ONLINE ETYMOLOGY
DICTIONARY
- Byzantium
- said to be named for its 7c.
B.C.E. Greek founder, Byzas of Megara.
WIKTIONARY
- (rare) The Byzantine
Empire.
WIKIPEDIA
Byzantium
(bih-ZAN-tee-uhm;
Greek:
Βυζάντιον, Byzántion;
Latin: BYZANTIVM)
was an ancient
Greek city, founded by Greek
colonists from Megara
in 657 BC and named after their king Byzas
(Greek: Βύζας, Býzas, genitive
Βύζαντος, Býzantos). The name Byzantium is a
Latinization
of the original name Byzantion. The city was later renamed
Nova Roma by Constantine
the Great, but popularly called Constantinople
and briefly became the imperial residence of the classical Roman
Empire. Then subsequently the city was, for more than a thousand
years, the capital of the Byzantine
Empire, the Greek-speaking
Roman Empire of late
Antiquity and the Middle
Ages. Constantinople was captured by the Ottoman
Turks, becoming the capital of their empire, in 1453. The name of
the city was officially changed to Istanbul
in 1930 following the establishment of modern Turkey.
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