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[[File: Constantinople.jpg |250px|thumbthumbnail|left|Sultan Mehmet I the conqueror of Constantinople]] 
The Byzantine Empire, also known as New Rome, was influential in Europe's history and culture during the Middle Ages. By the 15th century, the Empire was in terminal decline and had been for several centuries. At this time, the various Italian city-states experienced a cultural flowering known by historians as the Renaissance. In 1453, Byzantium's capital fell to the Ottoman Turkish army, and this was the effective end of the Byzantine Empire, which had endured for almost 1000 years.
== What was the relationship between Byzantium and Italy before the Fall of Constantinople in 1453? ==
[[File: Constantinople 2.jpg|350px250px|thumbthumbnail|left| The reconstructed walls of Constantinople]] 
Byzantium and Italy had a long and complicated history. In the 6th century, Emperor Justinian reconquered much of the peninsulas from the Goths after a devastating war. The Byzantines lost much of their conquests after the Germanic tribe. The Lombards invaded Italy. However, Byzantium retained control of Sicily and much of Southern Italy. There was a Byzantine presence in Italy until the mid-1050s until the Normans expelled them during their conquest of southern Italy and Sicily. Byzantium was often at odds with the Papacy in Rome over ecclesiastical jurisdictions and theological and liturgical disputes. These were ultimately to lead to the Great Schism between the Eastern and Western churches in the 11th century. Italians and Byzantines came into conflict in the aftermath of the ‘Latin massacre’ in Byzantium. This was the widespread killing of Italian merchants in the city in the 12th century.
== Did the Ottoman Empire try to invade Italy? ==
[[File: Constantinople Three.jpg|300px250px|thumb|left| The walls of Otranto]] 
The Fall of Constantinople shocked Europe, and when the news that the capital of the New Rome had fallen, there was consternation, even panic. After 1453 there was widespread fear, and many Christian kingdoms feared an Ottoman invasion was likely. The Fall of Constantinople changed the geopolitical situation in the Mediterranean. Many feared that Italy was the next target of the Ottomans, whose army was seen as invincible. The Byzantine Empire's end meant that the Ottomans could concentrate on expanding to the west and east. Successive Popes called for a crusade to reclaim Constantinople and defend the Italian city-states from a Turkish onslaught. There was a great deal of fear in Italy. These fears were realized in 1480 when the Turks invaded Southern Italy and seized Otranto's city, part of the Kingdom of Naples.
== How did the Fall of Constantinople change Italy? ==
[[File: Constantinople Four.jpg|200px250px|thumbthumbnail|left| The Battle of Zonchio (1499) between Turks and Venetians]] 
The Fall of Constantinople was the end of an era for Europe. The end of the Byzantine Empire was both a blessing and a curse for Renaissance Italy. There was a flood of refugees from Constantinople, and many scholars found sanctuary in the various Italian city-states. These brought with them knowledge of the Ancient classics and precious manuscripts that allowed the humanists better to understand philosophers and other writers from the ancient world. This helped to change the direction of humanist thought, and it began to focus on metaphysical speculation and concepts such as virtue.
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