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Aftermath of War: A Lesson from History
GlennBeck.Com ^ | March 3, 2003 | Nick Robertson

Posted on 03/03/2003 3:56:31 PM PST by ChemistCat

PORTLAND, Oregon, 3 March 2003 — Suppose Islam lost a great war. What would the consequences be? Some believe it will cause terrorism to erupt, disrupt the globe’s largest reserves of oil — the life-blood of the modern age — and plunge the Arab world into an age of fanaticism and darkness. But as we verge on a controversial war with Iraq, there is a fascinating — and surprising — lesson to be learned from another great battle in history.

On May 28, 1453, two of the greatest armies in the world ended an epic 52-day battle on the border of Europe and Asia. On one side the 100,000-man army of Sultan Mehmed II of the Ottoman Empire and the forces of Islam were attempting to capture one of the world’s greatest cities — Constantinople (now Istanbul). On the other side, behind the supposedly impenetrable walls of the city, were the defensive forces of the west — the 10,000 man force led by Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI.

Dragases. The battle for Constantinople is considered one of the greatest and most important confrontations in history.

Constantinople was one of the most vital possessions of the Christian world. The city was the capital of the East Roman — or Byzantine — Empire ever since the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great selected it as his new capital in 324 AD. Constantinople was the gateway between Europe and Asia, Christianity and Islam.

The city rested by the Bosporus, a watery straight which was the most important artery of international trade. Trade ships from Venice, Genoa, England, France, and much of Europe traveled past Constantinople to the eastern Black Sea ports which connected the European continent to the major trade centers of India and China. The wealth that traveled on this route built the economic power of the Western world — a 15th century version of today’s globalization of trade.

As the battle for Constantinople began, the Ottomans unleashed man’s newest weapon, artillery, to breach the city’s massive walls. Shortly after the shocking breakthrough, the Ottomans accomplished what had been deemed impossible for over a millennium — the fall of Constantinople. There was horror and disbelief as the forces of Islam routed the Western army. Panic swept across Europe. The vital trade routes to the East were now under enemy control, and an alien army with strange beliefs threatened to march through Europe.

Was this the end of the Western world? Quite the opposite. What seemed at the moment a knockout punch to Europe ended up causing great change. It literally forced the discovery of a new world.

Constantinople had been Europe’s center for intellectual studies for centuries. Its leaders promoted and encouraged classical studies and art. Many who lived inside the city’s walls devoted their lives to studying and preserving history’s classical past. When the Ottomans conquered the city, many of these intellectuals fled to Italy. This flight from war was directly responsible for the acceleration of one of the most important periods in Europe’s history, the Renaissance.

Classic ideas, locked inside the walls of Constantinople for centuries, broke free and spread out across Europe. Isolated city-states began to gradually dissolve. For the first time in history, nation states — like Spain and Portugal — emerged. The Renaissance brought Europe into an age of light after an age of darkness.

It also changed the shape of the world.

Since Constantinople’s fall blocked overland trade routes to the spice markets of South and East Asia, the emerging nation states needed new routes to the riches of the East. The Great Age of Exploration began. Brave men such as Christopher Columbus, Vasco da Gama, and Magellan circumnavigated the globe to find new routes across vast, unknown oceans. In the process they discovered the world — and many of its secrets, treasures and mysteries.

Now we face another important battle. Hopefully it can be avoided. But in the long run the result of a victory for the US and its allies may not cause havoc and a new dark age in the Arab world as many fear. As with the battle for Constantinople, it may in fact cause the opposite.

If liberated from their intellectual and physical imprisonment, the Iraqi people may well take full advantage of their new-found freedom. Iraq has the potential to become the center of a Renaissance for the Middle East. With a new regime focused on human rights and freedom, and with the financial security of 100 billion barrels of oil beneath their desert, a new Iraq can lead the Islamic world into an age of cultural and intellectual renewal. From repression can emerge an age of ingenuity and invention worthy of a country that was once the cradle of civilization.

Repression creates anger. Anger with little hope of change creates radicalism. Radicalism can destroy civilizations. The liberation of Iraq could break this dangerous cycle. Like the movement of Constantinople’s intellectuals coming into Italy in 1453, a liberated Iraq’s influence on the people throughout the region could be tremendous.

As with Europe in the 15th century Renaissance, Iraq’s people could begin to focus on the freedom, dignity and worth of the individual, man or woman. These ideals would spread through the Arab world.

The fall of Constantinople triggered some of the greatest changes in human history. Though both sides suffered great human loses, defeat at the hands of the Ottomans ushered in Europe’s great age of reason and the exploration of the world. The same might well occur in the Middle East as a post-Saddam Iraq leads the exploration of a brave new world of human freedom.

Nick Robertson is a 17-year-old junior at Lincoln High School in Portland, Oregon, US. He can be contacted at: Narobertson@aol.com. This article was reprinted with permission.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: constantinople; history; historylist; iraq; war
Glenn Beck has found one heck of an amazing 17 year-old writer here. Isn't this a great article? Tip of the hat to both GB and Nick Robertson!
1 posted on 03/03/2003 3:56:31 PM PST by ChemistCat
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To: ChemistCat
As with Europe in the 15th century Renaissance, Iraq’s people could begin to focus on the freedom, dignity and worth of the individual, man or woman. These ideals would spread through the Arab world.

Only one problem. Freedom, dignity, and the worth of the individual are fundamentally incompatible with Islam. One can always hope, though.

2 posted on 03/03/2003 4:09:09 PM PST by ecomcon
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To: *History_list
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
3 posted on 03/03/2003 4:14:49 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: ecomcon
I lived in Turkey for 2 years, and I don't believe that. I've known many very decent Muslims and I've seen that

But Islamicism has highjacked Islam in many, many places, and the evil of that cannot be wished away. Islam seems to have a special vulnerability to evil--

--but let's not forget that Germany was a Christian nation...and many who had their hands in the Holocaust went to church without feeling the need to pray for forgiveness.
4 posted on 03/03/2003 4:34:22 PM PST by ChemistCat (Zen and the benzene ring)
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To: ChemistCat
Interestingly enough I read this article yesterday on of all places, ArabNews.com! I was very surprised to see it there.
5 posted on 03/03/2003 4:40:54 PM PST by tinamina
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To: ecomcon; ChemistCat
Without becoming over excited about what a relatively democratic regime in Iraq might mean in terms of a safer world, at the very least it would pit Arab state against Arab state in a fierce struggle for power and influence in the middle east, which in turn would sap the energies that would be left over to wage war on the west.
6 posted on 03/03/2003 4:58:19 PM PST by ricpic
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To: ChemistCat
Was this the end of the Western world? Quite the opposite. What seemed at the moment a knockout punch to Europe ended up causing great change. It literally forced the discovery of a new world.

While well-written stylistically, the writer makes precious little connection between his description of the fall of Constantinople, its circumstances and effects, and what is imminent between the US and Iraq.

He doesn't make the case that this will be some watershed moment.

7 posted on 03/03/2003 5:01:43 PM PST by Pahuanui (When a foolish man hears about the Tao, he laughs out loud.)
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To: ChemistCat
Very respectable essay for a high school student, but the Renaissance does not start as a result of the fall of Constantinople in 1453...it had been going strong for some time before that. Petrarch died in 1374 and Boccaccio in 1375.
8 posted on 03/03/2003 5:57:21 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: ChemistCat
"The same might well occur in the Middle East as a post-Saddam Iraq leads the exploration of a brave new world of human freedom."

And descends, again, like Afghanistan and Iraq after the war, into...sharia. Then the reformers will be flayed alive as friends of the infidels, it's the same old story. Constantinople is still falling, it's fooloish to think a philosophy like jihad just vanished hundreds of years ago, kid, you are living it.

9 posted on 03/03/2003 6:17:56 PM PST by Darheel (Visit the strange and wonderful.)
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To: ChemistCat
Clearly, to the extent that Islam dominates a society, to that extent is that society's lack of freedom, dignity, and individual worth. Turkey illustrates the point.
10 posted on 03/04/2003 7:24:12 AM PST by ecomcon
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11 posted on 03/08/2003 2:32:47 PM PST by firewalk
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To: BeforeISleep; ChemistCat; Darheel; ecomcon; Libertarianize the GOP; Pahuanui; ricpic; tinamina; ...
stumbled across this topic, and the two quoted below, quite by accident, please forgive the intrusion:
The Real History of the Crusades ^
      Posted by RebelDawg
On News/Activism ^ 05/29/2002 6:43:31 PM PDT with 46 comments


crisismagazine ^ | April 1, 2002 | Thomas F. Madden
The Real History of the CrusadesBy Thomas F. MaddenWith the possible exception of Umberto Eco, medieval scholars are not used to getting much media attention. We tend to be a quiet lot (except during the annual bacchanalia we call the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, Michigan, of all places), poring over musty chronicles and writing dull yet meticulous studies that few will read. Imagine, then, my surprise when within days of the September 11 attacks, the Middle Ages suddenly became relevant.As a Crusade historian, I found the tranquil solitude of the ivory tower shattered by journalists, editors, and...
     
 
The Crusades in the Checkout Aisle: CRUSADES NONSENSE FROM U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT ^
      Posted by Dr. Brian Kopp
On News/Activism ^ 04/12/2002 9:28:57 PM PDT with 25 comments


CRISIS Magazine - e-Letter ^ | April 12, 2002
The Crusades in the Checkout Aisle Thomas F. Madden When I spied the U.S. News & World Report with the Crusades splashed across its cover, I braced for the worst. As a crusade historian, I long ago learned not to expect accuracy on this subject from the popular media. In fact, I usually avoid newspaper and magazine articles on the Crusades altogether, if only to keep my blood pressure under control. But there it was, staring me in the face. I had to read it. First, the good news. The article, written by Andrew Curry, was not dreadful. Curry did...
     
NOT A PING LIST, merely posted to: BeforeISleep; ChemistCat; Darheel; ecomcon; Libertarianize the GOP; Pahuanui; ricpic; tinamina; Verginius Rufus

12 posted on 07/31/2004 7:46:28 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
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