Adina Sommer
Antique and Contemporary Art
Winzerer Str. 154
80797 München
telephone
+49 89 304714
business hours:
by appointment
Email
Ansicht von Konstantinopel. Nach einer Photographie gezeichnet von H. Nisle.
Article ID | AST0888 |
Title | Ansicht von Konstantinopel. Nach einer Photographie gezeichnet von H. Nisle. |
Description | View shows part of the city of Istanbul with Galata Bridge and the Golden Horn (Turkish Haliç). The Golden Horn is an approximately 7 km long bay of the Bosphorus in Istanbul. It separates the European part of the metropolis into a southern and northern area. The southern part is a peninsula lying between the Sea of Marmara and the Golden Horn with the historical core of the city, i.e. the districts of Fatih and Eminönü, with Eyüp extending westward, beyond the old city walls. |
Year | ca. 1880 |
Artist | Nisle |
Historical Description | Constantinople was the capital city of the Roman and Byzantine (330 –1204 and 1261–1453), the Latin (1204–1261), and the Ottoman (1453–1922) empires. It was reinaugurated in 324 AD at ancient Byzantium, as the new capital of the Roman Empire by Emperor Constantine the Great, after whom it was named, and dedicated on 11 May 330.In the 12th century, the city was the largest and wealthiest European city and it was instrumental in the advancement of Christianity during Roman and Byzantine times. After the loss of its territory, the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire was reduced to just its capital city and its environs, eventually falling to the Ottomans in 1453. Following the Muslim conquest, the former bastion of Christianity in the east, Constantinople, was turned into the Islamic capital of the Ottoman Empire, under which it prospered and flourished again. After the founding of the modern Republic of Turkey the successor state of the Ottoman Empire the city was renamed Istanbul in 1923. Istanbul is probably the Turkish modification of the ancient Greek. This interpretation seems conclusive, because those who spoke colloquially "the city" in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages in the Eastern Roman Empire generally meant Constantinople, which, with its five hundred thousand inhabitants and its mighty walls, could not be compared to any other city in a wide area . |
Dimensions (cm) | 24 x 33 |
Condition | Small tears at the lower and upper margin. |
Coloring | colored |
Technique | Wood engraving |
Reproduction:
30.00 €
( A reproduction can be ordered individually on request. )