Friday, May 29, 2009

Aleo e poli!


This, 29th of May, is a day to remember... A day to fly, to the past... to the sacred past. Because a day like today, but 556 years ago, Constantinople fell in front of the armies of the Sultan Mehmed II... And this is the way it ended...


Some hours before the final attack, people gathered themselves in Hagia Sophia, which bells had been tolling all day long...and so, everyone was there, even the Basileus, Constantine XI... Everyone knew it was just a question of time... The walls of the city, a part of that long long wall... will fall, and then, the Jenissaurs (the Sultan's elit soldiers) would enter... and then... only destruction... And because of that, all of them were praying... But, unfortunately, praying wasn't enough. Some hours after that meeting Ottoman's armies destroyed part of the Theodosian wall, and entered the city... Chaos, mayhem... Some pople were souting on the streets, saying "Aleo e poli!", "the city is lost!"... Constantine, the last Basileus of the Last Rome died fighting in the walls, next to his subjects and brothers and sisters in pain... His body was never found and it is said, that an Angel came down from heaven and took him away, to a hidden cave... And there he is, still, waiting for the day that Byzantine armies return, to guide them and lead them, and take The City again...

So, that was the day... The day the last trace of the Roman Empire was erased by a crazy man... The day that 50.000 citizens fought bravely against an expert army of 100.000 men... A day dyed with the blood of brave Greek...This was, so, the day of The Fall of Constantinople...

"This is the night of the Greek. I've seen their sad eyes plunged into the melancholy of centuries... Outside, the bells are tolling for Dead, for the Last Rome". Mika Waltari, The Dark Angel.



Hail to the Fallen Majesty!

1 comment:

Nuria Vidal said...

Thanks for the info and the very sensitive video. Not just! as it seems, the new city, "Istambul", must certainly be a totally different experience nowadays.

I understand this melancoly for the past!