Bob and Ann in Turkey 2008

  • April 15 - Instanbul

    Please visit April 15 slideshow


    Turkey Pics
    Cistern

    Turkey Pics
    Medusa

    This morning we awoke to clearing skies and cool temperatures. We had 9 hours of sleep last night and felt like we are leaving our jet lag behind. Breakfast was the same as yesterday - bread, yogurt, meats, eggs, olives, coffee, etc. We ate with Alex Potter from Walnut Creek.


    Our tour started at 9:00. We walked about 1/4 mile to look at the Cistern, an underground water system that was created in the Byzantine times in the sixth century. The cistern covers an area the size of two football fields. There are 336 columns supporting a brick ceiling directly the city streets. A highlight is two Medusa heads lying on the ground squeezed under two pillars. It was cool, damp and spooky. We even saw fish swimming in the water. I had recently read a mystery by Jason Goodwin called "The Snake Stone" that featured the Cistern and the Medusa heads. So this visit brought the novel to life.


    Turkey Pics
    Higia Sophia


    Inside Hagia Sophia

    Next, we walked a couple of blocks to the Hagia Sophia . This served Constantinople as a church for centuries. It has also served as a mosque. It has been converted to a museum so no secular services are performed here. It was built in the sixth century an has an enormous dome that would fit Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral under it.


    We then walked along the Hippodrome and visited the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Art . The museum featured hundreds of carpets and ceramics as well as realistic displays of nomadic tents and early Istanbul household interiors.


    Lunch was on our own. We picked a small restaurant near the museum. Ann had grilled chicken and a green salad with white beans. I had Sultanahmet Koftecisi (lamb meatballs) and a green salad.


    After lunch, we met our bus for the first time and drove to the Chora Church . This church was built in the fourth century and contains some of the best examples of late Byzantine mosaics anywhere. It is fairly small and very crowded.


    Turkey Pics
    Chora Church

    Turkey Pics
    Chora Church - One of the Mosaics

    Turkey Pics
    Inside the Grand Bazaar

    After the church visit, we drove back into the city and wandered through the Grand Bazaar . This huge covered market has hundreds of shops and offers everything from housewares to carpets to jewelry to clothes to.... There are lots of hustlers trying to get you into shops to buy something. Bargaining is a must. We weren't ready to buy yet so we just looked.


    After strolling back to the hotel, we rested and then walked up one block to Yeni Akbiyik Caddesi (White Mustache Street) and picked a sidewalk restaurant for dinner. We had a mixed vegetable appetizer for two. For a main course, Ann had an eggplant puree with lamb and rice. I had lamb kabobs. It was tasty. It was barely warm enough to eat outside and watch the world walk by.


    A couple of things that we noticed about Istanbul are the abundance of old timbered houses and motion-sensitive lights. We aren't sure where the wood comes from for the houses and we think the the lights are a good "green" idea.


    The map of our route is below. To see it in Google Earth, follow this link.