which Latin (Catholic) crusaders from Europe pillaged the city of
Constantinople itself with incalculable lasting effects. The event was
consummated in 1182 by the immensely emotional so-called Massacre of the
Latins in Constantinople. Anti-Western sentiments ran deep among the general
population, who resented the powerful community of Venetian (Catholic)
merchants who virtually ran the economy of Constantinople. In the ensuing
rioting, a staggering eighty thousand “Latins”
were massacred in the city, driving
a further wedge of emotion, blood, and hatred between Rome and
Constantinople.
Today, nearly six hundred years after the Ottoman Turks conquered
Constantinople, this loss of its crown jewel is still remembered and mourned by
the Orthodox world with an intensity not readily appreciated in Europe.
Although Europeans viewed the fall of the city to Islam as a significant setback
to Christianity, they had little stomach for further crusades and precious little
nostalgia or attachment for the old Greek capital of the Eastern Empire. For most
Western Christians, Constantinople and its legacy had come to be seen as little
more than a corrupt Orthodox backwater and a historic
anomaly worthy of scant
attention. The poisonous legacy would never be forgotten in the East and would
fatefully affect Russia in particular, as we will see in a later chapter. And who in
the West today really has much sense or awareness of Eastern Christianity?
But Orthodox Christianity in no way perished with the fall of the Eastern
Empire to the Turks; indeed, the patriarch himself remained based in Muslim
Istanbul (even today), from where, with Turkish permission,
he continued to
exercise religious, but not secular, authority over portions of the Orthodox world.
Even in collapse, Byzantines maintained such resentment against Rome that they
actually came to feel it was better to be defeated by the Muslim Turks than by
the Christian Latins. For they knew the church would survive and operate under
Muslim rule, as was evident from other Christian areas that had already long
fallen to Muslim power,
including the Holy Lands; Orthodoxy would continue to
exist. But conquest by Rome would mean the Latinization of the church—an
abomination—and the end of Orthodoxy forever, a far worse fate. The choice
between domination by Muslim or Latin Christian rule thus remained a no-
brainer for most Orthodox believers.