Konstantinoupolis (newspaper)

Konstantinoupolis (Greek: Κωνσταντινούπολις, "Constantinople"), originally Heptalophos or Eptalofos (Ἑπτάλοφος, "City of Seven Hills"), was a Greek-language newspaper and periodical published in the Ottoman Empire.

The historian Johann Strauss wrote that Konstantinoupolis "was long to remain the most widely read Greek paper in the Ottoman Empire.

"[1] An employee, Manuel Gedeon,[2] stated that the style of the periodical was similar to that of Revue des Deux Mondes.

[3] According to historians Evangelia Balta and Ayșe Kavak, Konstantinoupolis "went down in the history of the Istanbul press as setting the seal on [Ottoman Greek newspaper and legal code publisher Demetrius Nicolaides]'s career in journalism".

[2] As more and more Greeks adopted the Megali Idea,[5] clashing with Nicolaides' Ottomanist beliefs,[8] the readership decreased in the 1900s and 1910s.

The first was for literary and science articles, some Greek versions of content from European journals and some initially published in Nea Eptalofos.

Eptalofos Nea