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Byzantine Sights

Take a Break in the Retaining Wall of the Hippodrome -- Arranged around a mushrooming fountain with choice seating tucked into the arches of the Sphendome, the Havusbasi Çay Bahcesi, or Pond Head Tea Garden (Nakilbent Sok.; tel. 0212/638-8819), couldn't get more atmospheric. Nestle in for fresh squeezed fruit juice, tea, or light fare well into the evening hours. In the summer, the management mounts a tiny dervis show nightly.

Sultanahmet's Streets Paved with Gold: The Great Palace -- The Great Palace complex was the primary residence and administrative center of Byzantine (and Roman) emperors from A.D. 330, when it was begun by Constantine, to 1081, when the Comnenus Dynasty moved to Blachernae. In 1204, the palace became the home of the Latin Crusaders-in-Residence, but through their neglect, the palace slowly fell into decline. It was eventually picked over for parts for use in new construction projects. Tradition has it that when Mehmet the Conqueror took the city (by which time the Byzantine dynasty had returned and installed itself into Blachernae and the Great Palace), the sultan's reaction to the state of the palace was to quote a phrase of the Persian poet, Ferdowsi: "the spider spins his web in the Palace of the Caesars . . ."

Constantine's earliest construction was based on Diocletian's palace on the Dalmatian Coast and covered an area of 10 hectares (almost 25 acres) from the Hippodrome to the Marmara Sea. At its peak, the palace was comprised of a complex that included state buildings, throne rooms, gardens, libraries, thermal baths, and fountains (among which were the 5th century A.D. Chalke monumental gate and the Magnaura or Senate building). The Bucoleon (built by Theophilius in A.D. 842) and Justinian's Hormisdas (6th century A.D.; located to the West of the Bucoleon) were later additions. A few places around the neighborhood provide a peak of these remains. A section of the loggia from the Bucoleon that survived the construction of the commuter train can be seen on the southern edge of the peninsula outside the remains of the sea walls, to the east of Aksakal Caddesi. A mosaic floor of one of the peristyle courtyards of the Great Palace is now the Mosaic Museum. Some remains were uncovered in the construction of the Eresin Crown hotel in Sultanahmet, while the Four Seasons project (they're adding a rear annex building) sits right atop the Magnaura.


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