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 The Land Walls


The defensive  system added by Theodosius II in the early fifth century combined two  lines of defense with a moat. They are perhaps themost  significant work of military architecture to come down to us from  the Middle Ages. The repairs, additions, inscriptions, and  modifications to the walls comprise a dramatic history of the city.  They were kept in constant repair throughout the Middle Ages, only to  fall to the cannons of Mehmet II in 1453 and, more  recentlry, to heavy-handed restorations. The restorations were  financed in part by UNESCO,  but the exigencies of the municipal authority caused the project to  be rushed. The work was divided among eleven contractors, with a  "scientific consultant" assigned to each, when one could be  located. In most areas, the walls have been overrestored and refaced.  Perhaps they now give a clearer idea of how the elaborate defensive  system once worked, but all  sorts of historical evidence  was destroyed in the process. There does not appear to be any  coordination between teams, nor a plan for the publication of the  results. With the change of government in 1994, the work was abruptly  halted. A report on the restoration of the southernmost section  (Towers 1-6) has recently been published by M. Ahunbay.

 

The so-called  Marble Tower, near the end of the Land Walls at the Sea of Marmara,  has been recently identified by U. Peschlow as a Palaiologan  residence. Devices associated with the Palaiologos and Cantacuzenos  families were noted on the cornices.

 

Computarized  Reconstruction of the Land Walls

 Image courtesy Tayfun Oner

Hypertext  courtesy of Robert Ousterhout 

 

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