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Constantinople

[ kon-stan-tn-oh-puhl ]

noun

  1. former name of Istanbul.


Constantinople

/ ˌkɒnstæntɪˈnəʊpəl /

noun

  1. the former name (330–1926) of Istanbul
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


Constantinople

  1. A city founded by the Roman emperor Constantine the Great as capital of the eastern part of the Roman Empire . Constantine ruled over both parts of the empire from Constantinople, which was later capital of the Byzantine Empire . Constantinople was conquered by Turkish forces in the fifteenth century.


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Notes

Today, under the name of Istanbul , Constantinople is the largest city in Turkey .
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Example Sentences

What good does it do a truck farmer when he knows Constantinople is the capital of Turkey?

Next morning Alcide packed my valise, and leaving him in charge of my apartments I took the Orient express for Constantinople.

He settled in Constantinople, where he had to start from scratch.

Large parts even of the city of Constantinople reverted to farm land.

Both built themselves new capitals, the Persian in Ctesiphon in Mesopotamia; the Romans in Constantinople.

We must make more—much more—elbow room before the Turks get help from Asia or Constantinople.

Early in the Seventeenth Century tobacco found its way to Constantinople.

Barillet describes the growing of the common jasmine near Constantinople.

John Cantacuzenus, the historian of his own times, and a defender of the faith, inaugurated emperor of Constantinople.

Ten short years ago, if K.'s heart had been set on Constantinople, why, to Constantinople he would have gone.

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Constantine XI PalaeologusConstantinopolitan Creed