Your quizzes are always wonderfully informative and thorough. They have plenty of information I don’t already know. I mean, who ever heard of that other Turkish city, or London? Took me forever to remember London existed…!
Thanks! Well, chances are that you kinda have to be history buff to get some of these. Edirne was the first Ottoman capital on European soil in the 14th and 15th century, which rapidly rose to prominence under their rule. Said city went into decline in the late 17th century and dropped under 100,000 again until the late 1970s.
I don't think I would ever have thought to put Rouen or Wolverhampton but on reflection they make total sense... Strange to think so many industrial cities are still significant (in terms of population, manufacturing, etc) but some absolutely are not.
The impact of the Industrial Revolution in the U.K. can definitely be seen here, with the rise of many cities in the north of the country.
Rouen was among France's biggest cities for the longest time, even serving as the 2nd or 3rd largest city in the entire country at times. Eventually though, the city started to fall behind in terms of population and stagnated. By 1900, Rouen had already fallen to being the 12th largest in France compared to being the 4th largest city in 1850.
Nice quiz. Since some older names are accepted can you accept Adrianople as well? I feel that name is much better known than the current Edirne given its historical context.
Probably tried to guess random slavic cities in that period of frantic desparation that takes over common sense once the timer gets below 30 seconds. Happens to the best of us ;)
Sarai-Berke was the capital of the Golden Horde (Ulug Ulus or Kipchak Khanate) up until the 15th century. It was no way a Russian city. Russians paid tribute to the Khanate
Edirne?! I've tried Adana, Kayseri, Konya, Canakkale, Antalya, Izmir, and more and even thought of typing in Edirne but thought it was a waste of energy since its a small city today. Great quiz.
The Wikipedia article about Sarai says there's considerable ambiguity about the name Sarai-Berke.
“Berke had presumably continued the development of the city, [...] leading later Muslim accounts to credit him with the foundation of the city; this probably led to references to the "Sarai of Berke", although it is doubtful that there was ever an entirely separate city called "Sarai of Berke" [...]; it certainly cannot be identified with "New Sarai", which was founded more than six decades after Berke's death.”
Might make sense to change the name in the quiz to Sarai.
Thanks for your reply! But I have to say that I am not convinced by a picture on the internet without a source. According to Mary Beard's SPQR, modern estimates give a population of 20,000 to 30,000 at the start of the republic in the late 6th century BC. Perhaps I come across other population figures later in the book, I'll let you know.
Rouen was among France's biggest cities for the longest time, even serving as the 2nd or 3rd largest city in the entire country at times. Eventually though, the city started to fall behind in terms of population and stagnated. By 1900, Rouen had already fallen to being the 12th largest in France compared to being the 4th largest city in 1850.
Anyone else always get Palermo and Parma confused? I was typing Catania and all sorts, need to brush up on my Italian cities... (Great quiz btw)
(I was too lazy to spell the whole thing out)
“Berke had presumably continued the development of the city, [...] leading later Muslim accounts to credit him with the foundation of the city; this probably led to references to the "Sarai of Berke", although it is doubtful that there was ever an entirely separate city called "Sarai of Berke" [...]; it certainly cannot be identified with "New Sarai", which was founded more than six decades after Berke's death.”
Might make sense to change the name in the quiz to Sarai.
Thank you for your scepticism, because this probably just made the quiz more accurate, haha.