
Your Virtual Guide to Adventure Outdoors!
Welcome to Istanbul Adventures, Turkey
ISTANBUL
OVERVIEW / TOPKAPI PALACE / HAGIA
SOPHIA / SULTAN AHMET CAMI-THE
BLUE MOSQUE / THE HIPPODROME / THE GRAND BAZAAR AND VICINITY / VICINITY OF SULTANAHMET / OTHER OLD CITY SIGHTS

Istanbul
Overview
Its beauty etched in floodlit dome and minaret at
dusk, Istanbul announces its unabashed longevity. Divided by waterways, the city
mounts and descends on seven hills, pulsating as a living entity should. For the vitality
of this city owes as much to its citizens of today as it does to past Byzantine emperors
and Ottoman sultans. Istanbul is undergoing re-embellishment under the guidance of a city
administration that, while maintaining an awareness of history and tradition, is giving
essential and considerate attention to the interests and well being of the present
inhabitants, and its future ones in a city whose population, for Greater Istanbul, now
stands at some 12 million, a figure that is increasing relentlessly.
Much debris has been cleared to be replaced by parks and gardens, most
noticeably in the vicinity of the city's ancient walls. Pedestrian complexes have been
established, as at Ortakoy on the European shore of the Bosphorus, below the stanchions of
the lower Bosphorus bridge,
where the 19th-century floodlit baroque mosque of the village has been disencumbered of
what were unsightly irrelevancies, as has its accompanying park, to become the showpiece
of a pedestrian-dominated quay side lively with restaurants, cafes, antique shops,
bric-a-brac stalls, and a book enthusiasms quarter as you would find on a Parisian
riverside. Here the citys youth gathers each evening to eat, drink, walk and talk.
There is Kumkapi, too, down below those few remains of the greater Byzantine Palace, at a
sea gate, always noted for its fish restaurants. It, too, has been turned into a
pedestrian complex, with a burgeoning of small unpretentious restaurants with their
seafood offerings.
Along the Bosphorus shores many of the lovely old timbered houses and
mansions have been restored to pristine elegance, an architect's delight. Elsewhere,
blatant and unsightly hoardings have been discouraged, and traffic has been disciplined by
roadway reconstructions and routings. One of the new city's principal thoroughfares has
been totally allocated to pedestrians except for an ancient tramway that has been
re-installed at the center in their service, to run all the way from Taksitn Square to
Tunel, and almost three quarters of Taksim Square itself is now reserved for strollers and
flaneurs.
The area of the Kariye Cami, the Church of St.
Savior in Chora, with its beautiful 14th-century frescoes and mosaics, up near the Edirne
Gate, in the walls, has also been turned into a peaceful complex with many of the area's
old houses restored, and a gracious hotel.
The city gives away free milk and bread to any
citizen who chooses to apply for vouchers, irrespective of income. New buses run on
redesigned routes, and new steel trams run in the old city, where tourist buses are no
longer permitted to park overshadowing the enduring monuments to be found in the area of
Sultanahmet.
A new and wider Galata Bridge now spans the
Golden Horn between Karakoy and Eminonu, and a second suspension bridge graces the middle reaches of the Bosphorus.
A Byzantine building has been converted into the International Press Club on the waterside
a little beyond the ferryboat quays at Eminonu, along with a terrace restaurant for
non-members. There is a new Art Museum in a former textile factory at Ayvansaray, and
another Byzantine building has become a Women's Library at Fener, the patriarchate
quarter.
Free milk and bread may not survive the term of
office of the present mayoral administration, but the physical and cultural embellishments
it has accomplished will most assuredly add to the city's enduring magnificence. On a more
practical note, a Metro system
is under construction, and there is a plan for a railway tunnel under the Bosphorus to
link the western railway terminal at Sirkeci to the Anatolian terminal of Haydrapasa.
Getting Around:
The main airport bus runs along Florya Highway and
eventually turns left into Ataturk Bulvari to go through Aksaray to Unkapani, where it
passes under the Aqueduct of Valens. If you intend to stay in the old city near the
district of Sultanahmet, dismount from the airport bus at Aksaray. Recent road
construction now carries incoming traffic from Unkapani along the Golden Horn to Galata
Bridge where a revamped road system leads either to the THY air terminal station at
Sishane or by way of Tarlabasi Caddesi to Taksim Square. Another route from Galata Bridge
takes traffic past the main quay at Karakoy and along the Bosphorus waterfront through
Kabatas to Besiktas.
An alternative form of transport in Istanbul and
elsewhere in Turkey is the dolmus, or shared taxi. The service runs between fixed
destinations and has passenger stops and a single charge as with buses. Though a dolmus
can be of the taxi-type, the customary vehicle today is the more serviceable minibus.
To take the ferry to Uskudar on Istanbul's Asian
shore, go to Kabatas, a little to the south of the Dolmabahce Palace. Although there are
the Bosphorus bridges, and your taxi, or dolmus, is likely to take one or other rather
than the ferry, the opportunity the boat offers to observe the outline of the city with
its hills, domes and minarets is recommended. In the meantime, there is a regular ferry
service leaving from Karakoy near the Galata Bridge. Its destination is Kadikoy where
Haydarpasa, the main railway terminal for Anatolia, is located. If your stay is to be
short, or even if it is to be a longer one, the best plan would be to find your way to the
Sultanahmet district where those monuments you will want to see can be found, such as the Topkapi Palace, St. Sophia, The Blue Mosque, the
Archaeological Museum and the Grand
Bazaar, all within reasonable walking distance of each other. They are in the area of
the original walled city of Byzantium on the western side of the Golden Horn. If you are
staying in Beyoglu, the new city, you can travel by taxi, bus or minibus down to the
Golden Horn and then cross the Galata
Bridge to the old city.
Historical Background
When Mehmet II breached the walls of Constantinople
in May 1453, the Byzantine Empire had been reduced in size to little more than the area of
the city. For the last emperor, who died in the breach, the battle had been fought
courageously with few defenders, a lack of arms, and money and almost no Western support-a
Genoese naval contingent arrived too late to participate. On entering the city, Mehmet
went at once to St. Sophia and, prostrating himself at the altar, rededicated the building
to Allah, after which he rode to what was left of the Great Palace where he reflected
philosophically on triumph, time and mortality. His troops were then allowed to indulge in
three days of looting and licensed mayhem-the customary privilege of a conquering army
whatever its creed -after which the rehabilitation of the city as an Ottoman possession
began.
Mehmet repopulated the city with Turks, but he also
encouraged people of other nationalities, Greeks and Jews in particular, to set up
businesses to help restore the city's commercial prosperity that throughout the latter
years of the Byzantine Empire had seriously declined.
Gennadius, a Byzantine scholar, was installed as
Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church. Mehmet allocated the Church of the Holy Apostles
as the seat of the patriarchate and, as with other ethnic communities, established the
Greeks as a millet (self-administrating unit) under the patriarch, which included
judicial control, though not for criminals, who were subject to trial in the Turkish
courts. The authority of these millets would decrease with time. The patriarchate was
later moved to the Pammakaristos Church and Monastery on the fifth hill overlooking the
Golden Horn, while the Fatih
Cami (Mosque of the Conqueror) was built on the site of Holy Apostles, on the fourth
hill of the city, to the northwest of the Aqueduct of Valens. The church had been the
burial place of emperors, and later Mehmet himself would be buried
on the same hill. Murat III took over the Pammakaristos in order to build the Fethiye
Cami, and the patriarchate was then established at St. George's Church in Phanar (now
Fener) on the Golden Horn, where it is today.
In the initial period of occupation, the Ottomans
converted many existing churches but later built mosques that within the complex often
included a medrese (theological school), a hastanesi (hospital) and an
imaret (soup kitchen). As well as Turkish architects, craftsmen of other nationalities
were employed, and many high officers of state were selected from among foreigners who had
converted to Islam. With the first four sultans, up to the reign of Suleiman the
Magnificent, the Ottoman Empire achieved its apogee of influence and expansion. Imperial
control lasted until this present century, but in the aftermath of the countrys
defeat in World War I and the repulse of the Greek invasion of 1920-2, the empire ended
with the declaration of a republic. Kemal Ataturk, its first president and great reformer,
established the capital at Ankara. Besides Parliament and the embassies, the head offices
of banks and large commercial and industrial enterprises are located there. Istanbul,
though, retains much of its principal city aura, and its acquired authority as a former
imperialistic masterpiece.
THE EARLY HISTORY:
About the middle of the seventh century BC the
Megarans, neighbors of the Athenians, are believed to have built the first city on the
site. Its name of Byzantium is said to derive from their leader Byzas, but authentic
records of this early time are scant. In 506 BC, it was occupied by the Medes, but seems
not to have been all that important to the Persian Xerxes who built a bridge of boats
across the Hellespont, at the lower end of the Dardanelles, when launching his invasion of
Greece. The Spartan general Pausanias captured it in 478 BC, and due to its strategic and
political importance in the long power struggle between Sparta and Athens, the city
changed hands on several occasions. Byzantium repulsed Philip of Macedon when he besieged
it in 340 BC, and Alexander a year or two later chose to ignore it and made his crossing
into Asia Minor by way of the Gallipoli Peninsula. As an independent city, its coinage
bore the stamp of the crescent moon and star, a symbol that in a much later age was to
spread panic among those in the path of Ottoman expansion.
In the second century BC the city elders signed a
treaty of alliance with Rome and agreed to pay tribute, but Vespasian annexed it for the
empire in AD 73. A civil war followed on the death of Commodus (AD 192), and the
Byzantines made the mistake of supporting the rival of Septimius Severus who, after a
three-year siege, revenged himself on the citizens by thoroughly sacking the city. Then,
in recognition of its unique strategic value, he rebuilt it; his new city of Antoninia
occupied the snout of high land above the Marmara Sea. Temples to Artemis, Aphrodite and
Apollo are associated with Antoninia, with Apollo's temple located between those to
Artemis (where St. Sophia now stands) and Aphrodite (on the St. Irene site). Of Antoninia,
only some sections of the citys Walls remain.
In AD 330, after defeating Licinius, his last
remaining rival from the civil war that followed the death of Diocletian, Constantine
chose Antoninia as the site for his capital of New Rome, which on completion was
designated Constantinople. Constantine extended the boundaries of Antoninia, building his
walls further to the west. With Constantine's declaration in favor of Christianity-his
mother Helena was a convert who had been on pilgrimage to the Holy Places of Jerusalem and
had returned with relics of Christ-the city became the Christian capital of the Eastern
Roman Empire, though Constantine himself is thought not to have been baptized until on his
deathbed. For a brief spell under Julian (361-63), there was a reversion to paganism. But
Julian died in battle in the Middle East, and the future of Christianity was assured when
Theodosius I (378-95) declared the empire Christian and ordered the destruction of all
remaining pagan shrines. Rome fell to the Goths in 476, and Constantinople became the sole
political capital of a developing Christian world.
In Justinian's time (527-65) much of the city was
destroyed in the Nika Riot, but Justinian, one of the greatest of East Roman rulers and,
as Hadrian had been, a prolific builder, reconstructed the city on a magnificent scale.
His brilliant generals Belisarius and Narses regained most of Italy, Spain and the North
African provinces for the empire, though the cost of doing so was to damage irrevocably
the economic resilience of the state. Some historians base the switch from Roman Empire to
Byzantine during the reign of Justinian. He codified the laws that until that time had
existed only in decrees. He recognized the predominance of Greeks among the empire's
citizens by making Greek an official language of state along with Latin, and later Greek
became the empire's sole official language. Throughout the ensuing centuries
Constantinople successfully repulsed many assaults, from Goths, Alans, Serbs, Bulgarians,
Russians and seventh-century Arabs. Its defenses held, reinforced by new walls built in
the fifth century under Theodosias II. (Standing to the west of the walls that Constantine
built, they are the ones that can be seen there today.)
In the 12th century, though, the knights and
soldiers of the Fourth Crusade attacked and took the city, establishing a Latin Empire and
occupying it until 1261 when the Byzantines reoccupied it. They continued in possession,
warding off a serious and sustained late 13th-century Ottoman assault by Beyazit I, until
Mehmet's assault and victory of 1453.

SULTANAHMET-THE
OLD CITY
TOPKAPI PALACE
FIRST COURT
Sultan Ahmet III loved fountains and tulips. He
became sultan in 1703 and each April held a Tulip Festival. The Seraglio Gardens were
decked with cages of canaries hanging in the trees, and lighted candles on the backs of
roving tortoises. One of his fountains, decorated with marble tulips, is outside the Royal Gate of the palace. It was
erected in 1728, but two years afterwards Ahmet was deposed because of his extravagance.
The Royal Gate, or Bab-i-Humayun, is in the walls
of Septimius Severus' rebuilding of Byzantium, which he called Antoninia after his wife.
The gate opens on the First Court and entrance grounds of the palace.
Over to the left after entering is the Church of
St. Irene, Hagia Eirene (in Greek), or Church of Divine Peace. It was never
converted to a mosque and is classified as a museum. A first church, in all probability
built over an earlier temple to Aphrodite, was burned down during the Nika Riot of the
sixth century and afterwards rebuilt. Still remaining is the basilican ground plan of the
church-rectangular with a semicircular apse on the eastern end, but structural
modifications and rebuildings followed another fire and an eighth-century earthquake. The
artillery armament that used to be on display outside the Church of the Holy Peace has
been removed now to the new Askeri Muze (Military Museum) at Valikonagi Sokak 1, at the
northern end of Cumhuriyet Caddesi at Beyoglu, the new city, where the road forks to
Nisantas.
THE JANISSARIES
Near St. Irene stood the Mint, and in front of this
building the great plane tree is still there, known as the Tree of the Janissaries, the
Ottoman Royal Corps of Guards. By tradition the Janissaries would assemble at this tree
whenever they wanted to dispute their conditions of service or, more drastically, depose a
sultan. Their method of protest was to bang their cooking pots or 'kettles' or, in a
serious revolt, overturn them. Under Mahmut II (1808-39), the Janissaries had become such
a menace to the court and to public order that the sultan secretly deployed artillery
units about the palace. When the Janissaries overturned their kettles and called for the
sultan's deposition, murdering the emissaries he had sent to parley with them, the sultan
mounted a white charger with the Banner of the Prophet unfurled and ordered the artillery
to open fire at point-blank range. The Janissaries who survived this onslaught took refuge
in their barracks, which were then pounded mercilessly. The handful of Janissaries who
escaped this massacre fled to the Basilican Cistern where each was individually hunted
down and killed. The corps was never re-formed.
An Executioner's Fountain stands close to
the Ortakapi, the Middle Gate and entry to the Second Court. The gate had a prison, and
the executioner doubled as the palace head gardener. After execution the head of a ranking
person was displayed on the Ortakapi but a less-privileged person had to be content with
an ear or a nose set up outside the Royal Gate among the mass of the executed.
SECOND COURT
The Middle Gate, Bab-i-Salam, or Selam
Kapisi (Salvation Gate), is a double one designed to prevent unlawful entry. This is where
the entrance fee is paid, with an extra charge for visiting the Harem. In the vicinity
evidence of the Byzantine Magnaura Palace has been found by excavators.
On the right of this Second Court are the domestic
quarters where the main kitchen with its enormous fireplace and huge cooking pots and
cauldrons, as well as iron and copper kitchen utensils, can be seen. In another section is
a large display of porcelain and china, gifts to the court from kings, queens and
potentates; in other sections are copperware, glassware and silver.
On the west side of the court is the Divan, or
Kubbealti (Council Chamber), in
which the grand vizier, the empire's executive officer, conducted affairs of state. Until
the time of Suleiman the Magnificent, the sultan himself used to preside at meetings here,
but Suleiman constructed a room with access to his own quarters in the Harem, allowing him
to overlook proceedings incognito. Ahmet III discontinued this use of the Divan, and there
after the grand vizier conducted meetings outside the palace in his own quarters, which
became universally known as the Sublime Porte. There is a private entrance to the Harem
behind the Divan; the public entrance is at the back of the Armory, the next building up
on that side.
THIRD COURT
The entrance to the Third Court is the Gate of Felicity, or
Bab-us-Saade, and the building immediately inside the entrance is the sultan's throne
room, or audience chamber. Ambassadors often had to wait on benches at the gate before
being summoned to an audience. Here were the quarters of the White Eunuchs, who served the
sultan and the palace and were therefore neutralized, not castrated as were the Black
Eunuchs, who served in the Harem and had their quarters there.
Under a colonnade on the right-hand side, there was
a palace school for boys in the Court of the Enderun. On graduation the pupils
first served the sultan as pages. The rooms here now have a display of royal clothing and
ceremonial costumes. Next to it, in the former Treasury, is the royal
collection of jewelry, along with jewel encrusted daggers, swords, thrones, cots and
gewgaws into which jewels have been indiscriminately embedded. This is quite an impressive
display, not to be missed! The Library of Ahmet III, which is at the center of the
main court, has a collection of illuminated manuscripts.
The most sacred building in the Third Court is the Pavilion of the Holy Mantle, or
Hirka-i-Saadet Dairesi, containing Mohammeds cloak, brought back along with his
sword and standard by Selim I, after his conquest of Egypt. These three sacred items
conferred the title of Caliph on the holder, the highest religious office in Islam.
Lower down on the left of this court is the
15th-century Agalar Cami, and behind it is the discreet Kushane Kapisi entrance
to the Harem. The Harem complex
consisted of 250 rooms situated on varying levels, and in the time of Suleiman the
Magnificent there were 1,000 selected inmates, as well as other girls in training. Sinan
designed part of the Seraglio for Suleiman, and a concealed passageway led from that
sultan's quarters to the room of his current favorite. The Valide Sultan, the mother of
the Sultan, was nominally in charge of the Harem and had her quarters there. Another
section consisted of the Kafes which was in fact a royal prison for the heir to the
throne. Those who lived there were cut off from all contact with society outside the
palace: Osman III spent 50 years in the Kafes prior to his elevation as sultan. Mehmet II,
the conqueror of Constantinople, on his accession promulgated the Law of Fratricide-given
credence by Koran interpreters-whereby a newly elected sultan, as a safeguard against
palace rebellion and conspiracy, had his brothers and other near relatives executed by
means of a silken cord. A later sultan suspended this law and restricted action to
confinement in the Kafes of only the immediate heir to the throne. In the 19th century,
the mad Abdul Hamid II temporarily revived the Law of Fratricide.
FOURTH COURT
Notable in the Fourth Court is the Baghdad Kiosk, or Bavgdat
Kosku, which Murat IV built, modeled on a building he had seen in Baghdad at the time of
his capture of that city in 1638. It has exquisite tiling and faience work,
and the rooms, complete with divans, look out to a courtyard with a fountain and views of
the Golden Horn. In the same court the Revan Kiosk is earlier building, again modeled on a
building that Murat had noted on campaign. This kiosk has for company the Sunnet Odasi of
1641, built by Sultan Ibrahim for the circumcision ceremonies of princes. The Mustafa Pasa
Kiosk, Kara Mustafa Kosku, or Sofa Kiosk, was so named because of its low-set sofas in the
window bays. Kara Mustafa was the grand vizier responsible for restorations at the palace.
Pierre Loti, the French novelist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, was given the
sultan's permission to stay at this kiosk during his residence in Istanbul. With its
pools, gardens and marble terraces,
the Fourth Court is an agreeable place to linger. It has a restaurant situated in a kiosk
that was a favorite retreat of Abdul Mecit I and overlooks the Marmara Sea. A gateway out
of this fourth court leads to Seraglio Point where wayward and offending ladies of the
Harem, tied into weighted sacks, were dropped into the Bosphorus.
Abdul Mecit (1831-61) abandoned Topkapi in favor of
Yildiz Kiosk near Besiktas on the Bosphorus, on the other side of the Golden Horn, and
lived there until the building of the Dolmabahce Palace was completed.
In their Revolution of 1908 the Young Turks, whose
political aim was to bring Turkey out of the dead past and into the 20th century, broke up
the Harem and invited relatives of inmates to reclaim their kin. Circassia in the Caucasus
region had been a favored recruiting ground for girls, and many villagers arrived from
Circassian villages, as from elsewhere, to claim their kin. Not every odalisque was so
claimed, nor did every inmate welcome release from the security the Harem had provided.
Unclaimed residents were given house room in the Eski Saray, the Old Palace near the Fatih
Cami, which had been the Harem prior to Suleiman's day.

HAGIA SOPHIA
On leaving Topkapi, and passing Ahmet's fountain, Ayasofya (in Turkish),
or St. Sophia, the
Church of the Holy Wisdom, is on the right. The church from this southeast side looks
massive, partly because of the heavy buttresses that were erected during the Latin
occupation at the beginning of the 13th century. The Belfry on the west faV ade is a Latin
addition too. Flying buttresses had been constructed in the ninth century. After the
Byzantines reoccupied the city in the 1260s, Andronicus II Palaeologos put up other
buttresses, setting these against the main piers. On its conversion to a mosque, Mehmet II
erected a wooden minaret on the southeast comer, replacing this later with a brick one.
Beyazit II added a stone minaret at the northeast
comer, and Sinan was employed by Selim II to erect another on the southwest, and finally
in the cause of harmony Murat II added the fourth. Murat also donated two large alabaster
urns taken from Pergamum to serve as an ablutions fountain in the forecourt. To add to the
mounting clutter, several large tombs were placed on the west side. In general, the
exterior aspect of this great church might well discourage a visitor prior to entering it.
In fairness, the massive
nobility of the structure is best seen from the Marmara Sea on a ferryboat making its
way to the Princes' Islands.
Constantine, or his son and successor Constantius,
is thought to have erected a first church over what had been a temple to Artemis on a site
sacred to even earlier deities. This church, as with St. Irene, was among the buildings
burned down in the Nika Riot of 532. Afterwards, Justinian commissioned Anthemius of
Tralles and Isadore of Miletus to build a new and larger church, which was completed in
537. The unique feature of the new building was the round dome set on a square by use of
squinches, pendentives and soffits. Twenty years later, weakened by earthquakes in 553 and
557, the dome collapsed; a new, higher one was erected by a nephew of Isadore of Miletus.
In 986 the western arch collapsed, and the dome was rebuilt by an Armenian architect.
The eastern arch fell in 1347, and this time three
Italian architects were employed to undertake repairs that took seven years. In the 19th
century, Sultan Abdul Mecit I commissioned Swiss engineers, the Fossati brothers, to place
an iron girdle about the dome in magnificence of concept, Justinian believed he had built
better than Solomon with his Temple at Jerusalem. Its gold, silver, priceless brocades and
precious ornamentation are no longer here: much of it disappeared with the Latins. Its
mosaics and frescoes have been plastered over and whitewashed under Islam, and its windows
have been boarded up or blocked. Kemal Ataturk ended Moslem worship there and declared it
a museum, but the low-hanging
chandeliers remain, as do the large medallions with their
calligraphic inscriptions of Allah, Mohammed and the first four caliphs.
The tall wooden structure with a stairway leading
up to the mimber (a pulpit) is Moslem, and in the apse is the mihrab (the
shallow niche that represents the cave in which Mohammed hid from his pursuers on the
night of his escape from Mecca to Medina). Aligned on Mecca, the setting of a mihrab in a
converted church can often look off-center, because the altar end of a church is seldom
built to face east with such precision. The great dome, which spans 32 meters (105 feet),
is supported on four main piers with arches between them and half-domes on the west and
east. The eight pillars of the nave are of green Molossian marble and probably came from
Ephesus. The porphyry columns of the porticoes are likely to have been cut in Egyptian
quarries at Thebes.
Work on the restoration of the mosaics was begun in
the 1930s by Thomas Whittemore and his team from the Byzantine Institute of America and
was continued by Paul Underwood after Whittemore's death in the 1950s. The lunette (wall
in which windows are set) over the main entry from the narthex-the vestibule
between the church entrance and the nave-has a detail of Christ between founder of the
Virgin Mary and the Archangel Gabriel, with a prostrate interceding emperor, Leo VI. In
the dome of the apse is a portrait of the Virgin Mary. In the lunette over the
southwestern entrance to the narthex, Constantine offers his city to Mary, while to
Justinian he offers his church. In a room over the southwestern porch, there is a mosaic
of Christ between Mary and John the Baptist (St. John Prodromos), and there are other
portraits of Apostles and of patriarchs. The dome of the apse has a portrait of the
Virgin. In the south gallery, the Empress Zoe and the Emperor Constantine IX Monomachus
are on either side of an enthroned Christ. Near it another panel has John II Comnenus and
his wife Irene in company with Mary, and in another damaged mosaic Christ is again with
Mary and St. John Prodromos. All these works date between the mid-ninth and early 12
centuries.
Henry Dandolo, the blind Doge of Venice, who was
the evil counselor at tile time of the Latin assault on Constantinople and its subsequent
occupation, has rated at least a modicum of sanctity in that an inscribed stone in the
women's gallery commemorates him.
Two of the original bronze gates that stood at the
southwest entrance have survived. Entrance is now by way of the exonarthex and narthex on
the northwestern end. The entrance fee is 34,OOOTL.

SULTAN AHMET CAMI-THE BLUE MOSQUE
Go southwest from Ayasofya, through the open area
of the former Augusteum to the site of the Hippodrome to arrive at the Blue Mosque; the
entrance into the walled forecourt is on the northwest side. If St. Sophia is a paean to
the revealed Wisdom of God, Sultan Ahmet is celestial illumination through blue and green
Iznik tiles: Allah is conveyed in a less-delineated form for the faithful than the son of
God in Christian mosaic, portrait and sculpture. Four massive pillars support the
43-metre-(141-foot-) high dome, 23.5 metros (77 feet) in diameter, with half-domes on each
side. The somewhat austere effect is set off by filtered and reflected light on the
beautiful tulip patterned tiling. Birds nest in the dome and are in almost constant
flight, as in an enormous birdcage.
The mosque, begun under Ahmet I in 1609 and
completed in 1616, was built over part of the ruins of the Byzantine Great Palace, the
Daphne. Its architect was Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, a pupil of Sinan. From the fine, spacious
forecourt with its elegant fountain on six pillars with floral carvings, the exterior mass
of the building lightens impressively as it rolls back and rises in ascending curves to
the dome. There are six slender minarets. An apocryphal story says that Ahmet was
considered presumptuous in erecting six minarets since the only other mosque with six was
the Ka'aba at Mecca, and so as not to jeopardize his hope of eternal felicity the sultan
donated a seventh to Mecca, which in fact already had seven minarets.
For a Moslem, ritual ablution accompanies the five
canonical daily periods of prayer. In the larger mosques, the sadirvan (ablutions
fountain) is in the mosque's forecourt, though in some, such as the Ulu Cami at Bursa, the
fountain is inside the mosque; in a small mosque a tap above a basin in the wall near the
entrance may serve as the sadirvan.
*** One must go shoeless into a mosque, and
women are expected to be soberly dressed, with covered heads. At large mosques
overshoes or slippers can be obtained at the entrance; they are not for hire, but a small
tip can be given to the custodian when returning them. Shoes can be left in his care or
carried. In general, no objection is raised to the discreet use of a camera inside a
mosque.

THE
HIPPODROME
The main gateway from the forecourt of the Blue
Mosque leads into the At Meydani which was the site of the Hippodrome. The
Daphne section of the Great Palace here had an entrance into the Royal Box, the Kathisma.
In Constantinople, chariot racing was the principal
spectacle, not gladiatorial contests as in the Coliseum in Rome. This was interspersed
with light entertainment: dancers, acrobats and singers, or heavier spectacles in the form
of a public execution or the humiliation of a captive of distinction or perhaps a fallen
emperor, as with Andronicus I. The display could be gruesome, as when Basil I blinded
15,000 Bulgarian prisoners, or idiosyncratic, as with Constantine Vs mustering of
the citys monks and nuns and ordering them to copulate on pain of execution or
blinding. The humiliation of a captive, however, not unusually might have ended with an
act of clemency, such as granting permission to stay on in the city, with accommodation
and a job. Draperies were hung in the Royal Box to indicate the form of entertainment for
the following day. The Emperor, the human being with the closest edge on divinity,
adjudicated from Kathisma.
Competing charioteers wore the colors of one or
other of the factions, a legacy from Rome, though they seem not to have been politically
organized at first. Later, the Greens were recruited from and supported by the lower
social groupings; the Blues came from the better off. There had been Whites and Reds as
well, but the Whites joined the Blues, and the Reds merged with the Greens.
Inter-faction fighting was frequent, more often than not with casualties, even fatalities.
Some civil responsibilities were expected of the members, such as serving as supplementary
police or as standard bearers in civic processions or triumphal marches.
The Nika Riot lasted eight days and culminated in
the Hippodrome, with a great part of the city destroyed, damaged or burning. According to
the historian Procopius, Justinian's nerve, about to crack, was held firm only by the
greater determination of Theodora, his empress. About 30,000 Greens were massacred by the
imperial troops, and Justinian rebuilt the city.
Of the monuments that were set up along the center
spine of the Hippodrome, only three have survived. The one that attracts most attention is
the Serpent Column,
transferred by Constantine from its original site at Delphi in Greece where it had been
placed to commemorate the victory of the Greeks over the Persians at Plataea in 478 BC.
Only part of one head of three entwined serpents exists now, and this is in the
Archaeological Museum. According to historians, this monument once dispensed wine, milk
and honey through its three mouths, but the Patriarch Theophilus in his day considered it
a source of evil and went out one night to axe the heads of the 'dragon'. He succeeded in
destroying two before the night watch stopped him. The benignity of the serpents, though,
was made manifest when one sultan, also considering the monument malign, had the remaining
head removed, and the city afterwards became infested by snakes. The Theodosian Column was
brought from Karnak by Theodosias I,(379-95). Carvings in relief with inscriptions in
Latin and Greek at the base of the granite column record events in the emperor's deeds.
The gilded plaques that once adorned this monument were removed for their value by
Dandolo's soldiers, as was the sculptured group of four Bronze Horses now set up above the
portal of St. Mark's in Venice. The fountain at the northeast end of the Hippodrome, the Alman
Cesmesi, or Kaiser's Fountain, was a gift from Kaiser Wilhelm to Abdul Hamit II in
1898.
At the rear of the Marmara University offices at
the southern end of the At Meydani, excavation and reconstruction have established part of
the Hippodrome's curved retaining wall, which had been built up to counter the steep slope
of the hill at the end.

OTHER
OLD CITY SIGHTS
On the opposite side of the At Meydani from the
Blue Mosque is the Museum of Oriental Antiquities, housed in the former
16th-century Palace of Ibrahim Pasa, named for a grand vizier of Suleiman the Magnificent.
Besides the exhibits, the building itself is of considerable interest. Entrance costs
1O,OOOTL, 5,OOOTL for students.
The Artisan Center can be found on Kabasacal
Caddesi by going out of the open place in front of St. Sophia at its Southwestern
comer. The courtyard of this restored medrese can be a cool, quiet Place in which to rest.
There is a fountain. Its workshops are under the arcade that surrounds the central court.
Next to the Artisan Center on Kabasacal Caddesi is Yesil Ev, a restored timbered
mansion, which has been converted to a hotel and restaurant. The garden here has a marble
pool, a conservatory and flowered arbors. Reconstruction of these two buildings was
sponsored by the Turkish Touring and Automobile Club.
The Basilican Cistern is
located on Sogukcesme Caddesi, which is off the roadway that runs downhill from the north
side of St. Sophia. It is on the line of the walls built by Septimius Severus. The
cistern, which has been dry for a long time, has now been converted by the Touring and
Automobile Association into an attractive restaurant, with its tables among the ancient
columns. Beside it, and along Antoninia's ancient wall behind St. Sophia, is a row of
timbered houses which has become the T.T.O.K. Pension with tourist accommodation and
restaurants.
On the opposite side of the open place in front of
St. Sophia, the site of the former Baths of Zeuxippus has been refashioned and
landscaped as a park. When the silk worm was first brought to the city from China by two
Byzantine monks, the baths were converted to an imperial silk factory. Beside the
park on the Southwestern corner of the open place, a former Turkish Bath has
been reconstructed and opened as a museum. The many rooms have been fitted out in keeping
with their purpose, and throughout the building there is a display of fine Turkish carpets
and kilims. In one section, carpets or rugs may be bought or ordered. Its rear exit leads
into Kabasacal Caddesi. Entrance to this building is free.
Beyond the northeastern end of the At Meydani and
the Kaisel's Fountain is the entrance to the remarkable Cistem of Philoxenos or Yerebatan
Saray, constructed in the time of Justinian. Water was brought to it via the aqueduct,
built by the co-emperor Valens (364-78), which spans the valley between the citys
third and fourth hills. The cistern has 336 columns supporting arched vaults in brick and
covers an area of 9,800 square metros (11,720 square yards). Effective flood-lighting and
a wooden walkway that surrounds the whole area have been installed. Most of the columns
have their capitals still and most probably were brought here from pagan temple sites. At
least two of the columns are set on carved Medusa heads that may well have been brought
from Ephesus or Didyma. A cafe is in operation on a platform below the entrance stairway
where the walkway starts. Above the cistern is a brick water tower, one of several in the
city. Entrance fee to the cistern is ~15,OOOTL.
In Byzantine times the main street of the city was
the Mese, which ran westward from the Augusteum and through the city walls at Hadrian's
Gate to link up with the Egnatian Way, the great road east from Rome. The Milion
was the post from which all road distances were measured. Alongside the entrance to the
Yerebatan Cistem at the start of Divan Yolu, an excavation located the site of this
milestone, and a broken section has been uncovered.
The former Great Palace, the crown of a vast
complex of hillside buildings, pavilions, gardens, stairways and stoas, was very nearly a
total ruin at the time the Blue Mosque (Mosque of Sultan Ahmet) was built there. What has
survived are a number of fine mosaics of the sixth century, some of which are in situ;
others have been moved and reset in what is now the Mosaic Museum. The museum is on
Torun Sokak, downhill from the northwestern comer of the open place in front of St. Sophia
but also reached from the southeastern end of the Hippodrome. Entrance is in the arcade of
the Arasta Bazaar, a reconstructed unit of tourist boutiques and carpet sellers, and costs
~5,OOOTL.
The First Court of Topkapi Palace is part of Gulhanc
Parki, which is encompassed within the walls of Septimius Severus' city, and on the
northern side runs downhill to the Bosphorus shore. From Ayasofya follow the line of the
walls northeastwards down towards the Bosphorus to reach the entrance into the park and
the Archaeological Museum, entrance ~1O,OOOTL. Exhibits include many from early and
prehistoric periods as well as Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine. A notable exhibit is the
item know as the Alexander Sarcophagus, excavated at Sidon in the Lebanon and
believed by some to be that of the Macedonian conqueror. it has fine relief carvings,
including one of a hunt. A companion sarcophagus is that of the Weeping or
Mourning Woman, which also has beautiful carvings and is assigned like the other to
the fourth century BC. An exhibit from Cyprus is of a savage caveman-like Heracles with
club.
In the close neighborhood of the museum is the Cinili
Kiosk of 1472, one of the very earliest Ottoman buildings in the city, where Mehmet II
is said to have resided while the new Topkapi Palace was under construction. Its style is
pleasing Persian with those large open-fronted tiled and vaulted chambers know as eyvans.
Now a tile museum, among its exhibits is a Seljuk mihrab from Karaman, in dark-blue
faience with traditional stalactite pattern.
Lower down in the park, towards the shore, the
Column, known as that of the Goths, is of obscure origin. It has been attributed to
Claudius II (268-70) but also to Constantine, though it may have been set up by Septimius
Severus: an inscription of a much later date assigns it as a victory monument to the
defeat of a Gothic incursion. In the park is a small zoo, which contains a section
of birds of prey that is not without its mesmerizing fascination. Many visitors might feel
outraged by the caged dogs on display.

VICINITY
OF SULTANAHMET
CEMBERLITAS
Set off westward along Divan Yolu from the Milion.
After several hundred meters, a little off to the right is the Cemberlitas, or Burnt
Column of Constantine, so called because of its having been damaged by fire.
In Constantine's day there was an oval forum
situated here at what may have been the west gate of Antoninia. On its erection, the
column of nine high drums was surmounted by a statue of Constantine as Apollo, and the orb
he carried was said to contain a fragment of the True Cross. At the foot of the column was
a sanctuary in which were relics claimed to be from the crosses of the two thieves who had
hung with Christ on Calvary, the baskets from the loaves and fishes miracle, a jar
belonging to Mary Magdalene and presumably used by her in the washing of the feet, the
palladium of ancient Rome and a wooden statue of Athena from Troy.
In 1150 a gale blew three drums and Constantine's
statue off the column. Bronze wreaths once covered the joins between the drums, but these
were likely to have been taken as loot by the Latins, or perhaps lost in a fire. After the
column had again been damaged, Sultan Mustafa II (1695-1703) made good the loss of the
wreaths with iron bands.

GRAND BAZAAR AND VICINITY
Between Constantine's Column and the Kapali Carsi,
the Covered or Grand Bazaar, there are two mosques of interest, the Atik Ali Pasa Cami,
which is one of the oldest in the city, and the Nuruosmaniye. The Atik Ali was
built in 1497 by a grand vizier of Beyazit II. It is on the same side of the road as the
Cemberlitas. A little further on again, and off to the right, is the Nuruosmaniye (Light
of Osman), a mosque begun in 1746 under Mahmut I (1730-54) but completed by Osman III
(1754-7). The interior is impressively uncluttered, and a multitude of windows let in
light. By going through the courtyard of this mosque one of the ten or more entrances to
the Grand Bazaar can be
reached, though the main entrance to the Ic Bedesten (Old
Bazaar) is further along on Divan Yolu.
The bazaar is a complex of market areas. The Ic
Bedesten was in origin Byzantine; Mehmet II began extensions in 1461, and the complex
grew. Fire has on more than one occasion destroyed whole sections, and there has been
damage by earthquakes; repairs and reconstructions are undertaken on an almost permanent
basis. Within the complex several main avenues and something
like 100 cross streets or arcades exist!
A bedesten is a separate vaulted court, each
a center for a particular trade. The jewelers' is among those most advertised, but the
merchants of fine rugs are numerous, as are those dealing in leather and suede. The bedesten
for brocades is also an auction hall, where the items on display in the morning are
for sale in the afternoon. One needs a visit or two to become acquainted with those bedestens
of your particular interests. You may harbor a belief that bartering and oriental
bazaars go hand in hand, youre oh so correct! Nothing has a set price, and shopping
around is advised. Dont forget to have some tea ,cookies, or other treats while in
the mists of bargaining on a rug or jewelry
the merchant will almost assuredly offer
you stuff to keep you there, or close a sale. Its a game you should learn to play
when shopping here. If you happen to be in a hurry over the purchase of a leather garment
and cannot find one off the peg, there are tailors who can measure and make one in a
matter of hours, including a fitting. The bargain hunter should perhaps temper enthusiasm
with the realization that a bargain is what you make of it. Figure out what the item would
cost elsewhere, check out quality closely, then make an offer under what youd expect
to pay, (Dont make stupid offensive low offers)
negotiate a price youre
comfortable with. If not, move along to another shop, and try again.
There are over 3,000 shops, including restaurants
and cafes, in the covered market. Streets on the northeast side of the bazaar lead down, shops all the way, to the Misir
Carsisi, the Egyptian
or Spice Bazaar, which
is situated just off the waterfront at Eminonu on the Golden Horn, close to the western
egress from Galata Bridge.
Within the complex of the Grand Bazaar are several hans,
(inns), in particular the Valide Han, built in 1651, and the Zincirli at
the northwest corner. Throughout Turkey such hans provided accommodation for merchants,
their animals and their merchandise, as well as for travelers. A hans is a large
rectangular structure that has an open central courtyard, off which are the stables for
the animals and storage space for merchandise; a balcony overlooking the court provides
access to the rooms for merchants and travelers. Many abandoned han are still standing,
and you may find one-where refinements are few, but the ambiance agreeable-still in use.
They make for reasonable accommodations, but be weary of leaving valuables strewn about
ones room.













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