Byzantium (Noun)
Meaning 1
A continuation of the Roman Empire in the Middle East after its division in 395.
Classification
Nouns denoting spatial position.
Synonyms
Meaning 2
An ancient city on the Bosporus founded by the Greeks; site of modern Istanbul; in 330 Constantine I rebuilt the city and called it Constantinople and made it his capital.
Classification
Nouns denoting spatial position.
Examples
- The ancient city of Byzantium was strategically located on the Bosporus, controlling the waterway between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea.
- Byzantium was a major cultural and commercial center in the ancient world, attracting merchants and travelers from all over the Mediterranean.
- In 330 AD, Constantine I transformed Byzantium into a new capital, renaming it Constantinople and establishing it as the center of the Eastern Roman Empire.
- The city of Byzantium was founded by Greek colonizers in the 7th century BC, and it quickly grew into a thriving metropolis.
- The legacy of Byzantium can still be seen in the modern city of Istanbul, which was built on the same site and retains many of the same cultural and architectural traditions.