|
Museums
|
The Basilica of St. Sophia, now called the Ayasofya
Museum is unquestionably one ot the finest buildings of all
time. Built by Constantine the Great and reconstructed by
Justinian in the 6th century, its immense dome rises 55 meters
above the ground and its diameter spans 31 meters. You should
linger here to absorb the building's majestic serenity and to
admire the fine Byzantine mosaics. (Open every day except
Monday.) |

Interior, Istanbul Archeological Museum
The Archaeological Museums are found just inside the first
court of Topkapi Palace. The newly renovated Archaeological
Museum includes the celebrated Alexander Sarcophagus among its
treasures of antiquity. The Museum of the Ancient Orient
displays artifacts from the Sumerian, Babylonian. Assyrian,
Hatti and Hittite civilizations. (Open every day except
Monday.)
Originally built as a kosk or pavilion by Mehmet the
Conqueror in the 15th century, the Cinili Kosk. which houses
the Museum of Turkish Ceramics. contains beautiful lznik wares
from the 16th century and fine examples of Seljuk and Ottoman
pottery and tiles. (Open every day except Monday.)
|
|
Like the Ayasofya Museum, the St. Irene Museum was
originally a church. It ranks, in fact, as the first church
built in Istanbul.Constantine commissioned it in the fourth
century and Justinian later had the church restored. Reputedly
the building stands on the site of a pre-Christian temple.
(Open every day except Monday.)
|

Yerebatan Palace |
The dark stone building that houses the Museum of Turkish
and Islamic Art was built in 1524 by Ibrahim Pasa, Grand
Vizier to Suleyman the Magnificent, as his residence. It was
the grandest private residence ever built in the Ottoman
Empire. Today it holds a superb collection of ceramics,
metalwork, miniatures, calligraphy, textiles, and woodwork as
well as some of the oldest carpets in the world. (Open every
day except Monday.)
Across the street from the Ibrahim Pasa Palace is the
Museum of Turkish Carpets which contains exquisite antique
carpets and kilims gathered from all over Turkey. (Open every
day except Sunday and Monday.)
Near St. Sophia is the sixth century Byzantine cistern
known as the Yerebatan Sarayi. Three hundred and thirty-five
massive Corinthian columns support the immense chamber's fine
brick vaulting. (Open every day except Tuesday.)
|
The Mosaic Museum preserves in situ exceptionally fine
mosaic pavements of the fifth and sixth centuries which remain
from the Great Palace of the Byzantine emperors. (Open every
day except Monday.)
The 11th century church of St. Savior in Chora, the
Kariye Museum,
is, after St. Sophia, the most important Byzantine monument in
Istanbul. Unremarkable in its architecture, inside tne walls
are decorated with superb l4th century frescoes and mosaics.
Illustrating scenes from the life of Christ and the Virgin
Mary, these brilliantly colored paintings embody the vigor of
Byzantine art. Restored wooden houses in the area surrounding
the churcn offer tea and coffee in a relaxed atmosphere far
removed from the city's hectic pace. (Open every day except
Tuesday.)
|

Mosaic From Kariye Museum |

Mosaic from Kariye
Museum |
The Aviation Museum in Yesilkoy traces the development of
air flight in Turkey. (Open every day except Monday.)
The great field tents used by the Ottoman armies on
campaigns are displayed in the Military Museum. Other exhibits
include Ottoman weapons and the accoutrements of war. The
Mehter Takimi (Ottoman military band) perform Ottoman Marshal
music between 3:00 and 4:00 p.m. (Open every day except Monday
and Tuesday.)
The house in which Ataturk lived in sisli now serves as
the Ataturk Museum and displays his personal effects. (Open
every day except Saturday and Sunday.)
|
In the
Besiktas district the Naval Museum displays the great imperial
caiques in which the sultans were rowed across the Bosphorus,
as well as many other interesting exhibits of Ottoman naval
history (Open every day except Monday and Thursday.)
Also in Besiktas, the Museum of Fine Arts displays Turkish
paintings and sculptures from the end of the 19th century to
the present day. (Open every day except Monday and Tuesday.)
Near the gardens of Yildiz Palace, the City Museum
preserves and documents the history of Istanbul since the
Ottoman conquest. (Open every day except Thursday.)
Up the Bosphorus in the picturesque village of Buyukdere,
the collections of the Sadberk Hanim Museum fill two charming
19th century wooden villas. A private museum which originally
displayed Turkish decorative arts, it has recently been
expanded with a new collection of archaeological finds. (Open
every day except Wednesday.) |
|
|
|