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  • Day 18

    Last day in Istanbul

    October 16, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C
  • Day 17

    2023 Presidential Tour of Turkey

    October 15, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    Now this was amazing!
    As I said previously, as we headed out on our walk, it was obvious a cycle race of some sort was happening today. The Hippodrome/Sultanahmet Square was blocked off, banners were being put up.

    When we returned after our walk, tents had popped up, cycle raceways were set up, major cameras in place.

    As I sat down to lunch, what should pop up on my Google news? That Jay Vine of Australia won the sprint of the Presidential Tour of Turkey cycle race yesterday on a solo ride.
    "Jay Vine has won stage 7 of the 2023 Tour of Turkey after an epic, long range solo attack to deny the sprinters.
    With just over 25km to go, Jay Vine went on the attack, riding clear from the peloton on the final climb of the day, hoping to boost his hopes of securing King of the Mountains glory. The Australian crested the climb solo, taking maximum points in the process."
    That told us what the race was! Today is the last day, it started elsewhere in Turkey on the 8th.

    So we had lunch then came back to the hotel. We found the race on the Turkish TV and watched the last 40 km.

    Jay Vine was in front again!! So that made it interesting for us as a race. On the TV though was all the streets and landmarks we'd seen on the Bus and Boat yesterday! Also, the race finished right next door to our hotel and the helicopter that was streaming the race on telly was right above us.
    It was pretty exciting!

    Jay didn't win today's leg but he did get King of the Mountain.
    Aussie, Aussie, Aussie!! 🦘 🇦🇺
    We also had an interview with him but was voiced over by Turkish!! Heard him say in Aussie accent " at least I got something for the mantle piece!"

    I have a good friend Gayle, who loves and lives cycle races. She couldn't live stream the race so I basically commentated the last stage for her! 😂

    I think it was the last race of the season
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  • Day 17

    Morning walk

    October 15, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    We were planning to go on the Hop on Hop off bus today but it's not running as a lot of streets are closed because of a cycle race. See a following page about that.

    We walked down to the Spice Bazaar, also called the Egyptian Bazaar. The Grand Bazaar is closed on Sundays but this looks to be a smaller version of that. Certainly doesn't have 4,000 shops or 16 streets in it. Like most markets, most shops are the same anyway.
    I buy my obligatory fridge magnet and flag lapel pin.
    Then we found a coffee shop. The owner is Turkish but born in Sydney.

    We head back to Sultanahmet and find another small bazaar near the Blue Mosque. Now that we live in a smaller house I'm less inclined to buy as many souvenirs as I used to. Where to put them?

    It's obvious there's a major cycle race happening - tents, cycle ways have been fenced off, banners and cameras set up.

    We have soup for lunch at a decent time so we can have a good last supper tonight.

    We have tea at a rooftop terrace restaurant with a great view. We've been wanting to have a type of kebab that is in a clay pot 🍯 that is put on fire then hit the pot to break it open. It's called a Testi Kebab.
    The waiter decides I need to get up and "cook" my dinner. It's all part of the performance. Some random guest filmed it but Steve "was so mesmerised by the performance" he forgot! He did get a couple of pics early on though 😂.
    Inside the pot was a very nice beef stew. There are many types of kebabs here, not just ones on sticks.
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  • Day 16

    Short history of Istanbul

    October 14, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ 🌙 18 °C

    History of Istanbul

    The first inhabitants of Istanbul date back to the second millennia BC, they were settled on the Asian side of the city. Its first name comes from Megara king Byzas who took his colonists here in the 7th century BC to establish a colony named Byzantium, the Greek name for a city on the Bosphorus. Byzas chose this spot after consulting an oracle of Delphi who told him to settle across from the "land of the blind". Indeed, Byzas believed that earlier settlers must have been "blind" for overlooking this superb location at the entrance of the Bosphorus strait, the only access to the Black Sea.

    In the 6th century BC Persians ruled the city and then Alexander the Great took it over after 4th century BC, which was a peaceful period until the 2nd century BC.

    In 193 AD Roman emperor Septimus Severus conquered the city and it remained under the Roman rule until 4th century AD, when emperor Constantine the Great made Byzantium the capital of the entire Roman Empire and gave it his name: Constantinople, and the Eastern Roman Empire was called Byzantine Empire after the 5th century. The city was built on seven hills, like Rome.

    Early Byzantine emperors filled their city with the treasures of the ancient world, especially between 4th and 6th centuries with a population exceeded half a million. In 532 during the reign of Justinian I, riots destroyed the city. But it was rebuilt and outstanding structures such as Hagia Sophia stand as monuments to the golden age of the Byzantines.
    Istanbul's latter history is full of intrigues and sieges. It was besieged by the Arabs in the 7th and 8th centuries and by the Barbarians in the 9th and 10th. Ruled by Romans on their Fourth Crusade between 1204-1261 they destroyed and sacked all the wealth. After this, Constantinople did not regain its former richness nor strength.

    Ottoman Turks led by Sultan Mehmet II conquered Constantinople in 1453. Renamed Islambol, the city became the capital of the Ottoman Empire. Between 15th and 16th centuries, sultans built many
    mosques and public buildings, topping the population again around half million by the mid 1500's, Istanbul was a major cultural, political, and commercial center. The name "Istanbul" was derived from a combination of "Islambol" ("city of Islam" in Turkish) and "eis tin Polin" ("to the City" in Greek) throughout the centuries.

    Ottoman rule lasted until World War I when Istanbul was occupied by the allied troops. After years of struggle led by Ataturk against the occupying forces, the Republic of Turkey was born in 1923 and the capital was moved to Ankara province. But Istanbul has continued to expand dramatically; today its population is over 20 million and still increases constantly. It continues to be the commercial and cultural center of Turkey.
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  • Day 16

    Bosphorus River Bus and Boat 🚢

    October 14, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    Pick up 10.30. Embark 11.30
    Cruise on the Golden Horn then the Bosphorus Strait.
    Cruise past palaces and mosques.
    Turkish Riviera.
    Largest Turkish flag 2000 square metres. They love flying their flags.

    One large building was built for military soldiers, then became hospital. Florence Nightingale worked there.

    Kucuksu Palace, hunting lodge. On Asian side.

    Istanbul bridge between 2 continents - Europe and Asia.
    Constantinople became second Roman capital.

    Bus to Lunch 3 pm at Pierre Loti Hill. Then cable car down to bus. Drive around city walls, a lot still intact, some renovated or in the process.
    Tour finished late 5.30 due to terrible but interesting to watch traffic
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  • Day 15

    The Blue Mosque

    October 13, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Imagine yourself as a young sultan in charge of an empire spanning parts of three continents—Asia, Europe, and Africa—your ancestors brought together through conquests. You are 13 years old and are enthroned in the capital city, Istanbul. You are confronted with the legacy of great rulers before you such as Suleiman the Magnificent and Mehmet the Conqueror. And yet, you are neither a renowned warrior nor an able administrator. How do you leave your mark on the fabric of the city that your forebears coveted and conquered? You commission one of the finest mosques in the heart of the imperial city.

    The Sultan Ahmet Mosque, popularly known as the Blue Mosque, was completed in 1617 just prior to the untimely death of its then 27-year-old eponymous patron, Sultan Ahmet I. The mosque dominates Istanbul’s majestic skyline with its elegant composition of ascending domes and six slender soaring minarets. Although considered one of the last classical Ottoman structures, the incorporation of new architectural and decorative elements in the mosque’s building program and its symbolic placement at the imperial center of the city point to a departure from the classical tradition innovated under the famous 16th-century master architect, Mimar Sinan.
    20,000 Iznik tiles rise from the mid-sections of the mosque and dazzle the visitor with their brilliant blue, green, and turquoise hues. The shade Torquise was coined here by the French due to it's shade of blue. Faded now apparently, we couldn't get in.

    The cheekiness of 6 minarets.
    Such a display was previously only preserved for the Prophet’s mosque in Mecca and the sultan was criticized for thinking a bit too highly of himself
    According to the most obvious urban legend, this whole issue was the result of a misunderstanding between the sultan and his architect. The sultan supposedly had asked to have altın minare (minarets in gold) and the architect understood altı minare (which means six minarets). A second, less plausible legend is that the architect decided that gold minarets were too expensive and therefore decided to make six of them.

    Whatever the true story behind the six minarets is, the sultan overcame the problem by paying for a seventh minaret at the mosque in Mecca.
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  • Day 15

    Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom)

    October 13, 2023 in Turkey ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    Hagia Sophia's complex history began in the year 537 when Byzantine emperor Justinian built the huge church overlooking the Golden Horn harbour

    With its huge dome, it was believed to be the world's largest church and building

    It remained in Byzantine hands for centuries apart from a brief moment in 1204 when Crusaders raided the city

    In 1453, in a devastating blow to the Byzantines, Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II captured Istanbul (formerly known as Constantinople) and the victorious conqueror performed Friday prayers inside Hagia Sophia

    The Ottomans soon converted the building into a mosque, adding four minarets to the exterior and covering ornate Christian icons and gold mosaics with panels of Arabic religious calligraphy

    After centuries at the heart of the Muslim Ottoman empire, it was turned into a museum in 1934 in a drive to make Turkey more secular

    2020 turned back into a Mosque but the Christian emblems, including mosaics of the Virgin Mary which adorn its soaring golden dome, are not removed.
    Christianity and Islam mingle here.

    Big line up control through the church as well as outside
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