
Why Europe Let Constantinople Fall: The Secret Betrayal of 1453
The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show · Jeremy Ryan Slate
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Show Notes
On May 29th, 1453, Constantinople fell—and with it, the last continuation of Rome.
But the real story isn’t just Ottoman cannons and overwhelming numbers.
It’s the cold mathematics of power: betrayal, sabotage, and profit-driven neutrality.
In this episode of Hidden Forces in History, we follow the receipts behind one of the most pivotal days in world history:
why the city was still defensible (if help had come)
how Genoa’s colony of Galata stayed “neutral” while Ottoman ships passed
why Venice negotiated safe passage instead of fighting
how Western Europe sent prayers instead of armies
and why the fall wasn’t inevitable—it was a series of choices
Because the most disturbing truth is this:
Constantinople didn’t fall because it was weak. It fell because powerful allies decided it was convenient to let it fall.
If you want history as investigation—documents, incentives, and the people who benefited—subscribe for weekly deep dives into the hidden forces behind the official story.
Question for you: Was this “inevitable”… or a calculated sacrifice?