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Antalya
Istanbul
Geography
History
City life
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Tand-Reizen
History
 The
city has been conquered, fought over and rebuilt many times over
the centuries. Istanbul’s history dates back to the first
settlement possibly in the 13th Century BC, although was founded
by Byzas the Megarian in the 7th Century BC, from when the city
was named Byzantium. A small colony of Greeks inhabited the area
until 3rd Century BC, and over the next 1000 years became a
thriving trading and commercial centre. Whilst continuing life as
a trading city during the Roman Empire, it was then conquered by
Emperor Septimus Severius in 193 AD.
During the 4th century, Istanbul was selected by the Roman Empire
to be the new capital, instead of Rome, by Constantine. It was a
strategic choice: Built on seven surrounding hills – echoing that
of Rome – the city would have control of the Bosphorus and easy
access to the harbour of the Golden Horn. The city was
re-organized within six years, its ramparts widened and the
construction of many temples, official buildings, palaces, hamams
and hippodrome.
With a great ceremony, in the year 330, the city was officially
announced as the capital of the Roman Empire, and known as
Constantinople in the late eras.
It remained the capital of the eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine)
for a long period, due to the fall of the west Roman Empire in the
5th century. By the sixth century, the population exceeded half a
million, and was considered a golden age under Emperor Justinyen’s
reign.
The Byzantium Empire and Istanbul's latter history is full of
palace and church intrigues, was overrun by the Arabs in the 7th
and 8th centuries, the Bulgars in the 9th and 10th, but could not
keep out the Crusaders who conquered in 1204. They destroyed and
raided it for many more years - including churches, monasteries
and monuments, which led to a decline in the population. The city
passed reign to Byzantium again in 1261, did not regain its former
richness, and was conquered by Turks in 1453 after a 53-day siege
and the hands of control changed yet again.
It then became the capital city of Ottoman Empire, which saw a
population increase with immigrants from other parts of the
country, with religious freedom and social rights granted to
Greeks, Armenians and Jews. Mehmet the Conqueror began to rebuild
it, with a new palace and mosque (Fatih Camii) and tried to inject
new life into the economy.
The reign of Suleyman the Magnificent (1520-66) was considered the
greatest of all the Ottoman leaders, and the military conquests
paid for the most impressive Ottoman architecture, the work of Mimar Sinan. The city was also the centre of the Islamic work, and
domes and minarets from hundreds of mosques dotted the skyline.
But a century after the death of Suleyman, the Empire started to
decline again. By the end of the 18th century, whilst the empire
was in decline with more territory being lost to the West, and
sultans becoming more interested in Western institutional models.
There was a short-lived Ottoman parliament and constitution in
1876, and by the end of the World War I during which allied troops
occupied the city, the once-great empire was in shambles.
This changed radically with the emergence of a prominent commander
of the Turkish army, who entered the struggle for the Turkish
nation. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was considered a hero after the
4-year long War of Independence, after which he established the
Republic if Turkey in 1923. Moving the capital to Ankara, then a
small provincial town in Anatolia, Istanbul was simply the
commercial and cultural centre, which it still remains today.
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