_dosyalar/Mininice.jpg)
Nicaea, today Iznik, is located on the shore of a lake close to the
Asian coast of the Marmara Sea, in the historical region called Bithynia.
The area around Nicaea was, and still is, very favoured from an
agricultural viewpoint. Unlike many other historical towns of Turkey and
in particular nearby Bursa, Iznik has not seen a large increase in
population and it is still enclosed within its ancient walls.
Southern Gate The
shape of Nicaea is a clear indication of the Roman influence. Two streets
cross the town and meet at a right angle. They are north/south and
east/west oriented and end with a monumental gate. Although Nicaea had
been inhabited since the most ancient time, an earthquake destroyed it in
123 A.D. and the town was redesigned and rebuilt under the emperor
Hadrian. Most likely the town was rebuilt without walls, because the
borders of the Roman Empire were far away and no one thought an enemy
could threaten Nicaea. In 267 however the Herules sacked Athens and the
Roman emperors realized that the legions on the Danubian border were no
longer able to resist the pressure of the Germanic tribes, pushed
westwards and southwards by the Huns. The emperor Claudius II (268-70)
fortified Nicaea by building walls having a length of five miles. The
gates incorporated pre-existing triumphal arches. The western gate is
lost.
Northern Gate The
Roman walls were damaged by earthquakes in the VIth century and parts of
them were rebuilt by the emperor Justinian and they were strengthened in
the next century when the Arabs threatened Nicaea (and Constantinople).
The walls were fortified by more than a hundred towers. The Byzantines
were able to resist the Arabs mainly because of the invention of the
Greek fire a mixture of sulphur, tow, resinous timber and other
easily inflammable substances. These Byzantine flame-throwers had the
shape of dragons to additionally frighten the enemy. Mainly used for
igniting ships, they proved very useful in igniting the movable towers and
the other engines used by the assailants during the siege of a town.
Eastern Gate and an arch of the
aqueduct The ruins of the aqueduct which supplied Nicaea
with water are visible immediately outside the eastern gate. Openings in
the walls, next to the gates, provide access to the town to cars and
lorries. The ancient gates are reserved for pedestrians or local
traffic.
Roman and Byzantine
walls In 1203 the Venetians profited by a dynastic quarrel
in Constantinople to route there the Fourth Crusade. The crusaders
occupied Galata and
the Venetian fleet went on parade before the maritime walls of
Constantinople. The emperor Alexius III fled to Walachia and the previous
Emperor Isaac, with his son Alexius IV, who had asked for help, was again
put on the Byzantine throne. But the party hostile to the Latins resented
the concessions that the new emperors had to make to those who had helped
them. Their leader strangled Alexius IV and appointed himself emperor
(Alexius V). He then offered the crusaders an enormous amount of gold to
convince them to leave, but the Venetians in turn convinced the crusaders
to put an end to the unreliability of the Byzantine rulers. On April 12,
1204 the crusaders occupied Constantinople and declared Baudouin of
Flanders Latin Emperor of Constantinople. The most important Byzantine
families had large possessions in the provinces and after the fall of
Constantinople they fled there: the Comnens, with the help of the
Georgians, founded the Empire of
Trebizond on the eastern Black Sea coast, the Angeloi managed to
retain most of Epirus, the Lascaris founded in Nicaea an empire which
claimed to be the legitimate heir of the Byzantine Empire. The first
emperor of Nicaea, Theodor I, decided to strengthen its capital by
building an external wall, at a distance of 20-30 feet from the existing
one. In Nicaea it is possible to easily compare the different techniques
used by the Romans and the Byzantines.
A stretch of the walls freed from
obstructions The Nicaean emperors made an attempt in 1236
(with the help of the Bulgarians) to seize Constantinople, but they had to
give up. They were however able to enlarge their possessions and later on
to acquire Epirus and through marriages to gain the support of some
European rulers. In 1261 some Latin prisoners leaked to the Byzantines
of Nicaea that the Latin Emperor with most of his army was away from
Constantinople. The prisoners were freed and sent back to Constantinople,
but they had been bribed so that once in Constantinople they would open
its gates to a small army sent by the Emperor of Nicaea, Michael VIII. On
July 27, 1261 Constantinople fell again and the Byzantine Empire was
restored. It was however a very different empire, with an oversized
capital. It was more similar to Genoa and Venice. It had a sizeable fleet
and trade was its main resource. The troops were almost totally
mercenaries. What was typical of the ancient empire was the ability to
play one against the other the powers which threatened the
Byzantines.
A detail of the Roman
Theatre The Romans built a theatre in Nicaea. Because the
land is flat, they did not have the flank of a hill to help them, so the
whole building was sustained by powerful arches. Over the centuries it was
used for different purposes and the steps where the spectators sat, were
badly damaged. Excavations found parts of the proscenium in pretty good
state.
Haghia Sophia Nicaea
played a great role in the history of Christianity when in 325 and in 787
it hosted two of the seven ecumenical councils recognized by all churches.
Both councils dealt with the conflict between the western and the eastern
part of the Mediterranean Sea and both councils failed to reach an
agreement accepted by all. In 325 Christians living in the east (Syria,
Egypt) leaned towards a Christianity influenced by other monotheistic
religions prevailing in that area (Mithraism, Zoroastrism), while
Christians living in the west, including Greece, preferred interpretations
which had more points of contacts with the pagan religions which had a
plurality of gods. The council condemned the doctrine of Arius of
Alexandria who denied full divinity of Christ, but his followers, who
included also some of the barbarian tribes at the borders of the empire,
did not accept this decision and Christianity, which had just been
recognized as a legitimate religion in 313, knew its first dramatic
split. The second council was held in 797 in the church of Haghia
Sophia at the center of Nicaea. The contrast dealt with the
appropriateness of use of images in religious worship. The Byzantine
Empire was split between iconoclasts (breaker of images) and their
opponents. The emperor Constantine VI favoured the worship of images, but
was confronted with the fact that the iconoclasts prevailed in
Constantinople; he then decided to hold the council in Nicaea where the
iconoclasts could not influence the bishops and he could exert his own
direct influence. Again it was a contrast between the east (influenced by
the Muslim ban on images) and the west, where the worship of saints (and
of their images) was largely spread. Notwithstanding the name of the
church (Sophia=wisdom), the contrasts were not solved and reciprocal
accusations of being pagan or Muslim increased them. Constantine VI
piloted the council to its desired conclusion, which allowed use of images
for worship purposes, but the fight between the two parties went on with
the usual toll of atrocities which mark religion wars. The matter surfaced
again in Europe in the XVIth century and it is still debated.
The blue
minaret About 1300 the Byzantines of Bithynia made their
first acquaintance with the Ottomans, a Turkoman tribe, led by Osman I
(hence the name of Ottoman). The Ottomans were vassals of the Seljuk emir
of Kastamonu and they had been settled by the latter near the border with
the Byzantine empire so that their raids in search of booty would not
affect his possessions. Osman gained control of the passes leading from
the central Anatolian plateau to the plains of Bithynia. Cavalry was the
strength of the Ottomans. They were known for their skills with bows and
spikes. The Byzantines most likely underestimated their potential and did
not react properly when the Ottomans occupied the town of Yenisehir
between Nicaea and Bursa, where they established their capital and began a
more settled existence. The Ottomans then moved towards the Marmara Sea
and they severed land communications between Constantinople and Bithynia.
Again, because the Byzantine had easy access to Bithynia by sea and the
Ottomans had no fleet, the "fait accompli" was tolerated. In 1321 however
Osman attacked the port of Mudanya and the last connection between
Bithynia and Constantinople was broken. Bursa fell to the Ottomans in
1326, Nicaea followed, without resistance, in 1331. The Ottomans set their
capital in Bursa which was embellished with several mosques and other
buildings. Nicaea became a quiet provincial town until 1514, when Selim I,
the Cruel, brought there from Tabriz, in Azerbajgan, a group of artisans
skilled in the manufacturing of ceramics. For more than two hundred years
Iznic (Nicaea) had a great reputation for its blue-greenish
ceramics. In my attempt to take a close picture of the ceramics of a
fine minaret of Iznic, I came across a nest of storks. In Turkey storks
have a definite liking for ancient monuments. I found them on the top of
Roman columns in Ankara and
in Silifke.
_dosyalar/Linetaj.jpg)
SEE THESE OTHER
EXHIBITIONS (for a full list see my detailed
index).
_dosyalar/Ministan.jpg) _dosyalar/Minivene.jpg) _dosyalar/Minianti.jpg)
See my Home Page on
Baroque Rome or my Home Page on Rome in the
footsteps of an XVIIIth century
traveller.
|