Istanbul

About Istanbul

YOUTUBE VIDEO


SKYLINES AND VIEWS:        
   
Skylines and views
  Views from the Galata Tower   The Bosphorus boat tour

 

EUROPEAN SIDE
- SOUTH OF GOLDEN HORN
(FATIH DISTRICT):

     

 

 

   
Sultanahmet part 1  

Sultanahmet part 2

 

Beyazit, Eminönü

Hagia Sophia
Blue Mosque
Sultanahmet Square
  Waterfront/Old Town
Kennedy Caddesi
  Grand Bazaar
University, Cemberlitas
Eminönü ferry terminal
Sirkeci Station
   
Topkapi Palace
 

Laleli
Sarachane
Aksaray

  Yerebatan Sarnici
Underground Cistern

The palace, the gardens,
Harem, Archaelogical Museum

 

The hotel
The Valens aqueduct

 

 



EUROPEAN SIDE

- NORTH OF GOLDEN HORN (BEYOGLU DISTRICT):

     
 

Istiklal Caddesi
Taksim Square


 

French Street
Galip Dede Caddesi
Tünel

 

Karaköy, Galata Bridge, Galata Tower, Kabatas and the Golden Horn

EUROPEAN SIDE
- NORTH OF GOLDEN HORN (BESIKTAS DISTRICT):

 

EUROPEAN SIDE
- NORTH OF GOLDEN HORN (SISLI DISTRICT):

 

EUROPEAN SIDE
- SOUTH OF GOLDEN HORN (OTHE DISTRICTS):


   

Levent CBD

 

Sisli district

  West outskirts
Skyline, Kanyon
     

 

 

 

 

         

ASIAN SIDE:
 
 

   
Anadolu Kavagi   Asian districts from afar
   
The fishing village that is the end station of the Bosphorus ferry on the Asian side   Kadiköy, Üsküdar, Anadolu    
         

NIGHT PHOTOS:
     
   

Istanbul by night

Sultanahmet, City center south,Lalei, The hotel, Hagia Sophia, Blue Mosque


 

 

 

 

AIRPORT:   SPECIALS:    
     
Atatürk Airport   The hotel    

 

 

ABOUT ISTANBUL

Country: Turkey - largest city
Population: 13 800 000 (metro 19 000 000)
Year:
2013 (May)

Area: 5 343 km²
Province:
Istanbul
Tallest building: Sapphire Tower (261 m)

Istanbul is one of the world's fastest growing cities in the world and during our visit in 2013 it is the world's second largest city (after Shanghai), figures that have been disputed though! It is the only large city in the world that is situated on two continents; the largest and historically and economically most important part is situated in Europe, while the East part, mainly residential, is situated in Asia. The wide strait Bosphorus divides them and they are connected by ferries. The famous bay called Golden Horn divides the old city center in two parts; connecetd by the Galata Bridge. On the south part is the Sultanahmet area with Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace and other interesting site, while you find the main street Istiklal Caddesi, the Galata Tower and Taksim Square, that is considered the heart of Istanbul, on the north side. On the south side you also fins the Grand Bazaar. Istanbul's Grand Bazaar is one of the largest and oldest covered markets in the world. You can probably find exotic fragrances and essential oil bottles of all kinds in some of the Grand Bazaar's over 4,000 shops. Bringing home some exotic essential oil bottles wholesale from the Grand Bazaar would be a good choice for visitors.The lake Marmaris is situated just south of the city center, as well as the relaxed Princes Islands. To the North of Istanbul, the Bosphorus strait flows into the Black Sea, that has borders to many Eastern European and former Soviet countries.

Istanbul has a very important role in the history, first it was the capital of the Byzantine (East Roman), then for many years it became muslim under the Ottoman rule after and in the 1920s the nation Turkey was born, and the still popular prime minister Atatürk secularized it. The still can find many large mosques everywhere and you can here call for prayers as much as 5 times a day! Despite its gross size Istanbul is not the capital of Turkey, it is Ankara.

You can find many rundown streets and buildings, even near tourist areas, as well as beautiful historic monuments, buildings and mosques, but there are also very modern parts, especially in the outskirts where you can find as much as 3 modern districts with tall skyscrapers, highways and large shopping malls. If you take the popular Bosphorus ferry, like we did, you can see the European side on one side, and the Asian on the other. Along the trip, you will find large palaces, modern office buildings, large apartments blocks and small fishing villages with charming colourful mansions.

MY EXPERIENCES

We experienced many different parts of this beautiful city, it was very interesting and the weather was perfect, warm but mild, often grey in the morning but mostly sunny in the daytime. It was a very exciting journey, the hightlights were the trip along the Bosphorus, and the visit to the Yerabatan Sarnici underground cisterna and Hagia Sophia.

The traffic is very chaotic, it is totally crazy, the cars drive very careless and sometimes you can't find pavements and crosswalks are hard to find. Not many traffic lights either, making it very dangerous to cross the streets. The local traffic is ok, but not very extensive. You can buy and refill cards for every trip, but you have to combinate different systems; lightrail trams (always overcrowded), historical trams, subway, trains, buses, taxi buses and ferries. The yellow small taxis are cheap but they always take twice the price for tourists and its hard to negociate it because they can't speak English. In general, however, most Istanbul citizens are pretty good on basic English.

Our stay was excellent. We got a great offer at a 5 star hotel, Celal Aga Konagi Hotel! It featured 2 large swimming pools, free brunch, large chandeliers, Turkish bath/spa, sauna, aquariums, bar, 2 restaurants and a double room with jacuzzi, ac, virtual fireplace and flatscreen TV. It is centrally located at Lalei district with easy connections to the Sultanahmet historic district.


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