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Byzantium, the Lost Empire (3/4): Envy of the World - ABTV (1997)

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Uploaded by on May 27, 2011

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byzantine_Empire
With subtitle in Greek: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8660677296696390218#
"Byzantium, the Lost Empire", an Agran Barton TV production for The Learning Channel in association with IBIS Films and Channel Four Television ; series producer, Nicholas Barton ; written by John Romer ; co-writer, Elizabeth Romer ; series director, Derek Towers.
For more than 1,000 years, the Byzantine Empire was the eye of the entire world -- the origin of great literature, fine art and modern government. Heir to Greece and Rome, the Byzantine Empire was also the first Christian empire.
After a year of filming on three continents, TLC unlocks this ancient civilization, spanning 11 centuries and three continents. Pass through the gates of Constantinople, explore the magnificent mosque of Hagia Sophia and see the looted treasures of the empire now located in St. Marks, Venice.
Byzantium, brings to life an empire that, while seemingly distant, is very closely linked to the evolution of Western Civilization. Traces the growth of the first Christian empire, one that lasted for over a thousand years and the maturity and decline of Byzantium through its conquest by the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
John Romer, the author and on-screen guide for the series, breathes life into the city and the powerful ideas that made the Byzantium a thriving cultural and commercial center while western Europe was slogging through the Dark Ages and the Middle Ages.
At its height, Byzantium housed the most precious Christian relics, including a piece of Christ's cross. Located on the border of Europe and Asia, it ruled an empire that extended across Asia Minor and the Balkans. Then, after the rise of Islam, the empire shrank until little was left outside the city walls.
Byzantium turned to Europe for help in fighting the infidels, only to have its own city sacked by the Crusaders whose help it sought. Venice, its erstwhile trading partner, carried off many of its artistic masterpieces. The Hagia Sophia, originally built as a Christian church, became Istanbul's most famous mosque.
And the scholars who had kept alive the study of Greek for more than a millennium fled to Europe where they helped lay the groundwork for the Renaissance. Byzantium, the video, takes us on a visually sumptuous journey to key locations throughout the empire, while putting a human face on the key actors in the history of this unique and vital empire. I never suspected I would find this story as compelling as it turned out to be.
1. Building the dream
2. Heaven on Earth
3. Envy of the world
4. Forever and ever.

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Uploader Comments (AntiDefm)

  • i went inside of hagia sophia since 2nd augest. lol its looks like a mix of mosque and church.

  • @RWJsSon and ... the whole place smells as stink as Turks' feet. What a pity!

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  • @RWJsSon Sad to see so many people don't appreciate the beauty of the Hagia Sophia. If you know a damn thing about either Islamic or Western culture, you would realize that the modern mosque is based upon the Muslim encounter with the Hagia Sophia.

    It inspired the mosque. It also did the same to the West, while they deviated with their own Gothic style, the very interior and layout of Western Churches is fundamentally based upon the inspiration of the Hagia Sophia.

  • ....what a great series.....

  • @ismaelvanwijk Brotherly??? Where you laughing when typing that?

  • @AntiDefm lol

  • The Haghia Sophia is nowadays neither a church or a mosque but a museum reflecting the past of the Haghia Sophia, where Christian images and Muslim caligraphy are seen brotherly next to eachother. A beautifull place.

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