How To Save Constantinople in 1453

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2024
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    Footage:
    Rise of the Empires: Ottomans (2020-2022)
    Medici: Masters of Florence (2016)
    MYSTRAS CASTLE CITY Cinematic Aerial 4K by @lambrosmalamas
    Music:
    Europa Universalis IV Soundtrack - At The Gates of Constantinople
    Europa Universalis IV Soundtrack - The Voyage
    Europa Universalis IV Soundtrack - De Hominis Dignitate
    Crusader Kings 2 Soundtrack - The Fifth Crusade
    Imperator: Rome Soundtrack - Tyrrenum
    Europa Universalis IV Soundtrack - Battle of Lepanto
    Imperator: Rome Soundtrack - Siege
    Europa Universalis IV Soundtrack - The End of an Era
    00:00 Intro
    03:07 The Lead-Up
    07:35 The Council and The Crusade
    12:04 The Appeasement Strategy
    16:05 Deal With Demetrios
    18:23 Secure Alliances
    26:08 Orban
    29:40 Historical Timeline
    32:00 Summary of The Strategy
    35:05 The Aftermath

Komentáře • 1K

  • @phantomjoker5
    @phantomjoker5 Před 11 měsíci +2328

    *boots up EU4*

    • @alexandrub8786
      @alexandrub8786 Před 11 měsíci +65

      Might i suggest modding it with Victorum Universalis?

    • @maisbiensur4934
      @maisbiensur4934 Před 11 měsíci +39

      Based awnser no need to watch this video any longer

    • @TheMisterDarknight
      @TheMisterDarknight Před 11 měsíci +14

      ​@Alexandru B ahh, at that point we can use voltaire's nightmare

    • @lilgravy2651
      @lilgravy2651 Před 11 měsíci +16

      Opens console cause I’m ass at EU4 could do it in HOI4 though

    • @TheMisterDarknight
      @TheMisterDarknight Před 11 měsíci +4

      Thinking about it nah this stragy could only work in the ck3 mod

  • @henrykkeszenowicz4664
    @henrykkeszenowicz4664 Před 11 měsíci +1176

    The EU4 references in this video are more inevitable than the fall of Constantinople itself.

    • @kenos911
      @kenos911 Před 11 měsíci +177

      They could’ve easily won in 1453 if they took burgher loans fr

    • @hithere640
      @hithere640 Před 11 měsíci +102

      @@kenos911 the byzantines would’ve won if they had no cb’d byzantium

    • @doughnutdevourer5667
      @doughnutdevourer5667 Před 11 měsíci +54

      @@hithere640 Rule number 1 of playing in Europe. 11th December 1444 = no cb vassalise Byzantium. I see no reason Byzantium should be exempt from this rule.

    • @safs3098
      @safs3098 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@kenos911 they did actually in real life. But that wasn't enough to save them

    • @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod
      @FarmerSlayerFromTheEdoPeriod Před 11 měsíci +11

      ​@@kenos911Bros should have blockaded the Ottos with Rhodes's help

  • @benmarley3086
    @benmarley3086 Před 11 měsíci +454

    Honestly the Romans had a good run. I was very surprised when I first learned they existed all the way to 1453, considering Rome was founded over 2200 years prior.

    • @lutskinu1491
      @lutskinu1491 Před 7 měsíci +17

      Rome was founded almost 2800 years ago

    • @beybladeguru101
      @beybladeguru101 Před 6 měsíci +62

      @@lutskinu14912200 years prior to 1453

    • @warrioremperor6320
      @warrioremperor6320 Před 6 měsíci +37

      The only reason it fell was because of the crusaders, Mehmed would be dead else

    • @Jondoe297..
      @Jondoe297.. Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@warrioremperor6320real

    • @randomperson9873
      @randomperson9873 Před 5 měsíci +14

      ​@@ozgurd5920ottomans are NOT romans lol

  • @byzansimp
    @byzansimp Před 11 měsíci +861

    Demetrios Palaiologos sort of reminds me of Andronikos I Komnenos, always causing trouble for his more competent family, jumping from one foreign court to another, but escapes responsibility multiple times because he "very sincerely apologized". Thankfully Demetrios never became the Emperor, or Constantinople would have fallen just like Rome in 476, "with a whimper".

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +186

      yes, lol
      I guess in case of Demetrios there is the issue of Ottoman backing. Andronikos is just: "... conspired to murder the emperor, but was caught. He realised the error of his ways, fell on the knees before Manuel and begged for forgiveness. Manuel spared his life and made him a governor. Two years later Andronikos rose in rebellion against Manuel..."

    • @johnisaacfelipe6357
      @johnisaacfelipe6357 Před 11 měsíci +40

      Christian Mercy doesn't work well with utter snakes.

    • @Michael_the_Drunkard
      @Michael_the_Drunkard Před 11 měsíci +67

      ​@@johnisaacfelipe6357 the problem isn't Christian mercy but a false pacifistic understanding of the scripture or in Manuel's case, gullibility.

    • @qbpdnguyen2844
      @qbpdnguyen2844 Před 11 měsíci +41

      @@Michael_the_Drunkard The worst thing is let a rebellious men governorship, he may got mercy to not be killed but to get ownership of a region? That's even more than a blunder move. If I was Manuel I would at least lock him at home and do the dishes rather than let him do whatever he what.

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +20

      @@Michael_the_Drunkard
      The Medieval Roman's Christian Mercy should have been alike that of Basil II. He was merciful, but only a couple of times; if you repeated your misdeeds, you would be blinded, and sent to a monastery or a prison cell to beg for God's mercy, since the Roman Emperor's has expired.

  • @BloodRider1914
    @BloodRider1914 Před 11 měsíci +957

    The biggest issue is just how competent and determined Mehmed II was. I don't think he would have ever allowed Constantinople to remain unconquered.

    • @maddogbasil
      @maddogbasil Před 11 měsíci +162

      True
      It feels the longer constantinople existed the shorter its life span gets
      It's r
      Already amazing it managed to stand for so long

    • @Michael_the_Drunkard
      @Michael_the_Drunkard Před 11 měsíci +83

      Him not allowing something to happen and being able to change it in in his favor are 2 different beasts.
      There is no inevitability in history.

    • @napoleonbuonaparte8975
      @napoleonbuonaparte8975 Před 11 měsíci +128

      @@Michael_the_Drunkard Yeah but him being alive pretty much meant Constantinople falling. He revolutionized war in Europe just to be able to take Constantinople.

    • @ailediablo79
      @ailediablo79 Před 11 měsíci

      He wouldn't have even thought about that if it wasn't due to how dangerous and annoying they are.
      Very simple. Before Mohammad and time before that. Make an alliance with them, pay money and be a loyal frind as parenters as a client stilight puppet state with an autonomous status. Don't do problems and don't b annoying. Mind your own business. Distant yourself from rest of Europe and other Christian powers. Don't intervene in Ottoman affairs. Be friendly and a support to the ottomans. Then it would have stayed up to WW1 or even today.

    • @Maelstromme
      @Maelstromme Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@napoleonbuonaparte8975Was he ever outsmarted before? Or did the Turks just pull a nat 20 out of nowhere

  • @CKyIe
    @CKyIe Před 11 měsíci +61

    If we're starting at 1444, we all know what the Byzantines should have done. Start building galleys everywhere, delete the fort in Morea, attack Epyrus and vassalise them, attacked the Ottomans, Island trap their armies and win.

    • @CKyIe
      @CKyIe Před 11 měsíci +16

      Oh no! As soon as I unpaused, I see that you made the exact same joke...

    • @codingstyle9480
      @codingstyle9480 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Yes, exactly, because the Byzantine emperor was holding his ipad and playing a computer game. :))

  • @legateelizabeth
    @legateelizabeth Před 11 měsíci +805

    He's only mentioned briefly, but I want to underscore just how much of a chad Giovanni Giustiniani was. This is a guy who spoke, at least well enough to command people in, like a half dozen different languages, possibly with mercs from as far away as Scotland. He was considered one of the foremost experts on defensive sieges, and it was he who was left in charge of keeping the rag-tag groups of foreigners and different interests in Constantinople stitched together and working well - which he did, training regular-ass people in the use of modern weaponry with what little time he had. Man genuinely pulled off the 'You must be swift as a coursing river!" thing but like, for real, since the detachment of people he led held out basically until the end. He'd learned from prior sieges and was adept at employing all kinds of incredibly effective unorthodox defences that weren't common at the time, and even mounted counter-attacks on the Ottomans. You could not have asked for a better man to be behind the walls, he'd have made everyone from Agrippa to Aetius, Belisarius to Maurice, proud.
    Some writers claim that he was a coward but a coward doesn't hold as fast and fight as hard as Giovanni did, I will die on that hill. Though if I do it won't be holding the position as effectively as Giovanni would've.
    People talk about Constantine's heroism, but everyone forgets Giovanni; just as, if not more, of a badass than Constantine was.

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +115

      Giustiniani was no coward. He only left the battlefield when he was unable to carry on. From what I have read a bullet pierced his fighting hand and then exited it, striking his chest. He could not fight any longer.

    • @faniskourelis1625
      @faniskourelis1625 Před 11 měsíci +97

      I don't think he is underrated we remember him in modern day Greece as one of the only heroes of the siege (Kinda hard for a whole country and especially Greece to rememeber a foreigner as a hero) . The emperor is just more famous because he was an emperor at least in name and therefore it would have been much easier for him to turn tail and run which he didn't.

    • @thomaslacornette1282
      @thomaslacornette1282 Před 11 měsíci +22

      @@faniskourelis1625 Greeks and Italians have become bros too late! 😕

    • @Artaxian_Debacle
      @Artaxian_Debacle Před 11 měsíci +21

      Giustiniani was by far a great and heroic figure. I’m right there with you defending his character

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Absolute mad lad, I respect him

  • @rev0126
    @rev0126 Před 11 měsíci +66

    Constantine didn't take care of Demetrios because he didn't want the "Kinslayer" trait...

    • @l.elmo.di.scipio
      @l.elmo.di.scipio Před 7 měsíci +14

      He didn't have a Pope to help him get rid of it for extra piety 😅

  • @huntclanhunt9697
    @huntclanhunt9697 Před 11 měsíci +428

    The biggest things that broke Rome:
    The 3rd Century Crisis
    Adrianople
    The Huns
    The Germans
    The Plague of Justinian
    The loss of Egypt (mostly happened because of the plague)
    The battle of Manzikirt (lead to the loss of Anatolia)
    The sack of Constantinople in the 4th Crusade
    Remove any one of these and Rome's chance increaes drastically, I think.

    • @hannibalburgers477
      @hannibalburgers477 Před 11 měsíci +77

      Anatolia was already lost to the Arabs, all Turks had to do is to steamroll the enemy. Mountainous Anatolia is perfect location to defend against horse archers in defensive situations if you implement mounted infantry tactics like Timur did. But Arabs did the main damage by conquering almost all of anatolia and dealing with local troops with their light infantry and light cavalry, which are perfect for skirmishes in uneven terrain such as in Anatolia.
      Then again, I would still argue that Bulgars, Slavs and most importantly Crusaders did the most damage. You could reconquer Anatolia with naval supremacy and by "slicing" the territories like Union did in US Civil War. But you have to secure the Balkans first.
      And you cannot easily reconquer Balkan peninsula.
      Tldr: Too little too late.

    • @hannibalburgers477
      @hannibalburgers477 Před 11 měsíci +23

      And if you read about the Turkish account of Manzikert, you will see that All turks did to divide and trap the separate Roman armies and scouts. The victory was not happened in the location near Manzikert, it happened all in the Eastern anatolia with strategy and logistics. So the problem in Roman army was deeper than a simple battle, or mistakes of a single general: It was a mistake of them not securing the inner anatolia and establishing supply routs. You cannot act aggressively in Eastern Anatolia, you have to use Flavian Tactics instead of attempting to one hit the Turkish army, and motivate the locals to defend the land and support your cause.
      Which also means that even if you somehow defeat the Turks, either they will retreat and invade with another army, or another power will march into Anatolia, because you did not secured anatolia first.
      Also both accounts mention that Greek and Muslim raiders were attacking each others settlements, and warbands beyond the frontier making small war deep in the Byzantine lands.
      And Turkish accounts mention that Alp Arslan raised his army to not conquer Rome, but to move east and dealing with the Egyptians in the support of Khalif. Sending a large army directly to Alp Arslan and spooking him into fighting you was a big mistake.

    • @asmrnaturecat984
      @asmrnaturecat984 Před 11 měsíci +14

      Not even mention the rise of islam permenantly remove roman presense in levant and north africa is what telling me your source of information

    • @gt2721
      @gt2721 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Why did the loss of Egypt happen because of the plague ? Wasn't it because of the arab early conquests (rashidun califate) ?

    • @HolyknightVader999
      @HolyknightVader999 Před 11 měsíci +29

      Of all these, the loss of Anatolia was the most avoidable. The Turks just wanted some tribute payments as they were preparing to march on Egypt. The new Emperor who deposed Romanos IV Diogenes opted to not pay those tribute payments, and the desolation of Anatolia was the result.
      Second would be the 4th Crusade Sack. Just don't kill the Byzantine Emperor allied with them. They were literally just waiting to get paid until their client emperor got killed and the new emperor ordered an attack on the Crusader camp, which led to the Crusaders counter-attacking and sacking the city in frustration due to what they felt was a betrayal.

  • @ejoji4245
    @ejoji4245 Před 11 měsíci +899

    I don't think manzikert made the collapse inevitable, i believe the sack of constantinople by the crusaders was what made the collapse inevitable

    • @ari3903
      @ari3903 Před 11 měsíci +57

      @bastiat The situation can be better described as a result of previous unfortunate decisions rather than something fundamentally foolish. It was an unfavorable idea with limited alternatives due to financial constraints and the inadequate military strength of the empire during that period.

    • @neutralfellow9736
      @neutralfellow9736 Před 11 měsíci +155

      Not to mention the Byzies making enemies of Frederick Barbarossa instead of assisting him, the dude roflstomped the Turks and took half of central Anatolia within a month, he would have perhaps given it to the Byzies had they not decided to silently ally themselves with Saladin, perhaps Frederick would have not even died in that river if he went a more lenient, Byzie supported route in that scenario.

    • @johnconnor8206
      @johnconnor8206 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @bastiat4855even with all of Greece alone they’d be one of the most powerful kingdoms in Europe

    • @Rikard_A
      @Rikard_A Před 11 měsíci +1

      Neither was not as problematic as to cause the down fall of the empire.

    • @fish5671
      @fish5671 Před 11 měsíci +19

      @@neutralfellow9736 Frederick in is the guy that died because he went for a swim in full suit of armor ?

  • @RmsOceanic
    @RmsOceanic Před 11 měsíci +314

    I think the best thing about your analysis here is admitting that even if your strategy pays off, the Empire most likely merely survives, rather than revives. Which I think is being honest, no matter how fun it is to successfully retake your cores in EU4. By the time of Varna the sad fact is Constantinople depended on the favour of other powers for any sort of independence, and I think the Demetrios Appeasement plan would have died with Murad II, Mehmed was clearly spoiling for conquest. Even if Varna went off without a hitch, it isn't likely the Empire would directly recover much land. Each of the "ERE doomed after year X" dates are more about the Emperor losing more and more ability to dictate or negotiate with others, instead having to plead. I think by Varna the empire had little ability to pursue any kind of independent foreign agenda. Was that threshold crossed in 1204? 1341? Was an opportunity to reclaim it in 1402 missed? Who knows? And it's unlikely any emperor would be able to over-leverage their resources to somehow build an army that can deter or even beat the Ottomans in open battle, unlike in EU4.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +122

      It's kinda why I don't like alt-history and specifically picked the smaller timespan. The amount of "what ifs" rises exponentially the farther back we go.

    • @pabodie8219
      @pabodie8219 Před 11 měsíci +65

      @@RomabooRamblings Agreed. My biggest problem with "alt-hist" videos/channels, is that they're more "alt-fiction", and doesn't give you any new insights or inferences of the history they're portraying. Your video was phenomenal and taught me so much about this time period that I didn't know, while at the same time entertaining an interesting and reasonable "what if". Brilliant job, mate.

    • @thomasrinschler6783
      @thomasrinschler6783 Před 11 měsíci +16

      I guess the interesting question, sort of skipped over here, is what if the Crusaders had actually won at Varna, and had inflicted a bad-to-shattering defeat on the Ottomans? Mesembria was not too far south of Varna, so the Crusader army would likely have reached the relative safety of Byzantine territory with ease. What then? Do they proceed to besiege Adrianople? Do they wait and try to get further reinforcements from the West? And if the Crusade does actually come away with a victory (presumably not totally driving the Ottomans out of Europe, but severely checking them and forcing concessions), who gets what?

    • @spaceracer6861
      @spaceracer6861 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@pabodie8219 I recon you will really like Possible History. He gives a lot of context and puts a lot of effort to keep everything plausible (and also isn't a massive nationalist like most channels of this genre).

    • @andriusgimbutas3723
      @andriusgimbutas3723 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Worked for Skanderberg

  • @Gabsboy123
    @Gabsboy123 Před 11 měsíci +24

    The thing about the medieval ERE was that it was given plenty of chances to recover but time and time again a variety of circumstances caused Byzantium to dig its own grave further.
    Manzikert ensured that the Empire would no longer be able to retake the Levant and Egypt (at least without the help of the West)
    Myriokephalon effectively stopped the reconquests of the Komnenid Dynasty, and of course the sack by the Fourth Crusade undid their progress altogether.
    However, when Constantinople was retaken in 1261, the Byzantines still had half of Greece and the western third of Anatolia, and could theoretically be able to restore at least the pre-Fourth Crusade borders. It was the two civil wars of the Palaiologian Dynasty that finally broke Byzantium's back altogether leading us to this situation in 1444

  • @tritonewt3344
    @tritonewt3344 Před 11 měsíci +29

    For anyone interested in the matter, Finnish writer Mika Waltari wrote a book called "Johannes Angelos". It is a historical novel telling the fictional story of the titular Johannes, who participates in the defense of Constantinople. Actual historical characters like Giovanni Giustiniani are featured in it too. I recommend it, really makes you wanna die at the walls of such a holy city

  • @DGordillo123
    @DGordillo123 Před 11 měsíci +27

    *furiously takes notes*

  • @GarfieldRex
    @GarfieldRex Před 11 měsíci +111

    Listened to this video while playing EU4 as Aragon, trying to vassalize Byz.
    Of course things could always be better, but it was very very difficult to find a better way.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +41

      He did promise you Lemnos, didn't he

    • @GarfieldRex
      @GarfieldRex Před 11 měsíci +25

      @@RomabooRamblings no :( I need that mod. Had to take the capital peacefully by force.

    • @enclavesoldier8893
      @enclavesoldier8893 Před 11 měsíci +20

      @@GarfieldRex “Peacefully by force” The most EU4 sentence I’ve ever heard.

  • @Dataism
    @Dataism Před 11 měsíci +78

    I actually like how you structured your alternative history scenario. Most alternative history on youtube is very surface level cause they try to cover events over several decades and make the scope too big so we can't really cover over maybe 1/2 factors, here we got an essentially in-depth analysis.

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul Před 11 měsíci +5

      Yeah I like alt-history but I love these very in-depth looks on the tiny details, though these are less common.

  • @gigachadgaming1551
    @gigachadgaming1551 Před 11 měsíci +217

    Rome was doomed to fall when Romulus killed Remus because it put the act of fratricide on a mythical pedestal, therefore making betrayal a more accepted and righteous act in the mind of the potential betrayer. This contributes to the internal strife and civil wars that severely weakened Rome. There 😏😏😏

    • @stewartcandy5018
      @stewartcandy5018 Před 11 měsíci +15

      Name fits.

    • @Yannis-ew2ok
      @Yannis-ew2ok Před 11 měsíci +15

      So a city based on trade would've been better? If Reme was actually built it would've just became a Venice on a river far from any real trade. Romulus was wrong but had brains

    • @theotheagendashill818
      @theotheagendashill818 Před 8 měsíci +13

      ​@@Yannis-ew2ok Romulus and Remus never existed they're based on the creation myth from the proto-Indo-European mythology

    • @michaelhaderach277
      @michaelhaderach277 Před 7 měsíci +3

      the legend of romulus and remus might have been created just cuz of that civil strife and betrayal roman tradition

    • @therealmcromano319
      @therealmcromano319 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Remus’ fratricide caused the fall of Rome because the Ottomans figured out the only way to become the New Rome is to copy Old Rome. That’s why the Ottomans made fratricide a state policy allowing stable succession.

  • @paulmayson3129
    @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +101

    Based on your last points, I have suggestions on what the Roman Greeks could have done after a successful defence of the 1453 AD Siege of New Rome, and ensure the Roman State would be in a better place by the early 16th century AD:
    * After a spectacular failure to capture the City, Mehmed II's position in power would be very shaky. After all, the 21 year old Sultan began this endeavour to capture New Rome in the first place in order to strenghten his position in the Ottoman Government, especially after the attempted coups he faced due to being doubts that he was a worthy successor of Murad II. It would be the best time for Constantine Paleologos to release Orhan Celebi from his hostage in Constantinople, and support him in an attempt to rally forces against a disgraced Mehmed II. In this way, there might be a Second Ottoman Civil War, like the one that had saved Constantinople 4 decades earlier. Having just failed in his attempt to capture New Rome, Mehmed II would be unable to try again even if he wanted, and the morale would be shattered in face of any idea to try it again in the years right after 1453 AD, perhaps even decades after it.
    *The Despotate of Morea indeed could have served as a new base for expansion of the Roman Greeks. The project of Constantine Paleologos was right, his campaigns of reconquest in Southern Greece would have been benefitial in the long run had their fruits been allowed to ripe. The good thing with the Morea is that it is simultaneously both insular and continential, so it could function both as a stepping poing for expansion of sea power and eventually the reconquest of the Aegean and Ionian Sea, while also liberating the Greek Mainland. Yet I feel that the importance of Peloponnese's defence should not be ignored either; with the failure of the Hexamilion Wall, I feel that a victory in the 1453 AD Siege of Constantinople for the Roman Greeks should make them decide to construct the Cannal of Corinth, like Greece did in reality in 1893 AD. All one needs is manpower and shovels to achieve this. In this manner, it would be virtually impossible for a land force from Greece to march into the Morea, and only with a naval landing would it be possible to conquer it. The Romans should be able to march out of it with wooden bridges. Even better if the Romans constructed later a New Corinth around the Cannal, having complete control of it, acting as a capital of a Despotate of Greece.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +23

      Don't you have to blast the rock to construct the canal?

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +26

      @@RomabooRamblings
      Perhaps. I could not find if they used explosives back in the 1880s and 1890s. But still, all you need to break rock is sledgehammers and a couple thousand dedicated men using them properly, just like how they did in mines since Antiquity. And it is not as if it was undoable; even as far back as Nero they had been planning it, but usually did not since there were no pressing military or economic benefits. Even as far as the Corinthians in the 6th century BC they could have done this - and in fact they did create a cannal that turned the Leucas Peninsula into an Island, Leukada, but they did not do so because the Delphi Oracle would not give her blessing. The Roman Greeks could have used work in the Cannal as a way to avoid taxes, a practice that was not unheard off at the time; the Italians did the same in Greece, though they usually forced it. And after all, it is well known that "a soldier who digs, lives".
      In this light, I have been wondering recently whether the Roman Greeks could have modernized the Theodosian Walls against contemporary artillery, by simply protecting the wall's exterior side with a hill-slide of dirt. All they would have needed was manpower, shovels and transporting the dirt. In this manner the cannon balls, no matter how large, whould have simply struck and splattered the soft dirt and not the wall behind it. Nothing too complicated, simply the basics for anti-artillery walls in the 17th century AD. As for the dirt, in the same time it could have been taken from extended constructions for second or third lines of moats in front of the Theodosian Walls, especially useful for the age of long ranged firearms. The Roman Greeks should have been able to deduce all that after a successful defence of the 1453 AD Siege of New Rome, so I think these actions might have been reasonable and useful for New Rome's protection in the second half of the 15th century AD...

    • @jj4l
      @jj4l Před 10 měsíci

      New Rome lol

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@jj4l
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Rome

    • @Sisyphus599
      @Sisyphus599 Před 7 měsíci

      Amazing

  • @wilsontheconqueror8101
    @wilsontheconqueror8101 Před 11 měsíci +32

    Manzikert definitely didn’t help. But the Roman Empire had recovered from disastrous battles before. Good grief if they could survive Canne with Hannibal at the walls! But what has to be looked at that wasn't present in other defeats was gunpowder! Technology had caught up to the days of staying behind great walled defensive structures.

    • @Uncle_Fred
      @Uncle_Fred Před 11 měsíci +12

      Arguably, the walls could have held up better had the Romans reconfigured them for modern warfare. Of course, this would have required time, money and foresight.

    • @anon2427
      @anon2427 Před 11 měsíci +4

      It definitely had not caught up to the point yet and wouldn’t for another 400 years at least

    • @provokatorasalitirios
      @provokatorasalitirios Před 6 měsíci

      Thats a bad point because the byzantines almost won with only 5000-10000 defenders just because of the great walls.

  • @paulmayson3129
    @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +93

    Thank you so much for mentioning Mani!!!
    The Toparchy of Maina stood alone, and all that separated it from the Ottoman Empire in 1461 AD was a strip of borderlands in its borders with Messenia and Laconia, given by Krokodeilos Kladas to Venice so that the Venetians would defend Mani. By that time, many fleeing elements of administrators, militarymen and politicians had fled there from New Rome and Mystras/Patras, and Toparchy of Mani was reorganized based on the local administration as the Maniot Republic, based on a Lacedaemonian/Laconian/Maniot Senate in Oitylo. In 1481 AD the Ottoman Turks would invade and the Venetians would just give these borderlands to the Turks, which began a 13 year long Maniot-Turkish War, in which the lowlands of Northern Mani and Middle Mani was captured, but the highlands of Northern Mani and Southern Mani were still free, from which the Maniots managed to eventually push out the Turks, and even wage a counter attack in 1493 AD in Southern Laconia, until their attempt to free Monemvasia was halted and Krokodeilos Kladas was captured and impaled by the Turks. Yet still, even in the 1520s AD we do hear of Kladiotes leading the Maniots and wreaking havoc in Southern Laconia, while the Maniot Republic being still free, sovereign and independent, exactly as it was for the next 3 centuries until it liberated half the Morea in 1821 AD and formed the First Hellenic Republic!!!

    • @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008
      @rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 Před 10 měsíci

      Please give me all your book sources on the maniot peninsula post 1453.

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@rfkwouldvebeenaok1008
      Here are some English sources. The matterial on this matter is mostly in Greek, French and Italian, barely in English:
      • Morritt, John Bacon Sawrey “The Letters of John B. S. Morritt of Rokeby; Descriptive of Journeys in Europe and Asia Minor in the Years 1794-1796”, edited by G. E. Marindin, Published by John Murray, 1914, London, Albemarle Street
      • Leake, Martin William. “Travels in the Morea”. Volume 1, Published by John Murray Albemarle Street. 1840. London.
      • Gell, William. “Narrative of a Journey in the Morea”. Published by Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, And Brown. 1823. London.
      • Gundogdu, Birol. “Ottoman Constructions of the Morea Rebellion, 1770s: A Comprehensive Study of Ottoman Attitudes to the Greek Uprising”. University of Toronto. 2012. Toronto.
      • Seifried, Rebecca M. “The Shifting Tides of Empires: Using GIS to Contextualize Population Change Within the Landscape of Seventeenth to Nineteenth-Century Mani, Greece”. Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014
      • Randolph, Bernard. “The present state of the Morea, called anciently Peloponnesus: together with a description of the city of Athens, islands of Zant, Strafades, and Serigo”. Printed, sold by Will. Notts, Tho. Basset, and Thomas Bennet. 1689. London.
      • Galt, John. “Voyages and Travels in the Years 1809, 1810, and 1811: Containing Statistical, Commercial, and Miscellaneous Observations on Gibralter, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta, Serigo, and Turkey”. Published by T. Cadell and W. Davies, Strand. 1812. London.

    • @SpartanLeonidas1821
      @SpartanLeonidas1821 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@paulmayson3129Damn Bro! You have all the sources! 👍🏻 BRAVO
      Everything you share is SPOT ON!!!

    • @MaxStArlyn
      @MaxStArlyn Před 4 měsíci

      A decaying Empire: 1261-1453
      By the fourteenth century, the J’3ωι5Η question of Byzantium seemed to be most concerned with Venetian J’3ω5. Venetians had come to reside in the Empire in large numbers by the early 14th century, and treaties between the Empire and Venice granted the Venetians living in the empire, including J’3ω5 of Venetian origin, special privileges, though they also carried certain minor economic prohibitions. Under the aegis of these treaties, Venetian J’3ω5 could buy, sell or rent land anywhere in Constantinople. They also enjoyed a more favorable tax structure than Byzantine citizens, as well as the freedom of movement and settlement anywhere in the Empire.[47]
      Further complicating this legal status, some J’3ω5 obtained Venetian citizenship either "by coming from areas subject to the Republic or by purchasing naturalization", thus obtaining the same privileges as Venetian nationals in the Empire.[48] At this time, the Empire was in rapid decay, and could not seriously enforce laws intended to curtail these rights and regain economic control within its borders. Thus, an exception to the general trend of Byzantine history emerged during this century, whereby J’3ω5 were entitled to a broader set of rights than Christians…. “

  • @quantashonjamaldigglerbury4934
    @quantashonjamaldigglerbury4934 Před 11 měsíci +81

    Thanks for the tips i will make sure to implement it in the next timeline i change.
    I tried to save constantinople 54 times(And only 9 timelines worked and only 1 of the timeline's rome managed to be restored, the other 8 perished in the 16th-20th centuries or continued as small and irrelevant)

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +35

      Becoming relevant again is an even bigger challenge

    • @luisgvillegaspereira4306
      @luisgvillegaspereira4306 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Of course, that desconsidereted for mi, idiot ottoman descenderunt

    • @luisgvillegaspereira4306
      @luisgvillegaspereira4306 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Of course, that desconsidereted for mi, idiot ottoman descenderunt

    • @ari3903
      @ari3903 Před 11 měsíci +10

      @@RomabooRamblings Indeed, maintaining a delicate power balance in the Balkans was crucial for the survival of the Romans. Striking a balance ensured that no single nation could grow excessively powerful. However, should the Romans aspire to expand their influence, they would inevitably need to engage in a conflict with one of the nations necessary for the balance. Such a confrontation would risk creating a dominant power that could ultimately bring about the demise of the empire.

    • @quantashonjamaldigglerbury4934
      @quantashonjamaldigglerbury4934 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@RomabooRamblings The 1 that did succeed though, did managed to recover the balkans,anatolia,levant and italy and had a mediocre run as a colonial power(but not in the americas.)
      In the 21st century they were quite high up though as the other colonial powers faded and so did they but they retained the territories i mentioned above.
      With a sizeable population of 225 million, 1.1 million active personnel and a gdp of 4.84 trillion.
      Gdp per capita=41,664$

  • @iseeyou5061
    @iseeyou5061 Před 11 měsíci +13

    Not having endless civil war every goddamn day. Even when Roman become Ottoman tributary they still have the time for civil war(by using Ottoman patron this time to win the civil war)

  • @EasternRomanHistory
    @EasternRomanHistory Před 11 měsíci +34

    I thought that this was a really fantastic video. All to often what-if history stuff is more fantasty than reality and also based on a very poor understanding of either the events or the general circumstances.
    This was really well researched and considered and offered very realistic alternatives.
    I would mention that Constantine XI made a mistep against the Venetians by introducing a wine and hides tax on the Venetians to raise more money. It is believed that Constantine's betrothal to the Venetian Doge was considered but not very far advanced. There is no record of it in any source other than Sphrantzes but the match probably was considered. I believe COnstantine's diplomatic gambit with Mehmed II comes from Doukas 34.2, though not an eyewitness source they, he did have access to Turkish sources so it may reflect the official Turkish casus belli for the war. Also Constantine may have gambled that Mehmed would have accepted since he was fighting Karaman at the time. It was ill-timed but I would not discount it not absolve Constantine from making such a mistake. Just some helpful notes.

  • @MausOfTheHouse
    @MausOfTheHouse Před 11 měsíci +37

    Either that or the Empire of Trebizond, technically the last remnant of the Roman Empire, which only fell in 1461 ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +30

      I guess the principality of Theodoro would've been the last if we include Trebizond.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +9

      I got yout Georgian request, btw. I'll keep it in mind and in the notes.

    • @MausOfTheHouse
      @MausOfTheHouse Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@RomabooRamblings 1. Yeah, 2nd last then.
      2. Thank you so much! If you do make the video, I guarantee that you'll get a minimum of 50K views from us alone, as the youth here love their history, especially concerning Rome

    • @hannibalburgers477
      @hannibalburgers477 Před 11 měsíci

      Dude, its like less than 10 years, and both conquered by the same guy. There wasn't much of a challenge and it is not like Mehmet is going to conquer other territories first so historians could pinpoint the specific year.

    • @kenos911
      @kenos911 Před 11 měsíci +2

      If you include some random Ionian islands it lasted until almost 1500

  • @51923ra
    @51923ra Před 4 měsíci +3

    Why does nobody ever talk about how Byzantium was doing well both economically and militarily, including retaking swathes of Anatolia from the Seljuks, until the 4th crusade in 1204 and never recovered from the Crusaders' sacking

  • @magdalenusrex346
    @magdalenusrex346 Před 11 měsíci +11

    A realistic divergent point could be either John Komnenos not dying in a hunting accident and/or Manuel Komnenos' child dying in childbirth meaning he has to keep Bela as his heir. I am still not too well versed in the 12th century but I'd imagine this allows more victories and Emperor Bela as Alexios II would be more beneficial than the timeline we live in.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před 11 měsíci

      No, the Roman leader will kill him because the Romans do not change

  • @bigalmou2261
    @bigalmou2261 Před 11 měsíci +11

    So let me get this straight... Right now, we are subscribed to Romaboo Ramblings. In a few years, the Sack of CZcams will result in rebranding and it'll be Eastern Romaboo Ramblings. Some people won't like the new content and say it's actually Byzaboo Ramblings, while saying another channel called Holy Romaboo Ramblings is the better one.
    Sounds right to me.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +7

      The Third Romaboo Ramblings channel might have a similar accent

  • @thenamesianna
    @thenamesianna Před 11 měsíci +8

    29:14 My man striaght up using Saul Goodman metaphors lmao.

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +6

      I'm just full of colorful metaphors and brimming with advice

  • @Pan_Z
    @Pan_Z Před 11 měsíci +6

    Must say, you have a talent for analysing a situation, planning how to create advantages & mitigate disadvantages, and making realistic conclusions. Grateful you're on CZcams.

  • @Predator20357
    @Predator20357 Před 10 měsíci +5

    I’m still impressed that the Romans and their continuations essentially took what would shatter most nations and survive this long and it was due to a relentless Mehmed II who had the skill and power to actually take out Constantinople which can be seen as the final nail for the Byzantines being able to bounce back.

  • @connorgolden4
    @connorgolden4 Před 11 měsíci +16

    Manzikert wasn’t the deathnail imo. It was the sack of 1204. Or even Michael VIII’s issues. They could’ve reconquered Anatolia imo, maybe not with ease but it was more than doable if just a few things were different.

    • @reubenmatthews5615
      @reubenmatthews5615 Před 11 měsíci +4

      If it wasn't for the Fourth Crusade I could honestly see Rome surviving roughly in the borders of modern Greece, as well as western Anatolia.

    • @RYwoodview
      @RYwoodview Před 4 měsíci +1

      I've always felt that the Battle of Yarmouk was actually the turning point in Byzantine history. Had they won, that might have terminated the Islamic invasions entirely as the entire strength of the Muslim armies was there. With that loss, and the increasing fervor of the Muslim fighters, further encroachment became inevitable. Also, had the West and Byzantium been able to bury the hatchets regarding Catholic vs Orthodox, a united Christendom would have been impossible to penetrate.

  • @thomasmckeane4799
    @thomasmckeane4799 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I usually enjoy your videos but this was an incredible dissection of the time and decisions, fantastic work

  • @user-rb3mo4uk3u
    @user-rb3mo4uk3u Před 11 měsíci +10

    George Sphranzes mentions several illness outbreaks in the Ottoman camp a week before the City fell. Alongside with reinforcements from Hungary and Venice, as you are already suggesting, Mehmet's armies could face total obliteration on the field, possibly even the Sultan's death.

  • @LordAnestis
    @LordAnestis Před 11 měsíci +27

    Παλαιολόγος, what a badass Emperor he was, fought until the end and never surrendered.
    Even today a few people like me for example say that our Emperor never surrendered nor made a treaty
    and don't care what the rest of the world says and thinks but we will take Constantinople back, and not only Constantinople.

    • @dannyvader007
      @dannyvader007 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Constantinople is truly Roman and also Anatolia and Armenia. Konstantinos died for Constantinople. It's sad and frustrating to forget of the great Roman city. We can't just forget about it.
      It seems like the world just wants to forget about it, but I still don't as it is a huge insult to see Turkish names on Roman soil. Only someone brave and great will restore the Roman state.

    • @LordAnestis
      @LordAnestis Před 11 měsíci

      @@dannyvader007 Even those turkish names are made from Greek names, this is how pathetic the turks are, try and find a single city the turks build, there is none.
      It’s all interest my friend the West supports turkey out of interest, they turn a blind eye on all the crimes turkey committed all the genocides they killed millions of people, but wait and see, once they stop supporting them it will be turkeys end.
      And this end will come soon have patience and you will see!

    • @the90thhunter92
      @the90thhunter92 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Not surprised that the video of Balkans history attracts some Balkan nationalists... Next thing you know, Austria is rightful German clay, Akhand Bharat should be a thing, and Ukraine is historic Russian land.

    • @exspresstelekom6699
      @exspresstelekom6699 Před 10 měsíci +6

      ​@@the90thhunter92 Its funny to see that some nationalist kids cannot accept the past.They are trying to live in their delusional dreams 😂😂

    • @the90thhunter92
      @the90thhunter92 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@exspresstelekom6699 this comment section is a shithole and is precisely the reason why people make fun of Byzaboos.

  • @haroldhavel9957
    @haroldhavel9957 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Another splendid and captivating video, well done!

  • @kalixkatt
    @kalixkatt Před 11 měsíci

    I Learned so much new information about these years from your video!

  • @nebeskisrb7765
    @nebeskisrb7765 Před 11 měsíci +59

    It's difficult to avoid the "ERE's history is one long decline" narrative when it's territory peaked with Justinian in the sixth century and for the next 900 years it just kept losing ground.

    • @johnconnor8206
      @johnconnor8206 Před 11 měsíci +43

      Theirs the Makedon dynasty and basil the second who greatly expanded the empires borders theirs the komenoi restoration which went from a few costal ports in Anatolia to controlling half of Anatolia in only a few decades. The Byzantine empire in the stock markets would be like a bunch of rises and falls but most rises of the stock price are 1 cent below the previous on average.

    • @monetizedyay6827
      @monetizedyay6827 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@johnconnor8206 Laskarid dynasty too

    • @monetizedyay6827
      @monetizedyay6827 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Even with it shrinking territorially from period to period, there's also the fact that it increasingly consolidated itself in terms of government and grew more economically powerful in the long run. I think I remember reading that the Komnenian period may have been the wealthiest Rome had been since the Heraclians.

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@monetizedyay6827
      This is wrong, it was Basil II who was the wealthiest Roman Emperor since the Heraclians.

    • @LordVader1094
      @LordVader1094 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Colours on a map does not determine an Empire's power.

  • @ljuma0124
    @ljuma0124 Před měsícem

    Watching this if i end up traveling back in time. Very Helpful 👍

  • @user-vl5zy1wi6r
    @user-vl5zy1wi6r Před 6 měsíci

    Very solid video, thnx for huge work and wish you great luck in the future

  • @kingmike1702
    @kingmike1702 Před 11 měsíci +15

    A follow up strategy to your strategy could have been to send the Turkish Pretender after Mehmed’s death (if he died in the siege) in exchange for Gallipoli.
    Or to send the pretender to cause instability, and invade Gallipoli with the combined force from Morea and Constantinople, under the Emperor’s leadership.
    Thus, the reclamation of Thessaly (as you claim in your strategy) the reclamation of Thrace (the areas surrounding Gallipoli) could have given the Romans even more decades to live for.
    They could then have made ottoman invasions of the balkans more difficult or time consuming( they would have to either cross through the Romans or land somewhere else).
    I believe that the concessions to Hungary could also be reclaimed when/if Hungary goes into instability or when their monarch dies.

  • @bobmcbob9856
    @bobmcbob9856 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I like this kind of grounded and detailed alternate history. Not as bombastic as some bigger points of divergence but still cool

  • @ATTLASXD
    @ATTLASXD Před 6 měsíci +2

    Hey man honestly I love if you did more videos like this one it definitely was a thought provoker and honestly a great video.🎉🎉🎉

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 6 měsíci +1

      I was thinking about this kinda vids lately, but it may take some time to make another one. I want to up the production quality a bit and move from using paradox games map to a more professional looking setup in Adobe After Effects. So it takes more time for me to learn this stuff and draw better looking maps.

    • @ATTLASXD
      @ATTLASXD Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@RomabooRamblings no problem that's awesome that you want to give us fans the best quality possible we really appreciate that and I don't mind the wait because I know you always give us awesome stuff and thanks for replying to me:)

  • @afonsodealbuquerque1879
    @afonsodealbuquerque1879 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great video idea, would enjoy more

  • @MTMMoonlight
    @MTMMoonlight Před 11 měsíci +3

    Fantastic video idea

  • @1992zorro
    @1992zorro Před 11 měsíci +7

    Thank you ! Just seeing and thinking how we could have won makes me happy as grown man.

  • @q.q.p.p
    @q.q.p.p Před 11 měsíci

    cool channel, very interesting and profound vids on subjects I haven't seen in such detail from the other creators in this genre.

  • @Kardia_of_Rhodes
    @Kardia_of_Rhodes Před 7 měsíci +2

    Demetrios is the kind of guy to fight for his principles in the abstract but in reality just rolls with whatever is most convenient at the time.

  • @dld6959
    @dld6959 Před 11 měsíci +6

    I don't think East Rome was doomed up until 1454, because of the revolt in the Morea. If the despotate had been ruled well it could have continued on and eventually recover.

  • @platinumgamer2150
    @platinumgamer2150 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Great video, learnt a lot of new things. Keep up the great work!

  • @Jesse_Dawg
    @Jesse_Dawg Před 11 měsíci +1

    Amazing video! Please more like this

  • @kafon6368
    @kafon6368 Před 11 měsíci

    Great video as always.

  • @AlphaOmegaByzantium
    @AlphaOmegaByzantium Před 11 měsíci +4

    Totally appreciate your video. Congratulations! I feel the Venetians would be very accommodating to the marriage. The only question to that from my understanding is the out of favor perception of Genoa. What would have your scenario caused to Genoa and its man Giovanni Giustiniani Longo to do with Venice being more strategic partners? I am reading a detailed history entitled "Venice, A Maritime Republic" by Frederic Chapin Lane which dives into details of Venice's foundational relationship with New Rome and its capitalization of marine based trade. I hope you pick up more on the dynamics of Venice-Genoa to Byzantium. By the way Venice has much of a Byzantine feel to itself even til this day. So your insight is quite appropriate.

  • @spaceracer6861
    @spaceracer6861 Před 11 měsíci +19

    Σε ευχαριστούμε αξιότιμε βάρβαρε. Οι βοήθειές σου θα ανταμειφθούν όπως αξίζει σε έναν πιστόν σαν εσένα.

    • @pc_suffering6941
      @pc_suffering6941 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Just wondering - are orthodox foreigners less barbarians than others?

    • @demetriusstiakkogiannakes1326
      @demetriusstiakkogiannakes1326 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Ωχ Χριστέ μου! 😂

    • @clonecommanderrex8542
      @clonecommanderrex8542 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@pc_suffering6941 Barbarian was originally used by ancient Greeks to describe non-Greek speakers

    • @pc_suffering6941
      @pc_suffering6941 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@clonecommanderrex8542 but Latin Romans also used it ?

    • @warthoggoulags1679
      @warthoggoulags1679 Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@pc_suffering6941 for roman it's people who do not speak latin

  • @JeremyBruder-rt6tr
    @JeremyBruder-rt6tr Před 11 měsíci

    High-quality history. Great work-

  • @herkus8044
    @herkus8044 Před 11 měsíci +1

    What an amazing video!

  • @marvelfannumber1
    @marvelfannumber1 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Really cool take on alternate history here. Appreciate the small scale and the attention to factual analysis here as opposed to the "Constantine XI reconquers Britain and colonizes the moon" wankery.
    Wouldn't mind seeing more of these occasionally. Would be cool to devise a similar strategy for the Romans to beat the Arabs during the 7th Century for instance. Even more ballsy if you're able to come up with one after Yarmouk.

  • @YD39222
    @YD39222 Před 11 měsíci

    This is a video we all didn't ask for but all needed

  • @Viktorvelat95
    @Viktorvelat95 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Brilliant EU4 references! Subscribed! Btw, Demetrios Palailogos sounds totally like Loki, a treacherous slimy brother of Konstantinos who would be the Thor, except all of them defeated by the Ottoman Thanos Mehmed II.

  • @dominickwong3002
    @dominickwong3002 Před 11 měsíci +4

    After you mentioned upgrading the theodosean walls i couldn't help but imagine it being converted to a zigzag star fort wall 😂

  • @AlexS-oj8qf
    @AlexS-oj8qf Před 11 měsíci +4

    I notice that Byzantines Emperor don’t like killing their relatives, they blind them or castrate them, but rarely kill. I wonder if it’s just their culture against kinslaying or what.

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před 11 měsíci

      Or that the army commander does not turn against the king and kill him

    • @jaif7327
      @jaif7327 Před 11 měsíci +4

      its very bad to spill royal blood

    • @user-cg2tw8pw7j
      @user-cg2tw8pw7j Před 11 měsíci

      @@jaif7327 Or military coups, the Romans are adept at this

    • @AlexS-oj8qf
      @AlexS-oj8qf Před 11 měsíci

      @@jaif7327 I can understand later Byzantine, but Earlier and Middle Byzantine begs a lot of question. Like the Sister Empress from the Makedon dynasty just blinded their opponents or cloistered them instead of outright killing / executing them for treason.

    • @KaiHung-wv3ul
      @KaiHung-wv3ul Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@AlexS-oj8qf Didn't Irene of Athens murder her own son or something. But yeah, they definitely did kinslaying a lot less than the pre-split Romans.

  • @zachariahmccoy
    @zachariahmccoy Před 18 dny

    I agree we only live in this time and right now people say we're failing however I hold optimism and I think things Will be better

  • @jakubhnizdil7800
    @jakubhnizdil7800 Před 8 dny

    great video

  • @wankawanka3053
    @wankawanka3053 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Matzikert wasn't that destructive it was the fourth crusade , something that did end the empire splitting it into 3 pieces all of whom later wasted time and resources fighting each other and the westerners in order to take the city back ,only one of them managed to do so but it never reunited with the other two

  • @compatriot852
    @compatriot852 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Constantinople could have been saved if the battle of Varna wasn't fumbled so hard (He had far more men he could have raised and charging head first didn't help). Vladislovas III' death really complicated things back in Lithuania and Poland as Casimir IV was too busy dealing with both corrupt Polish nobles and crusaders in the north.

  • @percy3993
    @percy3993 Před 11 měsíci

    One of the best what if’s I ever saw

  • @jkgzjhp1705
    @jkgzjhp1705 Před 11 měsíci +1

    2:16 well that all my posible strategic contribucions dealth whit

  • @diamondinthesky4771
    @diamondinthesky4771 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Plebian Majority - "The empire couldn't have possibly won in 1453."
    The Chad Patrician Romaboo Ramblings - "Wrong" *sips wine* "Now allow me to elaborate while you hold this for me"

  • @MausOfTheHouse
    @MausOfTheHouse Před 11 měsíci +6

    Can you make a video about the Theme of Iberia or Lazica? You have at least 3 Georgian viewers here :D

  • @MahsaKaerra
    @MahsaKaerra Před 6 měsíci +2

    I can just imagine how much history would be different if Constantinople had survived as a city state, nominally independent but in reality it'd be little more than a token to be traded between whichever countries would be vying for recognition as the regional hegemon. A vassal to whoever is in the dominant position at any given time, the city might endeavour to leverage their history and prestige to become an object over which other nations make war, but not one against which the wars themselves are fought.

  • @cengizsogutlu
    @cengizsogutlu Před 10 měsíci +1

    nice video greetings from turkey

  • @tarn1135
    @tarn1135 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Imo, Venice is more to blame for fall then any other nation state (outside of the ottomans). The single person most responsible in this time period was orban and the fact that he wasn’t executed before he left for the Ottoman Empire.

    • @paulmayson3129
      @paulmayson3129 Před 11 měsíci

      The Romans were too good Christians for their own good. They should have killed Orban, or at least forced him to work for them in pain of death or torture.

    • @seto_kaiba_
      @seto_kaiba_ Před 11 měsíci

      Executing businessmen that come to your lands to offer you a deal cause you can't pay is not a good way to foster trust in diplomacy with anyone really. Who is gonna come to the Eastern Roman court to offer them an alliance if the Emperor can demand you accept his terms or die on the spot.

    • @johnisaacfelipe6357
      @johnisaacfelipe6357 Před 11 měsíci

      @@seto_kaiba_ they don't need to know.

  • @Onezy05
    @Onezy05 Před 11 měsíci +5

    This is a really interesting premise. Would you be interested in exploring other divergent points in Roman history and how they would have been avoided?

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +5

      If I can isolate a reasonable timespan, like with this one

    • @Onezy05
      @Onezy05 Před 11 měsíci

      @@RomabooRamblings Aye, makes sense

    • @MrAaaaazzzzz00009999
      @MrAaaaazzzzz00009999 Před 10 měsíci

      @@RomabooRamblings maybe something interesting could be how rome could've prevented itself from becoming an empire or continued to stay as a republic.

  • @aiden6667
    @aiden6667 Před 6 měsíci +1

    1. Buid boats and conquer epirus,but keep them as a vassal for the boats
    2. Ally Albania for their general and the knights of Rhodes for their boats
    3. Take loans and buy mercenaries
    4. Occupy ottoman land in the balkans and wait for ticking war score to go up

  • @Nemenon
    @Nemenon Před 11 měsíci

    This is a really good video, but now I'm curious since you used so much footage; what are your thoughts on Rise of Empires?

    • @RomabooRamblings
      @RomabooRamblings  Před 11 měsíci +6

      Never watched it start to finish, btw :D
      I think it is OK, pretty decent as far as docudramas go. All the actors do a good job, except the child actor for Mehmed. They overrely on some "folk legends", e.g. Notaras is super slimy and Guistiniani is super loyal, but that par for the course in a dramatic production.

  • @TheCoolTank
    @TheCoolTank Před 11 měsíci +4

    You should make a video titled "How To Save Constantinople in 2023". Same video, just a slightly different date.

    • @danshakuimo
      @danshakuimo Před 5 měsíci

      Step 1: Get a TON of money
      Step 2: Buy it from Turkey

  • @alejandrocrespo7633
    @alejandrocrespo7633 Před 11 měsíci +5

    If it DOESN'T end with Trajan's borders and with the roman colonization od Mars, then it's not a very realistic timeline imo

  • @bj.bruner
    @bj.bruner Před 11 měsíci +2

    I wish I had the attention span and executive function to study all this history in depth on my own 😢 guess I'll wait until I go back to school

  • @roelantverhoeven371
    @roelantverhoeven371 Před 6 měsíci

    the two guns on the left were made both in the low countries, Mons Meg was the small sister of Dulle griet, coincidentally both named after the girl's name "Margarete"

  • @chazzeo
    @chazzeo Před 11 měsíci +3

    (Me, charging up fuel cells for time machine)
    **furiously scribbling notes**

  • @steffanyschwartz7801
    @steffanyschwartz7801 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Another way would be for the 4th crusade to not happen (and the Komnenoi decline) as that would prevent the weakening of Anatolia. Thus Sinope, Antalaya, Caria and Bulgaria wouldn’t fall. Thrace wouldn’t be annihilated by Kalyon, and Serbia wouldn’t rise. Or another one is the Palialagos take Orhan and Osman seriously. Thus not allowing Inegol and other key forts not to fall.

  • @yanalbertoagudelo9687
    @yanalbertoagudelo9687 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Awww, 😢 I was getting into that aftermath until you said probably not.

  • @stepanpytlik4021
    @stepanpytlik4021 Před 11 měsíci

    This one was very good.

  • @MrHazz111
    @MrHazz111 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Easy, get rid of Justinian's Plague.

  • @geoDB.
    @geoDB. Před 11 měsíci +3

    "Just play safe we scale" -Constantine the 11th

  • @ekulzonum
    @ekulzonum Před 11 měsíci

    Please do more vids like this

  • @tacoblude8208
    @tacoblude8208 Před 11 měsíci +15

    Thanks. If I ever wake up and I’m in 1453, the Emperor of Rome and the ottomans are at the gates I will use this guide.

    • @brago_
      @brago_ Před 11 měsíci +5

      I was there yesterday. Pretty cool.

    • @danshakuimo
      @danshakuimo Před 5 měsíci

      I think this guide might not be to useful since a lot of it had to be done before that, 1453 is super last minute (or year actually)

  • @tscchope
    @tscchope Před 11 měsíci +4

    Ah yes, we start on 11 november 1444, because we're going to play europa universalis IV as Byzantium... easy peesy. On a more serious note, keep Theodore as Despot of Morea and conquer Epirus and Cephalonia. Don't let Helena marry the KIng of Cyprus. He's not going to help. When the Crusade started, Murad would probably have given up Athens to keep Byzantium out of the war. A better match for Helena would have been Giustiniani. Should have let the Peace of Szeged stand. With the prospect of genoa getting the Morea, Konstantinos should have been able to get the northern Aegean islands of his wife's dowry without having to fight for them with his wife dying. Venice would have then had to negotiate to prevent Giustiniani succeeding to Morea by giving up its Morean territories, Euboea and the Duchy of Naxos and marrying the Doge's daughter to Thomas. The Genoese response would have been to station a strong fleet at Chios.
    As per your strategy Andronikos if still alive, and Demetrios would have been executed. The Knights Hospitallers would then be invited to establish chapter houses (strong fortifications) on the Balkan frontier with the ottomans. The Genoese would not have wanted Thomas to take over Morea. On Theodoros II's death, Konstantinos would have become ruler of Morea. Since 1444, he and Giustiniani would have built and trained the largest army and navy Morea could afford.
    On Ioannes' death, Konstantinos would become Autokrator, unifying the Roman Remnant. He'd appoint Thomas as Governor of Morea. There'd be the smooth accession of 2nd in commands in Morea as the commanders move to the City to train forces there. The accession of the new Autokrator would make for interesting times. Will he support the Union or be anti-union? The Venetians and Genoese in the City could be 'compromised' out, with the Venetian ships handed over to the Byzantine fleet based at the City.
    Konstantinos has an Ottoman Pretender. That shapes an Anatolian strategy to place him as Sultan of a much reduced western Ottoman sultanate with all the Anatolian beyliks released and gain an alliance of the Turkic states to do that.
    Konstantinos could ally with Serbia, Trebizond and Georgia. That should appease the Orthodox faction. He could seek out Bulgarians who would rise in revolt
    His third string is to keep the Union and parlay doing that into money and troops - 5000 Genoese crossbowmen and a 5000 strong Venetian mercenary company. There would be a plan to fill out a Byzantine army that would duplicate both formations.
    On the death of Murad, the Pretender is proclaimed Sultan and this time there would be no pre-emptive ottoman strike on Karaman. The Hospitallers, Venetian and Genoese fleets would close the strait. To protect trade, of course. Since Mehmed established his castle on Byzantine territory that would trigger the Crusade. That should finish off Ottoman Europe.

  • @Pan_Z
    @Pan_Z Před 11 měsíci +1

    Stage 6: Preventive Theory crafting

  • @andriilobanov7369
    @andriilobanov7369 Před 11 měsíci

    Very nice

  • @MatteoRomanelli-kl9fb
    @MatteoRomanelli-kl9fb Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is a very realistic plan. Well done in covering all the political aspects of that time!

  • @lucimicle5657
    @lucimicle5657 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Write that down!

  • @spaghettiking7312
    @spaghettiking7312 Před 11 měsíci +4

    So you're telling me the Greeks had a Ricimer of their own?

  • @NoName-xc6cg
    @NoName-xc6cg Před 5 měsíci +1

    I think "I see satan fall like lightning" is a book that indirectly makes the case that Rome was doomed to fail once Remus killed Romulus

  • @emperoremperor1486
    @emperoremperor1486 Před 11 měsíci +2

    That scenario could end with a 3 Rome in Morea which i think could be very cool even if it would at best become just another Ottoman tax farm.

  • @krushnaji4940
    @krushnaji4940 Před 11 měsíci +4

    How March pain you have caused me posting this video I can't tell you

  • @Eric_Von_Yesselstyn
    @Eric_Von_Yesselstyn Před 11 měsíci +7

    Western Christianity had previous issue with the Eastern form of Christianity and let what happened just happen... Had Europa rose up and sent a large coalition Army, History would have been far different in the Byzantine capital of Constantinople. But this is well known. Most likely the Coalition Army would have defeated the Ottomans and sacked Constantinople.
    So it's unlikely the Byzantines would have retained much power at all.

  • @awakenhistory
    @awakenhistory Před 11 měsíci

    Also the use of more burning earth strategy

  • @JalalGattas92
    @JalalGattas92 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I like the Gandalf quote.

  • @adansilveira2031
    @adansilveira2031 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Girls with a time machine:
    - I'm your granddaughter!
    - Wow cool!
    Boys with a time machine:

  • @nikolaosboukouvalas449
    @nikolaosboukouvalas449 Před 11 měsíci +7

    "The last emperor's conduct during the siege was beyond criticism"
    Morally yes. But before the siege a lot of nobles took their riches and left. Constantine did not stop them or confiscate their riches. Granted this might have cause unwanted chaos and civil strife and pushed some citizens to surrendering to Mehmet.

    • @Argo123_.0
      @Argo123_.0 Před 11 měsíci

      What’s wrong with letting bring their stuff away? They don’t have any moral obligation to give them to the ottomans…

    • @waltonsmith7210
      @waltonsmith7210 Před 11 měsíci

      I would've seized every last luxury good to pay for soldiers.

    • @Th3Kingism
      @Th3Kingism Před 11 měsíci +5

      I mean historically at that point it was just rats fleeing the sinking ship. He stood his ground and likely died fighting the Turks with his men. Overall, I'd contend he died like a true Roman, fighting on his feet even against certain death for God and the Roman Empire.

    • @nikolaosboukouvalas449
      @nikolaosboukouvalas449 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@Argo123_.0 The nobles had an obligation to defend the city like everyone else. Letting them abandon it like that deprived the defenders of extra soldiers (likely well equiped) and funds.

    • @SpartanLeonidas1821
      @SpartanLeonidas1821 Před 8 měsíci

      @@nikolaosboukouvalas449FACTS!!!!