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Dialling code
+90 212
Population
15 million (2005 official estimate, metropolitan area).
Time zone
GMT + 2 (GMT + 3 from last Sunday in March to Saturday before
last Sunday in October).
Electricity
220 volts AC, 50Hz; round two-pin plugs are standard.
Average January temperatures
5°C (41°F).
Average July temperatures
28°C (82°F).
Annual rainfall
654mm (25.8 inches).
Cost of Living:
The devaluation of the Turkish Lira in January 2006 meant ridding of
all the zeros, hence 1,000,000 Turkish Lira became 1 Yeni Turk
Lirasi (New Turkish Lira).
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Special Events:
New Year’s Day, 1 Jan, national holiday, throughout the city
Kurban Bayram (Feast of the Sacrifice), religious holiday
International
Film Festival, in April National Independence and Children’s Day, 23 Apr,
International Theater Festival, May, Ataturk Kultur Merkezi, Taksim
Youth and Sports Day, 19 May, national holiday, throughout the city
International Istanbul Music Festival, Jun,
various venues International Bosphorus Festival, Jun, yacht races
and regattas
International Jazz Festival, Jul, various venuesZafer Bayram (Victory
Day), 30 Aug, national holiday, throughout the city
International Istanbul Biennale, Sep-Nov, biannual art festival,
various venues
Cumhuriyet Bayram (Republic Day), 29 Oct, national holiday
celebrating Atatürk’s proclamation of the Turkish Republic in 1923,
throughout the city
Intercontinental Istanbul Eurasia Marathon, Oct, Üsküdar to Taksim
Akbank Jazz Festival, early Oct, Cemal Resit Rey Concert Hall,
Babylon and Venue Maslak
Ramadan, Muslim Holy Month of Fasting, with the end of the fast
marked by a three-day national holiday, Ramadan throughout the city
Seker Bayram (Sugar Holiday or Eid Al Fitr), religious holiday,throughout
the city Istanbul
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Istanbul Airports
Ataturk International Airport (IST)
Istanbul Ataturk Airport
The rebuilt, state-of-the-art Ataturk International Airport opened in 2000,
and is located 19 km (12 miles) west of central Istanbul, in Yesilkoy. As
Turkey’s largest airport, it is the main international gateway to the
country, with a capacity of 14 million passengers a year, increasing to 20
million after completion of the extension.
Sabiha Gokcen International Airport (SAW)
The airport is located on the Asian side of Istanbul, 50km (30 miles) east
of Taksim, the European center of Istanbul, 1.5km (1 mile) from the TEM
motorway, and 4km (2.5 miles) from Pendik sea bus jetty and train station.
This new airport, opened in 2001 and named after a Turkish female combat
pilot, has relieved some of the overload at Atatürk Airport with its
domestic terminal and international terminal mainly serving German cities,
plus London and Amsterdam. It also handles a small number of charter flights
to central Asia, and cargo and military planes.
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Istanbul is often described as ‘the crossroads of Europe and Asia’ -
a heaving bazaar-city of carpets and caravanserais with an imperial history
stretching back for more than 1,500 years. This metropolis of an estimated
15 million occupies both sides of an east-west land bridge divided by the
32km (20-mile) Bosphorus Strait, which also connects the trade routes of the
Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara and the Mediterranean. As a result, the city
has been a jealously guarded center of world trade since the Byzantine era,
and protected by water on three sides, with the natural harbor of the Golden
Horn nestled within the city.
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Even after Constantinople (as it was previously known) fell to the Ottoman
Sultans in 1453, the city remained (and it still is) the trading post for
valuable spices and textiles brought via the Silk Road from as far away as
China. Its prime position has meant that Istanbul has suffered from frequent
sieges, changing from a Hellenic outpost to New Rome, the world’s first
Christian capital, and the seat of the world’s biggest Muslim Empire. Its
identity today combines that of both eastern and European.
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Haghia Sophia
Haghia Sophia, known as Aya Sofya and translated as ‘Church of Divine Wisdom’,
is considered the world’s finest example of Byzantine architecture.
Consecrated in 537AD, its vast dome rises to 56m (183ft), designed to appear
suspended in space and thus representative of heaven. So impressed was
Mehmet the Conqueror that when he took the city in 1453, he dedicated it as
a mosque, and it remained so until declared a museum when the Turkish
Republic was founded. Highlights include Byzantine mosaics and huge Ottoman
circular shields containing calligraphy of Koranic verses.
Sultanahmet, in front of Topkapi Palace.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 0900-1700 (winter), 0900-1800 (summer).
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Topkapi Palace
Originally built as a summer residence and the seat of government, Topkapi
Palace was home to harem, state administration and military personnel in the
16th century, with around 3,000 residents. Sultans abandoned it for
Dolmabahçe Palace in 1855, but many of the sumptuous jewels of the original
treasury (including the Topkapi dagger, and gold-plated throne of Murat
III), the armory, silk ceremonial robes, Chinese ceramics and the collection
of manuscripts, all convey the old Ottoman decadence. Near the Imperial Gate
is Haghia Eirene Museum, venue of concerts during the International Istanbul
music festival. The prison-like Harem, comprising several dozen ornate rooms
which once housed up to 300 concubines, is only open to guided tours and
requires a separate ticket (and separate queue). Weekends and holidays are
more crowded.
Opening hours: Wed-Mon 0900-1700 (winter); Wed-Mon 0900-1800 (summer).
Kapali Carsi (Covered or Grand Bazaar)
The famous and vast bazaar is the best known
of Istanbul’s markets. It was instated shortly after the 1493
Conquest and contained the slave market, as well as the hans, or
caravanserais of old, where Silk Road traders could rest themselves
and their camels, as well as sell their goods. While the ornate
ceilings and labyrinth-like layout still hark back to the past,
these days the vast number of stalls (more than 4,000 of them, in
over 60 streets) sell mainly tourist-friendly goods, including
carpets, gold, leather and ceramics. The complex also contains two
mosques, money change offices, a police station, cafes and an
information point. Haggling is essential at most stalls.
Beyazit Opening hours: Mon-Sat
0900-1900.
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Misir Carsisi (Egyptian or Spice Market)
This L-shaped market, facing the Golden Horn,
was built in the 17th century as an extension to Yeni Camii (New
Mosque), and financed by the money paid as duty on Egyptian goods.
Originally famed for its exotic spices and oils from the Orient,
these days it also sells dried fruits, caviar and Turkish delight,
as well a plethora of souvenirs. Its surrounding streets are a hub
of commercial activity, with local craftspeople, traders and a great
selection of cheeses and olives. Eminonu Opening hours: Mon-Sat
0800-1900.
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Sultanahmet Camii (Blue Mosque)
The Blue Mosque was built during the reign
of Sultan Ahmet (1603-1617), as Islam’s answer to Haghia Sophia,
and remains the symbol and center of religious demonstrations
and Istanbul’s only mosque with six minarets. Blue Iznik tiles
dominate the interior, and blue light shines through more than
250 windows. The interior is stunning, from the vast central
dome designed to lift all eyes heavenward to the latticework-covered
Imperial Loge and the mihrab (prayer niche) containing a piece
of sacred black stone from Mecca. At dusk during summer there is
a Son et Lumière (sounds and lights) show. The Imperial Pavilion
also contains a state-run Carpet Museum with Usak, Bergama and
Konya samples, dating between the 16th and 19th centuries. (The
mosque is undergoing restoration until early 2007).
Archeoloji Müzeleri (Archaeological Museums)
Istanbul’s Archaeology Museums are located in
three separate buildings, once part of the Topkapi Palace complex.
The main building houses the famous fourth-century Alexander
sarcophagus discovered in Lebanon, as well as the facade of the
Temple to Athena from Assos, Byzantine mosaics and sarcophagi. The
interior of the Çinili Kösk (Tiled Pavilion), built in 1472, is
covered in Iznik tiles and contains the 14th-century royal blue
Karaman Mihrab (prayer niche). The Museum of the Ancient Orient
includes the Treaty of Kadesh, drawn up between the Egyptians and
Hittites in 1269BC, plus a magnificent frieze of a bull from Babylon.
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 1000-1700.
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Yerebatan Sarayi (Basilica Cistern)
Sometimes referred to as the Sunken Palace,
the Basilica Cistern was the reservoir for water required for
the Byzantine Great Palace, and thought to date back to AD532.
This huge atmospheric structure, measuring 140m (460ft) by 70m
(230ft), still contains a few feet of water, over which wooden
walkways have been constructed. Many of the 335 columns
supporting the cathedral-like ceiling have been recycled from
pre-Christian temples - such as the Medusa heads that are used
as column bases, pilfered from the Temple of Apollo in Didyma
(Didim). The cistern was used as a film set for the James Bond
film, From Russia With Love (1963).
Opening hours: Daily 0900-1730.
Kariye Muzesi (Kariye Museum)
Originally an 11th-century church (and
sometimes still referred to as Chora Church) this contains
Istanbul’s finest Byzantine mosaics, as well as superb 14th-century
religious frescoes. Although converted to a mosque after the
Conquest, the mosaics were merely whitewashed over, and have been
preserved for display in what is now a secular museum. Opening hours:
Thurs-Tues 0930-1630.
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Galata Kulesi (Galata Tower)
The balcony at the top of Galata Tower has an unforgettable view of the city.
Built in 1348 by the Genoese as part of their fortifications, this
distinctive 62m
(205ft) tower with conical roof is visible from most of the
city. It was converted to cater for tourism, which thankfully includes a
lift, plus a nightclub and restaurant on the top floors. On a clear day, the
view is spectacular and it is possible to see the main monuments of Istanbul
and even Princes’ Islands, and is highly recommended for visitors to get a
feel of the surroundings. There are several charming tea gardens at the foot.
Opening hours: Daily 0900-2000.
Turk ve Esleri Müzesi (Turkish and Islamic Art
Museum)
Originally the 16th-century palace of Süleyman
the Magnificent’s most able Grand Vizier, Ibrahim Pasha, this museum
contains more than 40,000 items dating from between the seventh to
the 19th century. Its famous carpet display contains Turkish carpets
depicting Holbein paintings and fragments of 13th-century Selçuk
rugs. Further highlights include Ottoman Koran cases and stands,
illuminated manuscripts and tiles, and the basement contains an
exhibition of the evolution of the Turkish house - from nomadic
tents to 19th-century palaces.
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Taksim Square and Istiklal Caddesi
The square is the nucleus of Istanbul’s modern European side, which many
tourists unfortunately miss. In the south-west corner is the Monument of
Independence, where the busy Istiklal Caddesi starts and cuts through
Beyoglu area. This 1.5km (1 mile) pedestrianized boulevard is lined with
shops, cinemas, markets and restaurants, and especially crowded at night.
Its 19th-century European consulates, churches and ornate buildings are
evidence that Beyoglu was once the centerpiece for an art nouveau belle
époque, and later the hang-out for bohemian artists and intellectuals.
Highlights include the stained glass at the entrance to Cicek Pasaj (Flower
Passage), the imposing Galatasaray Lisesi (High School) and various
contemporary art galleries (free).
Opening hours: Most shops open till 2100, later on Fri-Sat.
Istanbul Modern
Located in a restored old waterfront warehouse
and opened in 2004, the huge Istanbul Modern has a fine collection
of contemporary arts from Turkey and around the world. Specialising
in painting and photography, with a cinema screening world films in
the basement, the gallery hosts exhibitions that include 20th-century
home-grown talent to try to encourage Turkish art. The entire venue
is fresh, spacious and well laid-out, with a fine restaurant/café on
the ground floor overlooking the Bosphorus.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800; Thurs 1000-2000.
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Yildiz Park
Rising above the area of Besiktas, Yildiz is a welcome relief from the noise
of the city, with woodland and landscaped gardens. Sultan Abdul Hamit built
them for the Ciragan Palace (now a 5-star hotel over the main road) where
Sultans strolled and hunted since the 17th-century. It is now more popular
with courting couples and picnicking families and is busiest at weekends. At
the top are Malta Kosk and Cadir Kosk, two attractive 19th-century pavilions
originally part of the palace, whose guests included Winston Churchill and
Charles de Gaulle, and now operating as restaurants and cafés. The park also
houses Yildiz Palace Museum, Imperial Porcelain Factory and City Museum.
Opening hours: Daily, dawn till dusk.
Suleymaniye
Mosque
Although fewer tourists make it here than to
the Blue Mosque, this is even grander and more peaceful, and one of
the finest creations by Ottoman architect Mimar Sinan. The huge 53m-high
dome and pencil-slim minarets from each corner of the courtyard are
an exquisite example of symmetry and elegance. Built in the 1550s,
the site also contains the tombs of Sinan, Sultans Suleyman II and
Ahmet II decorated with intricate tiles, the original apartments of
the mosque astronomer, charitable foundations, caravanserai and
fountain, all set around a tranquil courtyard. There are several
outdoor tea-houses in a row behind the mosque.
Opening hours: Daily 0930-1730. Closed to non-Muslims during prayer
times.