List of sieges of Constantinople
There were many sieges of Constantinople during the history of the Byzantine Empire. Two of them resulted in the capture of Constantinople from Byzantine rule: in 1204 by the Fourth Crusade, and in 1453 by the Ottoman Empire under Mehmed II.
Contents
1 Ancient Greece
2 Turkic, Persian, Avar, Slavonic and Arab sieges
3 Rus' sieges
4 Sieges and attacks during Byzantine civil wars
5 Crusades
6 Nicaean sieges
7 Ottoman sieges
8 See also
Ancient Greece
Before the fourth century, the city was known as Byzantium
Siege of Byzantium (478 BC) by the Greeks, successful- 340 BCE – Besieged unsuccessfully by the forces of Philip II of Macedon.
Siege of Byzantium (193–195) by Septimius Severus against Pescennius Niger, successful
Turkic, Persian, Avar, Slavonic and Arab sieges
Siege of Constantinople (626), by Avars, Slavs, and the Sassanid Persians, unsuccessful
Siege of Constantinople (674–678), by the Umayyad Caliphate, unsuccessful
Siege of Constantinople (717–718), by the Umayyad Caliphate, unsuccessful
Siege of Constantinople (813), by Krum of Bulgaria, unsuccessful
Rus' sieges
Siege of Constantinople (860), by the Rus'
Siege of Constantinople (907), by the Rus' in 904/907
Siege of Constantinople (941), by the Rus'
Sieges and attacks during Byzantine civil wars
Siege of Constantinople (821–822), by rebel forces under Thomas the Slav
Siege of Constantinople (1047), by rebel forces under Leo Tornikios
Siege of Constantinople (1376), a 32-day siege by Andronikos IV Palaiologos with the support of the Ottoman Turks
Crusades
Crusader attack on Blachernae (1101), as part of the Crusade of 1101. Walls partly breached.
Siege of Constantinople (1203), first siege by the Fourth Crusade, in which Alexius IV was able to usurp the throne after Alexius III fled to Thrace; objectives achieved and the siege lifted
Sack of Constantinople (1204), second siege by the Fourth Crusade, in which the Byzantines were overwhelmed and the city thoroughly sacked, successful
Nicaean sieges
Siege of Constantinople (1235), by joint Bulgarian and Nicaean forces, unsuccessful- A Nicaean attack on Constantinople is implied by George Akropolites's account for 1248, but no details are known
Siege of Constantinople (1260), by the Empire of Nicaea, unsuccessful- In 1261, a small force of Nicaean troops under Alexios Strategopoulos gained entry into the poorly defended Latin capital, ending the Latin Empire and restoring Byzantine rule to the City. Most Latin troops defending the city were absent on campaign, and the Emperor fled without putting up any resistance; there was no siege.
Ottoman sieges
- An Ottoman blockade between 1390 and 1402, first interrupted by the Crusade of Nicopolis, then lifted due to the Battle of Ankara
Siege of Constantinople (1411), a short Ottoman siege that occurred during the Ottoman Interregnum, unsuccessful
Siege of Constantinople (1422), the first large-scale siege of the city by the Ottomans, unsuccessful
Fall of Constantinople in 1453, after an Ottoman siege, successful
See also
- Occupation of Constantinople
- Walls of Constantinople