“Cultural Life in Constantinople during the Siege of 1453”

Anthony Kaldellis (University of Chicago)

This event has passed.

Education L196
@ 6:00 pm

Event flyer for lecture entitled "Cultural Life in Constantinople during the Siege of 1453." The lecture is the Marquee event of the War in Society and Culture Program, co-sponsored by Wisconsin Veterans Museum. The date listed is February 26, 2026 at 6:00pm, and the location is Education L196. The event flyer features two overhead landscape images of 15th century Constantinople and  a portrait of the speaker, smiling at the camera with greenery in the background.War in Society and Culture Program’s Spring 2026 Speaker Series Marquee Lecture

The fall of Constantinople in 1453 marked the end of the Roman (Byzantine)  empire and enabled the Ottomans to become a world power. Most attention  on the siege has focused on its military aspects, including the  deployment of huge cannons against the city’s ancient  walls. But the city’s cultural life during the siege was just as intense, as classical scholars, both Greek and Latin, struggled to make  sense of events, while Catholic and Orthodox theologians debated the  issue of Church Union. In this lecture, professor Kaldellis will present the writers, thinkers, and scribes who were active during the siege and discuss their fates after the city’s fall