masterpiece of Islamic Historiography constitutes the World History’s largest book ever written by a single author.

Tabari wrote his celebrated History as a Chronography, like contemporaneous Eastern Roman chronographers, starting with the Creation of the World; his opus covers events up to the first three decades of the 10th c. This means that Tabari covers fully 300 years of Early Islamic History. This is essential because this period covers a historical example that would be very good for Mehmet II to have in mind and to adjust in his case and times.

The rise of the Abbasid dynasty (750 CE) was partly due to the involvement of the Iranian family of Barmakiyan (برمکیان‎), who were able to transpose Sassanid Iranian imperial traditions and manners, concepts and practices within the context of the newly established Caliphate, which broke with the Umayyad tradition of Damascus. This development is at the very origin of the Golden Era of Islamic Civilization, and without the establishment of the venerated Bayt al Hikmah (بيت الحكمة /House of Wisdom) in Abbasid Baghdad, what we now know as Islamic Sciences, Knowledge, Wisdom, Arts, Letters and Philosophy would have not existed. Aramaeans, Iranians, Copts, Yemenites and Turanians were the leading scholars in Baghdad’s Bayt al Hikmah, which was a mere revival of the Sassanid Imperial University, research center, library, archives and laboratories named Jond-e Shapur (or Gondishapur / فرهنگستان گندی‌شاپور) in today’s SW Iran. The Aramaean schools of Nasibina (Nusaybin / Nisibis) and Urhoy (Urfa / Edessa of Osrhoene) greatly contributed to the great role Bayt al Hikmah played in materializing Prophet Muhammad’s concept of Islam as a religion of Knowledge.

Due to the great role of the Barmakiyan in Abbasid Baghdad, after the peak of the Abbasid strength, several Iranian and Turanian dynasties started becoming partly independent from the Caliphate’s center. These rulers did not rise in opposition but in collaboration with the imperial capital Baghdad, which after one century of unmatched wealth, power and expansion had difficulty to keep faraway provinces under a centralized control.

The Tahirids, the Saffarids, the Samanids, the Sajids, the Ziyarids, the Buwaihi (Buyids), and the Sallarids controlled the enormous periphery from Central Asia to Northern India; the most influential of all were the Buyids who even managed to put the weak caliphs of Baghdad under control. They postured as warrantors of the caliphate and they bore royal names that meant exactly that. Examples: Sharaf al-dawla: ‘owner of the state’ – Fakhr al-dawla: ‘pride of the state’ – Taj al-dawla: ‘crown of the state’ – Rukn al-dawla: ‘cornerstone of the state’ – Imad al-dawla: ‘pillar of the state’, and so on.

This period that goes up to the arrival of the Seljuks is called by modern scholars as “The Iranian Intermezzo”. The term was introduced by the Russian Orientalist Vladimir Minorsky (1877-1966), who worked in Czarist Russia, France, England and Egypt, only to be invited in the Soviet Union during the great, liberal ‘intermezzo’ of Nikita Khrushchev (1960); the term is correct, although it consists in sheer neologism. As ‘Iranians’, one must understand many different nations, notably Persians, Turanians, Azeris, Khorasanians, etc.

This period was not named in this manner during the various Islamic historical periods, but it was well known for its main traits and facts. And the concept of a powerless king protected by his mighty warrior has always had very deep roots in many Oriental traditions; in addition, it was part of the common Iranian – Turanian culture that was the educational foundation of all Ottoman Sultans. Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh is the most celebrated masterpiece of Iranian epic poetry that was the cultural cornerstone of Iranians and Turanians. Shahnameh has the same value in Culture and Education of Asiatic Muslims as the Quran has in Religion.

Among many other epic stories, Shahnameh describes how the great hero Fereydun went to the Alborz Mountains to find the sublime Kay Qubad. the greatest of all emperors of the Kayanid dynasty, offer him the title of Emperor of Emperors (Shahinshah) and guide him to Iran where he would rule. Then, in the ensuing combat, it is the hero Fereydun, Kay Qubad’s standard bearer, who engages in battle. Mehmet II and all the Ottoman sultans and caliphs were fluent in Farsi and referred to Shahnameh even in official texts and correspondence.

 

MAP

AQQOYUNLU

 

 

 

What if Mehmet II never tried to conquer Constantinople?

 

Applying heroic prototypes, mythical concepts, and historical paradigms to his own time’s challenges, Mehmet could opt otherwise and this could be better for both him and Constantine XI Palaiologos. The following points are an indication of alternative approach:

1- Mehmet II could strike a deal with the basileus.

2- As per the deal’s terms, the sultan would be the protector of the basileus, of the otherwise small Eastern Roman Empire, and of the Christian Orthodox populations on both states’ territories and elsewhere.

3- The Anti-Union (Anthenotikoi) Orthodox theologians and the Muslim imams and sheikhs would establish an advisory body (reporting to the basileus and the sultan) to seek how the two allied states’ populations would live in peaceful cohabitation and how they would all join the effort to undertake a New Reconquista in both the East and the West.

4- Pacifying Central and Western Anatolia, the Balkans, and the Aegean Sea in relatively little time, the two heads of state would then launch an attack against the Kingdom of Naples that controlled almost the entire southern part of Italy, being part of the Crown of Aragon. The attack would involve Sicily as well. At the same time, the Patriarchate of Constantinople would call for a Crusade to liberate Rome from the Anti-Christian papacy.

5- Instead of trying to expand toward Central Europe, the Ottomans would cooperate with the Eastern Romans in liberating Christian Orthodox populations from the Aragon and the papal tyranny and in solidifying the weakened Emirate of Granada.

6- After an enormous mobilization of Muslim forces among the Aq Qoyunlu Turkmens of Eastern Anatolia, Iraq and Iran, among the Mamluks of Syria and Egypt, and among the Zayyanids of Tlemcen in the Atlas region, an enormous, Eastern Roman and Ottoman, Orthodox Christian and Muslim, attack would take place against Rome, and it would be impossible for any Western European army to thwart.

This would change the World History as we know it; the Renaissance fallacies and evil theories would never be diffused; the fake ‘discovery’ of ‘America’ would never involve the criminal extermination of dozens of millions of indigenous populations; the calamitous colonization of the Mayan – Aztec – Incas continent would never occur; the western European kingdoms, which caused numerous wars and hecatombs of massacred people worldwide, would not be formed; and Christianity would survive and expand worldwide along with Islam from Constantinople / Istanbul and from Jerusalem / Al Quds ash Sherif.

The barbarian monstrosity of Western European colonialism, the falsehood of Western European bogus-philosophers and pseudo-intellectuals, the fallacy of the Modern Science, and the inhuman evilness of Modern Technology would never happen. In brief, the Hell, which is called “Modern World”, would never take place.

 

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29 May 1453 The most Useless Ottoman Victory