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Title: ISTANBUL


1
ISTANBUL
  • The guide

2
The Bosphorus
  • The Bosphorus is the 32 km (20-mile)-long strait
    which joins the Sea of Marmara with the Black
    Sea in Istanbul, and separates the continents
    of Europe and Asia.
  • It's great for a half-day cruise north toward the
    Black Sea. You can return to Istanbul by land
    along the European shore and see all the sights.
  • It runs right through the heart of Istanbul, past
    theIstanbul Modern Art Museum, several Ottoman pal
    aces, at least two fortresses, forested hills,
    and shore villages with Ottoman architecture..
  • Its English name comes from a Greek legend Zeus
    had an affair with a beautiful women named Io.
    When Hera, his wife, discovered his infidelity,
    she turned Io into a cow and created a horsefly
    to sting her on the rump. Io jumped clear across
    the strait. Thus bous cow, and poros
     crossing-place Bosphorus  "crossing-place of
    the cow."
  • Recent marine archeological research in the
    chill, deep waters of the Black Sea has
    revealed sunken cities on the underwater slopes
    along the Turkish coast.
  • Geological evidence supports the theory that in
    ancient times the northern end of
    the Bosphorus was blocked by earth and rock. The
    Black Sea had no outlet (like Lake Van today),
    and its water level was below that of the Aegean
    Sea, the Sea of Marmara, and the Bosphorus.
  • However, an earthquake destroyed the Bosphorus
    blockage, releasing a deluge of water from the
    Bosphorus into the Black Sea, raising the water
    level and flooding its coastal communities. So it
    may well be that the Bosphorus is the source
    of Noah's flood and the legend of Noah's Ark!
    (Mount Ararat is also in Turkey.)
  •    32 km (20 miles) from the Black Sea to the Sea
    of Marmara...The Bosphorus has been a waterway of
    the highest importance since ancient
    times. Ulysses passed through. Byzas, who founded
    Byzantium (later Constantinople, later Istanbul)
    sailed up and down looking for the perfect place
    to found his village.
  • In 1452, Mehmet the Conqueror ordered the
    construction of the mighty fortresses of Rumeli
    Hisari(Fortress of Europe) and Anadolu
    Hisari (Fortress of Anatolia) so he could control
    the strait and prevent reinforcements from
    reaching the besieged Byzantine capital of
    Constantinople.
  • To the Ottomans it was mostly an obstacle each
    spring they had to ship their gigantic armies
    across the strait from Istanbul for campaigns
    in Anatolia, Syria and Persia.
  • During World War I, the Bosphorus was the key to
    the Black Sea and Russia. The Sultan held the
    key. The Entente powers wanted it. What they
    failed to get in battle they got by treaty, and
    British gunboats anchored outside Dolmabahçe
    Palace.
  • Today, the way to enjoy the Bosphorus is to take
    a cruise by traditional ferry ,TurYol
    boat or Dentur Avrasya boat, a self-guided tour
    of the European shore, or to relax at
    a tea-house or restaurant along its shores

3
History of Instanbul
  • What is now called Asian Istanbul was probably
    inhabited by people as early as 3000 BC.
    Eventually, in the 7th century, Greek colonists
    led by King Byzas established the colony of
    Byzantium, the Greek name for a city on the
    Bosphorus. Byzas chose the spot after consulting
    an oracle of Delphi who told him to settle across
    from the "land of the blind ones." Indeed, Byzas
    concluded, earlier settlers must have been
    deprived of their sight to have overlooked this
    superb location at the mouth of the Bosphorus
    strait. This proved an auspicious decision by
    Byzas, as history has shown Istanbul's location
    important far beyond what these early Greek
    settlers might possibly have conceived. Byzas
    gave his name to the city Byzantium.
  • In the early 100's BC, it became part of the
    Roman Empire and in 306 AD, Emperor Constantine
    the Great made Byzantium capital of the Eastern
    Roman Empire. From that point on, the city was
    known as Constantinople.
  • The mid 400's AD was a time of enormous upheaval
    in the empire. Barbarians conquered the western
    Roman Empire while the Eastern, also called the
    Byzantine Empire, kept Constantinople as its
    capital. In 532 during the reign of Justinian I,
    antigovernment riots destroyed the city. It was
    rebuilt, and outstanding structures such as Hagia
    Sophia stand as monuments to the heights
    Byzantine culture reached.
  • The attribute that made the city so desirable,
    its incomparable location for trade and transport
    between three continents, was also its nemesis.
    For the next several hundred years Persians,
    Arabs, nomadic peoples, and members of the Fourth
    Crusade (who for a time governed the city)
    attacked Constantinople.
  • Finally, in 1453, when Constantinople was so
    weakened by almost constant invasions and
    battles, the Ottoman Turks led by Sultan Mehmet
    II were able to conquer the city. Renamed
    Istanbul, it became the third and last capital of
    the Ottoman Empire. It was the nerve center for
    military campaigns that were to enlarge the
    Ottoman Empire dramatically. By the mid 1500's,
    Istanbul, with a population of almost half a
    million, was a major cultural, political, and
    commercial center. Ottoman rule continued until
    it was defeated in WWI and Istanbul was occupied
    by the allies.
  • When the Republic of Turkey was born in 1923
    after the War of Independence, Kemal Ataturk
    moved the capital to the city of Ankara. The city
    of Istanbul has continued to expand dramatically
    and today its population is over 13,6 million and
    increases at an estimated 700,000 immigrants per
    year. Industry has expanded even as tourism has
    grown. It continues to be a city that creates its
    own history at the meeting point of the two
    continents Europe and Asia.
  • Some of the interesting districts of the city
    are Sultanahmet, Haydarpasa, Uskudar, Eyup,
    Galata, Pera, Ortaköy, Taksim, Eminönü, Fatih,
    Balat, and The Bosphorus. Princess Islands are a
    popular summer resort for local people.

4
Topkapi Palace, (Topkapi Sarayi)
  • Topkapi Palace is definitely the best looking
    palace in Turkey. Home for the Ottoman Sultans,
    is now a perfect place to be a Museum to reflect
    the glory of Ottoman Empire, Sultans and their
    way of living. The Museum is open between 900
    am- 700 pm everyday except for Tuesdays. Tickets
    are purchased in the gateway to the Second
    Court. The tickets cost 20,- TL (approx. to 13
    USD or 9 EURO) per person for 2011 season. The
    Harem section needs a separate admission fee and
    costs another 15,- TL. There is a discounted fee
    for the students. The Harem Section can be
    visited with a separate ticket in the ticket
    office near the Harem entrance. The tours to
    Harem are operated every half hour from 930 am
    to 400 pm.
  • Topkapi palace has now an audio guide system
    which can be rented on the entrance for a cost of
    15,- TL. The audio guide system is much like a
    big mobile phone. All important items on the
    palace was identified with numbers and if you
    dial the code number of the item or place, you
    can get a full description of it. Currently the
    system is available on following languages,
    English, Germain, French, Spanish and Italian.
  • When Sultan Mehmed II captured Constantinople in
    1453, he found the palaces of the Byzantine
    Emperors in such ruins as to be uninhabitable. He
    chose a large area on the broad peak of the Third
    Hill as the site of his first imperial residence.
    He constructed a great complex of buildings and
    gardens here and they came to be known as "Eski
    Saray" which means "The Old Palace". A few years
    later, he decided to have his palace on the N
    side of the First Hill which had been the
    acropolis of the ancient Byzantium. He
    constructed a massive wall surrounding the area
    along the Sea of Marmara to the Golden Horn. This
    took place during the period 1459-65 after the
    Sultan left the former palace to women of his
    father's harem. The Harem in Topkapi Palace in
    its present state dates back to the reign of
    Murat III(1574-95), Mehmed IV(1648-87) and Osman
    III(1754-57).
  • Topkapi Palace was more than just the private
    residence of the Sultan and his court. It was the
    seat of the supreme executive and judiciary
    council, the Divan and the training school, the
    Palace School. In the First Courtyard, there were
    a hospital, bakery, arsenal, a state mint, a part
    of the treasury and the Outer Service. It was
    open to public. The Second Courtyard was open to
    people who had business with the council. The
    Third Courtyard was reserved to the Sultan's
    household and palace children. The Fourth
    Courtyard was exclusively reserved for the
    Sultan's use.
  • Topkapi Palace continued to be the principal
    residence for four centuries until in 1853,
    Sultan Abdul Mecid I moved into the new palace of
    Dolmabahce on the Bosphorus. The old palace was
    used as house for the women of the departed
    sultans and their servants until the Harem was
    officially disbanded in 1909. In 1924, Topkapi
    Palace was converted to a museum with the order
    of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. The final step was the
    opening of the Harem to the public in 1960.

5
THE BLUE MOSQUE
  • The Blue Mosque is so named because of the
    beautiful blue Iznik tiles decorating the
    interior. Officially called the 'Sultan Ahmet
    Mosque' by local people, it was built by Sultan
    Ahmet in 1609 and completed 7 years later...
  • The Blue Mosque in the Old City of Istanbul is so
    named because of the beautiful blue Iznik tiles
    decorating the interior. Officially called the
    'Sultan Ahmet Mosque' by local people, it was
    built by Sultan Ahmet in 1609 and completed 7
    years later...
  • The architect who oversaw its design was Sedefkar
    Mehmet Aga, better known as a student of Sinan
    (the greatest architect ever seen in the Ottoman
    Empire). Not only was it built to serve as a
    mosque, but its huge surrounding complex also
    held a medrese (theological school), turbe
    (tomb), hospital, caravanserai, primary school,
    public kitchen and market, although the hospital
    and caravanserai were destroyed in the nineteenth
    century. After the public kitchens were destroyed
    in a fire in 1970, they were restored and
    incorporated into the School of Industrial Art.
    It presently serves as the Dean's Office for the
    Marmara University. The Blue Mosque is open all
    day except during prayer times.

6
THE GALATA TOWER 
  • The Galata Tower (Galata Kulesi in Turkish) is a
    medieval stone tower in the Galata district of
    Istanbul, just to the north of the Golden Horn.
    One of the city's most striking landmarks, it is
    a high, cone-capped cylinder that dominates the
    skyline and affords a panoramic vista of Old
    Istanbul and its environs.The tower was built in
    1348 during an expansion of the Genoese colony in
    Constantinople and is 66.90 meters tall.In 1875,
    during a storm, the conic roof on the top of the
    building was destroyed. The tower remained
    without this conic roof for the rest of the
    Ottoman period. Many years later, in 1965-1967,
    during the Turkish Republic, the original conical
    cap was restored.

7
GALATA BRIDGE
  • The Galata Bridge (in Turkish Galata Köprüsü) is
    a bridge that spans the Golden Horn in Istanbul.
    It was a symbolic link between the traditional
    city of Istanbul , site of the imperial palace
    and principal religious and secular institutions
    of the empire.The first recorded bridge over the
    Golden Horn in Istanbul was built during the
    reign of Justinian the Great in the 6th century,
    it was close to the area near the Theodosian Land
    Walls at the western end of the Roman city.Then
    there were built other bridges over the Golden
    Horn and one of the projects has been thought by
    Leonardo da Vinci, however, it has never been
    built.

8
The Golden Horn
  • The Golden Horn is an inlet of the Bosphorus
    dividing the city of Istanbul and forming a
    natural harbor. It is a scimitar-shaped estuary
    that joins the Bosphorus just at the point where
    that strait enters the Sea of Marmara, thus
    forming a peninsula the tip of which is "Old
    Istanbul" .It is a flooded prehistoric estuary
    long 7.5 kilometers and 750 meters across at its
    widest. Its maximum depth, where it flows into
    the Bosphorus, is about 35 meters. It is today
    spanned by four bridges. The Byzantine Empire
    had its naval headquarters there, and walls were
    built along the shoreline to protect the city of
    Constantinople from naval attacks. At the
    entrance to the Horn on the northern side, a
    large chain was pulled across from Constantinople
    to the old Tower of Galata to prevent unwanted
    ships from entering.

9
The Grand Bazar
  • The Grand Bazaar (Kapaliçarsi) in Istanbul is one
    of the largest covered markets in the world with
    60 streets and 5,000 shops, and attracts between
    250,000 and 400,000 visitors daily. It is well
    known for its jewellery, hand-painted ceramics,
    carpets, embroideries, spices and antique shops.
    Many of the stalls in the bazaar are grouped by
    type of goods, with special areas for leather,
    gold jewellery and the like. The bazaar has been
    an important trading centre since 1461 and its
    labyrinthine vaults feature two bedestens (domed
    buildings), the first of which was constructed
    between 1455 and 1461 by the order of Sultan
    Mehmed the Conqueror. The bazaar was vastly
    enlarged in the 16th century, during the reign of
    Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, and in 1894
    underwent a major restoration following an
    earthquake. 
  • The complex houses two mosques, four fountains,
    two hamams, and several cafés and restaurants. In
    the centre is the high domed hall of the Cevahir
    Bedesten, where the most valuable items and
    antiques were to be found in the past, and still
    are today, including furniture, copperware, amber
    prayer beads, inlaid weapons, icons,
    mother-of-pearl mirrors, water pipes, watches and
    clocks, candlesticks, old coins, and silver and
    gold jewellery set with coral and turquoise. A
    leisurely afternoon spent exploring the bazaar,
    sitting in one of the cafés and watching the
    crowds pass by, and bargaining for purchases is
    one of the best ways to recapture the romantic
    atmosphere of old Istanbul.

10
The Chora Church
  • The Chora Church was originally built outside the
    walls of Constantinople, to the south of the
    Golden Horn. Literally translated, the church's
    full name was the Church of the Holy Saviour in
    the Country although "The Church of the Holy
    Redeemer in the Fields" would be a more natural
    rendering of the name in English. The last part
    of that name, Chora, referring to its location
    originally outside of the walls, became the
    shortened name of the church. The original church
    on this site was built in the early 5th century,
    and stood outside of the 4th century walls of
    Constantine the Great. However, when Theodosius
    II built his formidable land walls in 413414,
    the church became incorporated within the city's
    defences, but retained the name Chora. The name
    must have carried symbolic meaning, as the
    mosaics in the narthex describe Christ as the
    Land of the Living and Mary, the Mother of Jesus,
    as the Container of the Uncontainable.The
    majority of the fabric of the current building
    dates from 10771081, when Maria Dukaina, the
    mother-in-law of Alexius I Comnenus, rebuilt the
    Chora Church as an inscribed cross or quincunx a
    popular architectural style of the time. Early in
    the 12th century, the church suffered a partial
    collapse, perhaps due to an earthquake. The
    church was rebuilt by Isaac Comnenus, Alexius's
    third son. However, it was only after the third
    phase of building, two centuries after, that the
    church as it stands today was completed. The
    powerful Byzantine statesman Theodore Metochites
    endowed the church with much of its fine mosaics
    and frescos. Theodore's impressive decoration of
    the interior was carried out between 1315 and
    1321. The mosaic-work is the finest example of
    the Palaeologian Renaissance. The artists remain
    unknown. In 1328, Theodore was sent into exile by
    the usurper Andronicus III Palaeologus. However,
    he was allowed to return to the city two years
    later, and lived out the last two years of his
    life as a monk in his Chora Church.During the
    last siege of Constantinople in 1453, the Icon of
    the Theotokos Hodegetria, considered the
    protector of the City, was brought to Chora in
    order to assist the defenders against the assault
    of the Ottomans.Around fifty years after the
    fall of the city to the Ottomans, Atik Ali Pasa,
    the Grand Vizier of Sultan Bayezid II, ordered
    the Chora Church to be converted into a mosque
    Kariye Camii. Due to the prohibition against
    iconic images in Islam, the mosaics and frescoes
    were covered behind a layer of plaster. This and
    frequent earthquakes in the region have taken
    their toll on the artwork.In 1948, Thomas
    Whittemore and Paul A. Underwood, from the
    Byzantine Institute of America and the Dumbarton
    Oaks Center for Byzantine Studies, sponsored a
    programme of restoration. From that time on, the
    building ceased to be a functioning mosque. In
    1958, it was opened to the public as a museum
    Kariye Müzesi.

11
Dolmabahçe Palace
  • Dolmabahçe Palace (Turkish Dolmabahçe Sarayi)
    located in the Besiktas district of Istanbul on
    the European coastline of the Bosphorus strait,
    served as the main administrative center of the
    Ottoman Empire from 1856 to 1922. The design
    contains eclectic elements from the Baroque,
    Rococo and Neoclassical styles, blended with
    traditional Ottoman architecture to create a new
    synthesis. The palace layout and décor reflect
    the increasing influence of European styles and
    standards on Ottoman culture and art during the
    Tanzimat period. Functionally, on the other hand,
    it retains elements of traditional Ottoman palace
    life, and also features of traditional Turkish
    homes. Dolmabahçe Palace was home to six Sultans
    from 1856, when it was first inhabited, up until
    the abolition of the Caliphate in 1924 The last
    royal to live here was Caliph Abdülmecid Efendi.
    A law that went into effect on March 3, 1924
    transferred the ownership of the palace to the
    national heritage of the new Turkish Republic.
    The palace is composed of three parts the
    Mabeyn-i Hümâyûn (the quarters reserved for the
    men), Muayede Salonu (the ceremonial hall) and
    the Harem-i Hümâyûn (the Harem, the residential
    apartments of the family of the Sultan). The
    palace has an area of 45,000 m2 (11.2 acres), and
    contains 285 rooms, 46 halls, 6 baths (hamam) and
    68 toilets.

12
Egyptian Bazar
  • The Spice Bazaar, (Turkish 'Misir Çarsisi', or
    Egyptian Bazaar) in Istanbul, Turkey is one of
    the largest bazaars in the city. Located in
    Fatih, in the neighborhood of Eminönü, it is the
    second largest covered shopping complex after the
    Grand Bazaar. There are several documents
    suggesting the name of the bazaar was first "New
    Bazaar". The building was endowed to the
    foundation of the Yeni Mosque, and got its name
    ("Egyptian Bazaar", Turkish Misir Çarsisi)
    because it was built with the revenues from
    Egypt.The word misir has a double meaning in
    Turkish "Egypt" and "maize". This is why
    sometimes the name is wrongly translated as "Corn
    Bazaar". The bazaar was (and still is) the center
    for spice trade in Istanbul, but in the last
    years more and more shops of other type are
    replacing the spice shops. The building itself
    is part of the külliye of Yeni Mosque, and rents
    from the shops within was intended to help pay
    for the upkeep of the mosque. The structure was
    designed by the chief court architect Koca Kasim
    Aga, but completed by architect Mustafa in 1660.
    The Spice Bazaar is an L-shaped building,
    consisting of 88 vaulted rooms, almost all of
    which are now divided into an upper and lower
    story. Monumental gateways are at the ends of
    both halls, with chambers above each entrance
    way. The main entrance is in the southwest
    corner, facing the Yeni Mosque.

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Created by
  • Andrea Flamini
  • Sandro Marseglia
  • Lorenzo Maugeri
  • Francesco Mazzetti
  • Massimiliano Zampano
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