Siege of Constantinople (1394–1402)

Blockade of Constantinople
Part of the Rise of the Ottoman Empire and the Byzantine-Ottoman wars

Constantinople in 1422; the oldest surviving map of the city
Date1394–1402
Location41°0′44.064″N 28°58′33.665″E / 41.01224000°N 28.97601806°E / 41.01224000; 28.97601806
Result

Inconclusive

• Bayezid retreated after hearing that Timur had invaded Anatolia.
Belligerents
 Byzantine Empire
Crusade of Nicopolis
 Kingdom of France
Ottoman Sultanate
Commanders and leaders
Byzantine Empire Manuel II Palaiologos
Byzantine Empire John VII Palaiologos
Kingdom of France Marshal de Boucicaut
Bayezid I
Siege of Constantinople (1394–1402) is located in Mediterranean
Siege of Constantinople (1394–1402)
Location within Mediterranean

The siege of Constantinople in 1394–1402 was a long blockade of the capital of the Byzantine Empire by the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I. Already in 1391, the rapid Ottoman conquests in the Balkans had cut off the city from its hinterland. After constructing the fortress of Anadoluhisarı to control the Bosporus strait, Bayezid tried to starve the city into submission by blockading it both by land and, less effectively, by sea.

The Crusade of Nicopolis was launched to relieve the city, but it was decisively defeated by the Ottomans. In 1399, a French expeditionary force under Marshal de Boucicaut arrived, but was unable to achieve much. The situation became so dire that in December 1399 the Byzantine emperor, Manuel II Palaiologos, left the city to tour the courts of Western Europe in a desperate attempt to secure military aid. The emperor was welcomed with honours, but secured no definite pledges of support. The city was relieved when Bayezid had to confront the invasion of Timur in 1402. Bayezid's defeat in the Battle of Ankara in 1402 and the subsequent Ottoman civil war enabled the Byzantines to regain some lost territories in the Treaty of Gallipoli.


This page was last updated at 2023-11-28 03:36 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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