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  1. Mar 9, 2020 · The 'New Rome' (Nova Roma) was built over six years and inaugurated on May 11, 330, and new coins were struck by Constantine I to commemorate the founding of Constantinople. In many ways, the new city was an almost exact copy of the old and famous eternal city of Rome. Like Rome on the Tiber River, it was also located on seven hills and divided ...

  2. Dec 6, 2021 · Then there was Jerusalem, too, a medium-sized Roman colony since the reign of Hadrian (r. 117-138 CE), then the third focus of Constantinian building after Rome and Constantinople. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, incorporating another great basilica, was constructed in the last years of Constantine's reign.

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  4. The late antique urban histories of Constantinople and Rome are normally, and quite reasonably, viewed separately from each other; but there is a case for comparing them directly, since Constantinople was increasingly described as a “new” or “second” Rome, and provided with facilities and an administration to match and rival those of the old capital.

    • Geography
    • History of Constantinople
    • Natural and Man-Made Fortifications

    Constantinople is located on the Bosporus River, meaning that it lies on the boundary between Asia and Europe. Surrounded by water, it was easily accessible to other parts of the Roman Empire via the Mediterranean, Black Sea, Danube River, and Dnieper River. Constantinople was also accessible via land routes to Turkestan, India, Antioch, the Silk R...

    Emperor Diocletian ruled the Roman Empire from 284 to 305 CE. He chose to split the huge empire into n eastern and western parts, with a ruler for each portion of the empire. Diocletian ruled the east, while Constantinerose to power in the west. In 312 CE, Constantine challenged the rule of the eastern empire, and, upon winning the Battle of Milvia...

    Constantine, the early fourth-century emperor known for encouraging Christianity in the Roman Empire, enlarged the earlier city of Byzantium, in CE 328. He put up a defensive wall (1-1/2 miles east of where the Theodosian walls would be), along the westward limits of the city. The other side of the city had natural defenses. Constantine then inaugu...

  5. Dec 6, 2023 · Between 324–330 C.E., Constantine built a new Roman capital at the ancient city of Byzantium on the Bosporus strait, which was renamed “New Rome” and “Constantinople,” and is today known as Istanbul. Constantinople now became the center of the Roman Empire.

    • Why is Rome called the 'New Rome of Constantinople'?1
    • Why is Rome called the 'New Rome of Constantinople'?2
    • Why is Rome called the 'New Rome of Constantinople'?3
    • Why is Rome called the 'New Rome of Constantinople'?4
  6. 1 Mango, 1980: 1: ‘The Byzantine Empire, as defined by the majority of historians, is said to have come into being when the city of Constantinople, the New Rome, was founded in 324 AD …. As for the epithet ‘Byzantine,’ serious objections could be and have often been raised concerning its appropriateness.

  7. Constantinople: The “New Rome”? Though not initially intended to replace Rome, Constantinople (“city of Constantine”) was formally dedicated as a city in 330 CE, and the emperor Constantine was celebrated with various monuments. On the day of the dedication, Constantine erected a porphyry column with a statue of himself as Apollo on top.

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