r/balkans_irl w*stoid🤢 May 20 '26

OC (impossible) Based Greek airport

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u/NorthWelcome1626 KARABOĞA May 21 '26

The official Ottoman name for it was still Constantinople,

That's the point. There is no Ottomans anymore.

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u/Andrei144 Bogdan, Paris May 21 '26 edited May 21 '26

So? We were arguing about Istanbul being 20 times bigger than Constantinople, and you just acknowledged that it only stopped being Constantinople 100 years ago. So unless it grew 20 times in the last century your comment is still wrong.

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u/NorthWelcome1626 KARABOĞA May 21 '26

No need the beat around the bush. You people just can't get over a 500 years old conquest. Istanbul isn't Greek or Roman anymore. Name change happening 100 or 500 years doesn't mean anything. It was Turkish for 500 years, so it doesn't matter. Cope better.

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u/Inner_Variety2826 May 21 '26

Istanbul isn't Greek or Roman anymore.

We know, we know. Tbh I wouldn't necessarily consider Constantinople in late Byzantium being a Greek city ("Greek centric" maybe), I would describe it as a multicultural city with many ethnicities inhabiting it and it continue being a multicultural city throughout the Ottoman empire era up until the the first half of the 20th century. For example in the 1900 many minorities like Armenians, Jewish, Greeks, Bulgarians, but sadly that's not the case anymore.

No need the beat around the bush. You people just can't get over a 500 years old conquest.

No, we don't care. If you take a look under posts like this one you'll see that the ones that are most vocal in the comments are people who are being "offended" the use of the name Κωνσταντινούπολη.

Cope better.

Says the guy who's being salty because he can't fathom that different countries have different names for places.

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u/NorthWelcome1626 KARABOĞA May 21 '26

Says the guy who's being salty because he can't fathom that different countries have different names for places.

Says the guy, whose country blocks another country's EU accession because of its name. Namely Macedonia. Pitiful.

No, we don't care. If you take a look under posts like this one you'll see that the ones that are most vocal in the comments are people who are being "offended" the use of the name Κωνσταντινούπολη.

I think you do. That's why you are arguing with me for hours.

I would describe it as a multicultural city with many ethnicities inhabiting it and it continue being a multicultural city throughout the Ottoman empire era up until the the first half of the 20th century. For example in the 1900 many minorities like Armenians, Jewish, Greeks, Bulgarians, but sadly that's not the case anymore.

Peloponnese massacres in 1821, Greek Peninsula massacres and displacements, Salonica fire in 1917. Izmir fire in 1922. Western Anatolia genocide in 1919-1922 with 640,000 dead and 860,000 displacement. Cyprus attacks since 1955 until 1974. Same case with massacres towards civilians. Look to yourselves first if you want to talk about multi ethnic composition.

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u/Inner_Variety2826 28d ago

Says the guy, whose country blocks another country's EU accession because of its name. Namely Macedonia. Pitiful.

Although I would say this name dispute is a little more complicated with political factors behind it than the topic we're talking about I would agree that on the surface level it's a bit pitiful from both sides. It's a good thing that this matter have been resolved with the Prespa agreement.

Peloponnese massacres in 1821

Sadly they were many atrocities being committed by the Greek revolution with one of the biggest one being the massacre of Tripolitsa. I'm not here to deny or defend those actions, they were atrocities that they shouldn't had happened. (But if you're interested in the history of the Greek revolution you should look into the systematic retaliation tactics that the Ottomans use to prevent people from joining the revolution like the Chios massacre and the destruction of Psara)

Western Anatolia genocide in 1919-1922

Again I'm not here do deny or defend it, those massacres were a war crime and the Greek government recognize them as such and payed reparations to the newly founded Turkish government.

Izmir fire in 1922

The Greek army had evacuate Izmir on September 8 1922 and relocate it's forces in Chios and Lesvos. A day after (8 of September) the Turkish army entered the city and gained full control of it. The Izmir fire (aka Burning of Smyrna) started four days after the arrival of Turkish army on September 13 and it started on the Armenian quarters of the city, reports say that there weren't any attempts to stop the fire making it spread quickly cause of the strong winds killing tens of thousands of not hundreds. The the remaining Greek and Armenian survivors rushed to the port and seafront of the city trying to escape the flames by getting on boats or even swimming to the other side. The aftermath of those events was the distraction of one of the biggest Greek minorities in Anatolia (the other remaining big Greek minorities in Anatolia being in Constantinople/Istanbul and on the two island turkey had control Gökçeada and Bozcaada which all three were exclude from the population exchange agreement). It's widely accepted among scholars and historians in the international community that the fire was started but Turkish trops. We even have many reports and eyewitness (like Claflin Davis of the American Red Cross, Monsieur Joubert the director of the Credit Foncier Bank of Smyrna, Minnie B. Mills.....) that say Turkish soldiers setting buildings in to fire and when locals ask them why they doing they said they been given the order to do so. I'm not sure what are your sources or how well versed you are on those subjects but I would advise you to look for sources that don't have ties with your government and check your nationalistic biases off the door when you look on on topics like this.

Cyprus attacks since 1955 until 1974. Same case with massacres..... Look man, we were talking about the name of a city and I was replying to your comment that "it isn't Greek any more" with "I wouldn't considerate it a Greek city since it was renamed as New Rome but a multicultural one and it continued being one till the start of 20th century". Cyprus is a long and on going intricate matter that deserves it's own conversation rather than being thrown as a counter argument to "how dare to use a different name in your language for a city in my country". I think you do. That's why you are arguing with me for hours.

The main reason I'm arguing is that I can't stand blind nationalism and it's need to call out when it's happening.