Talk:Byzantine Empire
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[edit]- In the heyday of the Byzantine Empire its rulers tried to manage affairs from Constantinople, either bringing foreign rulers to their court or conducting negotiations by letters and by envoys who acted as the self-styled “voice of kings.” In 1096 and 1097 the emperor Alexis Comnenos made a point of meeting the leaders of the First Crusade in his own palace, as did Manuel Comnenos when the Second Crusade arrived in 1147. But when Byzantium spiralled into decline in the fourteenth century, its emperors became as mobile as those of the late Roman Empire, and much less potent. Emperor Manuel II was reduced to touring the courts of Italy, France, Germany and England for help against the Ottoman Turks, handing out precious books and pieces of the supposed tunic of Christ as inducements. This was the diplomacy of desperation: Byzantium fell to the Turks in 1453, less than thirty years after Manuel’s death.
- David Reynolds, Summits: Six Meetings that Changed the Twentieth Century (2007), p. 13
- It was the Byzantine Empire, which was to realize Alexander's idea - Macedonian Panhellenism -in face of an Asia in revolt, and realize it for the Greeks.
- René Grousset, A. Patterson, "The Sum of History", p. 159.
- Tell the your emperor; Where my power has reached, Emperor's dreams can not reach!
- Mehmed II, ( While Constantinople was besieged, Mehmed's response to the Byzantine ambassador ) Conquest and Doomsday -- better source needed
- The Christians were probably better off as dhimmis under Muslim-Arab rulers than they had been under the Byzantine Greeks.
- William Montgomery Watt, Islamic Political Thought: The Basic Concepts, p. 51.